Credit Assistance and Related Fees for Water Resources Infrastructure Projects, 32661-32681 [2023-10520]

Download as PDF Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations H. Fees I. Credit Assistance J. Rating Requirement K. Federal Requirements L. American Iron and Steel Requirements M. Labor Standards (Davis-Bacon Act of 1931) N. Reporting Requirements O. Selection Criteria V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Army, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 33 CFR Part 386 [Docket Number: COE–2022–0004] RIN 0710–AB31 Credit Assistance and Related Fees for Water Resources Infrastructure Projects U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Defense (DoD). ACTION: Final rule. AGENCY: This final rule implements a new credit assistance program administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps). Consistent with the funding provided under Subtitle C of Title V of the Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 (WRRDA), often referred to as the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (WIFIA), credit assistance is available for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of state, local government, public utility, or private. This final rule establishes the process by which the Corps will administer such credit assistance, including the assessment of fees, and also sets forth the policies and procedures that the Corps will use for receiving, evaluating, approving applications, and servicing and monitoring direct loans and loan guarantees. SUMMARY: DATES: This rule is effective on June 21, 2023. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aaron Snyder, Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Team, 441 G Street NW, CECW–I Attn: Aaron Snyder 3K87, Washington, DC 20314; telephone number: (612) 518–0355; email address: CWIFP@usace.army.mil. The phone number above may also be reached by individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, or who have speech disabilities, through the Federal Relay Service’s teletype service at 800–877– 8339. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: I. Background II. Water Resources Infrastructure Needs III. Summary of Comments IV. Program Information A. Funding B. Borrower Eligibility C. Project Eligibility D. Project Cost Eligibility E. Statutory Requirements F. Application Process G. Creditworthiness VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 I. Background The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) is publishing this final rule to implement a program authorized under Subtitle C of Title V of the Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 (WRRDA), often referred to as the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (WIFIA). The program was provided funding and further statutory direction in Division D, Title 1 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. WIFIA authorizes the Corps to provide secured (direct) loans and guaranteed loans to eligible water resources infrastructure projects. The only eligible project type— under Division D, Title 1 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act are: ‘‘. . . . safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of state, local government, public utility, or private. . .’’. The appropriations language also specifies that any project ‘‘for a dam that is identified as jointly owned in the National Inventory of Dams and where one of those joint owners is the Federal Government’’ is ineligible to receive the funding provided by these appropriations. This rule limits implementation to only those project types listed in the Acts. WIFIA authorizes the Corps to charge fees to recover all or a portion of the Corps’ cost of providing credit assistance and all costs of conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services, in the field of municipal and project finance to assist in the underwriting and servicing of Federal credit instruments. WIFIA also authorizes the borrower to pay part or all of the cost of direct loans and guaranteed loans (‘‘credit subsidy cost’’) and this authority would be implemented under this rule. Projects will be evaluated and selected by the Secretary of the Army (the Secretary) based on the requirements and the criteria described in this rule. Following the selection of projects, individual credit agreements will be developed PO 00000 Frm 00041 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32661 through negotiations between the borrowers and the Corps. Congress enacted the WIFIA as part of WRRDA, as amended by section 1445 of Public Law 114–94, section 5008 of Public Law 114–322, and section 4201 of Public Law 115–270 (see 33 U.S.C. 3901–3914). These amendments were minor changes primarily focused on the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other changes regarding State Infrastructure Financing Authorities, removing limitations on use of tax exempt funding sources, changes to project eligibility for the EPA, and allowance of fees as an eligible cost which is included elsewhere in this final rule. Title I, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 provided $12 million in budget authority for the credit subsidy cost for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private. Title 1, Division D also provided that the $12 million credit subsidy appropriation, is available to subsidize gross obligations for the principal amount of direct loans, including capitalized interest, and total loan principal, including capitalized interest, any part of which is to be guaranteed not to exceed $950,000,000. Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act provided an additional $64,000,000 in budget authority for the cost of direct loans and guaranteed loans, for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private.1 Division J, Title III also provided the $64 million credit subsidy appropriation cannot be used to fund a project for a dam that is identified as jointly owned in the National Inventory of Dams and where one of those joint owners is the Federal Government. As described in the proposed rule ‘‘Credit Assistance and Related Fees for Water Resources Infrastructure Projects’’ (87 FR 35473), the Corps is establishing its new WIFIA program limited to safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary 1 Until 2021, Tribally owned dams have been listed in the National Inventory of Dams under the primary ownership title of either ‘‘Private’’ or ‘‘Federal’’. In 2021, the National Inventory of Dams added a ‘‘Tribal Government’’ primary ownership type, however not all Tribally owned dams have been transitioned to the correct primary ownership type at the date of this Rule. Regardless of National Inventory of Dams primary ownership classification, all Tribally owned dams are eligible for this program. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 32662 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private. A primary objective for Federal credit programs is to help correct a capital market imperfection. Municipal, regional, state-level and other infrastructure project sponsors generally do not market debt sales used to fund infrastructure projects beyond 30-year terms through public bond markets due to existing market conventions. Proceeds from bond sales are available immediately, not according to cash flow needs during project construction. In addition, debt sold through multiple issuances during an infrastructure project’s construction period exposes project sponsors to debt interest rate risk. Congress provided the Corps WIFIA program the legal authority to help address these factors that otherwise may impede affordable infrastructure investment through the prospective terms of WIFIA credit assistance. WIFIA, authorized the Corps to provide both loans and loan guarantees to eligible entities: corporations; partnerships; joint ventures; trusts; State or local governmental entities, agencies, or instrumentalities; Tribal governments or consortiums of Tribal governments; or State infrastructure finance authorities. While WIFIA authorizes the Corps to provide for a wide variety of eligible projects this final rule is limited to implementing a credit assistance program for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private (referred to here after as ‘‘non-Federal dams’’). As applied to credit assistance for non-Federal dam projects under Title 1, Division D or the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Sections 3902, 3905, and 3907 of Title 33 of the U.S.C., describe the conditions that govern a project’s eligibility. Projects must have eligible costs of not less than $20 million. 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(2)(A). Eligible borrowers, eligible projects, and other statutory requirements are further described in detail in the sections below and summarized in this document and 85 FR 39189. As used throughout this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section and part 386 of the rule, ‘‘borrower’’ is synonymous with ‘‘obligor’’. WIFIA defines an ‘‘obligor’’ as ‘‘an eligible entity that is primarily liable for payment of the principal of, or interest on, a Federal credit instrument.’’ 33 U.S.C. 3901(7). ‘‘Obligor’’ is used in place of ‘‘borrower’’ whenever ‘‘obligor’’ VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 appears in a corresponding section of WIFIA. II. Water Resources Infrastructure Needs The American Jobs Plan estimates that in 2020, weather and climate disasters cost the United States $95 billion in damages to homes, businesses, and public infrastructure.2 The Administration has made investment in U.S. infrastructure a priority to increase resiliency in the face of such threats. Non-Federal dams account for roughly 87,000 of the 90,580 dams as reported in the National Inventory of Dams. Over 14,000 non-Federal dams are now classified as ‘‘high hazard potential,’’ meaning that they would likely result in loss of life if they were to fail.3 According to a 2019 cost estimate conducted by the Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO), the cost to rehabilitate (repair, replace or remove) all non-Federal dams is estimated at over $66 billion with high hazard potential dams accounting for over $20 billion.4 Funding requirements are only projected to increase as infrastructure continues to age, risk awareness progresses, and design standards evolve.5 While almost half of the States have created a state-funded grant or lowinterest revolving loan program to assist dam owners with repairs, the ASDSO indicates that these programs vary significantly in the financial assistance available.6 Another Federal infrastructure financing program, WIFIA, administered by the EPA provides credit financing for nonFederal water and wastewater infrastructure project. Similar to the Corps WIFIA program, the maximum portion of eligible project costs are 49% or 80% for small communities. The EPA WIFIA program can finance dam projects, however those projects compete against a wide range of water and wastewater type projects. In FY 2021 the EPA WIFIA program had an appropriation of $55 million, allowing WIFIA to lend approximately $5.5 billion. In 2021, the EPA made it 2 The White House Briefing Room. ‘‘FACT SHEET: The American Jobs Plan’’ at https:// www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statementsreleases/2021/03/31/fact-sheet-the-american-jobsplan. March 13, 2021. 3 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ‘‘National Inventory of Dams,’’ at https://nid.usace.army.mil. 2020 partial update. 4 Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO), ‘‘The Cost of Rehabilitating Our Nation’s Dams: A Methodology, Estimate, and Proposed Funding Mechanisms.’’ revised 2019. 5 Congressional Research Service, ‘‘Dam Safety Overview and the Federal Role,’’ October 24, 2019. 6 ASDSO, ‘‘The Cost of Rehabilitating’’. PO 00000 Frm 00042 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 possible for dam projects to receive funding under the Federal Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF), administered by the EPA, provided that the dam’s primary purpose is for drinking water supply and that the dam must be owned by the public water system. Through the DWSRF program, the EPA will make available $1.8 billion in capitalization grants for drinking water infrastructure needs, a portion of which could go towards drinking water supply dam projects, depending on the priorities of the States. The Federal Watershed Rehabilitation Program administered by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) helps project sponsors rehabilitate aging dams that are reaching the end of their design lives. This rehabilitation addresses critical public health and safety concerns. Division J, Title I of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act provides $118M for projects under the Watershed Rehabilitation Program. The Federal Rehabilitation of High Hazard Potential Dam (HHPD) Program, administered by Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), provides grants for repair, removal, or rehabilitation of eligible non-Federal, high hazard potential dams. Projects can receive a maximum grant of the lesser of $7.5 million or 12.5% of the total appropriated amount. The program was appropriated $10 million in both FY 2019 and FY 2020, $12 million in FY 2021, and $585 million in Division J, Title V of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act ($75 million of which must go to dam removal projects). In addition, Section 40333 of the Infrastructure and Jobs Act of 2021 appropriated $553,600,000 until expended for EPAct 2005 Section 247: Maintaining and Enhancing Hydroelectricity Incentives to the US Department of Energy (DOE) for making incentive payments to owners and authorized operators of qualified hydroelectric facilities for capital improvements directly related to improving grid resilience, improving dam safety, and related to environmental improvements. Such incentive payments are limited to 30% of the costs of the applicable capital improvement(s) and not more than one incentive payment can be made to a single qualified hydroelectric facility in any fiscal year, the amount of which shall not exceed $5,000,000. For details refer to the draft application guidance for the Maintaining & Enhancing Hydroelectricity Incentives Program (EPAct 2005 Section 247) released by the DOE’s Grid Deployment Office on February 8, 2023 for public comment to inform the implementation. In addition, E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations USDA’s Rural Development Water and Waste Disposal programs provide over $2 billion in grants and low-interest loans for water and waste infrastructure. These funds help provide rural Americans access to drinking water and sanitation, promoting economic development in rural areas. Dam construction and repair projects are eligible for these funds. Despite these programs and their funding capacity, the available funding for dam safety infrastructure falls short of the $66 billion need cited by ASDSO. The Corps’ WIFIA program helps to bridge that gap by providing non-Federal entities with an additional means to invest in dam safety infrastructure, which will help communities withstand future weather and climate events. As communities become more resilient, all else being equal, this is expected to assist in limiting Federal disaster spending associated with such events. III. Summary of Comments In response to the proposed rule, the Corps received 12 letters submitted to the docket. Combined, these letters provided approximately 45 individual comments on the proposed rule. The Corps received comments from prospective applicants, trade associations, and individual private citizens. The Corps has considered all of these comments in the development of the final rule. Docket comments and summaries of the Corps’ analyses and determinations are discussed as follows. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 A. Discussion of General Comments This section provides a discussion of each of the four major categories raised by commenters in response to the rulemaking, along with Corps’ analysis and resolution. 1. Project Eligibility Several commenters expressed support for expanding the scope of the program to allow credit assistance for additional eligible projects authorized for assistance under 33 U.S.C. 3905. Upon review and consideration of the comments, the Corps believes that it is important to note that Congress narrowed the scope of projects eligible for credit assistance by appropriating funds solely for non-federal dam safety projects, despite broad authority under WIFIA to fund water infrastructure projects. As a result, the Corps will not be expanding the scope of project eligibility under this rulemaking. One commenter suggested that the Corps should clarify eligibility and application process and include a list of ineligible projects along with clarifying the differences between the Corps and VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) WIFIA. Another commenter suggested that fragmented federal financing and unclear guidelines risk deterring applicants and delaying critical upgrades to high-risk infrastructure. Separately, the commenter recommended that the Corps should clarify eligibility and application steps for prospective applicants by (a) delineating between the Corps and the EPA WIFIA programs and (b) including a clear list of eligibility requirements. As evidence for this recommendation, the commenter stated that Corps anticipated the difficulty that applicants will have with (a) understanding eligibility requirements and (b) understanding which financing program best suits a project’s scope, purpose, and needs. The Corps and EPA intend to partner closely during the project selection process for eligible projects to ensure that funding allocated either by EPA or Corps WIFIA programs will use the most appropriate program relative to the project’s scope, purpose, and benefits. It is important to note that both programs share the same authorizing legislation, and Congress provided a list of projects eligible for assistance under EPA’s WIFIA program which also may be eligible as non-Federal dam safety projects. As a matter of efficiency of government resources, projects that include non-Federal dam safety work in addition to infrastructure outside of the scope of dam safety work, but eligible under EPA WIFIA, are ineligible for Corps WIFIA financing assistance. Any project whose application has been rejected for credit assistance by EPA will not be considered for assistance under the Corps program. The application form has been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for approval under OMB Control Number 0710–0026, titled ‘‘Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) Preliminary Application.’’ The Corps sought public comments on whether additional clarification is needed on project cost eligibility, such as whether a list of what costs are expressly ineligible would be helpful or whether that may result in additional confusion, as opposed to limiting the list to include only those which are eligible, as proposed. Although two commenters suggested they preferred a list of what costs are expressly ineligible, the commenters did not provide justification as to why such a list would not result in additional confusion among prospective applicants. Eligibility is dependent on several factors such as whether the costs PO 00000 Frm 00043 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32663 were incurred through federally compliant contracts and whether costs are allocable and reasonable. As such, the Corps does not plan to include a list of expressly ineligible costs in this final rule. For information on specific costs, a prospective borrower can contact the Corps by emailing CWIFP@ usace.army.mil. One commenter provided comments that all dam safety projects are potential flood risk projects and should be considered eligible. The Corps agrees; however, each individual project is different and will require appropriate considerations based on the project conditions and verification of potential flood risks. To receive clarification on any unique project conditions, a prospective borrower can contact the Corps by emailing CWIFP@ usace.army.mil. 2. Credit Assistance for Economically Disadvantaged Communities Several commenters provided comments about the approach to defining economically disadvantaged communities and allocation of credit assistance to such communities. The Corps is utilizing the term ‘‘economically disadvantaged’’ to be generally consistent with the direction provided in Section 160 of the Water Resources Development Act of 2020 (Pub. L. 116–260) for the term as well as the Biden Administration’s policies for identifying disadvantaged communities. This definition may be modified in the future as appropriate in response to updated guidance, tools and resources. A number of commenters wrote to expressly support inclusion of a selection criterion and prioritization for economically disadvantaged communities, and no commenters expressly opposed such a criterion. As stated in this rule, to be considered economically disadvantaged, a community only needs to meet one of the following criteria: (a) low-income, (b) unemployment rate above national average, (c) Indian country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in the proximity of an Alaska Native Village, (d) U.S. Territories, or (e) identified as disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool. One commenter requested that the rule establish static metrics for how the selection criterion related to economically disadvantaged communities is considered relative to other criteria. Weights will not be included in the rule, as they may change with each funding availability opportunity. The weights used for each selection criterion will be provided to the public upon the solicitation to E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32664 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations announce the availability of credit assistance. The priorities as indicated are as follows: Projects serving small, rural communities and economically disadvantaged communities and projects serving Tribal communities. One commenter recommended that the Corps align the content of the rule with Executive Order (E.O.) 14008 (Justice40 Initiative) and then report on its progress toward achieving a 40% distribution of funds to disadvantaged communities. Although the WIFIA program is not a covered program under the Justice40 Initiative, the program will support priorities consistent with the Justice40 Initiative, including projects serving small, rural communities and economically disadvantaged communities and projects serving Tribal communities. Via its publicly accessible website, the Corps intends to report on its lending activities, including those lending activities which support priorities consistent with the Justice40 Initiative. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 3. Procedures for Determining Eligibility Under 85 Federal Register 39189 (June 30, 2020) Two commenters expressed concerns about the transparency, accuracy, and fairness of the eligibility screening procedures for WIFIA projects under 85 FR 39189 and suggested that the Corps consider either eliminating the requirement that projects receiving WIFIA credit assistance should be subject to such procedures or revising the procedures and concepts contained within it. The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) fiscal year 2020 appropriation for the WIFIA program required EPA, OMB, and the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) to jointly develop and publish criteria in the Federal Register for limiting federal participation in projects receiving WIFIA loans and loan guarantees, including for WIFIA loans issued by the Corps. The appropriation did not provide the Corps a role in developing such criteria. The criteria required by the appropriation were published on June 30, 2020, in 85 Federal Register 39189. The Corps notes that funds made available by Congress for the Corps’ WIFIA program have required that WIFIA credit assistance must be in accord with the criteria in 85 FR 39189. As such, the Corps cannot alter the applicability or requirements of the criteria nor procedures and content prescribed in 85 FR 39189. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 4. Fees and Loan Administration Two commenters requested that the Corps provide applicants and borrowers estimates for transaction processing and servicing fees as early as practicable. The Corps will provide an estimate for transaction fees to applicants as part of initial coordination once the Corps has adequate data points to reference the transaction’s relative complexity but expects the ranges for transaction processing fees provided in the rule to accurately reflect the expected costs for applicants. The Corps will update servicing fees due under the credit agreement annually adjusted in proportion to the percentage change in Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (or its successors) calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar year during which such fee is due. One commenter recommended that the Corps provide more detail on the optional credit subsidy fee, including how this fee will be calculated. As mentioned in the rule, utilization of this fee will only be in rare instances where budget authority is insufficient to fund the credit instrument and with the agreement of Corps and the borrower. Calculation of this figure is based on a number of dynamic factors including but not limited to the loan’s relative risk, default and recovery assumptions, and interest rates. However, it is reasonable for applicants to assume loans with higher credit risk would result in a higher credit subsidy fee. One commenter recommended that the Corps establish a reserve fund to pay for extraordinary expenses related to loan administration. However, the Corps does not have authority to establish such a fund. One commenter asked for clarification of the treatment of changes in project scope and budget after credit agreement execution. Although the approach for changes to project scope and budget will be dependent on the relative risk and structure of the transaction’s financing arrangements, the Corps intends to ensure that the project remains fully funded and in compliance with all Federal requirements at all times. B. Discussion of Other Comments 1. Determination of the WIFIA Interest Rate One commenter noted that the proposed rule stated that ‘‘as required by section 3908(b)(4) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the interest rate on a secured loan would be equal to or greater than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of PO 00000 Frm 00044 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 execution of the credit agreement. The base interest rate can be identified through use of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) investments.’’ The commenter proposes removing the ability to charge interest rates greater than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of execution of the credit agreement to ensure access to the lowest borrowing cost possible for applicants. The Corps does not concur with this proposal because it would limit the ability of applicants to pay the optional credit subsidy fee through an interest rate premium in the rare instance budget authority is unavailable in a sufficient amount to extend credit assistance to an applicant. For other applicants, the Corps will set the interest rate based on the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of execution of the credit agreement, which per 31 CFR part 344 is the SLGS rate plus one basis point. 2. Blanket Payment and Performance Bond Requirements One commenter suggested that the Corps impose blanket payment and performance bond requirements for all projects receiving WIFIA credit assistance irrespective of the borrower or project type, suggesting that such a requirement provides important protections in the event of contractor non-performance. After consideration, the Corps has determined that the proposal could introduce uncertainty and confusion among prospective applicants, as well as delay closings and financial assistance to these regionally and nationally significant water infrastructure projects. The Corps expects that the bulk of WIFIA applicants will be comprised of non-Federal governmental entities, which in nearly all instances are subject to well-established State and local payment and performance bond requirements that provide appropriate protections for contractor nonperformance. As a result, the proposal as it applies to non-Federal governmental entities may conflict or be redundant. For other prospective WIFIA applicants which are not already subject to State and local payment and performance bond requirements, the Corps will carefully evaluate an applicant’s proposed procurement methodology, and negotiate appropriate payment and performance bond requirements as necessary to ensure E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations project completion and/or mitigate credit risk, while also meeting the program’s mission to stimulate investment in important regionally and nationally significant non-Federal dam safety projects. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 3. Build America, Buy America Requirements The Corps received two comments regarding the applicability of the Build America, Buy America Act (BABAA) to WIFIA credit assistance. The first comment expressed concerns about the fairness of applying BABAA requirements to WIFIA credit assistance. The second comment encouraged Corps to issue a waiver for projects that have initiated design planning prior to May 14, 2022, consistent with a waiver issued by the EPA under its WIFIA program. The commenter suggested that such a waiver would help minimize adverse cost and schedule impacts from implementing BABAA requirements for water infrastructure projects already in design. As part of President Biden’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), beginning with awards received on or after May 14, 2022, any infrastructure project receiving federal funding, including any credit assistance provided under the WIFIA program, must source their iron, steel, manufactured products and construction materials from the United States. The Corps is committed to successful implementation of BABAA to build a resilient supply chain and manufacturing base for critical infrastructure products. As a result, the Corps will administer the BABAA requirements for WIFIA credit assistance consistent with existing law. The Corps will consider the need and public interest for waivers of the BABAA requirements following the procedures outlined in the IIJA. 4. Disbursement Requirements and Procedures Several commenters requested clarification regarding the program’s disbursement requirements and procedures. Two commenters also expressed concern that disbursements would not be available until a project entered civil construction and requested a detailed description of expressly ineligible costs. Prior to any disbursement, all conditions precedent to funding specified in the credit agreement must be satisfied. The borrower may begin submitting eligible project costs for reimbursement following closing. To receive a disbursement, borrowers must submit a requisition form that will require borrowers to verify continued VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 compliance with the loan agreement. The requisition form includes certification that the disbursements are being made against incurred eligible project costs and in accordance with the terms of the credit agreement. It may also include confirmation that there have been no changes to the construction plan or any material events and that the representations and warranties included in the loan agreement are still true and correct, among other items. Each request for disbursement must include supporting documentation to ensure that the Corps can evaluate the costs for program eligibility, project allocability, and reasonableness. The Corps cannot provide a complete description of expressly ineligible costs because eligibility is dependent on a number of factors such as whether the costs were incurred through federally compliant contracts. Costs incurred prior to civil construction (such as for project planning and design) are eligible for disbursement regardless of the project’s current stage of development at the time of the disbursement request consistent with the construction plan identified in the credit agreement. Borrowers may request WIFIA funds disbursements as frequently as once per month. The Corps’ goal is to have disbursement available in the borrower’s account 15 calendar days after receiving a disbursement request. 5. Emergency Action Plan One commenter suggested that the Corps should require all credit assistance applicants to have an Emergency Action Plan (EAP) to be eligible for credit assistance and submit an updated EAP every 10 years. As evidence for the recommendation, the commenter noted that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) requires all applicants for the Rehabilitation of High Hazard Potential Dam Grant Program (RHHPDGP) to have an EAP. In Title IV, Section 5006 of Public Law 114–322, the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act (WIIN) which authorized the Rehabilitation of High Hazard Potential Dam Grant Program, Congress made an EAP approved by the relevant state dam safety agency a condition for receipt of grant assistance. Consequently, the requirement for an EAP to be eligible for HHPDGP is due to legislation and not regulation or policy alone. Conversely, in legislation authorizing the WIFIA program and the appropriations acts funding the WIFIA program to date, Congress has not included this PO 00000 Frm 00045 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32665 requirement as a condition for eligibility for WIFIA credit assistance. As a result, the Corps will rely on any applicable State requirements and will not adopt the proposed change. 6. Borrower Eligibility One commenter requested that the Corps explore ways to provide access to WIFIA credit assistance to private individuals who may own non-Federal dams that may pose a hazard to downstream communities. While Corps acknowledges the importance of mitigating the risks posed by dams owned by private individuals, Section 3904 of Title 33 of the U.S. Code defines entities that are eligible for WIFIA assistance and does not include private individuals as an eligible borrower. However, privately held corporations remain eligible for WIFIA credit assistance. 7. Reporting Requirements and Reviews Two commenters expressed concerns about the need for the Corps to mitigate the burden of project level reviews to an appropriate level. The Corps notes that technical documents will not be provided to any Corps Divisions or Districts for review and approval; all reviews necessary to complete the loan underwriting and construction oversight process will be completed by the WIFIA program. Each WIFIA project will be required to meet applicable construction and regulatory standards of the State in which the project is located. The Corps does not anticipate requiring additional reporting beyond annual project performance report (public benefits report), audited financial statements, and construction reports identified in this rule. For loans and/or projects which represent unusual risk, the Corps will retain the ability to augment its standard reporting requirements while recognizing the need to mitigate unnecessary burden on borrowers. An additional commenter asked the Corps to clarify how it intends to determine the project is economically justified, such as through a benefit/cost ratio calculation. Under the rule, ‘‘economically justified’’ means that the anticipated benefits will exceed the costs. Although OMB Circular A–94 does not apply to non-Federal recipients of loans and, to be accordance with the criteria outlined in 85 FR 39189, all projects funded under this rule are not Federal activities, A–94 provides useful guidance on measuring benefits and costs. Consistent with that guidance, Corps will determine whether collateral provided for the CWIFP credit assistance, which functions as a proxy E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32666 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations for the value beneficiaries receive from the project, exceed applicable project costs. IV. Program Information A. Funding The Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (FCRA), Title V of Public Law 101–508, codified at 2 U.S.C. 661–661f, requires that agencies estimate the longterm cost of providing direct loans and loan guarantees on a net present value basis and requires that agencies have the necessary budget authority appropriated before entering into an obligation for a loan. To date, $76 million in appropriations have been provided to the Corps for the cost of credit assistance for non-Federal dams under WIFIA. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 B. Borrower Eligibility Section 3904 of Title 33 of the U.S.C., defines entities that are eligible for WIFIA assistance. To be eligible under this program, a borrower must be one of the following: 1. A corporation; 2. A partnership; 3. A joint venture; 4. A trust; 5. A State, or local governmental entity, agency, or instrumentality; 6. A Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments; or 7. A State infrastructure financing authority. While Section 3904(5) includes ‘‘Federal’’ entities in the list of entities that are eligible to receive assistance, this program will not issue credit assistance to ‘‘Federal’’ entities or activities because recording credit assistance to a Federal entity or activity on a net present value basis would be inconsistent with 31 U.S.C. 1501, existing Government-wide guidance, and a cash budget. As required by Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations act of 2021 and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the credit assistance program covered by this final rule must be administered in accordance with the WIFIA criteria published on June 30, 2020 (85 FR 39189). Please review the criteria published at 85 FR 39189 for additional background and information regarding project eligibility. C. Project Eligibility Section 3905 of Title 33 of the U.S.C. defines projects eligible for assistance. To be eligible under this program, a project must fall under one of the following four categories: 1. Safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private; and which meet the statutory requirements of Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 and be in accordance with the criteria outlined in 85 FR 39189. 2. Any project that meets the criteria under C.1. above must also be a project for flood damage reduction, hurricane and storm damage reduction, environmental restoration, coastal or inland harbor navigation improvement, or inland and intracoastal waterways navigation improvement that the Secretary determines is technically sound, economically justified, and environmentally acceptable,7 including— a. A project to reduce flood damage; b. A project to restore aquatic ecosystems; c. A project to improve the inland and intracoastal waterways navigation system of the United States; and d. A project to improve navigation of a coastal inland harbor of the United States, including channel deepening and construction of associated general navigation features. 3. Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property for a project that meets the criteria under C.1. above— a. If the acquisition is integral to a project eligible for WIFIA credit assistance; or b. Pursuant to an existing plan that, in the judgment of the Secretary, would mitigate the environmental impacts of water resources infrastructure projects that are otherwise eligible for WIFIA credit assistance. 4. A combination of projects, each of which is eligible for WIFIA credit assistance, for which a single application is submitted and which is secured by a common security pledge. Title I, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act limited use of the appropriated funding to safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of state, local government, public utility, or private. Dam removal is an eligible project under this authorization. In addition, as noted above, Title I, Division D of the Consolidated 7 The Corps’ new definition (provided below at Sec. 386.2(l)), in conjunction with the timing provisions of Sec. 386.3(g), clarifies that when making a final determination regarding whether a project is environmentally acceptable, the Corps will consider the project’s environmental impacts in their entirety, as required by NEPA. PO 00000 Frm 00046 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 Appropriations Act, 2021 stipulates that ‘‘none of the direct loans or loan guarantee authority made available under this heading shall be available for any project unless the Secretary and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget have certified in advance in writing that the direct loan or loan guarantee, as applicable, and the project comply with the criteria . . .’’ published in the Federal Register on June 30, 2020 (85 FR 39189). D. Project Cost Eligibility Section 3906 of Title 33 of the U.S.C. defines eligible activities with respect to eligible projects as the following four types of project costs: 1. The cost of development-phase activities, including planning, feasibility analysis (including any related analysis necessary to carry out an eligible project), revenue forecasting, environmental review, permitting, preliminary engineering and design work, and other pre-construction activities. 2. The cost of construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and replacement activities. 3. The cost of the acquisition of real property or an interest in real property (including water rights, land relating to the project, and improvements to land), environmental mitigation, construction contingencies, and acquisition of equipment; and 4. The cost of capitalized interest necessary to meet market requirements, reasonably required reserve funds, capital issuance expenses, and other carrying costs during construction. In addition to the statutory project cost eligibility requirements listed above, the Corps program allows for fees associated with obtaining WIFIA funds to be considered as part of eligible project costs, as authorized by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), limited to the Application, Transaction Processing, and Servicing fees as described below in Section IV.H (Fees). Proceeds from the WIFIA credit assistance shall not be utilized to provide cash contributions to the Corps for project-related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7). The ‘‘Optional Credit Subsidy Fee’’ is not an eligible cost. E. Statutory Requirements WIFIA contains the following requirements, as paraphrased below, which are restated in the final rule: • Public or private applicants for credit assistance would be required to submit applications to the Corps in order to be considered for approval (33 U.S.C. 3903). E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 • Project financing would be required to be repayable, in whole or in part, from State or local taxes, user fees, or other dedicated revenue sources that also secure the senior project obligations of the project; to include a rate covenant, coverage requirement, or similar security feature supporting the project obligations; and may have a lien on revenues subject to any lien securing project obligations (33 U.S.C. 3908 (b)(3)). • In the case of a project that is undertaken by an entity that is not a State or local government or an agency or instrumentality of a State or local government, or a Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments, the project that the entity is undertaking would be required to be publicly sponsored. Public sponsorship means that the obligor can demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the Secretary, that it has consulted with the affected State, local, or Tribal government in which the project is located, or is otherwise affected by the project, and that such government supports the proposed project. Support could be shown by a certified letter signed by the approving municipal department or similar agency, mayor or other similar designated authority, local ordinance, or any other means by which local government approval can be evidenced (33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(4)). • To be eligible for financing, a prospective borrower would be required to have developed an operations and maintenance plan that identifies adequate revenues to operate, maintain, and repair the project during its useful life (33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(6)). Additionally, projects receiving WIFIA credit assistance would not be able to use that assistance for operations and maintenance activities. F. Application Process For each fiscal year that Congress appropriates funds for credit assistance under this program, the Corps will provide detailed instructions for submitting preliminary applications and applications, as well as the due dates for submissions. It will advise prospective borrowers of the estimated amount of funding available to support Federal credit instruments and information required in a preliminary application and application not detailed in this rule. The application process has two steps. The first step requires the submission of a preliminary application document, which has been submitted to OMB for approval under OMB Control Number 0710–0026, titled ‘‘Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) Preliminary Application.’’ No VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 fees are established for this preliminary application step. The Corps will review these preliminary applications and determine which applicants will be invited to continue in the application process and submit applications. An invitation to submit an application does not imply an obligation by the Corps to enter into a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. Those applicants that choose to submit an application will be required to include an application fee, if applicable. Consequently, the Corps anticipates that the fees established in this rule will only apply to those projects. See Paragraph III.H. below for more information on fees. The purpose of the preliminary application is to provide the Corps with the information necessary to determine whether a given project is eligible under the WIFIA statute, appropriations, and regulations. This serves to provide the Corps with sufficient information to evaluate preliminary applications and to invite prospective borrowers to submit applications. The purpose of the application is to provide the Corps with materials necessary to underwrite the proposed WIFIA assistance. The application will require similar information to the preliminary application, but with a greater level of detail and more fully developed information in support of the applicant’s proposal. The application must include sufficient information to allow the Secretary to make the determination required by 33 U.S.C. 3905(1) that the project is technically sound, economically justified, and environmentally acceptable. The information required to support this determination will depend on various factors, including but not limited to the purpose and scope of the activity proposed for WIFIA assistance. Applicants for WIFIA assistance should refer to any prior analysis that could assist the Corps in confirming the determination required by 33 U.S.C. 3905(1). The Corps does not expect the application to provide the level of analysis required for traditional Corps feasibility studies. Applicants should provide information to enable the Corps to determine that the project will meet all applicable engineering, safety, and other technical standards; that it is economically justified; and that it will satisfy all necessary environmental requirements to include requirements associated with the Corps Programmatic Environmental Assessment prepared for this rule under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). In addition, the application must include a PO 00000 Frm 00047 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32667 description of the extent to which the project financing plan includes any other form of Federal assistance (including grants), in addition to WIFIA credit assistance. This information directly relates to the total Federal risk exposure across all Federal programs and will require information on all possible sources of Federal support. The Corps will also be coordinating with other Federal agencies, such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), on other Federal programs that may be used to fund or finance projects under this rule. Additional information regarding the requirements for an applicant’s submittal would be described in the application materials. The application also should address any connection between the proposed WIFIA assistance and other Federal activities. In order for non-Federal flood risk management projects to be eligible for future Federal repair or rehabilitation assistance following storm events under 33 U.S.C. 701n, applicants would need to satisfy requirements from that program. Applicants can consult with the Corps WIFIA office to assist in understanding whether activities proposed for WIFIA assistance might implicate other Federal authorities and funding. G. Creditworthiness As provided in WIFIA, the Secretary must determine that every funded project is creditworthy. 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1). An overarching goal of the creditworthiness determination process is to ensure that each project that is ultimately offered credit assistance advances the WIFIA program’s mission while providing a level of risk exposure that is acceptable to the Corps. Therefore, the WIFIA program will evaluate applications for financial assistance based on credit risks over the repayment period of the WIFIA credit assistance. As required by 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1), the creditworthiness determination will be based on a review of the following: • Terms, conditions, financial structure, and security features of the proposed financing; • Dedicated revenue source(s) securing the financing; • Financial assumptions upon which the project is based; and • Financial soundness and credit history and outlook of the borrower. H. Fees Sections 3908(b)(7), 3909(b), and 3909(c)(3) of 33 U.S.C. allow the Corps to collect user fees from applicants to cover some or all of the costs associated with administering the program. The E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32668 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 Corps is establishing fees associated with the provision of Federal credit assistance under the WIFIA program. As specified under 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), 3909(b), and 3909(c)(3), Congress authorizes the Corps to charge fees to recover all or a portion of the Corps’ cost of providing credit assistance and the costs of conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services in the field of municipal and project finance to assist in the underwriting and servicing of Federal credit instruments. The Corps is establishing an application fee, transaction processing fee, annual servicing fee, optional credit subsidy fee, and enhanced monitoring fee to cover these costs to the extent not covered by Congressional appropriations. As described in greater detail below, the types of fees the Corps will charge are consistent with other Federal credit programs. The rationale for establishing fees associated with the provision of credit assistance is to cover the Corps’ cost of administering the program to the extent these costs are not covered by appropriations. To effectively administer the program, the Corps will incur both internal administrative costs (staffing, program support contracts, and other costs) as well as costs associated with conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services in the field of municipal and project finance, to assist in the underwriting of the Federal credit instrument. The Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act of 2016, Public Law 114–332, in section 5008(c), amended WIFIA to allow, at the request of an applicant, the financing of some fees as eligible costs as defined below. Borrowers are permitted to finance eligible fees as part of the WIFIA credit assistance. 1. Application Fee The Corps will require a nonrefundable application fee for each project that is invited to submit an application (second step following submission of a preliminary application) for credit assistance under WIFIA, if applicable. The application fee will be due upon submission of the application. This application fee supports the Corps’ planning efforts by helping to ensure that the program invites only the appropriate number of applicants that it has the capacity to fund. In the event that the prospective borrower has not completed and submitted a full application within oneyear of the Corps’ invitation to apply for credit assistance, the prospective VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 borrower must submit to the Corps a request for extension prior to the expiration year that sets forth the prospective borrower’s rationale for an extension, summarizes the prospective borrower’s progress achieved on the project to date, and provides an updated schedule of project development activities, including submission of the WIFIA application. The Corps may grant this extension after evaluating the progress of the prospective borrower’s application and its readiness to apply. The application fee will be waived for applications from public entities for projects serving small communities or economically disadvantaged communities. See Paragraph III.I. in the regulatory text for the definitions of small communities and economically disadvantaged communities for the purpose of this credit assistance program. For all other project applications, the application fee is $25,000. This $25,000 application fee represents an amount equal to 0.125 percent of the minimum threshold project cost ($20 million, 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(2)(A)), which the Corps considers to be sufficient to begin the financial, engineering, and legal analysis of the project while providing assurance that the applicant intends to proceed to closing. The Corps will undertake significant costs to evaluate applications and hire expert firms for underwriting and considers an application fee essential for applicants to show good faith in applying for credit assistance, to help cover the agency’s administrative costs in processing applications, and to ensure effective administration of the program. The application will not be reviewed without fee payment. The Corps will only invite projects to submit an application and application fee if the Corps believes there is a reasonable expectation that the project could receive financing. However, an invitation to submit an application does not guarantee that a project will proceed to financial close. 2. Transaction Processing Fees For projects invited to submit an application, the Corps will require payment of transaction processing fees at the time of closing, or at the time the application is withdrawn or denied (in the event the project does not proceed to closing). The proceeds of any such fees will be used to pay the remaining portion of the Corps’ cost of processing the application for credit assistance, including the costs of conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms to assist in underwriting, drafting and negotiating the terms of the PO 00000 Frm 00048 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 Federal credit instrument. In procuring the services of third-party firms, the Corps may issue task orders with $0 funding (i.e., no Federal funds). In such situations, at the direction of the Corps, payments to the contractor for services will be paid (i) by or on behalf of the Corps or (ii) directly by the applicant for services rendered in accordance with the terms of a sponsor payment letter/ agreement executed by the applicant (or its affiliate) and the contractor. In all instances, when a contractor is engaged to represent the Corps or its representative on a WIFIA matter and is paid by the applicant (or its affiliate), the Corps or its representative, as applicable, will remain the client of the contractor. The Corps estimates these costs would generally be in the range of approximately $125,000 to $300,000 per project, with the expectation that more complex projects could exceed this range. However, prior to the transaction processing fees being incurred, the Corps will develop a more precise estimate based on its understanding of the project and associated financial and legal structure. The application fee described above will be credited to the transaction processing fee. For example, if the total transaction processing fees are $300,000 and the applicant pays $25,000 with the application, $275,000 will be due at closing, or earlier if the project does not proceed to closing, e.g., if the application is withdrawn or denied. The total transaction processing fee for each project will be set based on the costs incurred by the Corps for that specific project. Due to the nature of the transaction processing, the amount is expected to vary among applicants. This variation reflects the amount of time taken to process a loan, which may not directly correlate with the size of the loan. More complex transactions with lengthy negotiations will have higher costs. The Corps may waive a portion of the fee for public applicants if appropriations are available to pay for the Corps’ cost of administering the WIFIA program and to pay for loan processing. Funds appropriated to the program may pay for the administration of the program, including internal administrative costs of staffing, program support contracts (separate from the expert services described previously), and other internal administrative needs. To the extent appropriations are available in excess of those needed for the Corps’ internal administrative costs, the Corps may use the remaining available administrative allowance (less any amount needed for future years’ administration) to reduce fees. The E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations Corps may allocate additional administrative funds by reducing fees by an equal amount per loan for those projects serving economically disadvantaged communities, with public applicants. If additional administrative funds remain, the Corps may reduce fees by an equal amount for each remaining loan, with public applicants. 3. Servicing Fee The Corps will charge an annual servicing fee after closing of the loan. The fee will be dependent upon the costs of servicing the credit instrument (e.g., collecting and processing loan principal and interest payments) as determined by the Secretary. Such fees will be set at a level to enable the Corps to recover all or a portion of the costs to the Federal Government of servicing WIFIA credit instruments and will be determined at the time of closing. The Corps expects such fees to range from $10,000 to $50,000 annually per loan and to be adjusted for inflation. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 4. Optional Credit Subsidy Fee The Corps may charge a fee, with agreement of the applicant, to reduce the budget authority required to fund the credit instrument. The Corps anticipates scenarios where assessing such a fee will provide flexibility to allow an applicant to ‘‘buy down’’ the budget authority required for the credit instrument. This could allow an applicant to proceed to approval if sufficient budget authority would not otherwise be available. Such a fee will only be charged upon agreement by an applicant and shall not be considered an eligible project cost. Utilization of this fee will only be in rare instances. 5. Enhanced Monitoring Fee The Corps may charge a fee to cover extraordinary expenses if a borrower experiences difficulty relating to technical, financial, or legal matters or other events (e.g., engineering failures or financial workouts) that require the Corps to incur time or expenses beyond standard monitoring. The Corps will be entitled to payment in full from the borrower of additional fees in an amount determined by the Corps and of related fees and expenses of its independent consultants and outside counsel that are incurred directly by the Corps and not paid directly by the borrower. Such fees shall not be considered an eligible project cost. I. Credit Assistance Two types of credit instruments are permitted under WIFIA secured (direct) loans and loan guarantees. The second VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 credit instrument under 33 U.S.C. 3908 (e), referred to as loan guarantees are defined under the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1991 as a binding agreement by a Federal agency to make a loan guarantee when specified conditions are fulfilled by the borrower, the lender, or any other party to the guarantee agreements. Statutory requirements applicable to this credit instrument appear at 33 U.S.C. 3908 and 3909. Additional Terms and conditions for loans and loan guarantees will be negotiated between the Corps and successful applicants. While the extent of the loan guarantee will vary based on the financing requirements and risk characteristics of a transaction, loan guarantees are not expected to cover more than 80% of any third-party debt obligation. Any 100% guaranteed obligation(s) must be financed by the Federal Financing Bank (FFB) unless a waiver is granted by Treasury. In general, WIFIA limits the amount of credit assistance that may be provided to a project to 49% or less of reasonably-anticipated eligible project costs. However, the statute authorizes the Corps to use up to 25% of its budget authority to provide credit assistance to one or more projects of up to 80% (statutory cap on Federal participation) of the total costs of any given project. The 80% statutory cap on Federal participation would be determined by adding the total loan proceeds, direct appropriations, grants, or other applicable Federal funding. Following credit assistance issuance, future direct appropriations, grants, or other applicable Federal funding may be modified to maintain compliance with the 80% statutory cap. Note, however, that projects receiving direct Federal appropriations or other Federal funding may not be eligible to receive WIFIA credit assistance based on the eligibility criteria outlined in this rule as well as at 85 FR 39189, as they may be determined to be Federal in nature. The Corps would limit its budget authority to extending credit assistance to eligible entities for those entities’ use in directly carrying out activities eligible for assistance under 33 U.S.C. 3906. The Corps would not extend credit assistance or allow loan proceeds to be used by any entity to provide cash contributions to the Corps for project related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7). The Corps would generally use its budget authority to provide credit assistance for greater than 49% of eligible project costs to projects serving economically disadvantaged communities that would otherwise not be able to obtain WIFIA PO 00000 Frm 00049 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32669 credit assistance. For the purposes of this program, the Corps is defining economically disadvantaged communities as those that meet one of the following criteria: (a) low-income, (b) unemployment rate above national average, (c) Indian country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in the proximity of an Alaska Native Village, (d) U.S. Territories, or (e) identified as disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool (developed by the Council on Environmental Quality).8 The implementation of this definition may be modified as appropriate in response to updated tools and resources as they become available. Additionally, the Corps may use its budget authority to provide credit assistance for greater than 49% of eligible project costs when a project would be unable to proceed to closing without such additional assistance due to unforeseen events. 33 U.S.C. 3912. Unforeseen events that could prevent a project from going to closure may include: unexpected loss of other sources of financing, increased cost of capital, or acts of nature. In such an event, the Corps would reexamine the creditworthiness of the project and only provide funding if the project can still meet all requirements of the program. Costs incurred, and the value of any integral in-kind contributions made before receipt of credit assistance may be considered in calculating eligible project costs upon approval of the Secretary. Such costs and integral inkind contributions must be directly related to the development or execution of the project and must be eligible project costs per 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(2). In addition, such costs, excluding the value of any integral in-kind contributions, are payable from the proceeds of the Federal credit instrument and would be considered incurred costs. Capitalized interest on the Federal credit instrument would not be eligible for calculating eligible project costs. The Corps would not obligate funds in the form of a loan or loan guarantee for a project prior to (1) to issuance of a determination that the Federal action is eligible for a Categorical Exclusion, (2) issuance of a Finding of No Significant Impact, or (3) issuance of a Record of Decision. The credit agreement would include the anticipated schedule for loan disbursements. However, actual disbursements would be based on costs incurred in accordance with the 8 Currently available at https:// screeningtool.geoplatform.gov. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 32670 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations approved construction plan. This requirement would protect the Corps in the event of non-performance. As required by section 3908(b)(4) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the interest rate on a secured loan would be equal to or greater than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of execution of the credit agreement. The base interest rate can be identified through use of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) investments. The WIFIA program would estimate the yield on comparable Treasury securities by adding one basis point to the SLGS daily rate with a maturity that is closest to the weighted average loan life of the WIFIA credit assistance. As allowed by statute at 33 U.S.C. 3908(c)(2), scheduled loan repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan or loan guarantee shall commence not later than 5 years after the projected date of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement, as determined by the Secretary. However, scheduled loan repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan or loan guarantee to a State infrastructure financing authority would commence not later than 5 years after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. The final maturity of the credit agreement shall be in no instance later than 35 years after the projected date of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. As required by section 3908(b)(5) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the final maturity date of a secured loan would be the earlier of the date that is (1) 35 years after the date of substantial completion of the project, as determined by the Secretary, or (2) the useful life of the project, as determined by the Secretary. However, the final maturity date of a secured loan to a State infrastructure financing authority would be not later than 35 years after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. In determining the useful life of the project, for the purposes of establishing the final maturity date of the Federal credit instrument, the Secretary would consider the useful economic life of the asset(s) being financed, as required under OMB Circular A–129.9 As required by statute, the Corps’ Federal credit instrument may have a 9 At the time of publication of this rule, the OMB circular may be accessed electronically at https:// www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/ omb/circulars/A129/a-129.pdf. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 junior claim to other debt issued by the obligor in terms of its priority interest in the project’s pledged security. However, the Corps’ claim on pledged security would not be subordinated to the claims of any holder of the project obligations in the event of a bankruptcy, insolvency, or liquidation of the obligor of the project. The Corps’ interest may include collateral other than pledged revenues. J. Rating Requirement The Corps, as required by 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1)(D)(i), would require each applicant to furnish a preliminary rating opinion letter as part of the application process. The applicant would be responsible for identifying and approaching one or more Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations (NRSROs) to obtain such a letter. This letter must indicate that the applicant project’s senior obligations (which may be the Federal credit instrument), have the potential of attaining an investment-grade rating. As required by Section 3907 (a)(1)(D)(ii) of the WIFIA, 33 U.S.C. 3901 et seq., the Corps would require each applicant to provide, prior to final acceptance and financing of the project, final rating opinion letters from at least two rating agencies indicating that the senior obligations of the project have an investment-grade rating. If the Federal credit instrument is the project’s senior obligation, these ratings must apply to all project obligations with claims at parity to that of the Federal credit instrument on the security pledged to the Federal credit instrument, including the Federal credit instrument. The Corps would also require as a matter of policy, prior to final execution of the loan agreement or loan guarantee agreement, that the applicant provide at least one final rating opinion letter which provides a credit rating on the final negotiated direct loan or loan guarantee that does not include consideration of the full faith and credit of the United States of America. K. Federal Requirements Recipients of WIFIA credit assistance would be required to comply with Federal requirements applicable to all federally-financed projects. The final rule provides a non-exhaustive list of these requirements in Section V (Statutory and Executive Order Reviews). L. American Iron and Steel Requirements Recipients of WIFIA credit assistance would be required to comply, per 33 U.S.C. 3914(a), with American Iron and PO 00000 Frm 00050 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 Steel (AIS) requirements, which requires that if any WIFIA assistance is provided for construction, alteration, maintenance, or repair of a project, all of the iron and steel products used in the project must be produced in the United States. These products include lined or unlined pipes and fittings, manhole covers and other municipal castings, hydrants, tanks, flanges, pipe clamps and restraints, valves, structural steel, reinforced precast concrete, and construction materials. 33 U.S.C. 3914(b). This requirement applies to all iron and steel products used in the project, not only those paid for with proceeds from the WIFIA credit assistance. M. Labor Standards (Davis-Bacon Act of 1931) The WIFIA requires recipients of WIFIA credit assistance to pay all laborers and mechanics employed by contractors or subcontractors’ wages at rates not less than those prevailing for the same type of work on similar construction in the immediate locality, as determined by the Secretary of Labor. 33 U.S.C. 3909(h) (cross-referencing Title VI of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act); 33 U.S.C. 1372. This is commonly referred to as Davis-Bacon wage requirements. This requirement applies to all laborers and mechanics working on a project, not only those paid from proceeds of the WIFIA credit assistance. N. Reporting Requirements The Corps will require, at a minimum, that any recipient of WIFIA credit assistance must make available to the Corps an annual project performance report and audited financial statements to the Corps within the time period stated in the credit agreement following the recipient’s fiscal year-end for each year during which the recipient’s obligation to the Federal Government remains in effect. The Corps may conduct periodic financial and compliance audits of the recipient, as determined necessary by the Corps. The specific credit agreement between the recipient of credit assistance and the Corps may contain additional reporting requirements. This would be a necessary and important requirement in order to allow the Corps to provide proper and sufficient oversight of federally-financed projects. O. Selection Criteria Congress enacted WIFIA with the goal of accelerating investment in our nation’s water infrastructure by providing credit assistance to creditworthy projects of major E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations importance to the water sector. Only eligible projects will be selected. The project priorities established under this rule are as follows: Projects serving small, rural communities and economically disadvantaged communities and projects serving Tribal communities. The program’s goal is to enable local investment in projects that enhance community resilience to flooding, while supporting the Corps’ policy initiatives by prioritizing the projects listed above. Section 3907(b)(2) of Title 33 of the U.S. Code establishes 11 criteria, at a minimum, for selecting among eligible projects to receive credit assistance, but does not prohibit the Corps from identifying additional selection criteria and requirements. As such, the Corps will utilize the following 12 selection criteria. 1. The extent to which the project is nationally or regionally significant, with respect to the generation of public benefits, such as— a. The reduction of flood risk; b. The improvement of water quality and quantity, including aquifer recharge; c. The protection of drinking water, including source water protection; d. The support of domestic and international commerce; and e. The restoration of degraded aquatic ecosystem structures. 2. The extent to which the project financing plan includes public or private financing, in addition to WIFIA credit assistance. 3. The likelihood that WIFIA credit assistance would enable the project to proceed at an earlier date than the project would otherwise be able to proceed. 4. The extent to which the project uses new or innovative approaches. 5. The amount of budget authority required to fund the WIFIA Federal credit instrument. 6. The extent to which the project— a. Protects against extreme weather event, such as floods or hurricanes; or b. Helps maintain or protect the environment. 7. The extent to which a project serves regions with significant clean energy exploration, development, or production areas. 8. The extent to which a project serves regions with significant water resource challenges, including the need to address— a. Water quality concerns in areas of regional, national, or international significance; b. Water quantity concerns related to groundwater, surface water, or other water sources; VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 c. Significant flood risk; d. Water resource challenges identified in existing regional, State, or multistate agreements; or e. Water resources with exceptional recreational value or ecological assistance. 9. The extent to which the project addresses identified municipal, State, or regional priorities. 10. The readiness of the project to proceed toward development, including a demonstration by the obligor that there is a reasonable expectation that the contracting process for construction of the project can commence not later than 90 days after the date on which a Federal credit instrument is obligated for the project under WIFIA. 11. The extent to which WIFIA credit assistance reduces overall Federal contributions to the project. 12. The extent to which the project serves economically disadvantaged communities and spurs economic opportunity for, and minimally adversely impacts, disadvantaged communities and their populations. Criterion (5) is directly related to a project’s creditworthiness, financial viability, and the Corps’ capacity to make a loan. This criterion would be used to assess projects separate from the assessment under the other selection criteria. In particular, it would inform the Corps’ ability to provide funding in an equitable manner to prospective borrowers seeking financing. The amount of budget authority used by a project would be an important consideration when selecting projects. The greater the budget authority used by a project, which is a function of both project size and creditworthiness, the less budget authority is available to finance other projects. Selecting projects would be at the discretion of the Secretary who may decide that a project that uses a disproportionally high level of budget authority provides essential public safety benefits and deserves greater consideration. The Corps added criterion (12) to reflect the Corps’ intention to address the needs of economically disadvantaged communities where obtaining financing for critical water resources infrastructure presents additional difficulties and to further current Administration priorities as expressed in E.O. 13985, E.O. 13990, and E.O. 14008.10 While the 10 Executive Order 13985 of January 20, 2021. Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government. Executive Order 13990 of Jan 20, 2021. Protecting Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis. PO 00000 Frm 00051 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32671 creditworthiness requirement, as well as the requirement to obtain an investment-grade rating on senior obligations, may be a challenge for economically disadvantaged communities, the flexibility and low interest rates of the Federal credit instrument may improve overall financial feasibility and burden to the community. V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review & Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review E.O. 12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review,’’ and E.O. 13563, ‘‘Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,’’ require that significant regulatory actions be submitted for review to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in OMB. These orders also direct agencies to assess the costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if the regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits. This rule has been determined significant under E.O. 12866. In accordance with E.O. 12866 and E.O. 13563, this significant regulatory action was submitted to OMB for review. The costs to the public of implementing the Corps WIFIA program, are demonstrated in Section D. Regulatory Flexibility Act below. The costs to large and small entities will be the same and include: the fees charged to applicants and loan recipients, as well as any remaining costs of administering the program that are not fully covered by the user fees and instead require support by Federal appropriations. The total estimated costs are anticipated to be between approximately $175,000 and $500,000, plus an annual cost between $20,000 and $60,000. The benefits of implementing the Corps WIFIA program include: (1) the value of the benefits provided by non-Federal dam safety projects enabled by future the Corps WIFIA credit assistance (for example, flood damages prevented by dam safety improvement projects), and (2) the savings realized by the borrowers from the lower lending rates of the Corps WIFIA credit assistance. The transfer effects of this rule are the credit subsidy costs for loans or loan guarantees issued to support safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair non-federal dams. To date, Congress has appropriated $81 Executive Order 14008 of January 27, 2021. Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32672 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations million in credit subsidy funding for the Corps WIFIA program. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 B. Executive Order 11988: Floodplain Management Projects funded under this rule will meet or exceed applicable State, local, Tribal, and territorial standards for flood risk and floodplain management, as well as E.O. 11988, as amended by E.O. 13690, which directs Federal agencies to avoid, to the extent possible, long-and short-term adverse impacts associated with the occupancy and modification of the floodplain as well as to avoid direct and indirect support of floodplain development wherever there is a practicable alternative. All projects under this rule are considered Federal actions under E.O. 11988 and thus, project applicants shall determine whether the proposed project will occur in the floodplain. If the project is located within the floodplain, the applicant must determine whether the action is critical or not and what floodplain standard to follow. The Corps will implement the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard (FFRMS), where appropriate, which is a flood standard established by E.O. 13690, that aims to build a more resilient future through the encouragement of consideration of current and future risk when Federal investments are used to build or rebuild near floodplains. The Corps will ensure unwise uses are avoided, where possible, including the increase or transfer of flood risks, resulting in adverse impacts to human health, safety, welfare, property, natural resources, or functions of floodplains. Further guidance on implementation of E.O. 11988 can be found in the Corps Engineer Regulation 1165–2–26 (30 March 1984). Further information on FFRMS can be found at https:// www.iwr.usace.army.mil/Missions/ Flood-Risk-Management/Flood-RiskManagement-Program/About-theProgram/Policy-and-Guidance/FederalFlood-Risk-Management-Standard/. C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) It has been determined that 33 CFR part 386 does impose reporting or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. These reporting requirements have been submitted to OMB for approval under OMB Control Number 0710–0026, titled ‘‘Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) Preliminary Application.’’ D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) The RFA (5 U.S.C. 601) requires Federal agencies to consider the impact of regulations on small entities (small businesses, small organizations, or small government jurisdictions) in developing the proposed and final regulations. The RFA applies to the Corps WIFIA program rule since notice and comment are required as part of this rulemaking process. Congress has provided authority and funding required for the Corps to make direct loans and loan guarantees for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private. The Corps is establishing its new WIFIA program within the limitations set by Congress. This rule sets forth the policies and procedures that the Corps will use for receiving, evaluating, approving applications, and servicing and monitoring direct loans and loan guarantees. Small entities that would be impacted by this rule will be non-Federal dam owners who own dams that require loans in excess of $20,000,000. This includes small government jurisdictions and organizations who voluntarily submit a preliminary application and are subsequently invited to submit a full application. The Corps will only invite potential borrowers to submit an application and application fee if the Corps believes there is a reasonable expectation that the project could receive financing. The application fee will be waived for communities governed by small governmental jurisdictions (small communities) and economically disadvantaged communities. The Corps anticipates receiving approximately 50 preliminary applications each year from eligible entities per year, five of which are expected to be considered small entities. This estimate is derived from EPA’s WIFIA program, which has received 118 applications in total, of which 4 were from small communities, since the program’s implementation 2017. There are approximately 87,000 nonfederally owned dams in the US (some of which are owned by the same entity). Of the NAICS classifications, the most applicable industry classification for these entities is the ‘‘Water Supply and Irrigation Systems’’ (NAICS code 221310) and the ‘‘Administration of Air and Water Resource and Solid Waste Management Programs’’ (NAICS code 924110). Information on these industries is provided in the tables below. Based on the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Size Standard/ Small Entity Threshold and the average annual receipts, the Water Supply and Irrigation Systems industry has 3,283 firms that qualify as small entities. Small business size standards are not established for the Public Administration sector. According to the SBA, ‘‘concerns performing operational services for the administration of a government program are classified under the NAICS private sector industry based on the activities performed.’’ The closest private sector industry fulfilling the functions of potential the Corps WIFIA borrowers within the Public Administration sector is the ‘‘Water Supply and Irrigation Systems’’ subsector, therefore the small business estimates for that subsector are used in this analysis. NAICS code Industry subsector description SBA size standard/small entity threshold (average annual receipts) 221310 ..................................................... 924110 ..................................................... Water Supply and Irrigation Systems ..... Administration of Air and Water Resource and Solid Waste Management Programs. $36.0 M ................................................... Small business size standards are not established for this Sector. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 PO 00000 Frm 00052 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Total small businesses 3,283 n/a Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations 32673 WATER SUPPLY AND IRRIGATION SYSTEMS [NAICS code 221310] Enterprise size ($1,000) 01: 02: 03: 04: 05: 06: 07: 08: 09: 10: 11: 12: 13: 14: 15: 16: 17: 18: Firms Total ....................................................................... <100 ....................................................................... 100–499 ................................................................. 500–999 ................................................................. 1,000–2,499 ........................................................... 2,500–4,999 ........................................................... 5,000–7,499 ........................................................... 7,500–9,999 ........................................................... 10,000–14,999 ....................................................... 15,000–19,999 ....................................................... 20,000–24,999 ....................................................... 25,000–29,999 ....................................................... 30,000–34,999 ....................................................... 35,000–39,999 ....................................................... 40,000–49,999 ....................................................... 50,000–74,999 ....................................................... 75,000–99,999 ....................................................... 100,000+ ................................................................ Establishments 3,334 684 1,300 569 448 143 54 29 25 12 9 5 5 5 6 8 5 27 Employment 4,131 684 1,300 570 455 151 67 38 40 17 19 14 9 30 11 68 24 634 Annual payroll ($1,000) 36,836 1,088 3,420 2,676 3,492 1,968 1,208 705 1,035 416 501 424 282 701 678 1,605 904 15,733 2,346,769 9,494 87,118 106,172 165,793 104,614 67,701 40,656 58,494 29,630 25,101 27,005 15,409 36,112 60,553 96,580 76,175 1,340,162 Receipts ($1,000) 11,712,605 35,768 336,983 402,485 694,133 482,800 322,787 219,741 277,199 166,138 99,781 84,788 117,611 123,970 179,170 392,037 303,054 7,474,160 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 Source: U.S. Census Bureau 2017 SUSB Data Table ‘‘Number of Firms and Establishments, Employment, Annual Payroll, and Receipts by Industry and Enterprise Receipts Size: 2017’’. Eligible small entities that qualify for WIFIA credit assistance and plan to utilize debt financing such as bank loans, bonds, or a WIFIA credit assistance to fund an eligible project, will incur compliance costs associated with any such debt instrument. As such, the compliance costs to obtain a WIFIA credit assistance noted below in most instances represents a meaningful savings compared to alternative capital market debt financing options. WIFIA compliance costs likely include the following: • Fees: The WIFIA application fee of $25,000 will be waived for small and/ or disadvantaged communities. All WIFIA credit assistance recipients will be charged a transaction processing fee, likely between $125,000 and $300,000, at the time of loan closing to cover the costs incurred by the Corps for the processing each loan. The cost of the fee will depend on the complexity of the transaction (more complex transactions will have higher transaction processing fees). Fees would first be reduced by an equal amount per loan for those projects serving economically disadvantaged communities, with public applicants. If additional administrative funds remain, the Corps may reduce fees by an equal amount for each remaining loan, with public applicants. Additionally, all WIFIA credit assistance recipients will be charged an annual servicing fee, likely between $10,000 and $50,000. This cost of this fee will depend on the costs of servicing the credit instrument. The transaction processing fee and the annual servicing fee will be determined VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 at the time of loan closing. To facilitate access to the funding, all applicants have the option to use loan proceeds to pay for all consulting reports and application fees. This amount is less than the underwriting fees incurred for alternative debt financings, which are usually 1.0% of the borrowed amount. • Rating letters: The Corps WIFIA program will require borrowers to provide credit rating letters before closing on the WIFIA credit assistance. Credit ratings typically cost approximately $50,000 to obtain. Credit ratings are a standard practice for alternative debt financings and as such, the cost to obtain one for Corps financing does not materially change the costs for small entities. • Reading the regulation: The regulation and other related documents are not expected to take more than a typical 8-hour workday to read and comprehend. Assuming an average hourly rate of $76.43/hour (the average hourly rate for architectural and engineering managers according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment and Wages data from May 2021), reading the regulation would cost approximately $1,300 for 2 employees to read the regulation. • Consulting fees: Consultants are not required to participate in the WIFIA program. However, eligible entities may opt to utilize support from consultants to prepare financial, legal, and technical documents required to support an application. Based on the eligible costs submitted by communities with executed EPA WIFIA loans to date, the PO 00000 Frm 00053 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 Corps estimates that should an entity opt to utilize such support, the cost is anticipated to be less than $75,000. This amount is less than the consulting fees incurred for alternative debt financings, which are usually in excess of $100,000. • Reporting: WIFIA requires that borrowers submit financial audit or financial condition reports, so that the program can monitor the status of the project and identify any changes to the credit risk posed to the Federal Government. These reports are already produced regularly by borrowers, so the added cost to borrowers is anticipated to be less than $5,000 per year. • Completing applications and corresponding with the Corps: Based on EPA figures from communities with executed EPA WIFIA loans, it is estimated that borrowers will spend approximately 50 hours per year completing required paperwork and correspondence with the Corps. Assuming an hourly wage of $76.43/ hour (the average hourly rate for architectural and engineering managers according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment and Wages data from May 2021), this is estimated to cost applicants and borrowers approximately $4,000 per year. • Record-keeping: It is anticipated that record-keeping costs for WIFIA credit assistance will not exceed $5,000 per year. The estimated costs to small business associated with the program are summarized in the table below. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32674 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations Fees $125,000–$350,000 plus $10,000–$50,000 annually Rating letters ............................................................................................. Loan interest ............................................................................................. Reading the regulation .............................................................................. Consulting fees ......................................................................................... Reporting ................................................................................................... Completing applications and corresponding with the Corps .................... Record-keeping ......................................................................................... Total ................................................................................................... These costs do not represent a significant economic impact. The only reason entities would proceed with the program is if there is a benefit compared to other alternative debt financings. The total estimated costs are anticipated to be between approximately $175,000 and $500,000, plus an annual cost between $20,000 and $60,000. For the affected industries, these costs range from 20% to 50% of average annual receipts (note: most costs included here are one-time costs; annually recurring costs range from 2% to 6% of average annual receipts for affected industries). Participation in the WIFIA program is voluntary and the Corps anticipates inviting approximately 5 small, nonFederal entities to apply for Federal credit assistance through the program. Because (1) participating in the program is voluntary and undertaken by small entities to affordably finance eligible projects, and (2) the cost of obtaining a WIFIA credit assistance is likely lower than the alternative forms of debt financing necessary to undertake a project, very few of the potentially affected small entities will experience a significant impact. Further, the WIFIA program eligibility will apply to 3,283 small entities, but the Corps expects only five to experience full impacts described above. The remainder will experience little to no impact from the rule. Therefore, the percentage of affected entities experiencing a significant impact is approximately 0.15%. Based on this result, the Corps certifies that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) This action does not contain an unfunded mandate of $100 million or more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any State, local, or Tribal governments or the private sector. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 $50,000. Based on loan amount and duration. $700–$1,300. $0–$75,000. $0–$5,000. $4,000 annually. $5,000 annually. $175,700–$481,300 Plus $19,000–$59,000 annually. F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the National Government and the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government. G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments This action does not have Tribal implications as specified in E.O. 13175. While a Tribal government, or a consortium of Tribal governments, may apply for WIFIA credit assistance as a voluntary action, this action does not have substantial direct effects on one or more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between the Federal Government and Indian tribes. The Corps invited 18 Tribal Governments identified in the NID with any primary owner type, except those identified as Federal, that owned dams of sufficient size to likely be interested in the program to two information sessions in 2023. The Corps will hold additional specific sessions for Tribes after issuance of this final rule to expand program awareness. H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental Health and Safety Risks This action is not subject to E.O. 13045 because it does not address environmental health or safety risks that would disproportionately affect children. This rulemaking provides the procedure to apply for credit assistance and establishes the fees related to the provision of Federal credit assistance under the WIFIA. The selection criteria used for evaluating and selecting among eligible projects to receive credit assistance contained in Section IV.O (Selection Criteria) of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of the preamble includes the extent to which the project generates public safety benefits. PO 00000 Frm 00054 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 I. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use This action is not a ‘‘significant energy action’’ because it is not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy and has not been designated by the OIRA Administrator as a significant energy action. This rulemaking simply provides the procedure to apply for credit assistance and establishes the fees related to the provision of Federal credit assistance under the Corps WIFIA program. J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA) This action is not subject to the NTTAA, Public Law 104–113, because it does not establish an environmental health or safety standard. K. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) This action of promulgating this rule will not have a significant effect on the human environment. Each project obtaining assistance under this program is required to adhere to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). These requirements apply at the time of application for assistance. The Corps has completed a Programmatic Environmental Assessment and associated Finding of No Significant Impact in support of this rule. These documents are available at https:// www.usace.army.mil/Missions/CivilWorks/Infrastructure/revolutionize/ CWIFP/. L. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations E.O. 12898 directs Federal agencies to identify and address the disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental effects of their actions on minority and lowincome populations. This action does not cause disproportionately high and adverse human health and E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations environmental effects on minority or low-income populations. The Corps anticipates that most of the adverse effects associated with projects would occur during construction and would be temporary, such as construction noise, air emissions from construction vehicles, erosion from disturbed surfaces and construction vehicle traffic or traffic detours. Impacts to communities from construction are not expected to be disproportionate to any identified environmental justice populations with the implementation of identified BMPs and as required by E.O. 12898. The Corps will address environmental justice for all projects receiving credit assistance consistent with the requirements of the NEPA review further described in Sec. 386.5(a) and CEQ guidance. M. Congressional Review Act (CRA) This action is subject to the CRA, and the Corps will submit a rule report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the United States. Pursuant to the CRA (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule as not a ‘‘major rule’’, as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 386 Administrative practice and procedure, Intergovernmental relations, Waterways. Approved by: Michael L. Connor, Assistant Secretary of the Army, (Civil Works). For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Corps is amending 33 CFR chapter II by adding part 386 to read as follows: ■ ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 PART 386—CREDIT ASSISTANCE FOR WATER RESOURCES INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS Sec. 386.1 Purpose and scope. 386.2 Definitions. 386.3 Limitations on assistance. 386.4 Application process. 386.5 Federal requirements. 386.6 Floodplain management. 386.7 American iron and steel. 386.8 Labor standards. 386.9 Investment-grade ratings. 386.10 Threshold criteria. 386.11 Selection criteria. 386.12 Term sheets and approvals. 386.13 Closing on the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. 386.14 Reporting requirements. 386.15 Fees. Authority: 33 U.S.C. 3901 et seq. § 386.1 Purpose and scope. The Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (WIFIA) VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 authorized a new Federal credit program for water resources infrastructure projects to be administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps). Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act limits the program to safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility or private. The purpose of this rule is to establish the process by which the Corps will administer such credit assistance, including the assessment of fees, and to set forth the policies and procedures that the Corps will use for receiving, evaluating, approving applications, and servicing and monitoring direct loans and loan guarantees. § 386.2 Definitions. The following definitions apply to this part: (a) Application means the form and attachments submitted by prospective borrowers that have been selected to apply for credit assistance after the review of letters of interest. (b) Borrower means any entity that enters into a direct loan or Loan Guarantee Agreement with the Corps that is primarily liable for payment of the principal or interest on a Federal credit instrument. ‘‘Borrower’’ is synonymous with ‘‘obligor.’’ ‘‘Obligor’’ is used in place of borrower in this part whenever ‘‘obligor’’ appears in a corresponding section of WIFIA. (c) Clean energy means systems, processes, and best practices for producing, converting, storing, transmitting, distributing, and consuming energy that avoid, reduce, or sequester the amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emitted to, or concentrated in, the atmosphere. (d) Community means a collection of people in a geographic area having one or more characteristic in common. The geographic area may be contained within or cross political subdivisions of States. (e) Credit agreement means a contractual agreement (or agreements) between the Corps and a borrower (and the lender, if applicable) establishing the terms and conditions, rules, and requirements of a secured loan or loan guarantee. (f) Credit assistance means a secured loan or loan guarantee under 33 U.S.C. 3908. (g) Credit subsidy shall have the same meaning as ‘‘cost’’ under section 502(5) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 PO 00000 Frm 00055 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32675 (2 U.S.C. 661a(5)), which is the net present value at the time the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement is executed. The credit subsidy cost for a given project is the net present value, at the time the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement is executed of the following estimated cash flows, discounted to the point of disbursement: (1) Payments by the Government to cover defaults and delinquencies, interest subsidies, or other payments; less (2) Payments to the Government including origination and other fees, penalties, and recoveries including the effects of changes in loan or debt terms resulting from the exercise by the borrower, eligible lender, or other holder of an option included in a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. (h) Economically disadvantaged community refers to a community that meets one of the following criteria: (1) Low-income; (2) Unemployment rate above national average; (3) Indian country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in the proximity of an Alaska Native Village; (4) U.S. Territories; or (5) Identified as disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool (developed by the Council on Environmental Quality).1 (i) Economically justified means that the anticipated benefits will exceed the costs. (j) Eligible entity means one of the following: (1) A corporation; (2) A partnership; (3) A joint venture; (4) A trust; (5) A State, or local government entity, agency, or instrumentality; (6) A Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments; or (7) A State infrastructure financing authority. (k) Eligible project costs means the amounts, which are paid by, or for the account of, a borrower in connection with a project, including the cost of: (1) Development-phase activities, including planning, feasibility analysis (including any related analysis necessary to carry out an eligible project), revenue forecasting, environmental review, permitting, preliminary engineering and design work, and other pre-construction activities. 1 Currently available at https:// screeningtool.geoplatform.gov. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 32676 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations (2) Construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and replacement activities. (3) Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property (including water rights, land relating to the project, and improvements to land), environmental mitigation, construction contingencies, and acquisition of equipment; and (4) Capitalized interest necessary to meet market requirements, reasonably required reserve funds, capital issuance expenses, and other carrying costs during construction. Capitalized interest on the Federal credit instrument is not an eligible project cost. (l) Environmentally acceptable means the project will satisfy all applicable and necessary environmental requirements to include those identified in Sec. 386.5(a), such as the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). (m) Federal credit instrument means a secured loan or loan guarantee authorized to be made available under 33 U.S.C. 3901–3914 with respect to a project. (n) Investment-grade rating means a rating category of BBB minus, Baa3, bbb minus, BBB (low), or higher assigned by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) to project obligations offered into the capital markets. (o) Iron and steel products means the following products made primarily of iron or steel: lined or unlined pipes and fittings, manhole covers and other municipal castings, hydrants, tanks, flanges, pipe clamps and restraints, valves, structural steel, reinforced precast concrete, and construction materials. (p) Lender means any non-Federal qualified institutional buyer (as defined in 17 CFR 230.144A(a), known as Rule 144A(a) of the Securities and Exchange Commission and issued under the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.)), including: (1) A qualified retirement plan (as defined in section 4974(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 4974(c)) that is a qualified institutional buyer; (2) A governmental plan (as defined in section 414(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 414(d)) that is a qualified institutional buyer; and (3) The Federal Financing Bank. (q) Loan guarantee means any guarantee or other pledge by the Secretary of the Army (Secretary) to pay all or part of the principal of and interest on a loan or other debt obligation issued by a borrower and funded by a lender. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 (r) Low income means the area has a per capita income of 80 percent or less of the national average. (s) Nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) means a credit rating agency identified and registered by the Office of Credit Ratings in the Securities and Exchange Commission under 15 U.S.C. 78c. (t) Non-Federal means an organization that is not an agency or instrumentality of the Federal Government, including State, interstate, Indian Tribal, or local government, as well as private organizations. (u) Preliminary application means the form and attachments prospective borrowers submit to the Corps to be considered for credit assistance following the announcement of available funding. (v) Project means: (1) Safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams (including dam removal) identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private; and which meets the statutory requirements of Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021, meet the criteria outlined in 85 FR 39189 (see division D of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (Pub. L. 116– 94)). (2) Any project that meets the criteria in paragraph (v)(1) of this section must also be a project for flood damage reduction, hurricane and storm damage reduction, aquatic environmental restoration, coastal or inland harbor navigation improvement, or inland and intracoastal waterways navigation improvement that the Secretary determines is technically sound, economically justified, and environmentally acceptable, including— (i) A project to reduce flood damage; (ii) A project to restore aquatic ecosystems; (iii) A project to improve the inland and intracoastal waterways navigation system of the United States; and (iv) A project to improve navigation of a coastal inland harbor of the United States, including channel deepening and construction of associated general navigation features. (3) Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property for a project that meets the criteria under paragraph (v)(1) of this section— (i) If the acquisition is integral to a project eligible for WIFIA credit assistance; or (ii) Pursuant to an existing plan that, in the judgment of the Secretary, would mitigate the environmental impacts of PO 00000 Frm 00056 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 water resources infrastructure projects otherwise eligible for WIFIA credit assistance. (4) A combination of projects secured by a common security pledge, each of which is eligible for WIFIA credit assistance, for which an eligible entity, or a combination of eligible entities, submits a single application. (w) Project obligation means any note, bond, debenture, or other debt obligation issued by a borrower in connection with the financing of a project, other than a Federal credit instrument. (x) Projected substantial completion date means the expected date as determined by the Secretary, at which the stage in the progress of the project when the project or designated portion thereof is sufficiently complete in accordance with the contract documents so that the project or designated portion thereof can be used for its intended use. (y) Prospective borrower means an eligible entity seeking credit assistance. (z) Publicly sponsored means the obligor can demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the Secretary, that it has consulted with the affected State, local, or Tribal government in which the project is located, or is otherwise affected by the project, and that such government supports the proposed project. Support can be shown by a certified letter signed by the approving municipal department or similar agency, mayor or other similar designated authority, local ordinance, or any other means by which local government approval can be evidenced. (aa) Secured loan means a direct loan or other debt obligation (including a note, bond, debenture, and sale or lease financing arrangement) issued by a borrower funded by the Secretary in connection with the financing of a project under 33 U.S.C. 3908. (bb) Small community means a community of not more than 25,000 individuals. (cc) State means any of the fifty States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, or any other territory or possession of the United States. (dd) State infrastructure financing authority means the State entity established or designated by the Governor of a State to receive a capitalization grant provided by, or otherwise carry out the requirements of, title VI of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1381 et seq.) or section 1452 of the Safe Drinking Water Act (42 U.S.C. 300j–12). (ee) Subsidy amount means the dollar amount of budget authority that is sufficient to cover the estimated longterm cost to the Federal Government of E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations a Federal credit instrument, calculated on a net present value basis, excluding administrative costs and any incidental effects on the governmental receipts or outlays in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 661 et seq.). (ff) Substantial completion means the stage in the progress of the project when the project or designated portion thereof is sufficiently complete in accordance with the contract documents so that the project or designated portion thereof can be used for its intended use. (gg) Technically sound means the project will meet all applicable engineering, safety, and other technical standards. (hh) Term sheet means a contractual agreement between the Corps and the borrower (and the lender, if applicable) that sets forth the key business terms and conditions of a Federal credit instrument. (ii) Territory means each of the commonwealths, territories, and possessions of the United States established in Title 48 of the U.S.C. (jj) Treatment works has the meaning given the term in section 212 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1292). (kk) Unemployment rate above national average means the area has an unemployment rate that is, for the most recent 24-month period for which data are available, at least 1 percent greater than the national average unemployment rate. (ll) WIFIA means the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113–121), as amended. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 § 386.3 Limitations on assistance. (a) The total amount of credit assistance offered to any project under this part shall not exceed 49% of the reasonably anticipated eligible project costs, or, if the secured loan does not receive an investment grade rating, the total amount of credit assistance shall not exceed the amount of the senior project obligations of the project (33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(2)(B)). (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, the Secretary may offer credit assistance in excess of 49% of the reasonably anticipated eligible project costs as long as such excess assistance combined for all projects does not require greater than 25% of the subsidy amount made available for the fiscal year, per 33 U.S.C. 3912(d). (1) Use of the authority to offer credit assistance in excess of 49% of the anticipated eligible project costs shall be considered on a case by case basis. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 (2) In the event this authority is used, all other criteria and requirements described in this part must be met and adhered to. (c) For each project receiving credit assistance, total Federal assistance may not exceed 80% of the total project costs, except for certain rural water projects authorized to be carried out by the Secretary of the Interior that includes among its beneficiaries a federally recognized Indian Tribe and for which the authorized Federal share of the total project costs is greater than 80%, and in accordance with 85 FR 39189 (see division D of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (Pub. L. 116–94)). (d) Proceeds from the credit assistance shall not be utilized to provide cash contributions to the Corps for project related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), limited to the application, transaction processing, and servicing fees as described in § 386.15. (e) Costs incurred, and the value of any integral in-kind contributions made, before receipt of credit assistance may be considered in calculating eligible project costs only upon approval of the Secretary. Such costs and integral inkind contributions must be directly related to the development or execution of the project and must be eligible project costs as defined in § 386.2. In addition, such costs, excluding the value of any integral in-kind contributions, are payable from the proceeds of the Federal credit instrument and shall be considered incurred costs for purposes of paragraph (h) of this section. Capitalized interest on the Federal credit instrument is not eligible for calculating eligible project costs. (f) No costs financed internally or with interim funding may be refinanced under this part later than a year following substantial completion of the project. (g) The Secretary shall not obligate funds in the form of a loan or loan guarantee for a project prior to: (1) To issuance of a determination that the Federal action is eligible for a Categorical Exclusion: (2) Issuance of a Finding of No Significant Impact; or (3) Issuance of a Record of Decision under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq. (h) The Secretary shall fund a secured loan based on the project’s financing needs. The credit agreement shall include the anticipated schedule for such loan disbursements. Actual disbursements will be based on incurred PO 00000 Frm 00057 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32677 costs, and in accordance with the approved construction plan, as evidenced by invoices or other documentation acceptable to the Secretary. (i) The interest rate on a secured loan will be equal to or greater than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of execution of the credit agreement as identified through use of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) investments. The yield on comparable Treasury securities will be estimated by adding one basis point to the SLGS daily rate with a maturity that is closest to the weighted average loan life of the Federal credit instrument, per 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(4). (j) The final maturity date of a secured loan will be the earlier of the date that is 35 years after the date of substantial completion of the project, as determined by the Secretary and identified in the credit agreement, or if the useful life of the project, as determined by the Secretary, is less than 35 years, the useful life of the project; however, the final maturity date of a secured loan to a State infrastructure financing authority will be not later than 35 years after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. In determining the useful life of the project, for the purposes of establishing the final maturity date of the Federal credit instrument, the Secretary will consider the useful economic life of the asset(s) being financed. (k) A secured loan will not be subordinated to the claims of any holder of project obligations in the event of bankruptcy, insolvency, or liquidation of the borrower of the project (33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(6)). (l) The Corps will establish a repayment schedule for a secured loan or loan guarantee based on the projected cash flow from project revenues and other repayment sources. Scheduled loan or loan guarantee repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan or loan guarantee will commence not later than 5 years after the projected date of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement, as determined by the Secretary (33 U.S.C. 3908(c)(A)); however, scheduled loan or loan guarantee repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan to a State infrastructure financing authority will commence not later than 5 years after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. The final maturity of the credit agreement shall be in no instance E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32678 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations later than 35 years after the projected date of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. § 386.4 Application process. (a) Each fiscal year for which budget authority is made available by Congress, the Corps shall publish a solicitation to announce the availability of credit assistance. It will specify how to electronically submit a preliminary application, the estimated amount of funding available to support Federal credit instruments, contact name(s), and other details for submissions and funding approvals. (b) Prospective borrowers seeking credit assistance under this part will be required to follow an application process requiring submission of the preliminary application as designated in the solicitation to announce the availability of credit assistance. In addition, the extent to which the project financing plan includes any other form of Federal assistance (including grants), in addition to WIFIA credit assistance, will be required to be provided in the application. (c) Following approval of the term sheet, and/or negotiation of satisfactory terms and conditions of the Federal credit instrument, the prospective borrower will proceed to closing, as described in § 386.13. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 § 386.5 Federal requirements. All projects receiving credit assistance under this part shall comply, where applicable, with: (a) Environmental authorities. (1) The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.; (2) Archeological and Historic Preservation Act, 16 U.S.C. 469–469c; (3) Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.; (4) Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.; (5) Coastal Barrier Resources Act, 16 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.; (6) Coastal Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. 1451 et seq.; (7) Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.; (8) Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, Executive Order 12898, 3 CFR, 1994 Comp., p. 859; (9) Floodplain Management, Executive Order 11988, as amended by Executive Order 13690; (10) Protection of Wetlands, Executive Order 11990, 3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 121, as amended by Executive Order 12608, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 245; VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 (11) Farmland Protection Policy Act, 7 U.S.C. 4201 et seq.; (12) Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 16 U.S.C. 661–666c, as amended; (13) Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.; (14) National Historic Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq..; (15) Safe Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. 300f et seq.; and (16) Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, 16 U.S.C. 1271 et seq. (b) Economic and miscellaneous authorities. (1) Debarment and Suspension, Executive Order 12549, 3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189; (2) New Restrictions on Lobbying, 31 U.S.C. 1352; (3) Prohibitions relating to violations of the Clean Water Act or Clean Air Act with respect to Federal contracts, grants, or loans under 42 U.S.C. 7606 and 33 U.S.C. 1368, and Executive Order 11738, 3 CFR, 1971–1975 Comp., p. 799; and (4) The Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, 42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq. (c) Civil rights, nondiscrimination, equal employment opportunity authorities. (1) Age Discrimination Act, 42 U.S.C.6101 et seq.; (2) Equal Employment Opportunity, Executive Order 11246, 3 CFR, 1964– 1965 Comp., p. 339; (3) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. 794, supplemented by Executive Orders 11914, 3 CFR, 1976 Comp., p. 117, and 11250, 3 CFR, 1964– 1965 Comp., p. 351; and (4) Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000d et seq. (d) Others authorities. Other Federal and compliance requirements as may be applicable. § 386.6 Floodplain management. (a) In making WIFIA funding decisions under this part, the Corps will follow the requirements of Executive Order (E.O.) 11988, as amended by E.O. 13690, and Engineering Regulation (ER) 1165–2–26, ‘‘Implementation of E.O. 11988 on Floodplain Management’’. Applicants shall submit information regarding the project that is sufficient for the Corps to determine that the project is in compliance with the requirements of E.O. 11988 and ER 1165–2–26. (b) Projects funded under this part will meet or exceed applicable State, local, Tribal, and territorial standards for flood risk and floodplain management, as well as E.O. 11988. (c) All projects under this part are considered Federal actions under E.O. PO 00000 Frm 00058 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 11988 and thus, project applicants shall determine whether the proposed project will occur in the floodplain. If the project is located within the floodplain, the applicant must determine whether the action is critical or not and what floodplain standard to follow. The Corps will implement the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard (FFRMS), where appropriate, which is a flood standard established by E.O. 13690, that aims to build a more resilient future through the encouragement of consideration of current and future risk when Federal investments are used to build or rebuild near floodplains. The Corps will ensure unwise uses are avoided, where possible, including the increase or transfer of flood risks, resulting in adverse impacts to human health, safety, welfare, property, natural resources, or functions of floodplains. Further guidance on implementation of E.O. 11988 can be found in the Corps ER 1165–2–26 (30 March 1984). Further information on FFRMS can be found at https://www.iwr.usace.army.mil/ Missions/Flood-Risk-Management/ Flood-Risk-Management-Program/ About-the-Program/Policy-andGuidance/Federal-Flood-RiskManagement-Standard/. § 386.7 American iron and steel. (a) All projects receiving credit assistance under this part for construction, alteration, maintenance, or repair of a project shall use only iron and steel products produced in the United States, unless waiver of the requirement in this paragraph (a) is granted by an official authorized to do so. (b) Consistent with 33 U.S.C. 3914(b), ‘‘iron and steel products’’ means the following products made primarily of iron or steel: lined or unlined pipes and fittings, manhole covers and other municipal castings, hydrants, tanks, flanges, pipe clamps and restraints, valves, structural steel, reinforced precast concrete and construction materials. Equipment employed in construction that does not become part of the project is not an ‘‘iron and steel product’’ for the purpose of this section. § 386.8 Labor standards. All laborers and mechanics employed by contractors or subcontractors on projects receiving credit assistance under this part shall be paid wages at rates not less than those prevailing for the same type of work on similar construction in the immediate locality, as determined by the Secretary of Labor. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 § 386.9 Investment-grade ratings. (a) At the time a prospective borrower submits an application, the Corps shall require a preliminary rating opinion letter. The letter is a conditional credit assessment from a NRSRO that provides a preliminary indication of the project’s overall creditworthiness and that specifically addresses the potential of the project’s senior debt obligations, which may include, or be limited to, the Federal credit instrument to achieve an investment-grade rating, and address the rating of obligations similar to those proposed for the Federal credit instrument when the Federal credit instrument is not a senior debt obligation. The requirement of this paragraph (a) may be met, on a case-bycase basis, by accepting a recent credit rating of obligations that have a lien on the revenues pledged for repayment. This rating should be based on an unenhanced analysis of the underlying pledged source of repayment and not give any credit to any prospective loan guarantee provided by the U.S. Government. (b) Consistent with 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(D)(ii), the full funding of a Federal credit instrument shall be contingent on: (1) The assignment of investmentgrade ratings by NRSROs to all project obligations that have a lien on the pledged security senior to that of the Federal credit instrument on the pledged security; or (2)(i) In the event that the Federal credit instrument is: (A) A senior debt obligation; (B) Pari passu with the senior project obligations; or (C) A general obligation of the prospective borrower, to the Federal credit instrument. (ii) The applicant must provide at least one final rating opinion letter which provides a credit rating on the direct loan or the unenhanced Federal credit instrument. This rating should be based on an unenhanced analysis of the underlying pledged source of repayment and not give any credit to the loan or loan guarantee provided by the U.S. Government. (c) Neither the preliminary rating opinion letter nor the final ratings should reflect the effect of bond insurance, unless that insurance provides credit enhancement that secures WIFIA obligation. § 386.10 Threshold criteria. (a) To be eligible to receive Federal credit assistance under this part, a project shall meet the following threshold criteria: VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 (1) The project and prospective borrower shall be creditworthy. (2) A project shall have eligible project costs that are reasonably anticipated to equal or exceed $20 million. (3) A Federal credit instrument: (i) Shall be repayable, in whole or in part, from State or local taxes, user fees, or other dedicated revenue sources that also secure the senior project obligations of the project; (ii) Shall include a rate covenant, coverage requirement, or similar security feature supporting the project obligations; and (iii) May have a lien on revenues subject to any lien securing project obligations. (4) In the case of a project that is undertaken by an entity that is not a State or local government or an agency or instrumentality of a State or local government, or a Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments, the project that the entity is undertaking shall be publicly sponsored. (5) The prospective borrower shall have developed an operations and maintenance plan that identifies adequate revenues to operate, maintain, and repair the project during its useful life. If the borrower is a State infrastructure financing authority, it shall have ensured and will ensure that its borrowers have a plan for the eligible projects they are undertaking that identifies adequate revenues to operate, maintain and repair such projects during the useful life of such projects. The requirement in this paragraph (a)(5) may be met through the development of a written plan or a financial model. (b) With respect to paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the Secretary may accept general obligation pledges or general corporate promissory pledges and will determine the acceptability of other pledges and forms of collateral as dedicated revenue sources on a case-bycase basis. The Secretary shall not accept a pledge of Federal funds, regardless of source, as security for the Federal credit instrument. (c) The provision at 33 U.S.C. 3907(c) provides that nothing in section 3907(c) (which includes eligibility requirements and selection criteria for projects and entities receiving WIFIA assistance) is intended to supersede the applicability of other requirements of Federal law, including regulations. § 386.11 Selection criteria. The selection criteria in paragraphs (a) through (l) of this section will be used for evaluating and selecting among eligible projects to receive credit assistance: PO 00000 Frm 00059 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 32679 (a) The extent to which the project is nationally or regionally significant, with respect to the generation of economic and public benefits, such as— (1) The reduction of flood risk; (2) The improvement of water quality and quantity, including aquifer recharge; (3) The protection of drinking water, including source water protection; (4) The support of domestic and international commerce; and (5) The restoration of degraded aquatic ecosystem structures. (b) The extent to which the project financing plan includes public or private financing, in addition to WIFIA credit assistance. (c) The likelihood that WIFIA credit assistance would enable the project to proceed at an earlier date than the project would otherwise be able or likely to proceed. (d) The extent to which the project uses new or innovative approaches. (e) The amount of budget authority required to fund the WIFIA Federal credit instrument. (f) The extent to which the project— (1) Protects against an extreme weather event, such as a flood or hurricane; or (2) Helps maintain or protect the environment. (g) The extent to which a project serves regions with significant clean energy exploration development, or production areas. (h) The extent to which a project serves regions with significant water resource challenges, including the need to address— (1) Water quality concerns in areas of regional, national, or international significance; (2) Water quantity concerns related to groundwater, surface water, or other water sources; (3) Significant flood risk; (4) Water resource challenges identified in existing regional, State, or multistate agreements; or (5) Water resources with exceptional recreational value or ecological assistance. (i) The extent to which the project addresses identified municipal, State, or regional priorities. (j) The readiness of the project to proceed toward development, including a demonstration by the obligor that there is a reasonable expectation that the contracting process for construction of the project can commence not later than 90 days after the date on which a Federal credit instrument is obligated for the project under WIFIA. (k) The extent to which WIFIA credit assistance reduces the overall Federal contributions to the project. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 32680 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations (l) The extent to which the project serves economically disadvantaged communities and spurs economic opportunity for, and minimally adversely impacts, economically disadvantaged communities and their populations. § 386.12 Term sheets and approvals. (a) The Corps, after review and evaluation of an application, and all other required documents submitted by a prospective borrower, may offer to such prospective borrower a written term sheet and/or a credit agreement, including detailed terms and conditions that must be met. (b) The issuance of a term sheet, upon execution by the Secretary, does not constitute a commitment by the Secretary to enter into the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. Execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement represents obligation by the Secretary. ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 § 386.13 Closing on the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. (a) Only a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement executed by the Secretary can obligate the Corps to issue a loan or loan guarantee. The Corps is not bound by oral representations. Each Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement shall contain the following requirements and conditions, and shall not be executed until the Corps determines that the following requirements and conditions are satisfied: (1) Except if explicitly authorized by an Act of Congress, no Federal funds, proceeds of Federal loans, or proceeds of loans guaranteed by the Federal Government may be used by a borrower to pay for credit subsidy costs, administrative fees, or other fees charged by or paid to the Corps relating to the WIFIA program; however, proceeds of the Federal credit instrument may be used to pay for such administrative or other fees but may not be used to pay an ‘‘Optional Credit Subsidy Fee’’. (2) At closing, the Corps will ensure that the following requirements and conditions are or will be satisfied pursuant to the credit agreement or otherwise: (i) The project qualifies as an eligible project under WIFIA; (ii) The face value of the credit agreement is limited to no more than 49 percent of reasonably anticipated eligible project costs, or if credit assistance in excess of 49 percent has been approved, no more than the percentage of eligible project costs VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 agreed upon, not to exceed 80 percent of total project costs; (iii) If the credit instrument is a loan guarantee, the loan guarantee does not finance, either directly or indirectly, tax exempt debt obligations, consistent with the requirements of section 149(b) of the Internal Revenue Code; (iv) The amount of the credit agreement, when combined with other funds, will be sufficient to carry out the project, including adequate contingency funds; (v) The borrower is pledging collateral and/or providing a general obligation pledge, determined by the Corps to be necessary to secure the repayment of the credit agreement; (vi) The credit agreement and related documents include detailed terms and conditions necessary and appropriate to protect the interest of the United States in the case of default; (vii) There is satisfactory evidence that the applicant is willing, competent, and capable of performing the terms and conditions of the credit agreement, and will diligently pursue the project; (viii) The applicant has taken and is obligated to continue to take those actions necessary to perfect and maintain liens on assets which are pledged as security for the credit agreement, as allowed under State or local law; (ix) The Corps or its representatives have access to the project site at all reasonable times in order to monitor the performance of the project; (x) The Corps and the applicant agree as to the information that will be made available to the Corps and the information that will be made publicly available; (xi) The applicant will file or has filed applications for or obtained any required regulatory approvals for the project and is in compliance, or promptly will be in compliance, where appropriate, with all Federal, State, and local regulatory requirements; (xii) The applicant has no delinquent Federal debt, including tax liabilities, unless the delinquency has been resolved with the appropriate Federal agency in accordance with the standards of the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996; (xiii) Loan proceeds provided under the agreement shall not be utilized by the applicant to provide cash contributions to the Corps for project related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), limited to the application, transaction processing, and servicing fees as described in § 386.15; (xiv) Costs incurred with loan proceeds under the agreement shall not PO 00000 Frm 00060 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 be eligible for reimbursement or for the transfer of credit toward the non-Federal cost share of another federally authorized project; (xv) The credit agreement and related agreements contain such other terms and conditions as the Corps deems reasonable and necessary to protect the interests of the United States, including without limitation provisions for: (A) Such collateral and other credit support for the credit agreement; and (B) Such collateral sharing, priorities and voting rights among creditors and other intercreditor arrangements as, in each case, the Corps deems reasonable and necessary to protect the interests of the United States; and (3) The credit agreement must contain audit provisions which provide, in substance, as follows: (i) The applicant must keep such records concerning the project as are necessary to facilitate an effective and accurate audit and performance evaluation of the project; and (ii) The Corps and the Inspector General, or their duly authorized representatives, must have access, for the purpose of audit and examination, to any pertinent books, documents, papers, and records of the applicant. Examination of records may be made during the regular business hours of the applicant, or at any other time mutually convenient. (4) OMB has reviewed and approved the Corps calculation of the Credit Subsidy Cost of the Loan or Loan Guarantee. (b) The Corps will set a closing date. By the closing date, the prospective borrower must have satisfied all of the detailed terms and conditions required by the Corps and all other contractual, statutory, and regulatory requirements. In addition, the prospective borrower must have provided at least one final rating opinion letter which provides a credit rating on the final negotiated direct loan or Loan Guarantee Agreement that does not take into account the full faith and credit of the United States of America. The prospective borrower must submit this final credit rating letter to the Corps prior to closing. If the prospective borrower has not satisfied all such terms and conditions by the closing date, the Secretary may set a new closing date or reject the application. (c) The execution of a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee shall represent approval of the application for credit assistance and shall represent the legal obligation of budget authority. E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2023 / Rules and Regulations § 386.14 Reporting requirements. The borrower will provide annual audited financial statements, a public benefits report, and other reports to the Corps in the form and manner agreed upon in the credit agreement. These other reports may include, but are not limited to, an updated financial model and construction reports. The Corps may conduct periodic financial and compliance reviews or audits of the borrower and its project, as determined necessary by the Corps. § 386.15 Fees. (a) Application fee. The Corps will require a non-refundable application fee for each project applying for credit assistance under the WIFIA program. The application fee will be due upon submission of the application. For public applicants with projects serving small communities or economically disadvantaged communities, the total application fee will be $0. For all other applications, the total application fee will be $25,000. The total application fee will be credited to the transaction processing fee required under paragraph (b) of this section. (b) Transaction processing fee. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (f) of this section, the Corps will require an additional transaction processing fee for projects selected to receive WIFIA assistance upon closing, or if the project does not proceed to closing, e.g., if the application is withdrawn or denied. The proceeds of any such fees will be used to pay the remaining portion of the Corps’ cost of providing credit assistance and the costs of conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services, to assist in the underwriting of the Federal Credit instrument. (c) Servicing fee. The Corps will require borrowers to pay a servicing fee for each credit instrument approved for funding. Separate fees may apply for each type of credit instrument (e.g., a secured loan with a single disbursement, or a secured loan with multiple disbursements), depending upon the costs of servicing the credit instrument as determined by the Secretary. Such fees will be set at a level sufficient to enable the Corps to recover all or a portion of the costs to the Federal Government of servicing WIFIA credit instruments. (d) Optional credit subsidy fee. If, in any given year, there is insufficient budget authority to fund the credit instrument for a qualified project that has been selected to receive assistance under WIFIA, the Corps and the approved applicant may agree upon a supplemental fee to be paid by or on behalf of the approved applicant at the time of execution of the term sheet to reduce the subsidy cost of that project. No such fee may be included among eligible project costs. (e) Reduced fees. To the extent that Congress appropriates funds in any given year beyond those needed to cover internal administrative costs, the Corps may utilize such appropriated funds to reduce fees for a State or local governmental entity, agency, or instrumentality, a Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments that would otherwise be charged under paragraph (c) of this section. (f) Enhanced monitoring fee. The Corps may require payment in full by the borrower of additional fees, in an amount determined by the Corps, and of related fees and expenses of its independent consultants and outside counsel, to the extent that such fees and expenses are incurred by or on behalf of the Corps and to the extent such third parties are not paid directly by the borrower, in the event the borrower experiences difficultly relating to technical, financial, or legal matters or other events (e.g., engineering failure or financial workouts) which require the Corps to incur time or expenses beyond standard monitoring. No such fee may be included among eligible project costs. [FR Doc. 2023–10520 Filed 5–19–23; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 3720–58–P 32681 POSTAL SERVICE 39 CFR Part 20 International Competitive Services: Price Changes Postal ServiceTM. ACTION: Final action. AGENCY: The Postal Service is revising Notice 123, Price List, to reflect the price changes to Competitive Services as established by the Governors of the United States Postal Service®. DATES: Effective July 9, 2023. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dale Kennedy at 202–268–6592 or Kathy Frigo at 202–268–4178. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule describes new prices established by the Governors of the United States Postal Service and submitted for review by the Postal Regulatory Commission in Docket Number CP2023–151 (see https://prc.gov). This final rule describes the international price changes for the following competitive international extra services and fees: • International Certificate of Mailing. • International Registered Mail. • International Return Receipt. • Customs Clearance and Delivery Fee. New prices are or will be located on the Postal Explorer® website at https:// pe.usps.com. SUMMARY: International Extra Services and Fees Depending on country destination and mail type, customers may add a variety of extra services to their outbound shipments and pay a variety of fees. The Postal Service is increasing fees for certain competitive international extra services as follows: • International Certificate of Mailing service: Prices for competitive international certificate of mailing service will be as follows: CERTIFICATE OF MAILING ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1 Fee Individual pieces: Individual article (PS Form 3817) ................................................................................................................................................. Duplicate copy of PS Form 3817 or PS Form 3665 (per page) .................................................................................................. Firm mailing sheet (PS Form 3665), per piece (minimum 3) First-Class Mail International only ............................................... Bulk quantities: For first 1,000 pieces (or fraction thereof) ................................................................................................................................... Each additional 1,000 pieces (or fraction thereof) ....................................................................................................................... Duplicate copy of PS Form 3606 ................................................................................................................................................. VerDate Sep<11>2014 17:13 May 19, 2023 Jkt 259001 PO 00000 Frm 00061 Fmt 4700 Sfmt 4700 E:\FR\FM\22MYR1.SGM 22MYR1 $1.95 1.95 0.57 10.90 1.40 1.95

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 98 (Monday, May 22, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 32661-32681]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10520]



[[Page 32661]]

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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

Department of the Army, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

33 CFR Part 386

[Docket Number: COE-2022-0004]
RIN 0710-AB31


Credit Assistance and Related Fees for Water Resources 
Infrastructure Projects

AGENCY: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Department of Defense (DoD).

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: This final rule implements a new credit assistance program 
administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps). Consistent 
with the funding provided under Subtitle C of Title V of the Water 
Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 (WRRDA), often referred to 
as the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (WIFIA), 
credit assistance is available for safety projects to maintain, 
upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams 
with a primary owner type of state, local government, public utility, 
or private. This final rule establishes the process by which the Corps 
will administer such credit assistance, including the assessment of 
fees, and also sets forth the policies and procedures that the Corps 
will use for receiving, evaluating, approving applications, and 
servicing and monitoring direct loans and loan guarantees.

DATES: This rule is effective on June 21, 2023.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Aaron Snyder, Corps Water 
Infrastructure Financing Team, 441 G Street NW, CECW-I Attn: Aaron 
Snyder 3K87, Washington, DC 20314; telephone number: (612) 518-0355; 
email address: [email protected]. The phone number above may also be 
reached by individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, or who have 
speech disabilities, through the Federal Relay Service's teletype 
service at 800-877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
I. Background
II. Water Resources Infrastructure Needs
III. Summary of Comments
IV. Program Information
    A. Funding
    B. Borrower Eligibility
    C. Project Eligibility
    D. Project Cost Eligibility
    E. Statutory Requirements
    F. Application Process
    G. Creditworthiness
    H. Fees
    I. Credit Assistance
    J. Rating Requirement
    K. Federal Requirements
    L. American Iron and Steel Requirements
    M. Labor Standards (Davis-Bacon Act of 1931)
    N. Reporting Requirements
    O. Selection Criteria
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

I. Background

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) is publishing this final 
rule to implement a program authorized under Subtitle C of Title V of 
the Water Resources Reform and Development Act of 2014 (WRRDA), often 
referred to as the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 
2014 (WIFIA). The program was provided funding and further statutory 
direction in Division D, Title 1 of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 
of 2021 and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and 
Jobs Act. WIFIA authorizes the Corps to provide secured (direct) loans 
and guaranteed loans to eligible water resources infrastructure 
projects. The only eligible project type--under Division D, Title 1 of 
the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021 and Division J, Title III 
of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act are: ``. . . . safety 
projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the 
National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of state, local 
government, public utility, or private. . .''. The appropriations 
language also specifies that any project ``for a dam that is identified 
as jointly owned in the National Inventory of Dams and where one of 
those joint owners is the Federal Government'' is ineligible to receive 
the funding provided by these appropriations. This rule limits 
implementation to only those project types listed in the Acts. WIFIA 
authorizes the Corps to charge fees to recover all or a portion of the 
Corps' cost of providing credit assistance and all costs of conducting 
engineering reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and 
legal services, in the field of municipal and project finance to assist 
in the underwriting and servicing of Federal credit instruments. WIFIA 
also authorizes the borrower to pay part or all of the cost of direct 
loans and guaranteed loans (``credit subsidy cost'') and this authority 
would be implemented under this rule. Projects will be evaluated and 
selected by the Secretary of the Army (the Secretary) based on the 
requirements and the criteria described in this rule. Following the 
selection of projects, individual credit agreements will be developed 
through negotiations between the borrowers and the Corps.
    Congress enacted the WIFIA as part of WRRDA, as amended by section 
1445 of Public Law 114-94, section 5008 of Public Law 114-322, and 
section 4201 of Public Law 115-270 (see 33 U.S.C. 3901-3914). These 
amendments were minor changes primarily focused on the Administrator of 
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other changes regarding 
State Infrastructure Financing Authorities, removing limitations on use 
of tax exempt funding sources, changes to project eligibility for the 
EPA, and allowance of fees as an eligible cost which is included 
elsewhere in this final rule. Title I, Division D of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2021 provided $12 million in budget authority for 
the credit subsidy cost for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and 
repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary 
owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private. 
Title 1, Division D also provided that the $12 million credit subsidy 
appropriation, is available to subsidize gross obligations for the 
principal amount of direct loans, including capitalized interest, and 
total loan principal, including capitalized interest, any part of which 
is to be guaranteed not to exceed $950,000,000. Division J, Title III 
of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act provided an additional 
$64,000,000 in budget authority for the cost of direct loans and 
guaranteed loans, for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair 
dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner 
type of State, local government, public utility, or private.\1\ 
Division J, Title III also provided the $64 million credit subsidy 
appropriation cannot be used to fund a project for a dam that is 
identified as jointly owned in the National Inventory of Dams and where 
one of those joint owners is the Federal Government. As described in 
the proposed rule ``Credit Assistance and Related Fees for Water 
Resources Infrastructure Projects'' (87 FR 35473), the Corps is 
establishing its new WIFIA program limited to safety projects to 
maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory 
of Dams with a primary

[[Page 32662]]

owner type of State, local government, public utility, or private.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Until 2021, Tribally owned dams have been listed in the 
National Inventory of Dams under the primary ownership title of 
either ``Private'' or ``Federal''. In 2021, the National Inventory 
of Dams added a ``Tribal Government'' primary ownership type, 
however not all Tribally owned dams have been transitioned to the 
correct primary ownership type at the date of this Rule. Regardless 
of National Inventory of Dams primary ownership classification, all 
Tribally owned dams are eligible for this program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A primary objective for Federal credit programs is to help correct 
a capital market imperfection. Municipal, regional, state-level and 
other infrastructure project sponsors generally do not market debt 
sales used to fund infrastructure projects beyond 30-year terms through 
public bond markets due to existing market conventions. Proceeds from 
bond sales are available immediately, not according to cash flow needs 
during project construction. In addition, debt sold through multiple 
issuances during an infrastructure project's construction period 
exposes project sponsors to debt interest rate risk. Congress provided 
the Corps WIFIA program the legal authority to help address these 
factors that otherwise may impede affordable infrastructure investment 
through the prospective terms of WIFIA credit assistance.
    WIFIA, authorized the Corps to provide both loans and loan 
guarantees to eligible entities: corporations; partnerships; joint 
ventures; trusts; State or local governmental entities, agencies, or 
instrumentalities; Tribal governments or consortiums of Tribal 
governments; or State infrastructure finance authorities.
    While WIFIA authorizes the Corps to provide for a wide variety of 
eligible projects this final rule is limited to implementing a credit 
assistance program for safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair 
dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner 
type of State, local government, public utility, or private (referred 
to here after as ``non-Federal dams''). As applied to credit assistance 
for non-Federal dam projects under Title 1, Division D or the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, Division J, Title III of the 
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Sections 3902, 3905, and 3907 
of Title 33 of the U.S.C., describe the conditions that govern a 
project's eligibility. Projects must have eligible costs of not less 
than $20 million. 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(2)(A). Eligible borrowers, eligible 
projects, and other statutory requirements are further described in 
detail in the sections below and summarized in this document and 85 FR 
39189. As used throughout this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section and 
part 386 of the rule, ``borrower'' is synonymous with ``obligor''. 
WIFIA defines an ``obligor'' as ``an eligible entity that is primarily 
liable for payment of the principal of, or interest on, a Federal 
credit instrument.'' 33 U.S.C. 3901(7). ``Obligor'' is used in place of 
``borrower'' whenever ``obligor'' appears in a corresponding section of 
WIFIA.

II. Water Resources Infrastructure Needs

    The American Jobs Plan estimates that in 2020, weather and climate 
disasters cost the United States $95 billion in damages to homes, 
businesses, and public infrastructure.\2\ The Administration has made 
investment in U.S. infrastructure a priority to increase resiliency in 
the face of such threats.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ The White House Briefing Room. ``FACT SHEET: The American 
Jobs Plan'' at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/03/31/fact-sheet-the-american-jobs-plan. March 13, 
2021.
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    Non-Federal dams account for roughly 87,000 of the 90,580 dams as 
reported in the National Inventory of Dams. Over 14,000 non-Federal 
dams are now classified as ``high hazard potential,'' meaning that they 
would likely result in loss of life if they were to fail.\3\ According 
to a 2019 cost estimate conducted by the Association of State Dam 
Safety Officials (ASDSO), the cost to rehabilitate (repair, replace or 
remove) all non-Federal dams is estimated at over $66 billion with high 
hazard potential dams accounting for over $20 billion.\4\ Funding 
requirements are only projected to increase as infrastructure continues 
to age, risk awareness progresses, and design standards evolve.\5\
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    \3\ U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ``National Inventory of 
Dams,'' at https://nid.usace.army.mil. 2020 partial update.
    \4\ Association of State Dam Safety Officials (ASDSO), ``The 
Cost of Rehabilitating Our Nation's Dams: A Methodology, Estimate, 
and Proposed Funding Mechanisms.'' revised 2019.
    \5\ Congressional Research Service, ``Dam Safety Overview and 
the Federal Role,'' October 24, 2019.
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    While almost half of the States have created a state-funded grant 
or low-interest revolving loan program to assist dam owners with 
repairs, the ASDSO indicates that these programs vary significantly in 
the financial assistance available.\6\ Another Federal infrastructure 
financing program, WIFIA, administered by the EPA provides credit 
financing for non-Federal water and wastewater infrastructure project. 
Similar to the Corps WIFIA program, the maximum portion of eligible 
project costs are 49% or 80% for small communities. The EPA WIFIA 
program can finance dam projects, however those projects compete 
against a wide range of water and wastewater type projects. In FY 2021 
the EPA WIFIA program had an appropriation of $55 million, allowing 
WIFIA to lend approximately $5.5 billion. In 2021, the EPA made it 
possible for dam projects to receive funding under the Federal Drinking 
Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF), administered by the EPA, provided 
that the dam's primary purpose is for drinking water supply and that 
the dam must be owned by the public water system. Through the DWSRF 
program, the EPA will make available $1.8 billion in capitalization 
grants for drinking water infrastructure needs, a portion of which 
could go towards drinking water supply dam projects, depending on the 
priorities of the States. The Federal Watershed Rehabilitation Program 
administered by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) helps 
project sponsors rehabilitate aging dams that are reaching the end of 
their design lives. This rehabilitation addresses critical public 
health and safety concerns. Division J, Title I of the Infrastructure 
Investment and Jobs Act provides $118M for projects under the Watershed 
Rehabilitation Program. The Federal Rehabilitation of High Hazard 
Potential Dam (HHPD) Program, administered by Federal Emergency 
Management Agency (FEMA), provides grants for repair, removal, or 
rehabilitation of eligible non-Federal, high hazard potential dams. 
Projects can receive a maximum grant of the lesser of $7.5 million or 
12.5% of the total appropriated amount. The program was appropriated 
$10 million in both FY 2019 and FY 2020, $12 million in FY 2021, and 
$585 million in Division J, Title V of the Infrastructure Investment 
and Jobs Act ($75 million of which must go to dam removal projects). In 
addition, Section 40333 of the Infrastructure and Jobs Act of 2021 
appropriated $553,600,000 until expended for EPAct 2005 Section 247: 
Maintaining and Enhancing Hydroelectricity Incentives to the US 
Department of Energy (DOE) for making incentive payments to owners and 
authorized operators of qualified hydroelectric facilities for capital 
improvements directly related to improving grid resilience, improving 
dam safety, and related to environmental improvements. Such incentive 
payments are limited to 30% of the costs of the applicable capital 
improvement(s) and not more than one incentive payment can be made to a 
single qualified hydroelectric facility in any fiscal year, the amount 
of which shall not exceed $5,000,000. For details refer to the draft 
application guidance for the Maintaining & Enhancing Hydroelectricity 
Incentives Program (EPAct 2005 Section 247) released by the DOE's Grid 
Deployment Office on February 8, 2023 for public comment to inform the 
implementation. In addition,

[[Page 32663]]

USDA's Rural Development Water and Waste Disposal programs provide over 
$2 billion in grants and low-interest loans for water and waste 
infrastructure. These funds help provide rural Americans access to 
drinking water and sanitation, promoting economic development in rural 
areas. Dam construction and repair projects are eligible for these 
funds. Despite these programs and their funding capacity, the available 
funding for dam safety infrastructure falls short of the $66 billion 
need cited by ASDSO. The Corps' WIFIA program helps to bridge that gap 
by providing non-Federal entities with an additional means to invest in 
dam safety infrastructure, which will help communities withstand future 
weather and climate events. As communities become more resilient, all 
else being equal, this is expected to assist in limiting Federal 
disaster spending associated with such events.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ ASDSO, ``The Cost of Rehabilitating''.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Summary of Comments

    In response to the proposed rule, the Corps received 12 letters 
submitted to the docket. Combined, these letters provided approximately 
45 individual comments on the proposed rule. The Corps received 
comments from prospective applicants, trade associations, and 
individual private citizens. The Corps has considered all of these 
comments in the development of the final rule. Docket comments and 
summaries of the Corps' analyses and determinations are discussed as 
follows.

A. Discussion of General Comments

    This section provides a discussion of each of the four major 
categories raised by commenters in response to the rulemaking, along 
with Corps' analysis and resolution.
1. Project Eligibility
    Several commenters expressed support for expanding the scope of the 
program to allow credit assistance for additional eligible projects 
authorized for assistance under 33 U.S.C. 3905. Upon review and 
consideration of the comments, the Corps believes that it is important 
to note that Congress narrowed the scope of projects eligible for 
credit assistance by appropriating funds solely for non-federal dam 
safety projects, despite broad authority under WIFIA to fund water 
infrastructure projects. As a result, the Corps will not be expanding 
the scope of project eligibility under this rulemaking.
    One commenter suggested that the Corps should clarify eligibility 
and application process and include a list of ineligible projects along 
with clarifying the differences between the Corps and the Environmental 
Protection Agency (EPA) WIFIA. Another commenter suggested that 
fragmented federal financing and unclear guidelines risk deterring 
applicants and delaying critical upgrades to high-risk infrastructure. 
Separately, the commenter recommended that the Corps should clarify 
eligibility and application steps for prospective applicants by (a) 
delineating between the Corps and the EPA WIFIA programs and (b) 
including a clear list of eligibility requirements. As evidence for 
this recommendation, the commenter stated that Corps anticipated the 
difficulty that applicants will have with (a) understanding eligibility 
requirements and (b) understanding which financing program best suits a 
project's scope, purpose, and needs.
    The Corps and EPA intend to partner closely during the project 
selection process for eligible projects to ensure that funding 
allocated either by EPA or Corps WIFIA programs will use the most 
appropriate program relative to the project's scope, purpose, and 
benefits. It is important to note that both programs share the same 
authorizing legislation, and Congress provided a list of projects 
eligible for assistance under EPA's WIFIA program which also may be 
eligible as non-Federal dam safety projects. As a matter of efficiency 
of government resources, projects that include non-Federal dam safety 
work in addition to infrastructure outside of the scope of dam safety 
work, but eligible under EPA WIFIA, are ineligible for Corps WIFIA 
financing assistance. Any project whose application has been rejected 
for credit assistance by EPA will not be considered for assistance 
under the Corps program.
    The application form has been submitted to the Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB) for approval under OMB Control Number 0710-0026, 
titled ``Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) 
Preliminary Application.''
    The Corps sought public comments on whether additional 
clarification is needed on project cost eligibility, such as whether a 
list of what costs are expressly ineligible would be helpful or whether 
that may result in additional confusion, as opposed to limiting the 
list to include only those which are eligible, as proposed. Although 
two commenters suggested they preferred a list of what costs are 
expressly ineligible, the commenters did not provide justification as 
to why such a list would not result in additional confusion among 
prospective applicants. Eligibility is dependent on several factors 
such as whether the costs were incurred through federally compliant 
contracts and whether costs are allocable and reasonable. As such, the 
Corps does not plan to include a list of expressly ineligible costs in 
this final rule. For information on specific costs, a prospective 
borrower can contact the Corps by emailing [email protected].
    One commenter provided comments that all dam safety projects are 
potential flood risk projects and should be considered eligible. The 
Corps agrees; however, each individual project is different and will 
require appropriate considerations based on the project conditions and 
verification of potential flood risks. To receive clarification on any 
unique project conditions, a prospective borrower can contact the Corps 
by emailing [email protected].
2. Credit Assistance for Economically Disadvantaged Communities
    Several commenters provided comments about the approach to defining 
economically disadvantaged communities and allocation of credit 
assistance to such communities. The Corps is utilizing the term 
``economically disadvantaged'' to be generally consistent with the 
direction provided in Section 160 of the Water Resources Development 
Act of 2020 (Pub. L. 116-260) for the term as well as the Biden 
Administration's policies for identifying disadvantaged communities. 
This definition may be modified in the future as appropriate in 
response to updated guidance, tools and resources. A number of 
commenters wrote to expressly support inclusion of a selection 
criterion and prioritization for economically disadvantaged 
communities, and no commenters expressly opposed such a criterion. As 
stated in this rule, to be considered economically disadvantaged, a 
community only needs to meet one of the following criteria: (a) low-
income, (b) unemployment rate above national average, (c) Indian 
country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in the proximity of an Alaska 
Native Village, (d) U.S. Territories, or (e) identified as 
disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool.
    One commenter requested that the rule establish static metrics for 
how the selection criterion related to economically disadvantaged 
communities is considered relative to other criteria. Weights will not 
be included in the rule, as they may change with each funding 
availability opportunity. The weights used for each selection criterion 
will be provided to the public upon the solicitation to

[[Page 32664]]

announce the availability of credit assistance. The priorities as 
indicated are as follows: Projects serving small, rural communities and 
economically disadvantaged communities and projects serving Tribal 
communities.
    One commenter recommended that the Corps align the content of the 
rule with Executive Order (E.O.) 14008 (Justice40 Initiative) and then 
report on its progress toward achieving a 40% distribution of funds to 
disadvantaged communities. Although the WIFIA program is not a covered 
program under the Justice40 Initiative, the program will support 
priorities consistent with the Justice40 Initiative, including projects 
serving small, rural communities and economically disadvantaged 
communities and projects serving Tribal communities. Via its publicly 
accessible website, the Corps intends to report on its lending 
activities, including those lending activities which support priorities 
consistent with the Justice40 Initiative.
3. Procedures for Determining Eligibility Under 85 Federal Register 
39189 (June 30, 2020)
    Two commenters expressed concerns about the transparency, accuracy, 
and fairness of the eligibility screening procedures for WIFIA projects 
under 85 FR 39189 and suggested that the Corps consider either 
eliminating the requirement that projects receiving WIFIA credit 
assistance should be subject to such procedures or revising the 
procedures and concepts contained within it.
    The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) fiscal year 2020 
appropriation for the WIFIA program required EPA, OMB, and the 
Department of the Treasury (Treasury) to jointly develop and publish 
criteria in the Federal Register for limiting federal participation in 
projects receiving WIFIA loans and loan guarantees, including for WIFIA 
loans issued by the Corps. The appropriation did not provide the Corps 
a role in developing such criteria. The criteria required by the 
appropriation were published on June 30, 2020, in 85 Federal Register 
39189.
    The Corps notes that funds made available by Congress for the 
Corps' WIFIA program have required that WIFIA credit assistance must be 
in accord with the criteria in 85 FR 39189. As such, the Corps cannot 
alter the applicability or requirements of the criteria nor procedures 
and content prescribed in 85 FR 39189.
4. Fees and Loan Administration
    Two commenters requested that the Corps provide applicants and 
borrowers estimates for transaction processing and servicing fees as 
early as practicable. The Corps will provide an estimate for 
transaction fees to applicants as part of initial coordination once the 
Corps has adequate data points to reference the transaction's relative 
complexity but expects the ranges for transaction processing fees 
provided in the rule to accurately reflect the expected costs for 
applicants. The Corps will update servicing fees due under the credit 
agreement annually adjusted in proportion to the percentage change in 
Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (or its successors) 
calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for the calendar year 
immediately preceding the calendar year during which such fee is due.
    One commenter recommended that the Corps provide more detail on the 
optional credit subsidy fee, including how this fee will be calculated. 
As mentioned in the rule, utilization of this fee will only be in rare 
instances where budget authority is insufficient to fund the credit 
instrument and with the agreement of Corps and the borrower. 
Calculation of this figure is based on a number of dynamic factors 
including but not limited to the loan's relative risk, default and 
recovery assumptions, and interest rates. However, it is reasonable for 
applicants to assume loans with higher credit risk would result in a 
higher credit subsidy fee.
    One commenter recommended that the Corps establish a reserve fund 
to pay for extraordinary expenses related to loan administration. 
However, the Corps does not have authority to establish such a fund.
    One commenter asked for clarification of the treatment of changes 
in project scope and budget after credit agreement execution. Although 
the approach for changes to project scope and budget will be dependent 
on the relative risk and structure of the transaction's financing 
arrangements, the Corps intends to ensure that the project remains 
fully funded and in compliance with all Federal requirements at all 
times.

B. Discussion of Other Comments

1. Determination of the WIFIA Interest Rate
    One commenter noted that the proposed rule stated that ``as 
required by section 3908(b)(4) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the interest 
rate on a secured loan would be equal to or greater than the yield on 
U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of 
execution of the credit agreement. The base interest rate can be 
identified through use of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau 
of the Fiscal Service for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) 
investments.'' The commenter proposes removing the ability to charge 
interest rates greater than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of 
comparable maturity on the date of execution of the credit agreement to 
ensure access to the lowest borrowing cost possible for applicants.
    The Corps does not concur with this proposal because it would limit 
the ability of applicants to pay the optional credit subsidy fee 
through an interest rate premium in the rare instance budget authority 
is unavailable in a sufficient amount to extend credit assistance to an 
applicant. For other applicants, the Corps will set the interest rate 
based on the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity 
on the date of execution of the credit agreement, which per 31 CFR part 
344 is the SLGS rate plus one basis point.
2. Blanket Payment and Performance Bond Requirements
    One commenter suggested that the Corps impose blanket payment and 
performance bond requirements for all projects receiving WIFIA credit 
assistance irrespective of the borrower or project type, suggesting 
that such a requirement provides important protections in the event of 
contractor non-performance. After consideration, the Corps has 
determined that the proposal could introduce uncertainty and confusion 
among prospective applicants, as well as delay closings and financial 
assistance to these regionally and nationally significant water 
infrastructure projects.
    The Corps expects that the bulk of WIFIA applicants will be 
comprised of non-Federal governmental entities, which in nearly all 
instances are subject to well-established State and local payment and 
performance bond requirements that provide appropriate protections for 
contractor non-performance. As a result, the proposal as it applies to 
non-Federal governmental entities may conflict or be redundant.
    For other prospective WIFIA applicants which are not already 
subject to State and local payment and performance bond requirements, 
the Corps will carefully evaluate an applicant's proposed procurement 
methodology, and negotiate appropriate payment and performance bond 
requirements as necessary to ensure

[[Page 32665]]

project completion and/or mitigate credit risk, while also meeting the 
program's mission to stimulate investment in important regionally and 
nationally significant non-Federal dam safety projects.
3. Build America, Buy America Requirements
    The Corps received two comments regarding the applicability of the 
Build America, Buy America Act (BABAA) to WIFIA credit assistance. The 
first comment expressed concerns about the fairness of applying BABAA 
requirements to WIFIA credit assistance. The second comment encouraged 
Corps to issue a waiver for projects that have initiated design 
planning prior to May 14, 2022, consistent with a waiver issued by the 
EPA under its WIFIA program. The commenter suggested that such a waiver 
would help minimize adverse cost and schedule impacts from implementing 
BABAA requirements for water infrastructure projects already in design. 
As part of President Biden's Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act 
(IIJA), beginning with awards received on or after May 14, 2022, any 
infrastructure project receiving federal funding, including any credit 
assistance provided under the WIFIA program, must source their iron, 
steel, manufactured products and construction materials from the United 
States. The Corps is committed to successful implementation of BABAA to 
build a resilient supply chain and manufacturing base for critical 
infrastructure products. As a result, the Corps will administer the 
BABAA requirements for WIFIA credit assistance consistent with existing 
law. The Corps will consider the need and public interest for waivers 
of the BABAA requirements following the procedures outlined in the 
IIJA.
4. Disbursement Requirements and Procedures
    Several commenters requested clarification regarding the program's 
disbursement requirements and procedures. Two commenters also expressed 
concern that disbursements would not be available until a project 
entered civil construction and requested a detailed description of 
expressly ineligible costs. Prior to any disbursement, all conditions 
precedent to funding specified in the credit agreement must be 
satisfied. The borrower may begin submitting eligible project costs for 
reimbursement following closing. To receive a disbursement, borrowers 
must submit a requisition form that will require borrowers to verify 
continued compliance with the loan agreement. The requisition form 
includes certification that the disbursements are being made against 
incurred eligible project costs and in accordance with the terms of the 
credit agreement.
    It may also include confirmation that there have been no changes to 
the construction plan or any material events and that the 
representations and warranties included in the loan agreement are still 
true and correct, among other items. Each request for disbursement must 
include supporting documentation to ensure that the Corps can evaluate 
the costs for program eligibility, project allocability, and 
reasonableness. The Corps cannot provide a complete description of 
expressly ineligible costs because eligibility is dependent on a number 
of factors such as whether the costs were incurred through federally 
compliant contracts.
    Costs incurred prior to civil construction (such as for project 
planning and design) are eligible for disbursement regardless of the 
project's current stage of development at the time of the disbursement 
request consistent with the construction plan identified in the credit 
agreement. Borrowers may request WIFIA funds disbursements as 
frequently as once per month. The Corps' goal is to have disbursement 
available in the borrower's account 15 calendar days after receiving a 
disbursement request.
5. Emergency Action Plan
    One commenter suggested that the Corps should require all credit 
assistance applicants to have an Emergency Action Plan (EAP) to be 
eligible for credit assistance and submit an updated EAP every 10 
years. As evidence for the recommendation, the commenter noted that the 
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) requires all applicants for 
the Rehabilitation of High Hazard Potential Dam Grant Program (RHHPDGP) 
to have an EAP.
    In Title IV, Section 5006 of Public Law 114-322, the Water 
Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act (WIIN) which authorized 
the Rehabilitation of High Hazard Potential Dam Grant Program, Congress 
made an EAP approved by the relevant state dam safety agency a 
condition for receipt of grant assistance. Consequently, the 
requirement for an EAP to be eligible for HHPDGP is due to legislation 
and not regulation or policy alone. Conversely, in legislation 
authorizing the WIFIA program and the appropriations acts funding the 
WIFIA program to date, Congress has not included this requirement as a 
condition for eligibility for WIFIA credit assistance. As a result, the 
Corps will rely on any applicable State requirements and will not adopt 
the proposed change.
6. Borrower Eligibility
    One commenter requested that the Corps explore ways to provide 
access to WIFIA credit assistance to private individuals who may own 
non-Federal dams that may pose a hazard to downstream communities. 
While Corps acknowledges the importance of mitigating the risks posed 
by dams owned by private individuals, Section 3904 of Title 33 of the 
U.S. Code defines entities that are eligible for WIFIA assistance and 
does not include private individuals as an eligible borrower. However, 
privately held corporations remain eligible for WIFIA credit 
assistance.
7. Reporting Requirements and Reviews
    Two commenters expressed concerns about the need for the Corps to 
mitigate the burden of project level reviews to an appropriate level. 
The Corps notes that technical documents will not be provided to any 
Corps Divisions or Districts for review and approval; all reviews 
necessary to complete the loan underwriting and construction oversight 
process will be completed by the WIFIA program. Each WIFIA project will 
be required to meet applicable construction and regulatory standards of 
the State in which the project is located.
    The Corps does not anticipate requiring additional reporting beyond 
annual project performance report (public benefits report), audited 
financial statements, and construction reports identified in this rule. 
For loans and/or projects which represent unusual risk, the Corps will 
retain the ability to augment its standard reporting requirements while 
recognizing the need to mitigate unnecessary burden on borrowers.
    An additional commenter asked the Corps to clarify how it intends 
to determine the project is economically justified, such as through a 
benefit/cost ratio calculation. Under the rule, ``economically 
justified'' means that the anticipated benefits will exceed the costs. 
Although OMB Circular A-94 does not apply to non-Federal recipients of 
loans and, to be accordance with the criteria outlined in 85 FR 39189, 
all projects funded under this rule are not Federal activities, A-94 
provides useful guidance on measuring benefits and costs. Consistent 
with that guidance, Corps will determine whether collateral provided 
for the CWIFP credit assistance, which functions as a proxy

[[Page 32666]]

for the value beneficiaries receive from the project, exceed applicable 
project costs.

IV. Program Information

A. Funding

    The Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (FCRA), Title V of Public Law 
101-508, codified at 2 U.S.C. 661-661f, requires that agencies estimate 
the long-term cost of providing direct loans and loan guarantees on a 
net present value basis and requires that agencies have the necessary 
budget authority appropriated before entering into an obligation for a 
loan. To date, $76 million in appropriations have been provided to the 
Corps for the cost of credit assistance for non-Federal dams under 
WIFIA.

B. Borrower Eligibility

    Section 3904 of Title 33 of the U.S.C., defines entities that are 
eligible for WIFIA assistance. To be eligible under this program, a 
borrower must be one of the following:
    1. A corporation;
    2. A partnership;
    3. A joint venture;
    4. A trust;
    5. A State, or local governmental entity, agency, or 
instrumentality;
    6. A Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments; or
    7. A State infrastructure financing authority.
    While Section 3904(5) includes ``Federal'' entities in the list of 
entities that are eligible to receive assistance, this program will not 
issue credit assistance to ``Federal'' entities or activities because 
recording credit assistance to a Federal entity or activity on a net 
present value basis would be inconsistent with 31 U.S.C. 1501, existing 
Government-wide guidance, and a cash budget. As required by Title 1, 
Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations act of 2021 and Division 
J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the credit 
assistance program covered by this final rule must be administered in 
accordance with the WIFIA criteria published on June 30, 2020 (85 FR 
39189). Please review the criteria published at 85 FR 39189 for 
additional background and information regarding project eligibility.

C. Project Eligibility

    Section 3905 of Title 33 of the U.S.C. defines projects eligible 
for assistance. To be eligible under this program, a project must fall 
under one of the following four categories:
    1. Safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified 
in the National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, 
local government, public utility, or private; and which meet the 
statutory requirements of Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act 2021 and be in accordance with the criteria outlined 
in 85 FR 39189.
    2. Any project that meets the criteria under C.1. above must also 
be a project for flood damage reduction, hurricane and storm damage 
reduction, environmental restoration, coastal or inland harbor 
navigation improvement, or inland and intracoastal waterways navigation 
improvement that the Secretary determines is technically sound, 
economically justified, and environmentally acceptable,\7\ including--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ The Corps' new definition (provided below at Sec. 386.2(l)), 
in conjunction with the timing provisions of Sec. 386.3(g), 
clarifies that when making a final determination regarding whether a 
project is environmentally acceptable, the Corps will consider the 
project's environmental impacts in their entirety, as required by 
NEPA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    a. A project to reduce flood damage;
    b. A project to restore aquatic ecosystems;
    c. A project to improve the inland and intracoastal waterways 
navigation system of the United States; and
    d. A project to improve navigation of a coastal inland harbor of 
the United States, including channel deepening and construction of 
associated general navigation features.
    3. Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property for 
a project that meets the criteria under C.1. above--
    a. If the acquisition is integral to a project eligible for WIFIA 
credit assistance; or
    b. Pursuant to an existing plan that, in the judgment of the 
Secretary, would mitigate the environmental impacts of water resources 
infrastructure projects that are otherwise eligible for WIFIA credit 
assistance.
    4. A combination of projects, each of which is eligible for WIFIA 
credit assistance, for which a single application is submitted and 
which is secured by a common security pledge.
    Title I, Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 
and Division J, Title III of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act 
limited use of the appropriated funding to safety projects to maintain, 
upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory of Dams 
with a primary owner type of state, local government, public utility, 
or private. Dam removal is an eligible project under this 
authorization.
    In addition, as noted above, Title I, Division D of the 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 stipulates that ``none of the 
direct loans or loan guarantee authority made available under this 
heading shall be available for any project unless the Secretary and the 
Director of the Office of Management and Budget have certified in 
advance in writing that the direct loan or loan guarantee, as 
applicable, and the project comply with the criteria . . .'' published 
in the Federal Register on June 30, 2020 (85 FR 39189).

D. Project Cost Eligibility

    Section 3906 of Title 33 of the U.S.C. defines eligible activities 
with respect to eligible projects as the following four types of 
project costs:
    1. The cost of development-phase activities, including planning, 
feasibility analysis (including any related analysis necessary to carry 
out an eligible project), revenue forecasting, environmental review, 
permitting, preliminary engineering and design work, and other pre-
construction activities.
    2. The cost of construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and 
replacement activities.
    3. The cost of the acquisition of real property or an interest in 
real property (including water rights, land relating to the project, 
and improvements to land), environmental mitigation, construction 
contingencies, and acquisition of equipment; and
    4. The cost of capitalized interest necessary to meet market 
requirements, reasonably required reserve funds, capital issuance 
expenses, and other carrying costs during construction.
    In addition to the statutory project cost eligibility requirements 
listed above, the Corps program allows for fees associated with 
obtaining WIFIA funds to be considered as part of eligible project 
costs, as authorized by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), limited to the 
Application, Transaction Processing, and Servicing fees as described 
below in Section IV.H (Fees). Proceeds from the WIFIA credit assistance 
shall not be utilized to provide cash contributions to the Corps for 
project-related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 
3908(b)(7). The ``Optional Credit Subsidy Fee'' is not an eligible 
cost.

E. Statutory Requirements

    WIFIA contains the following requirements, as paraphrased below, 
which are restated in the final rule:
     Public or private applicants for credit assistance would 
be required to submit applications to the Corps in order to be 
considered for approval (33 U.S.C. 3903).

[[Page 32667]]

     Project financing would be required to be repayable, in 
whole or in part, from State or local taxes, user fees, or other 
dedicated revenue sources that also secure the senior project 
obligations of the project; to include a rate covenant, coverage 
requirement, or similar security feature supporting the project 
obligations; and may have a lien on revenues subject to any lien 
securing project obligations (33 U.S.C. 3908 (b)(3)).
     In the case of a project that is undertaken by an entity 
that is not a State or local government or an agency or instrumentality 
of a State or local government, or a Tribal government or consortium of 
Tribal governments, the project that the entity is undertaking would be 
required to be publicly sponsored. Public sponsorship means that the 
obligor can demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the Secretary, that it 
has consulted with the affected State, local, or Tribal government in 
which the project is located, or is otherwise affected by the project, 
and that such government supports the proposed project. Support could 
be shown by a certified letter signed by the approving municipal 
department or similar agency, mayor or other similar designated 
authority, local ordinance, or any other means by which local 
government approval can be evidenced (33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(4)).
     To be eligible for financing, a prospective borrower would 
be required to have developed an operations and maintenance plan that 
identifies adequate revenues to operate, maintain, and repair the 
project during its useful life (33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(6)).
    Additionally, projects receiving WIFIA credit assistance would not 
be able to use that assistance for operations and maintenance 
activities.

F. Application Process

    For each fiscal year that Congress appropriates funds for credit 
assistance under this program, the Corps will provide detailed 
instructions for submitting preliminary applications and applications, 
as well as the due dates for submissions. It will advise prospective 
borrowers of the estimated amount of funding available to support 
Federal credit instruments and information required in a preliminary 
application and application not detailed in this rule.
    The application process has two steps. The first step requires the 
submission of a preliminary application document, which has been 
submitted to OMB for approval under OMB Control Number 0710-0026, 
titled ``Corps Water Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) 
Preliminary Application.'' No fees are established for this preliminary 
application step. The Corps will review these preliminary applications 
and determine which applicants will be invited to continue in the 
application process and submit applications. An invitation to submit an 
application does not imply an obligation by the Corps to enter into a 
Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. Those applicants that 
choose to submit an application will be required to include an 
application fee, if applicable. Consequently, the Corps anticipates 
that the fees established in this rule will only apply to those 
projects. See Paragraph III.H. below for more information on fees.
    The purpose of the preliminary application is to provide the Corps 
with the information necessary to determine whether a given project is 
eligible under the WIFIA statute, appropriations, and regulations. This 
serves to provide the Corps with sufficient information to evaluate 
preliminary applications and to invite prospective borrowers to submit 
applications.
    The purpose of the application is to provide the Corps with 
materials necessary to underwrite the proposed WIFIA assistance. The 
application will require similar information to the preliminary 
application, but with a greater level of detail and more fully 
developed information in support of the applicant's proposal.
    The application must include sufficient information to allow the 
Secretary to make the determination required by 33 U.S.C. 3905(1) that 
the project is technically sound, economically justified, and 
environmentally acceptable. The information required to support this 
determination will depend on various factors, including but not limited 
to the purpose and scope of the activity proposed for WIFIA assistance. 
Applicants for WIFIA assistance should refer to any prior analysis that 
could assist the Corps in confirming the determination required by 33 
U.S.C. 3905(1). The Corps does not expect the application to provide 
the level of analysis required for traditional Corps feasibility 
studies. Applicants should provide information to enable the Corps to 
determine that the project will meet all applicable engineering, 
safety, and other technical standards; that it is economically 
justified; and that it will satisfy all necessary environmental 
requirements to include requirements associated with the Corps 
Programmatic Environmental Assessment prepared for this rule under the 
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). In addition, the application 
must include a description of the extent to which the project financing 
plan includes any other form of Federal assistance (including grants), 
in addition to WIFIA credit assistance. This information directly 
relates to the total Federal risk exposure across all Federal programs 
and will require information on all possible sources of Federal 
support. The Corps will also be coordinating with other Federal 
agencies, such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), on 
other Federal programs that may be used to fund or finance projects 
under this rule. Additional information regarding the requirements for 
an applicant's submittal would be described in the application 
materials.
    The application also should address any connection between the 
proposed WIFIA assistance and other Federal activities. In order for 
non-Federal flood risk management projects to be eligible for future 
Federal repair or rehabilitation assistance following storm events 
under 33 U.S.C. 701n, applicants would need to satisfy requirements 
from that program. Applicants can consult with the Corps WIFIA office 
to assist in understanding whether activities proposed for WIFIA 
assistance might implicate other Federal authorities and funding.

G. Creditworthiness

    As provided in WIFIA, the Secretary must determine that every 
funded project is creditworthy. 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1). An overarching 
goal of the creditworthiness determination process is to ensure that 
each project that is ultimately offered credit assistance advances the 
WIFIA program's mission while providing a level of risk exposure that 
is acceptable to the Corps. Therefore, the WIFIA program will evaluate 
applications for financial assistance based on credit risks over the 
repayment period of the WIFIA credit assistance. As required by 33 
U.S.C. 3907(a)(1), the creditworthiness determination will be based on 
a review of the following:
     Terms, conditions, financial structure, and security 
features of the proposed financing;
     Dedicated revenue source(s) securing the financing;
     Financial assumptions upon which the project is based; and
     Financial soundness and credit history and outlook of the 
borrower.

H. Fees

    Sections 3908(b)(7), 3909(b), and 3909(c)(3) of 33 U.S.C. allow the 
Corps to collect user fees from applicants to cover some or all of the 
costs associated with administering the program. The

[[Page 32668]]

Corps is establishing fees associated with the provision of Federal 
credit assistance under the WIFIA program. As specified under 33 U.S.C. 
3908(b)(7), 3909(b), and 3909(c)(3), Congress authorizes the Corps to 
charge fees to recover all or a portion of the Corps' cost of providing 
credit assistance and the costs of conducting engineering reviews and 
retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services in the 
field of municipal and project finance to assist in the underwriting 
and servicing of Federal credit instruments. The Corps is establishing 
an application fee, transaction processing fee, annual servicing fee, 
optional credit subsidy fee, and enhanced monitoring fee to cover these 
costs to the extent not covered by Congressional appropriations. As 
described in greater detail below, the types of fees the Corps will 
charge are consistent with other Federal credit programs.
    The rationale for establishing fees associated with the provision 
of credit assistance is to cover the Corps' cost of administering the 
program to the extent these costs are not covered by appropriations. To 
effectively administer the program, the Corps will incur both internal 
administrative costs (staffing, program support contracts, and other 
costs) as well as costs associated with conducting engineering reviews 
and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal services in 
the field of municipal and project finance, to assist in the 
underwriting of the Federal credit instrument.
    The Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act of 2016, 
Public Law 114-332, in section 5008(c), amended WIFIA to allow, at the 
request of an applicant, the financing of some fees as eligible costs 
as defined below. Borrowers are permitted to finance eligible fees as 
part of the WIFIA credit assistance.
1. Application Fee
    The Corps will require a non-refundable application fee for each 
project that is invited to submit an application (second step following 
submission of a preliminary application) for credit assistance under 
WIFIA, if applicable. The application fee will be due upon submission 
of the application. This application fee supports the Corps' planning 
efforts by helping to ensure that the program invites only the 
appropriate number of applicants that it has the capacity to fund. In 
the event that the prospective borrower has not completed and submitted 
a full application within one-year of the Corps' invitation to apply 
for credit assistance, the prospective borrower must submit to the 
Corps a request for extension prior to the expiration year that sets 
forth the prospective borrower's rationale for an extension, summarizes 
the prospective borrower's progress achieved on the project to date, 
and provides an updated schedule of project development activities, 
including submission of the WIFIA application. The Corps may grant this 
extension after evaluating the progress of the prospective borrower's 
application and its readiness to apply.
    The application fee will be waived for applications from public 
entities for projects serving small communities or economically 
disadvantaged communities. See Paragraph III.I. in the regulatory text 
for the definitions of small communities and economically disadvantaged 
communities for the purpose of this credit assistance program. For all 
other project applications, the application fee is $25,000. This 
$25,000 application fee represents an amount equal to 0.125 percent of 
the minimum threshold project cost ($20 million, 33 U.S.C. 
3907(a)(2)(A)), which the Corps considers to be sufficient to begin the 
financial, engineering, and legal analysis of the project while 
providing assurance that the applicant intends to proceed to closing. 
The Corps will undertake significant costs to evaluate applications and 
hire expert firms for underwriting and considers an application fee 
essential for applicants to show good faith in applying for credit 
assistance, to help cover the agency's administrative costs in 
processing applications, and to ensure effective administration of the 
program. The application will not be reviewed without fee payment. The 
Corps will only invite projects to submit an application and 
application fee if the Corps believes there is a reasonable expectation 
that the project could receive financing. However, an invitation to 
submit an application does not guarantee that a project will proceed to 
financial close.
2. Transaction Processing Fees
    For projects invited to submit an application, the Corps will 
require payment of transaction processing fees at the time of closing, 
or at the time the application is withdrawn or denied (in the event the 
project does not proceed to closing). The proceeds of any such fees 
will be used to pay the remaining portion of the Corps' cost of 
processing the application for credit assistance, including the costs 
of conducting engineering reviews and retaining expert firms to assist 
in underwriting, drafting and negotiating the terms of the Federal 
credit instrument. In procuring the services of third-party firms, the 
Corps may issue task orders with $0 funding (i.e., no Federal funds). 
In such situations, at the direction of the Corps, payments to the 
contractor for services will be paid (i) by or on behalf of the Corps 
or (ii) directly by the applicant for services rendered in accordance 
with the terms of a sponsor payment letter/agreement executed by the 
applicant (or its affiliate) and the contractor. In all instances, when 
a contractor is engaged to represent the Corps or its representative on 
a WIFIA matter and is paid by the applicant (or its affiliate), the 
Corps or its representative, as applicable, will remain the client of 
the contractor.
    The Corps estimates these costs would generally be in the range of 
approximately $125,000 to $300,000 per project, with the expectation 
that more complex projects could exceed this range. However, prior to 
the transaction processing fees being incurred, the Corps will develop 
a more precise estimate based on its understanding of the project and 
associated financial and legal structure. The application fee described 
above will be credited to the transaction processing fee. For example, 
if the total transaction processing fees are $300,000 and the applicant 
pays $25,000 with the application, $275,000 will be due at closing, or 
earlier if the project does not proceed to closing, e.g., if the 
application is withdrawn or denied. The total transaction processing 
fee for each project will be set based on the costs incurred by the 
Corps for that specific project. Due to the nature of the transaction 
processing, the amount is expected to vary among applicants. This 
variation reflects the amount of time taken to process a loan, which 
may not directly correlate with the size of the loan. More complex 
transactions with lengthy negotiations will have higher costs.
    The Corps may waive a portion of the fee for public applicants if 
appropriations are available to pay for the Corps' cost of 
administering the WIFIA program and to pay for loan processing. Funds 
appropriated to the program may pay for the administration of the 
program, including internal administrative costs of staffing, program 
support contracts (separate from the expert services described 
previously), and other internal administrative needs.
    To the extent appropriations are available in excess of those 
needed for the Corps' internal administrative costs, the Corps may use 
the remaining available administrative allowance (less any amount 
needed for future years' administration) to reduce fees. The

[[Page 32669]]

Corps may allocate additional administrative funds by reducing fees by 
an equal amount per loan for those projects serving economically 
disadvantaged communities, with public applicants. If additional 
administrative funds remain, the Corps may reduce fees by an equal 
amount for each remaining loan, with public applicants.
3. Servicing Fee
    The Corps will charge an annual servicing fee after closing of the 
loan. The fee will be dependent upon the costs of servicing the credit 
instrument (e.g., collecting and processing loan principal and interest 
payments) as determined by the Secretary. Such fees will be set at a 
level to enable the Corps to recover all or a portion of the costs to 
the Federal Government of servicing WIFIA credit instruments and will 
be determined at the time of closing. The Corps expects such fees to 
range from $10,000 to $50,000 annually per loan and to be adjusted for 
inflation.
4. Optional Credit Subsidy Fee
    The Corps may charge a fee, with agreement of the applicant, to 
reduce the budget authority required to fund the credit instrument. The 
Corps anticipates scenarios where assessing such a fee will provide 
flexibility to allow an applicant to ``buy down'' the budget authority 
required for the credit instrument. This could allow an applicant to 
proceed to approval if sufficient budget authority would not otherwise 
be available. Such a fee will only be charged upon agreement by an 
applicant and shall not be considered an eligible project cost. 
Utilization of this fee will only be in rare instances.
5. Enhanced Monitoring Fee
    The Corps may charge a fee to cover extraordinary expenses if a 
borrower experiences difficulty relating to technical, financial, or 
legal matters or other events (e.g., engineering failures or financial 
workouts) that require the Corps to incur time or expenses beyond 
standard monitoring. The Corps will be entitled to payment in full from 
the borrower of additional fees in an amount determined by the Corps 
and of related fees and expenses of its independent consultants and 
outside counsel that are incurred directly by the Corps and not paid 
directly by the borrower. Such fees shall not be considered an eligible 
project cost.

I. Credit Assistance

    Two types of credit instruments are permitted under WIFIA secured 
(direct) loans and loan guarantees. The second credit instrument under 
33 U.S.C. 3908 (e), referred to as loan guarantees are defined under 
the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1991 as a binding agreement by a 
Federal agency to make a loan guarantee when specified conditions are 
fulfilled by the borrower, the lender, or any other party to the 
guarantee agreements.
    Statutory requirements applicable to this credit instrument appear 
at 33 U.S.C. 3908 and 3909. Additional Terms and conditions for loans 
and loan guarantees will be negotiated between the Corps and successful 
applicants. While the extent of the loan guarantee will vary based on 
the financing requirements and risk characteristics of a transaction, 
loan guarantees are not expected to cover more than 80% of any third-
party debt obligation. Any 100% guaranteed obligation(s) must be 
financed by the Federal Financing Bank (FFB) unless a waiver is granted 
by Treasury.
    In general, WIFIA limits the amount of credit assistance that may 
be provided to a project to 49% or less of reasonably-anticipated 
eligible project costs. However, the statute authorizes the Corps to 
use up to 25% of its budget authority to provide credit assistance to 
one or more projects of up to 80% (statutory cap on Federal 
participation) of the total costs of any given project. The 80% 
statutory cap on Federal participation would be determined by adding 
the total loan proceeds, direct appropriations, grants, or other 
applicable Federal funding. Following credit assistance issuance, 
future direct appropriations, grants, or other applicable Federal 
funding may be modified to maintain compliance with the 80% statutory 
cap. Note, however, that projects receiving direct Federal 
appropriations or other Federal funding may not be eligible to receive 
WIFIA credit assistance based on the eligibility criteria outlined in 
this rule as well as at 85 FR 39189, as they may be determined to be 
Federal in nature. The Corps would limit its budget authority to 
extending credit assistance to eligible entities for those entities' 
use in directly carrying out activities eligible for assistance under 
33 U.S.C. 3906. The Corps would not extend credit assistance or allow 
loan proceeds to be used by any entity to provide cash contributions to 
the Corps for project related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 
33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7). The Corps would generally use its budget 
authority to provide credit assistance for greater than 49% of eligible 
project costs to projects serving economically disadvantaged 
communities that would otherwise not be able to obtain WIFIA credit 
assistance. For the purposes of this program, the Corps is defining 
economically disadvantaged communities as those that meet one of the 
following criteria: (a) low-income, (b) unemployment rate above 
national average, (c) Indian country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in 
the proximity of an Alaska Native Village, (d) U.S. Territories, or (e) 
identified as disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice 
Screening Tool (developed by the Council on Environmental Quality).\8\ 
The implementation of this definition may be modified as appropriate in 
response to updated tools and resources as they become available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ Currently available at https://screeningtool.geoplatform.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, the Corps may use its budget authority to provide 
credit assistance for greater than 49% of eligible project costs when a 
project would be unable to proceed to closing without such additional 
assistance due to unforeseen events. 33 U.S.C. 3912. Unforeseen events 
that could prevent a project from going to closure may include: 
unexpected loss of other sources of financing, increased cost of 
capital, or acts of nature. In such an event, the Corps would reexamine 
the creditworthiness of the project and only provide funding if the 
project can still meet all requirements of the program.
    Costs incurred, and the value of any integral in-kind contributions 
made before receipt of credit assistance may be considered in 
calculating eligible project costs upon approval of the Secretary. Such 
costs and integral in-kind contributions must be directly related to 
the development or execution of the project and must be eligible 
project costs per 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(2). In addition, such costs, 
excluding the value of any integral in-kind contributions, are payable 
from the proceeds of the Federal credit instrument and would be 
considered incurred costs. Capitalized interest on the Federal credit 
instrument would not be eligible for calculating eligible project 
costs.
    The Corps would not obligate funds in the form of a loan or loan 
guarantee for a project prior to (1) to issuance of a determination 
that the Federal action is eligible for a Categorical Exclusion, (2) 
issuance of a Finding of No Significant Impact, or (3) issuance of a 
Record of Decision.
    The credit agreement would include the anticipated schedule for 
loan disbursements. However, actual disbursements would be based on 
costs incurred in accordance with the

[[Page 32670]]

approved construction plan. This requirement would protect the Corps in 
the event of non-performance.
    As required by section 3908(b)(4) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the 
interest rate on a secured loan would be equal to or greater than the 
yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on the date of 
execution of the credit agreement. The base interest rate can be 
identified through use of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau 
of the Fiscal Service for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) 
investments. The WIFIA program would estimate the yield on comparable 
Treasury securities by adding one basis point to the SLGS daily rate 
with a maturity that is closest to the weighted average loan life of 
the WIFIA credit assistance.
    As allowed by statute at 33 U.S.C. 3908(c)(2), scheduled loan 
repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan or loan 
guarantee shall commence not later than 5 years after the projected 
date of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution 
of the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement, as determined by the 
Secretary. However, scheduled loan repayments of principal and interest 
on a secured loan or loan guarantee to a State infrastructure financing 
authority would commence not later than 5 years after the date on which 
amounts are first disbursed. The final maturity of the credit agreement 
shall be in no instance later than 35 years after the projected date of 
substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of the 
Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement.
    As required by section 3908(b)(5) of Title 33 of the U.S.C., the 
final maturity date of a secured loan would be the earlier of the date 
that is (1) 35 years after the date of substantial completion of the 
project, as determined by the Secretary, or (2) the useful life of the 
project, as determined by the Secretary. However, the final maturity 
date of a secured loan to a State infrastructure financing authority 
would be not later than 35 years after the date on which amounts are 
first disbursed. In determining the useful life of the project, for the 
purposes of establishing the final maturity date of the Federal credit 
instrument, the Secretary would consider the useful economic life of 
the asset(s) being financed, as required under OMB Circular A-129.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ At the time of publication of this rule, the OMB circular 
may be accessed electronically at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A129/a-129.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As required by statute, the Corps' Federal credit instrument may 
have a junior claim to other debt issued by the obligor in terms of its 
priority interest in the project's pledged security. However, the 
Corps' claim on pledged security would not be subordinated to the 
claims of any holder of the project obligations in the event of a 
bankruptcy, insolvency, or liquidation of the obligor of the project. 
The Corps' interest may include collateral other than pledged revenues.

J. Rating Requirement

    The Corps, as required by 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1)(D)(i), would require 
each applicant to furnish a preliminary rating opinion letter as part 
of the application process. The applicant would be responsible for 
identifying and approaching one or more Nationally Recognized 
Statistical Rating Organizations (NRSROs) to obtain such a letter. This 
letter must indicate that the applicant project's senior obligations 
(which may be the Federal credit instrument), have the potential of 
attaining an investment-grade rating. As required by Section 3907 
(a)(1)(D)(ii) of the WIFIA, 33 U.S.C. 3901 et seq., the Corps would 
require each applicant to provide, prior to final acceptance and 
financing of the project, final rating opinion letters from at least 
two rating agencies indicating that the senior obligations of the 
project have an investment-grade rating. If the Federal credit 
instrument is the project's senior obligation, these ratings must apply 
to all project obligations with claims at parity to that of the Federal 
credit instrument on the security pledged to the Federal credit 
instrument, including the Federal credit instrument. The Corps would 
also require as a matter of policy, prior to final execution of the 
loan agreement or loan guarantee agreement, that the applicant provide 
at least one final rating opinion letter which provides a credit rating 
on the final negotiated direct loan or loan guarantee that does not 
include consideration of the full faith and credit of the United States 
of America.

K. Federal Requirements

    Recipients of WIFIA credit assistance would be required to comply 
with Federal requirements applicable to all federally-financed 
projects. The final rule provides a non-exhaustive list of these 
requirements in Section V (Statutory and Executive Order Reviews).

L. American Iron and Steel Requirements

    Recipients of WIFIA credit assistance would be required to comply, 
per 33 U.S.C. 3914(a), with American Iron and Steel (AIS) requirements, 
which requires that if any WIFIA assistance is provided for 
construction, alteration, maintenance, or repair of a project, all of 
the iron and steel products used in the project must be produced in the 
United States. These products include lined or unlined pipes and 
fittings, manhole covers and other municipal castings, hydrants, tanks, 
flanges, pipe clamps and restraints, valves, structural steel, 
reinforced precast concrete, and construction materials. 33 U.S.C. 
3914(b). This requirement applies to all iron and steel products used 
in the project, not only those paid for with proceeds from the WIFIA 
credit assistance.

M. Labor Standards (Davis-Bacon Act of 1931)

    The WIFIA requires recipients of WIFIA credit assistance to pay all 
laborers and mechanics employed by contractors or subcontractors' wages 
at rates not less than those prevailing for the same type of work on 
similar construction in the immediate locality, as determined by the 
Secretary of Labor. 33 U.S.C. 3909(h) (cross-referencing Title VI of 
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act); 33 U.S.C. 1372. This is 
commonly referred to as Davis-Bacon wage requirements. This requirement 
applies to all laborers and mechanics working on a project, not only 
those paid from proceeds of the WIFIA credit assistance.

N. Reporting Requirements

    The Corps will require, at a minimum, that any recipient of WIFIA 
credit assistance must make available to the Corps an annual project 
performance report and audited financial statements to the Corps within 
the time period stated in the credit agreement following the 
recipient's fiscal year-end for each year during which the recipient's 
obligation to the Federal Government remains in effect. The Corps may 
conduct periodic financial and compliance audits of the recipient, as 
determined necessary by the Corps. The specific credit agreement 
between the recipient of credit assistance and the Corps may contain 
additional reporting requirements. This would be a necessary and 
important requirement in order to allow the Corps to provide proper and 
sufficient oversight of federally-financed projects.

O. Selection Criteria

    Congress enacted WIFIA with the goal of accelerating investment in 
our nation's water infrastructure by providing credit assistance to 
creditworthy projects of major

[[Page 32671]]

importance to the water sector. Only eligible projects will be 
selected. The project priorities established under this rule are as 
follows: Projects serving small, rural communities and economically 
disadvantaged communities and projects serving Tribal communities.
    The program's goal is to enable local investment in projects that 
enhance community resilience to flooding, while supporting the Corps' 
policy initiatives by prioritizing the projects listed above.
    Section 3907(b)(2) of Title 33 of the U.S. Code establishes 11 
criteria, at a minimum, for selecting among eligible projects to 
receive credit assistance, but does not prohibit the Corps from 
identifying additional selection criteria and requirements. As such, 
the Corps will utilize the following 12 selection criteria.
    1. The extent to which the project is nationally or regionally 
significant, with respect to the generation of public benefits, such 
as--
    a. The reduction of flood risk;
    b. The improvement of water quality and quantity, including aquifer 
recharge;
    c. The protection of drinking water, including source water 
protection;
    d. The support of domestic and international commerce; and
    e. The restoration of degraded aquatic ecosystem structures.
    2. The extent to which the project financing plan includes public 
or private financing, in addition to WIFIA credit assistance.
    3. The likelihood that WIFIA credit assistance would enable the 
project to proceed at an earlier date than the project would otherwise 
be able to proceed.
    4. The extent to which the project uses new or innovative 
approaches.
    5. The amount of budget authority required to fund the WIFIA 
Federal credit instrument.
    6. The extent to which the project--
    a. Protects against extreme weather event, such as floods or 
hurricanes; or
    b. Helps maintain or protect the environment.
    7. The extent to which a project serves regions with significant 
clean energy exploration, development, or production areas.
    8. The extent to which a project serves regions with significant 
water resource challenges, including the need to address--
    a. Water quality concerns in areas of regional, national, or 
international significance;
    b. Water quantity concerns related to groundwater, surface water, 
or other water sources;
    c. Significant flood risk;
    d. Water resource challenges identified in existing regional, 
State, or multistate agreements; or
    e. Water resources with exceptional recreational value or 
ecological assistance.
    9. The extent to which the project addresses identified municipal, 
State, or regional priorities.
    10. The readiness of the project to proceed toward development, 
including a demonstration by the obligor that there is a reasonable 
expectation that the contracting process for construction of the 
project can commence not later than 90 days after the date on which a 
Federal credit instrument is obligated for the project under WIFIA.
    11. The extent to which WIFIA credit assistance reduces overall 
Federal contributions to the project.
    12. The extent to which the project serves economically 
disadvantaged communities and spurs economic opportunity for, and 
minimally adversely impacts, disadvantaged communities and their 
populations.
    Criterion (5) is directly related to a project's creditworthiness, 
financial viability, and the Corps' capacity to make a loan. This 
criterion would be used to assess projects separate from the assessment 
under the other selection criteria. In particular, it would inform the 
Corps' ability to provide funding in an equitable manner to prospective 
borrowers seeking financing. The amount of budget authority used by a 
project would be an important consideration when selecting projects. 
The greater the budget authority used by a project, which is a function 
of both project size and creditworthiness, the less budget authority is 
available to finance other projects. Selecting projects would be at the 
discretion of the Secretary who may decide that a project that uses a 
disproportionally high level of budget authority provides essential 
public safety benefits and deserves greater consideration.
    The Corps added criterion (12) to reflect the Corps' intention to 
address the needs of economically disadvantaged communities where 
obtaining financing for critical water resources infrastructure 
presents additional difficulties and to further current Administration 
priorities as expressed in E.O. 13985, E.O. 13990, and E.O. 14008.\10\ 
While the creditworthiness requirement, as well as the requirement to 
obtain an investment-grade rating on senior obligations, may be a 
challenge for economically disadvantaged communities, the flexibility 
and low interest rates of the Federal credit instrument may improve 
overall financial feasibility and burden to the community.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ Executive Order 13985 of January 20, 2021. Advancing Racial 
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal 
Government.
    Executive Order 13990 of Jan 20, 2021. Protecting Health and the 
Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis.
    Executive Order 14008 of January 27, 2021. Tackling the Climate 
Crisis at Home and Abroad.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review & Executive 
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review

    E.O. 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' and E.O. 13563, 
``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' require that 
significant regulatory actions be submitted for review to the Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in OMB. These orders also 
direct agencies to assess the costs and benefits of available 
regulatory alternatives and, if the regulation is necessary, to select 
regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits. This rule has been 
determined significant under E.O. 12866. In accordance with E.O. 12866 
and E.O. 13563, this significant regulatory action was submitted to OMB 
for review. The costs to the public of implementing the Corps WIFIA 
program, are demonstrated in Section D. Regulatory Flexibility Act 
below. The costs to large and small entities will be the same and 
include: the fees charged to applicants and loan recipients, as well as 
any remaining costs of administering the program that are not fully 
covered by the user fees and instead require support by Federal 
appropriations. The total estimated costs are anticipated to be between 
approximately $175,000 and $500,000, plus an annual cost between 
$20,000 and $60,000. The benefits of implementing the Corps WIFIA 
program include: (1) the value of the benefits provided by non-Federal 
dam safety projects enabled by future the Corps WIFIA credit assistance 
(for example, flood damages prevented by dam safety improvement 
projects), and (2) the savings realized by the borrowers from the lower 
lending rates of the Corps WIFIA credit assistance. The transfer 
effects of this rule are the credit subsidy costs for loans or loan 
guarantees issued to support safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and 
repair non-federal dams. To date, Congress has appropriated $81

[[Page 32672]]

million in credit subsidy funding for the Corps WIFIA program.

B. Executive Order 11988: Floodplain Management

    Projects funded under this rule will meet or exceed applicable 
State, local, Tribal, and territorial standards for flood risk and 
floodplain management, as well as E.O. 11988, as amended by E.O. 13690, 
which directs Federal agencies to avoid, to the extent possible, long-
and short-term adverse impacts associated with the occupancy and 
modification of the floodplain as well as to avoid direct and indirect 
support of floodplain development wherever there is a practicable 
alternative.
    All projects under this rule are considered Federal actions under 
E.O. 11988 and thus, project applicants shall determine whether the 
proposed project will occur in the floodplain. If the project is 
located within the floodplain, the applicant must determine whether the 
action is critical or not and what floodplain standard to follow. The 
Corps will implement the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard 
(FFRMS), where appropriate, which is a flood standard established by 
E.O. 13690, that aims to build a more resilient future through the 
encouragement of consideration of current and future risk when Federal 
investments are used to build or rebuild near floodplains. The Corps 
will ensure unwise uses are avoided, where possible, including the 
increase or transfer of flood risks, resulting in adverse impacts to 
human health, safety, welfare, property, natural resources, or 
functions of floodplains. Further guidance on implementation of E.O. 
11988 can be found in the Corps Engineer Regulation 1165-2-26 (30 March 
1984). Further information on FFRMS can be found at https://www.iwr.usace.army.mil/Missions/Flood-Risk-Management/Flood-Risk-Management-Program/About-the-Program/Policy-and-Guidance/Federal-Flood-Risk-Management-Standard/.

C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    It has been determined that 33 CFR part 386 does impose reporting 
or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
1995. These reporting requirements have been submitted to OMB for 
approval under OMB Control Number 0710-0026, titled ``Corps Water 
Infrastructure Financing Program (CWIFP) Preliminary Application.''

D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    The RFA (5 U.S.C. 601) requires Federal agencies to consider the 
impact of regulations on small entities (small businesses, small 
organizations, or small government jurisdictions) in developing the 
proposed and final regulations. The RFA applies to the Corps WIFIA 
program rule since notice and comment are required as part of this 
rulemaking process.
    Congress has provided authority and funding required for the Corps 
to make direct loans and loan guarantees for safety projects to 
maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the National Inventory 
of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local government, public 
utility, or private. The Corps is establishing its new WIFIA program 
within the limitations set by Congress. This rule sets forth the 
policies and procedures that the Corps will use for receiving, 
evaluating, approving applications, and servicing and monitoring direct 
loans and loan guarantees.
    Small entities that would be impacted by this rule will be non-
Federal dam owners who own dams that require loans in excess of 
$20,000,000. This includes small government jurisdictions and 
organizations who voluntarily submit a preliminary application and are 
subsequently invited to submit a full application. The Corps will only 
invite potential borrowers to submit an application and application fee 
if the Corps believes there is a reasonable expectation that the 
project could receive financing. The application fee will be waived for 
communities governed by small governmental jurisdictions (small 
communities) and economically disadvantaged communities. The Corps 
anticipates receiving approximately 50 preliminary applications each 
year from eligible entities per year, five of which are expected to be 
considered small entities. This estimate is derived from EPA's WIFIA 
program, which has received 118 applications in total, of which 4 were 
from small communities, since the program's implementation 2017.
    There are approximately 87,000 non-federally owned dams in the US 
(some of which are owned by the same entity). Of the NAICS 
classifications, the most applicable industry classification for these 
entities is the ``Water Supply and Irrigation Systems'' (NAICS code 
221310) and the ``Administration of Air and Water Resource and Solid 
Waste Management Programs'' (NAICS code 924110). Information on these 
industries is provided in the tables below. Based on the U.S. Small 
Business Administration's (SBA) Size Standard/Small Entity Threshold 
and the average annual receipts, the Water Supply and Irrigation 
Systems industry has 3,283 firms that qualify as small entities. Small 
business size standards are not established for the Public 
Administration sector. According to the SBA, ``concerns performing 
operational services for the administration of a government program are 
classified under the NAICS private sector industry based on the 
activities performed.'' The closest private sector industry fulfilling 
the functions of potential the Corps WIFIA borrowers within the Public 
Administration sector is the ``Water Supply and Irrigation Systems'' 
subsector, therefore the small business estimates for that subsector 
are used in this analysis.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        SBA size standard/small
               NAICS code                     Industry subsector       entity threshold (average    Total small
                                                  description              annual receipts)         businesses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
221310..................................  Water Supply and            $36.0 M...................           3,283
                                           Irrigation Systems.
924110..................................  Administration of Air and   Small business size                    n/a
                                           Water Resource and Solid    standards are not
                                           Waste Management Programs.  established for this
                                                                       Sector.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 32673]]


                                       Water Supply and Irrigation Systems
                                               [NAICS code 221310]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  Annual payroll     Receipts
  Enterprise size ($1,000)         Firms       Establishments      Employment        ($1,000)        ($1,000)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
01: Total...................           3,334             4,131            36,836       2,346,769      11,712,605
02: <100....................             684               684             1,088           9,494          35,768
03: 100-499.................           1,300             1,300             3,420          87,118         336,983
04: 500-999.................             569               570             2,676         106,172         402,485
05: 1,000-2,499.............             448               455             3,492         165,793         694,133
06: 2,500-4,999.............             143               151             1,968         104,614         482,800
07: 5,000-7,499.............              54                67             1,208          67,701         322,787
08: 7,500-9,999.............              29                38               705          40,656         219,741
09: 10,000-14,999...........              25                40             1,035          58,494         277,199
10: 15,000-19,999...........              12                17               416          29,630         166,138
11: 20,000-24,999...........               9                19               501          25,101          99,781
12: 25,000-29,999...........               5                14               424          27,005          84,788
13: 30,000-34,999...........               5                 9               282          15,409         117,611
14: 35,000-39,999...........               5                30               701          36,112         123,970
15: 40,000-49,999...........               6                11               678          60,553         179,170
16: 50,000-74,999...........               8                68             1,605          96,580         392,037
17: 75,000-99,999...........               5                24               904          76,175         303,054
18: 100,000+................              27               634            15,733       1,340,162       7,474,160
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: U.S. Census Bureau 2017 SUSB Data Table ``Number of Firms and Establishments, Employment, Annual
  Payroll, and Receipts by Industry and Enterprise Receipts Size: 2017''.

    Eligible small entities that qualify for WIFIA credit assistance 
and plan to utilize debt financing such as bank loans, bonds, or a 
WIFIA credit assistance to fund an eligible project, will incur 
compliance costs associated with any such debt instrument. As such, the 
compliance costs to obtain a WIFIA credit assistance noted below in 
most instances represents a meaningful savings compared to alternative 
capital market debt financing options. WIFIA compliance costs likely 
include the following:
     Fees: The WIFIA application fee of $25,000 will be waived 
for small and/or disadvantaged communities. All WIFIA credit assistance 
recipients will be charged a transaction processing fee, likely between 
$125,000 and $300,000, at the time of loan closing to cover the costs 
incurred by the Corps for the processing each loan. The cost of the fee 
will depend on the complexity of the transaction (more complex 
transactions will have higher transaction processing fees). Fees would 
first be reduced by an equal amount per loan for those projects serving 
economically disadvantaged communities, with public applicants. If 
additional administrative funds remain, the Corps may reduce fees by an 
equal amount for each remaining loan, with public applicants. 
Additionally, all WIFIA credit assistance recipients will be charged an 
annual servicing fee, likely between $10,000 and $50,000. This cost of 
this fee will depend on the costs of servicing the credit instrument. 
The transaction processing fee and the annual servicing fee will be 
determined at the time of loan closing. To facilitate access to the 
funding, all applicants have the option to use loan proceeds to pay for 
all consulting reports and application fees. This amount is less than 
the underwriting fees incurred for alternative debt financings, which 
are usually 1.0% of the borrowed amount.
     Rating letters: The Corps WIFIA program will require 
borrowers to provide credit rating letters before closing on the WIFIA 
credit assistance. Credit ratings typically cost approximately $50,000 
to obtain. Credit ratings are a standard practice for alternative debt 
financings and as such, the cost to obtain one for Corps financing does 
not materially change the costs for small entities.
     Reading the regulation: The regulation and other related 
documents are not expected to take more than a typical 8-hour workday 
to read and comprehend. Assuming an average hourly rate of $76.43/hour 
(the average hourly rate for architectural and engineering managers 
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Occupational Employment 
and Wages data from May 2021), reading the regulation would cost 
approximately $1,300 for 2 employees to read the regulation.
     Consulting fees: Consultants are not required to 
participate in the WIFIA program. However, eligible entities may opt to 
utilize support from consultants to prepare financial, legal, and 
technical documents required to support an application. Based on the 
eligible costs submitted by communities with executed EPA WIFIA loans 
to date, the Corps estimates that should an entity opt to utilize such 
support, the cost is anticipated to be less than $75,000. This amount 
is less than the consulting fees incurred for alternative debt 
financings, which are usually in excess of $100,000.
     Reporting: WIFIA requires that borrowers submit financial 
audit or financial condition reports, so that the program can monitor 
the status of the project and identify any changes to the credit risk 
posed to the Federal Government. These reports are already produced 
regularly by borrowers, so the added cost to borrowers is anticipated 
to be less than $5,000 per year.
     Completing applications and corresponding with the Corps: 
Based on EPA figures from communities with executed EPA WIFIA loans, it 
is estimated that borrowers will spend approximately 50 hours per year 
completing required paperwork and correspondence with the Corps. 
Assuming an hourly wage of $76.43/hour (the average hourly rate for 
architectural and engineering managers according to the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics' Occupational Employment and Wages data from May 2021), this 
is estimated to cost applicants and borrowers approximately $4,000 per 
year.
     Record-keeping: It is anticipated that record-keeping 
costs for WIFIA credit assistance will not exceed $5,000 per year.
    The estimated costs to small business associated with the program 
are summarized in the table below.

[[Page 32674]]



------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       $125,000-$350,000 plus $10,000-
                Fees                           $50,000 annually
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rating letters.....................  $50,000.
Loan interest......................  Based on loan amount and duration.
Reading the regulation.............  $700-$1,300.
Consulting fees....................  $0-$75,000.
Reporting..........................  $0-$5,000.
Completing applications and          $4,000 annually.
 corresponding with the Corps.
Record-keeping.....................  $5,000 annually.
                                    ------------------------------------
    Total..........................  $175,700-$481,300 Plus $19,000-
                                      $59,000 annually.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These costs do not represent a significant economic impact. The 
only reason entities would proceed with the program is if there is a 
benefit compared to other alternative debt financings. The total 
estimated costs are anticipated to be between approximately $175,000 
and $500,000, plus an annual cost between $20,000 and $60,000. For the 
affected industries, these costs range from 20% to 50% of average 
annual receipts (note: most costs included here are one-time costs; 
annually recurring costs range from 2% to 6% of average annual receipts 
for affected industries). Participation in the WIFIA program is 
voluntary and the Corps anticipates inviting approximately 5 small, 
non-Federal entities to apply for Federal credit assistance through the 
program.
    Because (1) participating in the program is voluntary and 
undertaken by small entities to affordably finance eligible projects, 
and (2) the cost of obtaining a WIFIA credit assistance is likely lower 
than the alternative forms of debt financing necessary to undertake a 
project, very few of the potentially affected small entities will 
experience a significant impact. Further, the WIFIA program eligibility 
will apply to 3,283 small entities, but the Corps expects only five to 
experience full impacts described above. The remainder will experience 
little to no impact from the rule. Therefore, the percentage of 
affected entities experiencing a significant impact is approximately 
0.15%. Based on this result, the Corps certifies that this rule will 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.

E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This action does not contain an unfunded mandate of $100 million or 
more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. The action imposes 
no enforceable duty on any State, local, or Tribal governments or the 
private sector.

F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between 
the National Government and the States, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.

G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian 
Tribal Governments

    This action does not have Tribal implications as specified in E.O. 
13175. While a Tribal government, or a consortium of Tribal 
governments, may apply for WIFIA credit assistance as a voluntary 
action, this action does not have substantial direct effects on one or 
more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government 
and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities 
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
    The Corps invited 18 Tribal Governments identified in the NID with 
any primary owner type, except those identified as Federal, that owned 
dams of sufficient size to likely be interested in the program to two 
information sessions in 2023. The Corps will hold additional specific 
sessions for Tribes after issuance of this final rule to expand program 
awareness.

H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental 
Health and Safety Risks

    This action is not subject to E.O. 13045 because it does not 
address environmental health or safety risks that would 
disproportionately affect children. This rulemaking provides the 
procedure to apply for credit assistance and establishes the fees 
related to the provision of Federal credit assistance under the WIFIA. 
The selection criteria used for evaluating and selecting among eligible 
projects to receive credit assistance contained in Section IV.O 
(Selection Criteria) of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of the 
preamble includes the extent to which the project generates public 
safety benefits.

I. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use

    This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is 
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, 
distribution, or use of energy and has not been designated by the OIRA 
Administrator as a significant energy action. This rulemaking simply 
provides the procedure to apply for credit assistance and establishes 
the fees related to the provision of Federal credit assistance under 
the Corps WIFIA program.

J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA)

    This action is not subject to the NTTAA, Public Law 104-113, 
because it does not establish an environmental health or safety 
standard.

K. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)

    This action of promulgating this rule will not have a significant 
effect on the human environment. Each project obtaining assistance 
under this program is required to adhere to the National Environmental 
Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). These 
requirements apply at the time of application for assistance. The Corps 
has completed a Programmatic Environmental Assessment and associated 
Finding of No Significant Impact in support of this rule. These 
documents are available at https://www.usace.army.mil/Missions/Civil-Works/Infrastructure/revolutionize/CWIFP/.

L. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental 
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations

    E.O. 12898 directs Federal agencies to identify and address the 
disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental 
effects of their actions on minority and low-income populations. This 
action does not cause disproportionately high and adverse human health 
and

[[Page 32675]]

environmental effects on minority or low-income populations. The Corps 
anticipates that most of the adverse effects associated with projects 
would occur during construction and would be temporary, such as 
construction noise, air emissions from construction vehicles, erosion 
from disturbed surfaces and construction vehicle traffic or traffic 
detours. Impacts to communities from construction are not expected to 
be disproportionate to any identified environmental justice populations 
with the implementation of identified BMPs and as required by E.O. 
12898. The Corps will address environmental justice for all projects 
receiving credit assistance consistent with the requirements of the 
NEPA review further described in Sec. 386.5(a) and CEQ guidance.

M. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

    This action is subject to the CRA, and the Corps will submit a rule 
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of 
the United States. Pursuant to the CRA (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the 
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs designated this rule as 
not a ``major rule'', as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).

List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 386

    Administrative practice and procedure, Intergovernmental relations, 
Waterways.

    Approved by:
Michael L. Connor,
Assistant Secretary of the Army, (Civil Works).

0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Corps is amending 33 CFR 
chapter II by adding part 386 to read as follows:

PART 386--CREDIT ASSISTANCE FOR WATER RESOURCES INFRASTRUCTURE 
PROJECTS

Sec.
386.1 Purpose and scope.
386.2 Definitions.
386.3 Limitations on assistance.
386.4 Application process.
386.5 Federal requirements.
386.6 Floodplain management.
386.7 American iron and steel.
386.8 Labor standards.
386.9 Investment-grade ratings.
386.10 Threshold criteria.
386.11 Selection criteria.
386.12 Term sheets and approvals.
386.13 Closing on the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement.
386.14 Reporting requirements.
386.15 Fees.

    Authority:  33 U.S.C. 3901 et seq.


Sec.  386.1  Purpose and scope.

    The Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act of 2014 (WIFIA) 
authorized a new Federal credit program for water resources 
infrastructure projects to be administered by the U.S. Army Corps of 
Engineers (Corps). Title 1, Division D of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2021, and Division J, Title III of the 
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act limits the program to safety 
projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams identified in the 
National Inventory of Dams with a primary owner type of State, local 
government, public utility or private. The purpose of this rule is to 
establish the process by which the Corps will administer such credit 
assistance, including the assessment of fees, and to set forth the 
policies and procedures that the Corps will use for receiving, 
evaluating, approving applications, and servicing and monitoring direct 
loans and loan guarantees.


Sec.  386.2  Definitions.

    The following definitions apply to this part:
    (a) Application means the form and attachments submitted by 
prospective borrowers that have been selected to apply for credit 
assistance after the review of letters of interest.
    (b) Borrower means any entity that enters into a direct loan or 
Loan Guarantee Agreement with the Corps that is primarily liable for 
payment of the principal or interest on a Federal credit instrument. 
``Borrower'' is synonymous with ``obligor.'' ``Obligor'' is used in 
place of borrower in this part whenever ``obligor'' appears in a 
corresponding section of WIFIA.
    (c) Clean energy means systems, processes, and best practices for 
producing, converting, storing, transmitting, distributing, and 
consuming energy that avoid, reduce, or sequester the amount of 
greenhouse gas (GHG) emitted to, or concentrated in, the atmosphere.
    (d) Community means a collection of people in a geographic area 
having one or more characteristic in common. The geographic area may be 
contained within or cross political subdivisions of States.
    (e) Credit agreement means a contractual agreement (or agreements) 
between the Corps and a borrower (and the lender, if applicable) 
establishing the terms and conditions, rules, and requirements of a 
secured loan or loan guarantee.
    (f) Credit assistance means a secured loan or loan guarantee under 
33 U.S.C. 3908.
    (g) Credit subsidy shall have the same meaning as ``cost'' under 
section 502(5) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 
661a(5)), which is the net present value at the time the Loan Agreement 
or Loan Guarantee Agreement is executed. The credit subsidy cost for a 
given project is the net present value, at the time the Loan Agreement 
or Loan Guarantee Agreement is executed of the following estimated cash 
flows, discounted to the point of disbursement:
    (1) Payments by the Government to cover defaults and delinquencies, 
interest subsidies, or other payments; less
    (2) Payments to the Government including origination and other 
fees, penalties, and recoveries including the effects of changes in 
loan or debt terms resulting from the exercise by the borrower, 
eligible lender, or other holder of an option included in a Loan 
Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement.
    (h) Economically disadvantaged community refers to a community that 
meets one of the following criteria:
    (1) Low-income;
    (2) Unemployment rate above national average;
    (3) Indian country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151 or in the proximity 
of an Alaska Native Village;
    (4) U.S. Territories; or
    (5) Identified as disadvantaged by the Climate and Economic Justice 
Screening Tool (developed by the Council on Environmental Quality).\1\
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    \1\ Currently available at https://screeningtool.geoplatform.gov.
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    (i) Economically justified means that the anticipated benefits will 
exceed the costs.
    (j) Eligible entity means one of the following:
    (1) A corporation;
    (2) A partnership;
    (3) A joint venture;
    (4) A trust;
    (5) A State, or local government entity, agency, or 
instrumentality;
    (6) A Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments; or
    (7) A State infrastructure financing authority.
    (k) Eligible project costs means the amounts, which are paid by, or 
for the account of, a borrower in connection with a project, including 
the cost of:
    (1) Development-phase activities, including planning, feasibility 
analysis (including any related analysis necessary to carry out an 
eligible project), revenue forecasting, environmental review, 
permitting, preliminary engineering and design work, and other pre-
construction activities.

[[Page 32676]]

    (2) Construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, and replacement 
activities.
    (3) Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property 
(including water rights, land relating to the project, and improvements 
to land), environmental mitigation, construction contingencies, and 
acquisition of equipment; and
    (4) Capitalized interest necessary to meet market requirements, 
reasonably required reserve funds, capital issuance expenses, and other 
carrying costs during construction. Capitalized interest on the Federal 
credit instrument is not an eligible project cost.
    (l) Environmentally acceptable means the project will satisfy all 
applicable and necessary environmental requirements to include those 
identified in Sec. 386.5(a), such as the National Environmental Policy 
Act (NEPA).
    (m) Federal credit instrument means a secured loan or loan 
guarantee authorized to be made available under 33 U.S.C. 3901-3914 
with respect to a project.
    (n) Investment-grade rating means a rating category of BBB minus, 
Baa3, bbb minus, BBB (low), or higher assigned by a nationally 
recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) to project 
obligations offered into the capital markets.
    (o) Iron and steel products means the following products made 
primarily of iron or steel: lined or unlined pipes and fittings, 
manhole covers and other municipal castings, hydrants, tanks, flanges, 
pipe clamps and restraints, valves, structural steel, reinforced 
precast concrete, and construction materials.
    (p) Lender means any non-Federal qualified institutional buyer (as 
defined in 17 CFR 230.144A(a), known as Rule 144A(a) of the Securities 
and Exchange Commission and issued under the Securities Act of 1933 (15 
U.S.C. 77a et seq.)), including:
    (1) A qualified retirement plan (as defined in section 4974(c) of 
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 4974(c)) that is a 
qualified institutional buyer;
    (2) A governmental plan (as defined in section 414(d) of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 414(d)) that is a qualified 
institutional buyer; and
    (3) The Federal Financing Bank.
    (q) Loan guarantee means any guarantee or other pledge by the 
Secretary of the Army (Secretary) to pay all or part of the principal 
of and interest on a loan or other debt obligation issued by a borrower 
and funded by a lender.
    (r) Low income means the area has a per capita income of 80 percent 
or less of the national average.
    (s) Nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) 
means a credit rating agency identified and registered by the Office of 
Credit Ratings in the Securities and Exchange Commission under 15 
U.S.C. 78c.
    (t) Non-Federal means an organization that is not an agency or 
instrumentality of the Federal Government, including State, interstate, 
Indian Tribal, or local government, as well as private organizations.
    (u) Preliminary application means the form and attachments 
prospective borrowers submit to the Corps to be considered for credit 
assistance following the announcement of available funding.
    (v) Project means:
    (1) Safety projects to maintain, upgrade, and repair dams 
(including dam removal) identified in the National Inventory of Dams 
with a primary owner type of State, local government, public utility, 
or private; and which meets the statutory requirements of Title 1, 
Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021, meet the 
criteria outlined in 85 FR 39189 (see division D of the Further 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (Pub. L. 116-94)).
    (2) Any project that meets the criteria in paragraph (v)(1) of this 
section must also be a project for flood damage reduction, hurricane 
and storm damage reduction, aquatic environmental restoration, coastal 
or inland harbor navigation improvement, or inland and intracoastal 
waterways navigation improvement that the Secretary determines is 
technically sound, economically justified, and environmentally 
acceptable, including--
    (i) A project to reduce flood damage;
    (ii) A project to restore aquatic ecosystems;
    (iii) A project to improve the inland and intracoastal waterways 
navigation system of the United States; and
    (iv) A project to improve navigation of a coastal inland harbor of 
the United States, including channel deepening and construction of 
associated general navigation features.
    (3) Acquisition of real property or an interest in real property 
for a project that meets the criteria under paragraph (v)(1) of this 
section--
    (i) If the acquisition is integral to a project eligible for WIFIA 
credit assistance; or
    (ii) Pursuant to an existing plan that, in the judgment of the 
Secretary, would mitigate the environmental impacts of water resources 
infrastructure projects otherwise eligible for WIFIA credit assistance.
    (4) A combination of projects secured by a common security pledge, 
each of which is eligible for WIFIA credit assistance, for which an 
eligible entity, or a combination of eligible entities, submits a 
single application.
    (w) Project obligation means any note, bond, debenture, or other 
debt obligation issued by a borrower in connection with the financing 
of a project, other than a Federal credit instrument.
    (x) Projected substantial completion date means the expected date 
as determined by the Secretary, at which the stage in the progress of 
the project when the project or designated portion thereof is 
sufficiently complete in accordance with the contract documents so that 
the project or designated portion thereof can be used for its intended 
use.
    (y) Prospective borrower means an eligible entity seeking credit 
assistance.
    (z) Publicly sponsored means the obligor can demonstrate, to the 
satisfaction of the Secretary, that it has consulted with the affected 
State, local, or Tribal government in which the project is located, or 
is otherwise affected by the project, and that such government supports 
the proposed project. Support can be shown by a certified letter signed 
by the approving municipal department or similar agency, mayor or other 
similar designated authority, local ordinance, or any other means by 
which local government approval can be evidenced.
    (aa) Secured loan means a direct loan or other debt obligation 
(including a note, bond, debenture, and sale or lease financing 
arrangement) issued by a borrower funded by the Secretary in connection 
with the financing of a project under 33 U.S.C. 3908.
    (bb) Small community means a community of not more than 25,000 
individuals.
    (cc) State means any of the fifty States, the District of Columbia, 
Puerto Rico, or any other territory or possession of the United States.
    (dd) State infrastructure financing authority means the State 
entity established or designated by the Governor of a State to receive 
a capitalization grant provided by, or otherwise carry out the 
requirements of, title VI of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act 
(33 U.S.C. 1381 et seq.) or section 1452 of the Safe Drinking Water Act 
(42 U.S.C. 300j-12).
    (ee) Subsidy amount means the dollar amount of budget authority 
that is sufficient to cover the estimated long-term cost to the Federal 
Government of

[[Page 32677]]

a Federal credit instrument, calculated on a net present value basis, 
excluding administrative costs and any incidental effects on the 
governmental receipts or outlays in accordance with the provisions of 
the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 661 et seq.).
    (ff) Substantial completion means the stage in the progress of the 
project when the project or designated portion thereof is sufficiently 
complete in accordance with the contract documents so that the project 
or designated portion thereof can be used for its intended use.
    (gg) Technically sound means the project will meet all applicable 
engineering, safety, and other technical standards.
    (hh) Term sheet means a contractual agreement between the Corps and 
the borrower (and the lender, if applicable) that sets forth the key 
business terms and conditions of a Federal credit instrument.
    (ii) Territory means each of the commonwealths, territories, and 
possessions of the United States established in Title 48 of the U.S.C.
    (jj) Treatment works has the meaning given the term in section 212 
of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1292).
    (kk) Unemployment rate above national average means the area has an 
unemployment rate that is, for the most recent 24-month period for 
which data are available, at least 1 percent greater than the national 
average unemployment rate.
    (ll) WIFIA means the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation 
Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113-121), as amended.


Sec.  386.3  Limitations on assistance.

    (a) The total amount of credit assistance offered to any project 
under this part shall not exceed 49% of the reasonably anticipated 
eligible project costs, or, if the secured loan does not receive an 
investment grade rating, the total amount of credit assistance shall 
not exceed the amount of the senior project obligations of the project 
(33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(2)(B)).
    (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, the Secretary 
may offer credit assistance in excess of 49% of the reasonably 
anticipated eligible project costs as long as such excess assistance 
combined for all projects does not require greater than 25% of the 
subsidy amount made available for the fiscal year, per 33 U.S.C. 
3912(d).
    (1) Use of the authority to offer credit assistance in excess of 
49% of the anticipated eligible project costs shall be considered on a 
case by case basis.
    (2) In the event this authority is used, all other criteria and 
requirements described in this part must be met and adhered to.
    (c) For each project receiving credit assistance, total Federal 
assistance may not exceed 80% of the total project costs, except for 
certain rural water projects authorized to be carried out by the 
Secretary of the Interior that includes among its beneficiaries a 
federally recognized Indian Tribe and for which the authorized Federal 
share of the total project costs is greater than 80%, and in accordance 
with 85 FR 39189 (see division D of the Further Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2020 (Pub. L. 116-94)).
    (d) Proceeds from the credit assistance shall not be utilized to 
provide cash contributions to the Corps for project related costs, 
except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(7), limited to the 
application, transaction processing, and servicing fees as described in 
Sec.  386.15.
    (e) Costs incurred, and the value of any integral in-kind 
contributions made, before receipt of credit assistance may be 
considered in calculating eligible project costs only upon approval of 
the Secretary. Such costs and integral in-kind contributions must be 
directly related to the development or execution of the project and 
must be eligible project costs as defined in Sec.  386.2. In addition, 
such costs, excluding the value of any integral in-kind contributions, 
are payable from the proceeds of the Federal credit instrument and 
shall be considered incurred costs for purposes of paragraph (h) of 
this section. Capitalized interest on the Federal credit instrument is 
not eligible for calculating eligible project costs.
    (f) No costs financed internally or with interim funding may be 
refinanced under this part later than a year following substantial 
completion of the project.
    (g) The Secretary shall not obligate funds in the form of a loan or 
loan guarantee for a project prior to:
    (1) To issuance of a determination that the Federal action is 
eligible for a Categorical Exclusion:
    (2) Issuance of a Finding of No Significant Impact; or
    (3) Issuance of a Record of Decision under the National 
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
    (h) The Secretary shall fund a secured loan based on the project's 
financing needs. The credit agreement shall include the anticipated 
schedule for such loan disbursements. Actual disbursements will be 
based on incurred costs, and in accordance with the approved 
construction plan, as evidenced by invoices or other documentation 
acceptable to the Secretary.
    (i) The interest rate on a secured loan will be equal to or greater 
than the yield on U.S. Treasury securities of comparable maturity on 
the date of execution of the credit agreement as identified through use 
of the daily rate tables published by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service 
for the State and Local Government Series (SLGS) investments. The yield 
on comparable Treasury securities will be estimated by adding one basis 
point to the SLGS daily rate with a maturity that is closest to the 
weighted average loan life of the Federal credit instrument, per 33 
U.S.C. 3908(b)(4).
    (j) The final maturity date of a secured loan will be the earlier 
of the date that is 35 years after the date of substantial completion 
of the project, as determined by the Secretary and identified in the 
credit agreement, or if the useful life of the project, as determined 
by the Secretary, is less than 35 years, the useful life of the 
project; however, the final maturity date of a secured loan to a State 
infrastructure financing authority will be not later than 35 years 
after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. In determining the 
useful life of the project, for the purposes of establishing the final 
maturity date of the Federal credit instrument, the Secretary will 
consider the useful economic life of the asset(s) being financed.
    (k) A secured loan will not be subordinated to the claims of any 
holder of project obligations in the event of bankruptcy, insolvency, 
or liquidation of the borrower of the project (33 U.S.C. 3908(b)(6)).
    (l) The Corps will establish a repayment schedule for a secured 
loan or loan guarantee based on the projected cash flow from project 
revenues and other repayment sources. Scheduled loan or loan guarantee 
repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan or loan 
guarantee will commence not later than 5 years after the projected date 
of substantial completion of the project at the time of execution of 
the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement, as determined by the 
Secretary (33 U.S.C. 3908(c)(A)); however, scheduled loan or loan 
guarantee repayments of principal and interest on a secured loan to a 
State infrastructure financing authority will commence not later than 5 
years after the date on which amounts are first disbursed. The final 
maturity of the credit agreement shall be in no instance

[[Page 32678]]

later than 35 years after the projected date of substantial completion 
of the project at the time of execution of the Loan Agreement or Loan 
Guarantee Agreement.


Sec.  386.4  Application process.

    (a) Each fiscal year for which budget authority is made available 
by Congress, the Corps shall publish a solicitation to announce the 
availability of credit assistance. It will specify how to 
electronically submit a preliminary application, the estimated amount 
of funding available to support Federal credit instruments, contact 
name(s), and other details for submissions and funding approvals.
    (b) Prospective borrowers seeking credit assistance under this part 
will be required to follow an application process requiring submission 
of the preliminary application as designated in the solicitation to 
announce the availability of credit assistance. In addition, the extent 
to which the project financing plan includes any other form of Federal 
assistance (including grants), in addition to WIFIA credit assistance, 
will be required to be provided in the application.
    (c) Following approval of the term sheet, and/or negotiation of 
satisfactory terms and conditions of the Federal credit instrument, the 
prospective borrower will proceed to closing, as described in Sec.  
386.13.


Sec.  386.5  Federal requirements.

    All projects receiving credit assistance under this part shall 
comply, where applicable, with:
    (a) Environmental authorities. (1) The National Environmental 
Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.;
    (2) Archeological and Historic Preservation Act, 16 U.S.C. 469-
469c;
    (3) Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.;
    (4) Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.;
    (5) Coastal Barrier Resources Act, 16 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.;
    (6) Coastal Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. 1451 et seq.;
    (7) Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.;
    (8) Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority 
Populations and Low-Income Populations, Executive Order 12898, 3 CFR, 
1994 Comp., p. 859;
    (9) Floodplain Management, Executive Order 11988, as amended by 
Executive Order 13690;
    (10) Protection of Wetlands, Executive Order 11990, 3 CFR, 1977 
Comp., p. 121, as amended by Executive Order 12608, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., 
p. 245;
    (11) Farmland Protection Policy Act, 7 U.S.C. 4201 et seq.;
    (12) Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 16 U.S.C. 661-666c, as 
amended;
    (13) Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, 16 
U.S.C. 1801 et seq.;
    (14) National Historic Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 300101 et seq..;
    (15) Safe Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. 300f et seq.; and
    (16) Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, 16 U.S.C. 1271 et seq.
    (b) Economic and miscellaneous authorities. (1) Debarment and 
Suspension, Executive Order 12549, 3 CFR, 1986 Comp., p. 189;
    (2) New Restrictions on Lobbying, 31 U.S.C. 1352;
    (3) Prohibitions relating to violations of the Clean Water Act or 
Clean Air Act with respect to Federal contracts, grants, or loans under 
42 U.S.C. 7606 and 33 U.S.C. 1368, and Executive Order 11738, 3 CFR, 
1971-1975 Comp., p. 799; and
    (4) The Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition 
Policies Act of 1970, 42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.
    (c) Civil rights, nondiscrimination, equal employment opportunity 
authorities. (1) Age Discrimination Act, 42 U.S.C.6101 et seq.;
    (2) Equal Employment Opportunity, Executive Order 11246, 3 CFR, 
1964-1965 Comp., p. 339;
    (3) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. 794, 
supplemented by Executive Orders 11914, 3 CFR, 1976 Comp., p. 117, and 
11250, 3 CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 351; and
    (4) Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000d et 
seq.
    (d) Others authorities. Other Federal and compliance requirements 
as may be applicable.


Sec.  386.6  Floodplain management.

    (a) In making WIFIA funding decisions under this part, the Corps 
will follow the requirements of Executive Order (E.O.) 11988, as 
amended by E.O. 13690, and Engineering Regulation (ER) 1165-2-26, 
``Implementation of E.O. 11988 on Floodplain Management''. Applicants 
shall submit information regarding the project that is sufficient for 
the Corps to determine that the project is in compliance with the 
requirements of E.O. 11988 and ER 1165-2-26.
    (b) Projects funded under this part will meet or exceed applicable 
State, local, Tribal, and territorial standards for flood risk and 
floodplain management, as well as E.O. 11988.
    (c) All projects under this part are considered Federal actions 
under E.O. 11988 and thus, project applicants shall determine whether 
the proposed project will occur in the floodplain. If the project is 
located within the floodplain, the applicant must determine whether the 
action is critical or not and what floodplain standard to follow. The 
Corps will implement the Federal Flood Risk Management Standard 
(FFRMS), where appropriate, which is a flood standard established by 
E.O. 13690, that aims to build a more resilient future through the 
encouragement of consideration of current and future risk when Federal 
investments are used to build or rebuild near floodplains. The Corps 
will ensure unwise uses are avoided, where possible, including the 
increase or transfer of flood risks, resulting in adverse impacts to 
human health, safety, welfare, property, natural resources, or 
functions of floodplains. Further guidance on implementation of E.O. 
11988 can be found in the Corps ER 1165-2-26 (30 March 1984). Further 
information on FFRMS can be found at https://www.iwr.usace.army.mil/Missions/Flood-Risk-Management/Flood-Risk-Management-Program/About-the-Program/Policy-and-Guidance/Federal-Flood-Risk-Management-Standard/.


Sec.  386.7  American iron and steel.

    (a) All projects receiving credit assistance under this part for 
construction, alteration, maintenance, or repair of a project shall use 
only iron and steel products produced in the United States, unless 
waiver of the requirement in this paragraph (a) is granted by an 
official authorized to do so.
    (b) Consistent with 33 U.S.C. 3914(b), ``iron and steel products'' 
means the following products made primarily of iron or steel: lined or 
unlined pipes and fittings, manhole covers and other municipal 
castings, hydrants, tanks, flanges, pipe clamps and restraints, valves, 
structural steel, reinforced precast concrete and construction 
materials. Equipment employed in construction that does not become part 
of the project is not an ``iron and steel product'' for the purpose of 
this section.


Sec.  386.8  Labor standards.

    All laborers and mechanics employed by contractors or 
subcontractors on projects receiving credit assistance under this part 
shall be paid wages at rates not less than those prevailing for the 
same type of work on similar construction in the immediate locality, as 
determined by the Secretary of Labor.

[[Page 32679]]

Sec.  386.9  Investment-grade ratings.

    (a) At the time a prospective borrower submits an application, the 
Corps shall require a preliminary rating opinion letter. The letter is 
a conditional credit assessment from a NRSRO that provides a 
preliminary indication of the project's overall creditworthiness and 
that specifically addresses the potential of the project's senior debt 
obligations, which may include, or be limited to, the Federal credit 
instrument to achieve an investment-grade rating, and address the 
rating of obligations similar to those proposed for the Federal credit 
instrument when the Federal credit instrument is not a senior debt 
obligation. The requirement of this paragraph (a) may be met, on a 
case-by-case basis, by accepting a recent credit rating of obligations 
that have a lien on the revenues pledged for repayment. This rating 
should be based on an unenhanced analysis of the underlying pledged 
source of repayment and not give any credit to any prospective loan 
guarantee provided by the U.S. Government.
    (b) Consistent with 33 U.S.C. 3907(a)(D)(ii), the full funding of a 
Federal credit instrument shall be contingent on:
    (1) The assignment of investment-grade ratings by NRSROs to all 
project obligations that have a lien on the pledged security senior to 
that of the Federal credit instrument on the pledged security; or
    (2)(i) In the event that the Federal credit instrument is:
    (A) A senior debt obligation;
    (B) Pari passu with the senior project obligations; or
    (C) A general obligation of the prospective borrower, to the 
Federal credit instrument.
    (ii) The applicant must provide at least one final rating opinion 
letter which provides a credit rating on the direct loan or the 
unenhanced Federal credit instrument. This rating should be based on an 
unenhanced analysis of the underlying pledged source of repayment and 
not give any credit to the loan or loan guarantee provided by the U.S. 
Government.
    (c) Neither the preliminary rating opinion letter nor the final 
ratings should reflect the effect of bond insurance, unless that 
insurance provides credit enhancement that secures WIFIA obligation.


Sec.  386.10  Threshold criteria.

    (a) To be eligible to receive Federal credit assistance under this 
part, a project shall meet the following threshold criteria:
    (1) The project and prospective borrower shall be creditworthy.
    (2) A project shall have eligible project costs that are reasonably 
anticipated to equal or exceed $20 million.
    (3) A Federal credit instrument:
    (i) Shall be repayable, in whole or in part, from State or local 
taxes, user fees, or other dedicated revenue sources that also secure 
the senior project obligations of the project;
    (ii) Shall include a rate covenant, coverage requirement, or 
similar security feature supporting the project obligations; and
    (iii) May have a lien on revenues subject to any lien securing 
project obligations.
    (4) In the case of a project that is undertaken by an entity that 
is not a State or local government or an agency or instrumentality of a 
State or local government, or a Tribal government or consortium of 
Tribal governments, the project that the entity is undertaking shall be 
publicly sponsored.
    (5) The prospective borrower shall have developed an operations and 
maintenance plan that identifies adequate revenues to operate, 
maintain, and repair the project during its useful life. If the 
borrower is a State infrastructure financing authority, it shall have 
ensured and will ensure that its borrowers have a plan for the eligible 
projects they are undertaking that identifies adequate revenues to 
operate, maintain and repair such projects during the useful life of 
such projects. The requirement in this paragraph (a)(5) may be met 
through the development of a written plan or a financial model.
    (b) With respect to paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the Secretary 
may accept general obligation pledges or general corporate promissory 
pledges and will determine the acceptability of other pledges and forms 
of collateral as dedicated revenue sources on a case-by-case basis. The 
Secretary shall not accept a pledge of Federal funds, regardless of 
source, as security for the Federal credit instrument.
    (c) The provision at 33 U.S.C. 3907(c) provides that nothing in 
section 3907(c) (which includes eligibility requirements and selection 
criteria for projects and entities receiving WIFIA assistance) is 
intended to supersede the applicability of other requirements of 
Federal law, including regulations.


Sec.  386.11  Selection criteria.

    The selection criteria in paragraphs (a) through (l) of this 
section will be used for evaluating and selecting among eligible 
projects to receive credit assistance:
    (a) The extent to which the project is nationally or regionally 
significant, with respect to the generation of economic and public 
benefits, such as--
    (1) The reduction of flood risk;
    (2) The improvement of water quality and quantity, including 
aquifer recharge;
    (3) The protection of drinking water, including source water 
protection;
    (4) The support of domestic and international commerce; and
    (5) The restoration of degraded aquatic ecosystem structures.
    (b) The extent to which the project financing plan includes public 
or private financing, in addition to WIFIA credit assistance.
    (c) The likelihood that WIFIA credit assistance would enable the 
project to proceed at an earlier date than the project would otherwise 
be able or likely to proceed.
    (d) The extent to which the project uses new or innovative 
approaches.
    (e) The amount of budget authority required to fund the WIFIA 
Federal credit instrument.
    (f) The extent to which the project--
    (1) Protects against an extreme weather event, such as a flood or 
hurricane; or
    (2) Helps maintain or protect the environment.
    (g) The extent to which a project serves regions with significant 
clean energy exploration development, or production areas.
    (h) The extent to which a project serves regions with significant 
water resource challenges, including the need to address--
    (1) Water quality concerns in areas of regional, national, or 
international significance;
    (2) Water quantity concerns related to groundwater, surface water, 
or other water sources;
    (3) Significant flood risk;
    (4) Water resource challenges identified in existing regional, 
State, or multistate agreements; or
    (5) Water resources with exceptional recreational value or 
ecological assistance.
    (i) The extent to which the project addresses identified municipal, 
State, or regional priorities.
    (j) The readiness of the project to proceed toward development, 
including a demonstration by the obligor that there is a reasonable 
expectation that the contracting process for construction of the 
project can commence not later than 90 days after the date on which a 
Federal credit instrument is obligated for the project under WIFIA.
    (k) The extent to which WIFIA credit assistance reduces the overall 
Federal contributions to the project.

[[Page 32680]]

    (l) The extent to which the project serves economically 
disadvantaged communities and spurs economic opportunity for, and 
minimally adversely impacts, economically disadvantaged communities and 
their populations.


Sec.  386.12  Term sheets and approvals.

    (a) The Corps, after review and evaluation of an application, and 
all other required documents submitted by a prospective borrower, may 
offer to such prospective borrower a written term sheet and/or a credit 
agreement, including detailed terms and conditions that must be met.
    (b) The issuance of a term sheet, upon execution by the Secretary, 
does not constitute a commitment by the Secretary to enter into the 
Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement. Execution of the Loan 
Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement represents obligation by the 
Secretary.


Sec.  386.13  Closing on the Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee 
Agreement.

    (a) Only a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee Agreement executed by 
the Secretary can obligate the Corps to issue a loan or loan guarantee. 
The Corps is not bound by oral representations. Each Loan Agreement or 
Loan Guarantee Agreement shall contain the following requirements and 
conditions, and shall not be executed until the Corps determines that 
the following requirements and conditions are satisfied:
    (1) Except if explicitly authorized by an Act of Congress, no 
Federal funds, proceeds of Federal loans, or proceeds of loans 
guaranteed by the Federal Government may be used by a borrower to pay 
for credit subsidy costs, administrative fees, or other fees charged by 
or paid to the Corps relating to the WIFIA program; however, proceeds 
of the Federal credit instrument may be used to pay for such 
administrative or other fees but may not be used to pay an ``Optional 
Credit Subsidy Fee''.
    (2) At closing, the Corps will ensure that the following 
requirements and conditions are or will be satisfied pursuant to the 
credit agreement or otherwise:
    (i) The project qualifies as an eligible project under WIFIA;
    (ii) The face value of the credit agreement is limited to no more 
than 49 percent of reasonably anticipated eligible project costs, or if 
credit assistance in excess of 49 percent has been approved, no more 
than the percentage of eligible project costs agreed upon, not to 
exceed 80 percent of total project costs;
    (iii) If the credit instrument is a loan guarantee, the loan 
guarantee does not finance, either directly or indirectly, tax exempt 
debt obligations, consistent with the requirements of section 149(b) of 
the Internal Revenue Code;
    (iv) The amount of the credit agreement, when combined with other 
funds, will be sufficient to carry out the project, including adequate 
contingency funds;
    (v) The borrower is pledging collateral and/or providing a general 
obligation pledge, determined by the Corps to be necessary to secure 
the repayment of the credit agreement;
    (vi) The credit agreement and related documents include detailed 
terms and conditions necessary and appropriate to protect the interest 
of the United States in the case of default;
    (vii) There is satisfactory evidence that the applicant is willing, 
competent, and capable of performing the terms and conditions of the 
credit agreement, and will diligently pursue the project;
    (viii) The applicant has taken and is obligated to continue to take 
those actions necessary to perfect and maintain liens on assets which 
are pledged as security for the credit agreement, as allowed under 
State or local law;
    (ix) The Corps or its representatives have access to the project 
site at all reasonable times in order to monitor the performance of the 
project;
    (x) The Corps and the applicant agree as to the information that 
will be made available to the Corps and the information that will be 
made publicly available;
    (xi) The applicant will file or has filed applications for or 
obtained any required regulatory approvals for the project and is in 
compliance, or promptly will be in compliance, where appropriate, with 
all Federal, State, and local regulatory requirements;
    (xii) The applicant has no delinquent Federal debt, including tax 
liabilities, unless the delinquency has been resolved with the 
appropriate Federal agency in accordance with the standards of the Debt 
Collection Improvement Act of 1996;
    (xiii) Loan proceeds provided under the agreement shall not be 
utilized by the applicant to provide cash contributions to the Corps 
for project related costs, except for such fees as allowed by 33 U.S.C. 
3908(b)(7), limited to the application, transaction processing, and 
servicing fees as described in Sec.  386.15;
    (xiv) Costs incurred with loan proceeds under the agreement shall 
not be eligible for reimbursement or for the transfer of credit toward 
the non-Federal cost share of another federally authorized project;
    (xv) The credit agreement and related agreements contain such other 
terms and conditions as the Corps deems reasonable and necessary to 
protect the interests of the United States, including without 
limitation provisions for:
    (A) Such collateral and other credit support for the credit 
agreement; and
    (B) Such collateral sharing, priorities and voting rights among 
creditors and other intercreditor arrangements as, in each case, the 
Corps deems reasonable and necessary to protect the interests of the 
United States; and
    (3) The credit agreement must contain audit provisions which 
provide, in substance, as follows:
    (i) The applicant must keep such records concerning the project as 
are necessary to facilitate an effective and accurate audit and 
performance evaluation of the project; and
    (ii) The Corps and the Inspector General, or their duly authorized 
representatives, must have access, for the purpose of audit and 
examination, to any pertinent books, documents, papers, and records of 
the applicant. Examination of records may be made during the regular 
business hours of the applicant, or at any other time mutually 
convenient.
    (4) OMB has reviewed and approved the Corps calculation of the 
Credit Subsidy Cost of the Loan or Loan Guarantee.
    (b) The Corps will set a closing date. By the closing date, the 
prospective borrower must have satisfied all of the detailed terms and 
conditions required by the Corps and all other contractual, statutory, 
and regulatory requirements. In addition, the prospective borrower must 
have provided at least one final rating opinion letter which provides a 
credit rating on the final negotiated direct loan or Loan Guarantee 
Agreement that does not take into account the full faith and credit of 
the United States of America. The prospective borrower must submit this 
final credit rating letter to the Corps prior to closing. If the 
prospective borrower has not satisfied all such terms and conditions by 
the closing date, the Secretary may set a new closing date or reject 
the application.
    (c) The execution of a Loan Agreement or Loan Guarantee shall 
represent approval of the application for credit assistance and shall 
represent the legal obligation of budget authority.

[[Page 32681]]

Sec.  386.14  Reporting requirements.

    The borrower will provide annual audited financial statements, a 
public benefits report, and other reports to the Corps in the form and 
manner agreed upon in the credit agreement. These other reports may 
include, but are not limited to, an updated financial model and 
construction reports. The Corps may conduct periodic financial and 
compliance reviews or audits of the borrower and its project, as 
determined necessary by the Corps.


Sec.  386.15  Fees.

    (a) Application fee. The Corps will require a non-refundable 
application fee for each project applying for credit assistance under 
the WIFIA program. The application fee will be due upon submission of 
the application. For public applicants with projects serving small 
communities or economically disadvantaged communities, the total 
application fee will be $0. For all other applications, the total 
application fee will be $25,000. The total application fee will be 
credited to the transaction processing fee required under paragraph (b) 
of this section.
    (b) Transaction processing fee. Except as otherwise provided in 
paragraph (f) of this section, the Corps will require an additional 
transaction processing fee for projects selected to receive WIFIA 
assistance upon closing, or if the project does not proceed to closing, 
e.g., if the application is withdrawn or denied. The proceeds of any 
such fees will be used to pay the remaining portion of the Corps' cost 
of providing credit assistance and the costs of conducting engineering 
reviews and retaining expert firms, including financial and legal 
services, to assist in the underwriting of the Federal Credit 
instrument.
    (c) Servicing fee. The Corps will require borrowers to pay a 
servicing fee for each credit instrument approved for funding. Separate 
fees may apply for each type of credit instrument (e.g., a secured loan 
with a single disbursement, or a secured loan with multiple 
disbursements), depending upon the costs of servicing the credit 
instrument as determined by the Secretary. Such fees will be set at a 
level sufficient to enable the Corps to recover all or a portion of the 
costs to the Federal Government of servicing WIFIA credit instruments.
    (d) Optional credit subsidy fee. If, in any given year, there is 
insufficient budget authority to fund the credit instrument for a 
qualified project that has been selected to receive assistance under 
WIFIA, the Corps and the approved applicant may agree upon a 
supplemental fee to be paid by or on behalf of the approved applicant 
at the time of execution of the term sheet to reduce the subsidy cost 
of that project. No such fee may be included among eligible project 
costs.
    (e) Reduced fees. To the extent that Congress appropriates funds in 
any given year beyond those needed to cover internal administrative 
costs, the Corps may utilize such appropriated funds to reduce fees for 
a State or local governmental entity, agency, or instrumentality, a 
Tribal government or consortium of Tribal governments that would 
otherwise be charged under paragraph (c) of this section.
    (f) Enhanced monitoring fee. The Corps may require payment in full 
by the borrower of additional fees, in an amount determined by the 
Corps, and of related fees and expenses of its independent consultants 
and outside counsel, to the extent that such fees and expenses are 
incurred by or on behalf of the Corps and to the extent such third 
parties are not paid directly by the borrower, in the event the 
borrower experiences difficultly relating to technical, financial, or 
legal matters or other events (e.g., engineering failure or financial 
workouts) which require the Corps to incur time or expenses beyond 
standard monitoring. No such fee may be included among eligible project 
costs.

[FR Doc. 2023-10520 Filed 5-19-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3720-58-P


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