Regulatory and Administrative Requirement Flexibilities Available to Native American Programs During CY 2024 and CY 2025 to Tribal Grantees To Assist With Recovery and Relief Efforts on Behalf of Families Affected by Presidentially Declared Disasters, 87900-87903 [2023-27724]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 243 / Wednesday, December 20, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 1000, 1003, and 1006
[FR–6431–N–01]
Regulatory and Administrative
Requirement Flexibilities Available to
Native American Programs During CY
2024 and CY 2025 to Tribal Grantees
To Assist With Recovery and Relief
Efforts on Behalf of Families Affected
by Presidentially Declared Disasters
Office of Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD).
ACTION: Notification of waivers.
AGENCY:
This document advises the
public of waivers and flexibilities from
HUD requirements for its Indian
Housing Block Grant (IHBG), Indian
Community Development Block Grant
(ICDBG), and Native Hawaiian Housing
Block Grant (NHHBG) grantees located
in areas that are covered by
Presidentially Declared Disasters (PDDs)
declared during Calendar Years 2024
and 2025. A PDD is a major disaster or
emergency declared under the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act that activates an array of
Federal programs to assist in the
response and recovery efforts. When
they occur, disasters and their aftermath
impose significant barriers and
challenges for housing programs to
overcome or operate. To provide relief
during such challenging times for its
IHBG, ICDBG, and NHHBG grantees,
HUD is publishing this standing
notification of regulatory and
administrative requirement flexibilities
to assist affected grantees. Instructions
are provided below on how to apply for
flexibilities. A grantee may request a
waiver or flexibility of a HUD
requirement not listed in this document
and receive an expedited review of the
request if the grantee demonstrates that
the waiver or flexibility is needed to
assist its disaster relief and recovery
efforts.
SUMMARY:
This document announces the
waivers and flexibilities set out within
as of January 1, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Hilary Atkin, Office of Native American
Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh
Street SW, Room 4108, Washington, DC
20410–5000, or email Hilary.C.Atkin@
hud.gov, phone (202)-402–3427.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
document advises the public of waivers
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and flexibilities from HUD requirements
for its Indian Housing Block Grant
(IHBG), Indian Community
Development Block Grant (ICDBG), and
Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant
(NHHBG) grantees located in areas that
are covered by Presidentially Declared
Disasters (PDDs) declared during
Calendar Years 2024 and 2025. Please
note that the waivers and flexibilities in
this document do not apply to the
various COVID-relief related programs
administered by the Office of Native
American Programs (IHBG–CARES,
IHBG–ARP, ICDBG–CARES, ICDBG–
ARP, and NHHBG–ARP) because HUD
has issued separate waivers and
alternative requirements that apply to
those programs, as further outlined in
the Implementation and Waiver Notices
governing those programs.
I. Flexibilities That Are Available to
PDD Tribes, Tribally Designated
Housing Entities, and the Department of
Hawaiian Home Lands for PDDs
Declared in CY 2024 and CY 2025
The following is a list of HUD
requirement waivers and flexibilities
available for IHBG, ICDBG, and NHHBG
grantees located within PDD areas.
Grantees may use any of the waivers
and flexibilities below to assist their
communities in addressing challenges
and issues that result from a disaster
covered by a PDD declared in CY 2024
and 2025.
A. 24 CFR Part 1000 (IHBG)
1. Total Development Costs (24 CFR
1000.156, 1000.158, 1000.160, and
1000.162):
The IHBG regulations at 24 CFR part
1000 require that affordable housing
under the Native American Housing
Assistance and Self-Determination Act
of 1996 (NAHASDA) be of moderate
design with a size and with amenities
consistent with unassisted housing
offered for sale in the Indian tribe’s
general geographic area to buyers who
are at or below the area median income
(AMI). To achieve this requirement the
recipient must either adopt written
standards for its affordable housing
programs that reflect the requirement
specified or use total development cost
(TDC) limits published periodically by
HUD that establish the maximum
amount of funds (from all sources) that
the recipient may use to develop or
acquire/rehabilitate affordable housing.
The limits provided by the TDC may
not, without prior HUD approval,
exceed by more than 10 percent the TDC
maximum cost for the project. Nondwelling structures used to support an
affordable housing activity must be of a
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design, size and with features or
amenities that are reasonable and
necessary to accomplish the purpose
intended by the structures.
Disasters may result in disruptions to
supply chains, lead to labor and
contractor shortages, and result in
overall increases in construction costs.
Given this possibility of increased costs
of resources and the urgency to
rehabilitate homes following a PDD,
HUD is waiving the TDC regulatory
requirements in 24 CFR 1000.156,
1000.158, 1000.160, and 1000.162
relating to limitations on cost or design
standards and TDC with respect to
dwelling and non-dwelling units
developed, acquired, or assisted with
IHBG funding. Under this waiver, an
IHBG recipient may exceed the current
TDC maximum by 20 percent without
HUD review or approval (other than
notification by the grantee pursuant to
the procedures outlined in Section II of
this document). The recipient, however,
must maintain documentation that
indicates the dwelling units and nondwelling structures developed,
acquired, or assisted with this funding
will, after the PDD, be for IHBG-eligible
families and the design, size, and
amenities are moderate and comparable
to housing in the area. The TDC limits
can be exceeded by more than 20
percent if the recipient receives written
approval from HUD Headquarters. This
waiver applies to both single-family and
multi-family housing, as well as nondwelling structures.
2. Income Verification (24 CFR
1000.128):
24 CFR 1000.128 requires IHBG
recipients to verify that a family is
income eligible. Families are required to
provide documentation to verify this
determination, and a recipient is
required to maintain that
documentation. Families may be
required by the IHBG recipient to
periodically verify income after initial
occupancy, and the recipient is required
to maintain documentation.
As families may be displaced during
a PDD and may not have access to their
income documentation, HUD is waiving
§ 1000.128, and allowing the following:
(a) IHBG recipients may deviate from
their current written admissions and
occupancy policies, and may allow less
frequent income recertifications; and
(b) IHBG recipients may carry out
intake and other tasks necessary to
verify income through alternative means
if the IHBG recipient chooses to do so,
including allowing income selfcertification over the phone (with a
written record by the IHBG recipient’s
staff), or through an email with a selfcertification form signed by a family.
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3. Assistance to Middle-Income
Families Impacted by a Disaster (24 CFR
1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and
1000.110):
Generally, Section 201 of NAHASDA
and the IHBG regulations at 24 CFR
1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and
1000.110 require that IHBG recipients
limit assistance to low-income Native
American families, with some
exceptions for non-low-income families
at 80–100 percent AMI, families over
100 percent of AMI, and essential
families under section 201(b)(3) of
NAHASDA. Section 201(b)(2) and 24
CFR 1000.110 provide that an IHBG
recipient may aid a non-low-income
family upon a documented
determination by the recipient that there
is a need for housing for such family
that cannot reasonably be met without
such assistance. 24 CFR 1000.110(c)
provides that a recipient may use up to
10 percent of the amount planned for
the Tribal program year for families
whose income falls within 80 to 100
percent of AMI without HUD approval.
HUD approval is required if a recipient
plans to use more than 10 percent of the
amount planned for the Tribal program
year for such assistance or to provide
housing for families with income over
100 percent of AMI. Finally, 24 CFR
1000.110(d) provides that non-lowincome families cannot receive the same
benefits provided low-income Indian
families. The amount of rental
assistance, homeownership assistance,
and other assistance that non-lowincome families may receive will be
determined in accordance with the
formula provided in that regulation.
Disasters may devastate and displace
Native American families in a
community of all incomes, make
housing uninhabitable, damage
community infrastructure, and result in
a loss of life and property. IHBG
recipients may find it in the public
interest to aid non-low-income families
that are displaced due to a disaster,
including by using IHBG funds to
provide such assistance as temporary
rental assistance to otherwise ineligible
families in IHBG-assisted housing
owned or operated by the recipient,
housing such families in hotels/motels,
and similar facilities, providing such
families with necessary relocation
assistance, and more. To help alleviate
the impact of PDDs on Tribal
communities, HUD is waiving 24 CFR
1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and
1000.110 to the extent necessary to
allow for the following flexibilities:
(a) IHBG recipients in areas covered
by PDDs may exceed the 10 percent cap
on serving Native American families
whose income falls within 80 to 100
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percent of AMI without HUD approval,
provided the recipient decides that the
families are impacted by the disaster
and that there is a need for housing for
such family that cannot reasonably be
met without such assistance.
(b) IHBG recipients in areas covered
by PDDs may provide IHBG assistance
to middle-income Native American
families whose income is at or below
120 percent of AMI without HUD
approval, provided the recipient decides
that the families are impacted by the
disaster and that there is a need for
housing for such family that cannot
reasonably be met without such
assistance.
In all cases, assistance to these nonlow-income families must still comply
with limits on assistance specified in 24
CFR 1000.110(d). Additionally, all
assistance must be temporary in nature.
For instance, such families may receive
temporary rental assistance that is timelimited pursuant to the recipient’s
policies but may not receive permanent
tenant-based rental assistance with no
specified end date. IHBG recipients
must ensure that IHBG assistance
provided does not result in a
duplication of benefits. For example,
IHBG recipients should not pay for costs
that are already covered by private
insurance or other Federal, State, or
Tribal funds or programs. Finally, when
providing this assistance, IHBG
recipients must also maintain records
documenting that all these criteria were
met at the time that such assistance was
provided.
B. 24 CFR Part 1003 (ICDBG)
1. Purchasing Equipment (24 CFR
1003.207(b)(1)(i)):
The purchase of equipment with
ICDBG funds is generally ineligible
under 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(1)(i), with
some exceptions. Given the immediate
need for certain equipment to carry out
ICDBG-eligible activities related to
disaster recovery, such as construction
equipment necessary for clearance,
construction, rehabilitation, and other
recovery efforts in the aftermath of a
PDD, HUD is waiving 24 CFR
1003.207(b)(1)(i) and authorizing the
use of ICDBG funds for the purchase of
equipment necessary to carry out
ICDBG-eligible activities that assist with
clearance, rehabilitation, construction,
and other uses related to housing,
public facilities, improvements, and
works, and other disaster-recovery
related purposes. Equipment must be
used for authorized program purposes,
and any proceeds from the disposition
of equipment will be considered ICDBG
program income. HUD may issue further
guidance in the future on the
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disposition of program income after
grant closeout.
2. Emergency Payments for Up to Six
Months (24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4)):
Under 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4), the
general rule is that ICDBG funds may
not be used for income payments. For
purposes of the ICDBG program, income
payments mean a series of subsistencetype grant payments made to an
individual or family for items such as
food, clothing, housing (rent or
mortgage), or utilities. However, ICDBG
may be used to make emergency
payments over a period of up to three
months to the provider of such items or
services on behalf of an individual or
family.
Low- and moderate-income families
impacted by disasters may have an
immediate need for short-term rental
assistance, mortgage assistance, utility
assistance, food, clothing, and similar
services.
To provide additional relief to
families impacted by disasters, HUD is
waiving 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4) to the
extent necessary to allow ICDBG grant
funds to be used to provide emergency
payments for low- and moderate-income
individuals or families impacted by a
PDD. These grant funds may be used for
items such as food, medicine, clothing,
and other necessities, as well as rental,
mortgage, and utility assistance, without
regard for the three-month limitation in
24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4), but for a period
not to exceed six months, unless further
approved in writing by HUD on a caseby-case basis.
ICDBG grantees may establish lines of
credit with third party providers (e.g.,
grocery stores) on behalf of specific
beneficiary families, provided all
expenses can be properly documented
and all ICDBG funds used for this
purpose are expended on eligible
activities. In all cases, ICDBG grantees
must ensure that proper documentation
is maintained to ensure that all costs
incurred are eligible. ICDBG grantees
using this waiver flexibility must
document, in their policies and
procedures, how they will determine
the necessary and reasonable amount of
assistance to be provided.
C. 24 CFR Part 1006 (NHHBG)
1. Assistance to Middle-Income
Families Impacted by Disaster (24 CFR
1006.301(a)):
24 CFR 1006.301(a) describes families
eligible for NHHBG assistance as lowincome Native Hawaiian families who
are eligible to reside on the Hawaiian
homelands. Section 809(a)(2) of
NAHASDA limits assistance for families
who are not low-income to
homeownership activities, as approved
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by HUD, to address a housing need that
cannot be reasonably met without that
assistance. Section 1006.301(d) requires
the Department of Hawaiian Home
Lands (DHHL) to have written policies
governing eligibility, admission, and
occupancy of families for NHHBGassisted housing.
Disasters may devastate and displace
Native Hawaiian families in a
community of all incomes, make
housing uninhabitable, damage
community infrastructure, and result in
loss of life and property. DHHL may
find it in the public interest to aid nonlow-income families that are displaced
due to a disaster by using NHHBG funds
to provide such assistance as temporary
mortgage assistance, temporary rental
assistance on or off the Hawaiian home
lands, housing such families in hotels,
motels, or similar facilities, providing
such families with necessary relocation
assistance, and more. To help alleviate
the impact of PDD on Native Hawaiian
communities, HUD is waiving 24 CFR
1006.301(a) to allow DHHL more
flexibility to provide NHHBG assistance
to families that are middle income
(defined as 120 percent of AMI),
provided the assistance is for
homeownership activities (which may
include short-term rental assistance to
displaced homeowners), is temporary in
nature, and DHHL determines that the
families are impacted by the disaster
and that there is a need for housing for
such family that cannot reasonably be
met without such assistance.
Under this waiver, Native Hawaiian
families impacted by PDD can
automatically be served provided their
household income does not exceed 120
percent of AMI, there is no duplication
of benefits, and all eligible criteria in
this waiver are met. All assistance must
be temporary in nature. For instance,
such families may receive temporary
rental assistance that is time-limited
pursuant to DHHL’s policies but may
not receive permanent tenant-based
rental assistance with no specified end
date. DHHL must ensure that NHHBG
assistance provided does not result in a
duplication of benefits. For example,
DHHL should not pay for costs that are
already covered by private insurance or
other Federal or State funds or
programs. Further, when providing this
assistance, DHHL must maintain records
documenting that all these criteria were
met at the time that such assistance was
provided. HUD encourages DHHL to
update its written policies to allow
middle-income Native Hawaiian
families who are impacted by disasters
covered by a PDD to be considered
eligible for NHHBG homeownership
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assistance and include a definition for
‘temporary’ assistance.
2. Income Verification (24 CFR
1006.320):
24 CFR 1006.320 requires DHHL to
have written policies regarding tenant
and homebuyer selection and criteria
related to eligibility for NHHBG
assistance. Many families whose homes
were damaged or destroyed by the
disaster may not have any
documentation of income. DHHL may
modify its policy and procedures to
streamline any income verification and
documentation requirements for
families impacted by PDDs. This may
include allowing income selfcertification over the phone (with a
written record by the DHHL’s staff), or
through an email with a selfcertification form signed by a family.
This waiver applies only to families
impacted by PDDs whose income
documentation was destroyed or made
difficult to access by the disaster.
II. Instructions
To use the waivers or flexibilities,
grantees must provide notification in
writing, preferably by email, to the
Administrator in the Office of Native
American Programs (ONAP) Area Office
serving their area before the grantee
anticipates using the waiver or
flexibility. Grantees can find their
ONAP office at https://www.hud.gov/
program_offices/public_indian_
housing/ih/codetalk/onap/map/
nationalmap. The written notification
should include the following details:
• Requestor’s Tribe/Tribally
Designated Housing Entity (TDHE)/
DHHL, name, title, and contact
information.
• Presidentially declared major
disaster area(s) where the waivers will
be used.
• Date on which the grantee
anticipates the first use of the waiver or
flexibility, and its expected duration
(which must include a specific end
date), and
• A list of the waivers and
flexibilities the grantee will use.
III. Exceptions
An IHBG, ICDBG, or NHHBG grantee
in a PDD may request an exception of
a HUD requirement not listed in Section
I of this document. HUD will only
consider such exception requests
subject to statutory limitations and
pursuant to 24 CFR 5.110. HUD will not
approve a recipient’s request to waive or
be granted a flexibility for an existing
fair housing or civil rights obligation.
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IV. Period of Use for Waivers and
Flexibilities
Waivers and flexibilities provided in
this document will remain available to
grantees provided a grantee is using the
waivers or flexibilities in response to a
PDD declared in CY 2024 or 2025 or as
part of the recovery process effort for
such PDD. HUD recommends that
grantees clearly document the need for
each waiver and flexibility in their
records and ensure that a specific time
period for which the grantee will use
the waivers and flexibilities that the
grantee specifies in its written
notification to HUD, described in
Section II of this document, is
reasonably set and ties back to the
response and recovery effort. If a grantee
finds a need to extend the period for
which it will use a waiver or flexibility
beyond the end date initially set by the
grantee in its initial written notification
to aid in its ongoing recovery effort, the
grantee should send HUD written
notification of its intent to extend the
end date. The request must also
demonstrate to HUD’s satisfaction that
the new time period is reasonably set
and ties back to the response and
recovery effort.
V. Finding of No Significant Impact
A Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in
accordance with HUD regulations at 24
CFR part 50, which implement section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4332(2)(C)).
The FONSI is available for public
inspection between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Eastern Time weekdays in the
Regulations Division, Office of General
Counsel, U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Room 10276, Washington, DC
20410–0500. Due to security measures
at the HUD Headquarters building, an
advance appointment to review the
docket file must be scheduled by calling
the Regulations Division at 202–708–
3055 (this is not a toll-free number).
HUD welcomes and is prepared to
receive calls from individuals who are
deaf or hard of hearing, or who have
speech and other communication
disabilities may use a relay service to
reach the Regulations Division. To learn
more about how to make an accessible
telephone call, visit the web page for
Federal Communications Commission at
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
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VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collections
referenced in this document have been
approved by OMB pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act under, OMB
Control Number 2577–0292.
Richard J. Monocchio,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Corrections to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
corrected by making the following
correcting amendments:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
[FR Doc. 2023–27724 Filed 12–19–23; 8:45 am]
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 9979]
RIN 1545–BQ81
Additional Guidance on Low-Income
Communities Bonus Credit Program;
Correction
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule; correction and
correcting amendments.
AGENCY:
This document contains
corrections to Treasury Decision 9979,
which was published in the Federal
Register for Tuesday, August 15, 2023.
Treasury Decision 9979 issued final
regulations relating to the application of
the low-income communities bonus
credit program for the energy
investment credit established pursuant
to the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.
DATES: These corrections are effective
on December 20, 2023, and applicable
on August 15, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Whitney Brady at (202) 317–6853 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Background
The final regulations (TD 9979) that
are the subject of this correction are
under section 48(e) of the Code.
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§ 1.48(e)–1 Low-Income Communities
Bonus Credit Program.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) * * *
(B) Partnership. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Oluwafunmilayo A. Taylor,
Section Chief, Publications & Regulations
Section, Associate Chief Counsel, (Procedure
and Administration).
[FR Doc. 2023–27933 Filed 12–19–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
Bureau of Prisons
28 CFR Part 543
1. The authority citation for part 543
continues to read as follows:
■
RIN 1120–AB80
Bureau of Prisons, Justice.
Correcting amendment.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Bureau
of Prisons (Bureau) corrects inadvertent
errors and omissions in its regulations
caused by errors in the interim final rule
titled ‘‘Federal Tort Claims Act—
Technical Changes’’ published in the
Federal Register on November 7, 2023.
DATES: This correcting amendment is
effective December 20, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel J. Crooks III, Assistant General
Counsel/Rules Administrator, at
Legislative & Correctional Issues
SUMMARY:
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Frm 00009
Need for Correction
On November 7, 2023, the Bureau
published an interim final rule (IFR) in
the Federal Register at 88 FR 76656 that
made technical changes to how the
Bureau processes Federal Tort Claims
Act (FTCA) claims. This document
corrects inadvertent errors and
omissions in its regulations caused by
errors in that rule.
First, this document revises the
headings of two paragraphs in § 543.31
to conform with the statement-like form
of other paragraph headings we
amended in the IFR. Thus, the heading
of § 543.31(a) should be changed from
‘‘Who may file a claim?’’ to ‘‘Claimant,’’
and the heading of § 543.31(b) should be
changed from ‘‘Where do I obtain a form
for filing a claim?’’ to ‘‘Claim form.’’
Second, the third instruction of the
IFR revised paragraphs (a) through (d)
and (f) of § 543.32. Paragraphs (g) and
(h) were missing from that instruction,
while they were correctly included in
the amendatory language. In addition,
the heading to paragraph (e) needs to be
changed to conform with the declaratory
headings of the other paragraphs.
Finally, paragraph (i) needs to be
deleted because, with the revisions to
the other paragraphs, paragraph (i) is
redundant.
PART 543—LEGAL MATTERS
[BOP–1180–I]
ACTION:
Branch, Office of General Counsel,
Bureau of Prisons, 320 First Street NW,
Washington, DC 20534 or at (202) 353–
4885.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
List of Subjects in 28 CFR Part 543
Prisoners.
Accordingly, 28 CFR part 543 is
corrected by making the following
correcting amendments:
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Federal Tort Claims Act—Technical
Changes; Correction
Corrections to Publication
Accordingly, the final regulations (TD
9979) that are the subject of FR Doc.
2023–17078, appearing on page 55506
in the Federal Register published on
August 15, 2023, are corrected as
follows:
1. On page 55519, in the third
column, the heading ‘‘VII. Annual
Capacity Limitation’’ is corrected to
read ‘‘VII. Annual Capacity Limitation’’.
2. On page 55522, in the first column,
second full paragraph, the last line is
corrected to read, ‘‘applicants in
Category 4.’’.
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Par. 2. Section 1.48(e)–1 is amended:
a. In the first sentence of paragraph
(h)(1) by removing the language
‘‘paragraph (b)’’ and adding the
language ‘‘paragraph (b)(2)’’ in its place.
■ b. By revising the heading for
paragraph (h)(2)(ii)(B).
The revision reads as follows:
■
■
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Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 18 U.S.C. 3621,
3622, 3624, 4001, 4042, 4081, 4082 (Repealed
in part as to offenses committed on or after
November 1, 1987), 5006–5024 (Repealed
October 12, 1984 as to Offenses committed
after that date), 5039; 28 U.S.C. 509, 510,
1346(b), 2671–80; 28 CFR 0.95–0.99, 0.172,
14.1–11.
2. Amend § 543.31 by revising the
section heading and the headings for
paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
■
§ 543.31
Presenting a claim.
(a) Claimant. * * *
(b) Claim form. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 543.32 by:
■ a. Revising the heading for paragraph
(e) and paragraphs (g) and (h); and
E:\FR\FM\20DER1.SGM
20DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 243 (Wednesday, December 20, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 87900-87903]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-27724]
[[Page 87900]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 1000, 1003, and 1006
[FR-6431-N-01]
Regulatory and Administrative Requirement Flexibilities Available
to Native American Programs During CY 2024 and CY 2025 to Tribal
Grantees To Assist With Recovery and Relief Efforts on Behalf of
Families Affected by Presidentially Declared Disasters
AGENCY: Office of Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
ACTION: Notification of waivers.
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SUMMARY: This document advises the public of waivers and flexibilities
from HUD requirements for its Indian Housing Block Grant (IHBG), Indian
Community Development Block Grant (ICDBG), and Native Hawaiian Housing
Block Grant (NHHBG) grantees located in areas that are covered by
Presidentially Declared Disasters (PDDs) declared during Calendar Years
2024 and 2025. A PDD is a major disaster or emergency declared under
the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act
that activates an array of Federal programs to assist in the response
and recovery efforts. When they occur, disasters and their aftermath
impose significant barriers and challenges for housing programs to
overcome or operate. To provide relief during such challenging times
for its IHBG, ICDBG, and NHHBG grantees, HUD is publishing this
standing notification of regulatory and administrative requirement
flexibilities to assist affected grantees. Instructions are provided
below on how to apply for flexibilities. A grantee may request a waiver
or flexibility of a HUD requirement not listed in this document and
receive an expedited review of the request if the grantee demonstrates
that the waiver or flexibility is needed to assist its disaster relief
and recovery efforts.
DATES: This document announces the waivers and flexibilities set out
within as of January 1, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Hilary Atkin, Office of Native
American Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW, Room 4108,
Washington, DC 20410-5000, or email [email protected], phone
(202)-402-3427.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This document advises the public of waivers
and flexibilities from HUD requirements for its Indian Housing Block
Grant (IHBG), Indian Community Development Block Grant (ICDBG), and
Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant (NHHBG) grantees located in areas
that are covered by Presidentially Declared Disasters (PDDs) declared
during Calendar Years 2024 and 2025. Please note that the waivers and
flexibilities in this document do not apply to the various COVID-relief
related programs administered by the Office of Native American Programs
(IHBG-CARES, IHBG-ARP, ICDBG-CARES, ICDBG-ARP, and NHHBG-ARP) because
HUD has issued separate waivers and alternative requirements that apply
to those programs, as further outlined in the Implementation and Waiver
Notices governing those programs.
I. Flexibilities That Are Available to PDD Tribes, Tribally Designated
Housing Entities, and the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands for PDDs
Declared in CY 2024 and CY 2025
The following is a list of HUD requirement waivers and
flexibilities available for IHBG, ICDBG, and NHHBG grantees located
within PDD areas. Grantees may use any of the waivers and flexibilities
below to assist their communities in addressing challenges and issues
that result from a disaster covered by a PDD declared in CY 2024 and
2025.
A. 24 CFR Part 1000 (IHBG)
1. Total Development Costs (24 CFR 1000.156, 1000.158, 1000.160, and
1000.162):
The IHBG regulations at 24 CFR part 1000 require that affordable
housing under the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-
Determination Act of 1996 (NAHASDA) be of moderate design with a size
and with amenities consistent with unassisted housing offered for sale
in the Indian tribe's general geographic area to buyers who are at or
below the area median income (AMI). To achieve this requirement the
recipient must either adopt written standards for its affordable
housing programs that reflect the requirement specified or use total
development cost (TDC) limits published periodically by HUD that
establish the maximum amount of funds (from all sources) that the
recipient may use to develop or acquire/rehabilitate affordable
housing. The limits provided by the TDC may not, without prior HUD
approval, exceed by more than 10 percent the TDC maximum cost for the
project. Non-dwelling structures used to support an affordable housing
activity must be of a design, size and with features or amenities that
are reasonable and necessary to accomplish the purpose intended by the
structures.
Disasters may result in disruptions to supply chains, lead to labor
and contractor shortages, and result in overall increases in
construction costs. Given this possibility of increased costs of
resources and the urgency to rehabilitate homes following a PDD, HUD is
waiving the TDC regulatory requirements in 24 CFR 1000.156, 1000.158,
1000.160, and 1000.162 relating to limitations on cost or design
standards and TDC with respect to dwelling and non-dwelling units
developed, acquired, or assisted with IHBG funding. Under this waiver,
an IHBG recipient may exceed the current TDC maximum by 20 percent
without HUD review or approval (other than notification by the grantee
pursuant to the procedures outlined in Section II of this document).
The recipient, however, must maintain documentation that indicates the
dwelling units and non-dwelling structures developed, acquired, or
assisted with this funding will, after the PDD, be for IHBG-eligible
families and the design, size, and amenities are moderate and
comparable to housing in the area. The TDC limits can be exceeded by
more than 20 percent if the recipient receives written approval from
HUD Headquarters. This waiver applies to both single-family and multi-
family housing, as well as non-dwelling structures.
2. Income Verification (24 CFR 1000.128):
24 CFR 1000.128 requires IHBG recipients to verify that a family is
income eligible. Families are required to provide documentation to
verify this determination, and a recipient is required to maintain that
documentation. Families may be required by the IHBG recipient to
periodically verify income after initial occupancy, and the recipient
is required to maintain documentation.
As families may be displaced during a PDD and may not have access
to their income documentation, HUD is waiving Sec. 1000.128, and
allowing the following:
(a) IHBG recipients may deviate from their current written
admissions and occupancy policies, and may allow less frequent income
recertifications; and
(b) IHBG recipients may carry out intake and other tasks necessary
to verify income through alternative means if the IHBG recipient
chooses to do so, including allowing income self-certification over the
phone (with a written record by the IHBG recipient's staff), or through
an email with a self-certification form signed by a family.
[[Page 87901]]
3. Assistance to Middle-Income Families Impacted by a Disaster (24
CFR 1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and 1000.110):
Generally, Section 201 of NAHASDA and the IHBG regulations at 24
CFR 1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and 1000.110 require that IHBG
recipients limit assistance to low-income Native American families,
with some exceptions for non-low-income families at 80-100 percent AMI,
families over 100 percent of AMI, and essential families under section
201(b)(3) of NAHASDA. Section 201(b)(2) and 24 CFR 1000.110 provide
that an IHBG recipient may aid a non-low-income family upon a
documented determination by the recipient that there is a need for
housing for such family that cannot reasonably be met without such
assistance. 24 CFR 1000.110(c) provides that a recipient may use up to
10 percent of the amount planned for the Tribal program year for
families whose income falls within 80 to 100 percent of AMI without HUD
approval. HUD approval is required if a recipient plans to use more
than 10 percent of the amount planned for the Tribal program year for
such assistance or to provide housing for families with income over 100
percent of AMI. Finally, 24 CFR 1000.110(d) provides that non-low-
income families cannot receive the same benefits provided low-income
Indian families. The amount of rental assistance, homeownership
assistance, and other assistance that non-low-income families may
receive will be determined in accordance with the formula provided in
that regulation.
Disasters may devastate and displace Native American families in a
community of all incomes, make housing uninhabitable, damage community
infrastructure, and result in a loss of life and property. IHBG
recipients may find it in the public interest to aid non-low-income
families that are displaced due to a disaster, including by using IHBG
funds to provide such assistance as temporary rental assistance to
otherwise ineligible families in IHBG-assisted housing owned or
operated by the recipient, housing such families in hotels/motels, and
similar facilities, providing such families with necessary relocation
assistance, and more. To help alleviate the impact of PDDs on Tribal
communities, HUD is waiving 24 CFR 1000.104, 1000.106, 1000.108, and
1000.110 to the extent necessary to allow for the following
flexibilities:
(a) IHBG recipients in areas covered by PDDs may exceed the 10
percent cap on serving Native American families whose income falls
within 80 to 100 percent of AMI without HUD approval, provided the
recipient decides that the families are impacted by the disaster and
that there is a need for housing for such family that cannot reasonably
be met without such assistance.
(b) IHBG recipients in areas covered by PDDs may provide IHBG
assistance to middle-income Native American families whose income is at
or below 120 percent of AMI without HUD approval, provided the
recipient decides that the families are impacted by the disaster and
that there is a need for housing for such family that cannot reasonably
be met without such assistance.
In all cases, assistance to these non-low-income families must
still comply with limits on assistance specified in 24 CFR 1000.110(d).
Additionally, all assistance must be temporary in nature. For instance,
such families may receive temporary rental assistance that is time-
limited pursuant to the recipient's policies but may not receive
permanent tenant-based rental assistance with no specified end date.
IHBG recipients must ensure that IHBG assistance provided does not
result in a duplication of benefits. For example, IHBG recipients
should not pay for costs that are already covered by private insurance
or other Federal, State, or Tribal funds or programs. Finally, when
providing this assistance, IHBG recipients must also maintain records
documenting that all these criteria were met at the time that such
assistance was provided.
B. 24 CFR Part 1003 (ICDBG)
1. Purchasing Equipment (24 CFR 1003.207(b)(1)(i)):
The purchase of equipment with ICDBG funds is generally ineligible
under 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(1)(i), with some exceptions. Given the
immediate need for certain equipment to carry out ICDBG-eligible
activities related to disaster recovery, such as construction equipment
necessary for clearance, construction, rehabilitation, and other
recovery efforts in the aftermath of a PDD, HUD is waiving 24 CFR
1003.207(b)(1)(i) and authorizing the use of ICDBG funds for the
purchase of equipment necessary to carry out ICDBG-eligible activities
that assist with clearance, rehabilitation, construction, and other
uses related to housing, public facilities, improvements, and works,
and other disaster-recovery related purposes. Equipment must be used
for authorized program purposes, and any proceeds from the disposition
of equipment will be considered ICDBG program income. HUD may issue
further guidance in the future on the disposition of program income
after grant closeout.
2. Emergency Payments for Up to Six Months (24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4)):
Under 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4), the general rule is that ICDBG funds
may not be used for income payments. For purposes of the ICDBG program,
income payments mean a series of subsistence-type grant payments made
to an individual or family for items such as food, clothing, housing
(rent or mortgage), or utilities. However, ICDBG may be used to make
emergency payments over a period of up to three months to the provider
of such items or services on behalf of an individual or family.
Low- and moderate-income families impacted by disasters may have an
immediate need for short-term rental assistance, mortgage assistance,
utility assistance, food, clothing, and similar services.
To provide additional relief to families impacted by disasters, HUD
is waiving 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4) to the extent necessary to allow ICDBG
grant funds to be used to provide emergency payments for low- and
moderate-income individuals or families impacted by a PDD. These grant
funds may be used for items such as food, medicine, clothing, and other
necessities, as well as rental, mortgage, and utility assistance,
without regard for the three-month limitation in 24 CFR 1003.207(b)(4),
but for a period not to exceed six months, unless further approved in
writing by HUD on a case-by-case basis.
ICDBG grantees may establish lines of credit with third party
providers (e.g., grocery stores) on behalf of specific beneficiary
families, provided all expenses can be properly documented and all
ICDBG funds used for this purpose are expended on eligible activities.
In all cases, ICDBG grantees must ensure that proper documentation is
maintained to ensure that all costs incurred are eligible. ICDBG
grantees using this waiver flexibility must document, in their policies
and procedures, how they will determine the necessary and reasonable
amount of assistance to be provided.
C. 24 CFR Part 1006 (NHHBG)
1. Assistance to Middle-Income Families Impacted by Disaster (24
CFR 1006.301(a)):
24 CFR 1006.301(a) describes families eligible for NHHBG assistance
as low-income Native Hawaiian families who are eligible to reside on
the Hawaiian homelands. Section 809(a)(2) of NAHASDA limits assistance
for families who are not low-income to homeownership activities, as
approved
[[Page 87902]]
by HUD, to address a housing need that cannot be reasonably met without
that assistance. Section 1006.301(d) requires the Department of
Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL) to have written policies governing
eligibility, admission, and occupancy of families for NHHBG-assisted
housing.
Disasters may devastate and displace Native Hawaiian families in a
community of all incomes, make housing uninhabitable, damage community
infrastructure, and result in loss of life and property. DHHL may find
it in the public interest to aid non-low-income families that are
displaced due to a disaster by using NHHBG funds to provide such
assistance as temporary mortgage assistance, temporary rental
assistance on or off the Hawaiian home lands, housing such families in
hotels, motels, or similar facilities, providing such families with
necessary relocation assistance, and more. To help alleviate the impact
of PDD on Native Hawaiian communities, HUD is waiving 24 CFR
1006.301(a) to allow DHHL more flexibility to provide NHHBG assistance
to families that are middle income (defined as 120 percent of AMI),
provided the assistance is for homeownership activities (which may
include short-term rental assistance to displaced homeowners), is
temporary in nature, and DHHL determines that the families are impacted
by the disaster and that there is a need for housing for such family
that cannot reasonably be met without such assistance.
Under this waiver, Native Hawaiian families impacted by PDD can
automatically be served provided their household income does not exceed
120 percent of AMI, there is no duplication of benefits, and all
eligible criteria in this waiver are met. All assistance must be
temporary in nature. For instance, such families may receive temporary
rental assistance that is time-limited pursuant to DHHL's policies but
may not receive permanent tenant-based rental assistance with no
specified end date. DHHL must ensure that NHHBG assistance provided
does not result in a duplication of benefits. For example, DHHL should
not pay for costs that are already covered by private insurance or
other Federal or State funds or programs. Further, when providing this
assistance, DHHL must maintain records documenting that all these
criteria were met at the time that such assistance was provided. HUD
encourages DHHL to update its written policies to allow middle-income
Native Hawaiian families who are impacted by disasters covered by a PDD
to be considered eligible for NHHBG homeownership assistance and
include a definition for `temporary' assistance.
2. Income Verification (24 CFR 1006.320):
24 CFR 1006.320 requires DHHL to have written policies regarding
tenant and homebuyer selection and criteria related to eligibility for
NHHBG assistance. Many families whose homes were damaged or destroyed
by the disaster may not have any documentation of income. DHHL may
modify its policy and procedures to streamline any income verification
and documentation requirements for families impacted by PDDs. This may
include allowing income self-certification over the phone (with a
written record by the DHHL's staff), or through an email with a self-
certification form signed by a family. This waiver applies only to
families impacted by PDDs whose income documentation was destroyed or
made difficult to access by the disaster.
II. Instructions
To use the waivers or flexibilities, grantees must provide
notification in writing, preferably by email, to the Administrator in
the Office of Native American Programs (ONAP) Area Office serving their
area before the grantee anticipates using the waiver or flexibility.
Grantees can find their ONAP office at https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_indian_housing/ih/codetalk/onap/map/nationalmap.
The written notification should include the following details:
Requestor's Tribe/Tribally Designated Housing Entity
(TDHE)/DHHL, name, title, and contact information.
Presidentially declared major disaster area(s) where the
waivers will be used.
Date on which the grantee anticipates the first use of the
waiver or flexibility, and its expected duration (which must include a
specific end date), and
A list of the waivers and flexibilities the grantee will
use.
III. Exceptions
An IHBG, ICDBG, or NHHBG grantee in a PDD may request an exception
of a HUD requirement not listed in Section I of this document. HUD will
only consider such exception requests subject to statutory limitations
and pursuant to 24 CFR 5.110. HUD will not approve a recipient's
request to waive or be granted a flexibility for an existing fair
housing or civil rights obligation.
IV. Period of Use for Waivers and Flexibilities
Waivers and flexibilities provided in this document will remain
available to grantees provided a grantee is using the waivers or
flexibilities in response to a PDD declared in CY 2024 or 2025 or as
part of the recovery process effort for such PDD. HUD recommends that
grantees clearly document the need for each waiver and flexibility in
their records and ensure that a specific time period for which the
grantee will use the waivers and flexibilities that the grantee
specifies in its written notification to HUD, described in Section II
of this document, is reasonably set and ties back to the response and
recovery effort. If a grantee finds a need to extend the period for
which it will use a waiver or flexibility beyond the end date initially
set by the grantee in its initial written notification to aid in its
ongoing recovery effort, the grantee should send HUD written
notification of its intent to extend the end date. The request must
also demonstrate to HUD's satisfaction that the new time period is
reasonably set and ties back to the response and recovery effort.
V. Finding of No Significant Impact
A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in accordance with HUD regulations at 24 CFR
part 50, which implement section 102(2)(C) of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)).
The FONSI is available for public inspection between 8 a.m. and 5
p.m. Eastern Time weekdays in the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW, Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500. Due to security
measures at the HUD Headquarters building, an advance appointment to
review the docket file must be scheduled by calling the Regulations
Division at 202-708-3055 (this is not a toll-free number). HUD welcomes
and is prepared to receive calls from individuals who are deaf or hard
of hearing, or who have speech and other communication disabilities may
use a relay service to reach the Regulations Division. To learn more
about how to make an accessible telephone call, visit the web page for
Federal Communications Commission at https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
[[Page 87903]]
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collections referenced in this document have been
approved by OMB pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act under, OMB
Control Number 2577-0292.
Richard J. Monocchio,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing.
[FR Doc. 2023-27724 Filed 12-19-23; 8:45 am]
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