Waivers and Alternative Requirements for Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) and Community Development Block Grant National Disaster Resilience (CDBG-NDR) Grantees, 3942-3948 [2024-01116]
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c. SBA will conduct the match against
the Disaster Loans Case Files system of
records (SBA 20) via Disaster Lending
System using the FEMA Disaster ID
number, FEMA Registration ID number,
Product (Home/Business), and
Registration Occupant Social Security
number (SSN) to create a New PreApplication. The records SBA receives
are of DHS/FEMA applicants who are
referred to SBA for disaster loan
assistance. Controls on the DHS/FEMA
export of data are in place to ensure that
SBA only receives unique and valid
referral records.
d. When SBA matches its records to
those provided by DHS/FEMA, two
types of matches are possible: a full
match and a partial match. A full match
exists when an SBA record matches a
DHS/FEMA record on each of the
following data fields: FEMA Disaster ID
number, FEMA Registration ID number,
Product (Home/Business), and
Registration Occupant SSN. A partial
match exists when an SBA record
matches a DHS/FEMA record on one or
more, but not all data fields listed
above. If an exact (full) match is found
among SBA records for the current
imported record, the current record is
automatically marked as a duplicate by
the system with appropriate comments
inserted to indicate the corresponding
record that matched. If a partial match
is found during the import process, the
record is routed for manual
examination, investigation, and
resolution to determine whether it is
truly a duplicate record.
2. DHS/FEMA–SBA Duplication of
Benefits Automated Match Process:
a. Both DHS/FEMA and SBA will act
as the recipient (i.e., matching) agencies.
SBA will extract and provide to DHS/
FEMA data from its Disaster Loans Case
Files system of records and accessed via
the Disaster Lending System. DHS/
FEMA will match the data SBA
provides to records in its Disaster
Recovery Assistance Files system of
records, accessed through NEMIS–IA
System, via the FEMA Registration ID
number. SBA will issue a data call to
DHS/FEMA requesting that DHS/FEMA
return any records for which NEMIS–IA
found a match. For each match found,
DHS/FEMA sends all applicant
information that it collects during the
registration process to SBA so that SBA
may match these records with its
registrant data in the Disaster Lending
System. SBA’s Disaster Lending System
manual process triggers an automated
interface to query NEMIS-IA, using the
FEMA Registration ID number as the
unique identifier.
b. DHS/FEMA will return the
following fields for the matching DHS/
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FEMA record, if any: FEMA Disaster
Number; FEMA Registration ID number;
applicant and if applicable, co-applicant
name; damaged dwelling address;
phone number; SSN; damaged property
data; insurance policy information;
contact address (if different from
damaged dwelling address); flood zone
and flood insurance data; FEMA
Housing Assistance and Other Needs
Assistance data; program, award level,
eligibility, inspection data; verification
of ownership and occupancy; and
approval or rejection data. DHS/FEMA
will return no result when the FEMA
Registration ID number is not matched.
c. For each matching record received
from DHS/FEMA, SBA determines
whether DHS/FEMA assistance
duplicates SBA loan assistance. If SBA
loan officers determine that there is a
duplication of benefits, the duplicated
amount is deducted from the eligible
SBA loan amount.
3. DHS/FEMA–SBA Status Update
Automated Match Process:
a. DHS/FEMA will act as the recipient
(i.e., matching) agency. DHS/FEMA will
match records from its Disaster
Recovery Assistance Files system of
records to the records extracted and
provided by SBA from its Disaster Loans
Case Files system of records. The
purpose of this process is to update
DHS/FEMA applicant information with
the status of SBA loan determinations.
The records provided by SBA will be
automatically imported into NEMIS–IA
to update the status of existing applicant
records. The records DHS/FEMA
receives from SBA are of DHS/FEMA
applicants who were referred to SBA for
disaster loan assistance. Controls on the
SBA export of data are in place to
ensure that DHS/FEMA only receives
unique and valid referral records.
b. SBA will provide to DHS/FEMA
information and data, including but not
limited to the following: personal
information about SBA applicants,
including name, damaged dwelling
address, and SSN; application data; loss
to personal property data; loss
mitigation data; SBA loan data; and SBA
event data. DHS/FEMA will conduct the
match using FEMA Disaster Number
and FEMA Registration ID number.
c. Loan data for matched records will
be recorded and displayed in NEMIS–
IA. Loan data will also be run through
NEMIS–IA business rules; potentially
duplicative categories of assistance are
sent to FEMA’s Program Review process
for manual evaluation of any
duplication of benefits. If FEMA review
staff determines that there is a
duplication of benefits, the duplicated
amount is deducted from the e1igible
award. FEMA applicants receive a letter
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(hardcopy or electronic) that indicates
the amount of their eligible award and
their ability to appeal.
SYSTEM OF RECORDS:
DHS/FEMA–008 Disaster Recovery
Assistance Files (87 FR 7852, February
10, 2022) accesses records from its
Disaster Recovery Assistance Files
system of records, as provided by the
DHS/FEMA—008 SORN, through its
NEMIS–IA system, and matches them to
the records that SBA provides from its
SBA-20 Disaster Loans Case Files, 86 FR
64979 (November 19, 2021) system of
records, as amended. SBA 20 Disaster
Loans Case Files (86 FR 64979,
November 19, 2021) uses its Disaster
Lending System to access records from
its Disaster Loan Case Files system of
records and match them to the records
that DHS/FEMA provides from its
Disaster Recovery Assistance Files
system of records.
Mason C. Clutter,
Chief Privacy Officer, Department of
Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2024–01057 Filed 1–19–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–9L–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–6412–N–01]
Waivers and Alternative Requirements
for Community Development Block
Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG–DR)
and Community Development Block
Grant National Disaster Resilience
(CDBG–NDR) Grantees
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice governs
Community Development Block Grant
disaster recovery (CDBG–DR) and
Community Development Block Grant
National Disaster Resilience (CDBG–
NDR) funds awarded under several
appropriations acts identified in the
Table of Contents. Specifically, this
notice provides waivers and establishes
alternative requirements for certain
CDBG–DR and CDBG–NDR grantees that
have submitted requests for waivers and
alternative requirements for grants
provided under the public laws cited in
this notice.
DATES: Applicability Date: January 29,
2024.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tennille Parker, Director, Office of
Disaster Recovery, U.S. Department of
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Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW, Room 7282, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone number 202–708–
3587 (this is not a toll-free number).
HUD welcomes and is prepared to
receive calls from individuals who are
deaf or hard of hearing, as well as
individuals with speech or
communication disabilities. To learn
more about how to make an accessible
telephone call, please visit: https://
www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Email inquiries may be sent to disaster_
recovery@hud.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Authority To Grant Waivers
II. Public Law 113–2 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
III. Public Law 115–123 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
IV. Public Law 116–20 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
V. Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)
I. Authority To Grant Waivers
Each of the appropriations acts cited
in the Table of Contents authorize the
Secretary to waive, or specify alternative
requirements for, any provision of any
statute or regulation that the Secretary
administers in connection with the
obligation by the Secretary, or use by
the recipient, of grant funds, except for
requirements related to fair housing,
nondiscrimination, labor standards, and
the environment. HUD may also
exercise its regulatory waiver authority
under 24 CFR 5.110, 91.600, and 570.5.
All waivers and alternative
requirements authorized in this notice
are based upon a determination by the
Secretary that good cause exists and that
the waiver or alternative requirement is
not inconsistent with the overall
purposes of title I of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974
(42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.) (HCDA). The
good cause for each waiver and
alternative requirement is summarized
in this notice.
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II. Public Law 113–2 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
II.A. Isle de Jean Charles Waiver and
Alternative Requirement for Eligibility
and National Objective Compliance and
Use of Program Income (State of
Louisiana Only)
The Federal Register notice published
on June 7, 2016 (81 FR 36557)
announced the allocation of
approximately $1 billion of CDBG–NDR
funds appropriated pursuant to Public
Law 113–2 for competitive awards
through the National Disaster Resilience
Competition (NDRC). Through the
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NDRC, HUD awarded CDBG–NDR funds
to 13 states and local governments to
implement innovative and replicable
activities to increase the resilience of
communities to future disasters. HUD
awarded $92.6 million in CDBG–NDR
funds to the State of Louisiana,
including $48.3 million to implement
the Isle de Jean Charles (IDJC)
Relocation. Additionally, HUD
published a Federal Register notice on
February 19, 2019 (84 FR 4836) that
included a clarification of certain
actions being taken by the State as part
of the relocation of the IDJC community.
The State is using its CDBG–NDR
funds to support the voluntary
resettlement of current and former
residents of the flood-prone Isle de Jean
Charles to a new and more resilient
inland community (the ‘‘IDJC
Resettlement Project’’). In 1955, Isle de
Jean Charles was a 22,400-acre island.
At the time of the CDBG–NDR award,
IDJC had lost 98 percent of its land due
to subsidence, with only 320 acres
remaining. The goals of the IDJC
Resettlement Project are to move
residents out of harm’s way, to engage
the Isle de Jean Charles community
residents in the design of the new
community, to identify means by which
the new community can be financially
sustainable, and to safeguard the
preservation and continuity of IDJC’s
diverse cultural identities and
traditions.
In the Federal Register notice
published on February 19, 2019, HUD
clarified that costs required to restrict
the use of land as a primary residence
are eligible costs of the State’s new
construction and disposition activities
for relocating island residents. (84 FR at
4839). HUD also clarified that the
placement of restrictions and limitations
on the use of land as a primary
residence is a condition of the new
construction and disposition activities
to relocate IDJC residents out of harm’s
way into more resilient housing, and not
acquisition activities triggering buyout
requirements. Since the award of the
CDBG–NDR funds, the State has moved
forward in the planning and
development of the new community,
New Isle, and has identified several
challenges related to the eligibility of
some project activities and the timeline
for certain activities to meet a national
objective, as provided in the CDBG–
NDR notice (81 FR 36557). The State has
also identified challenges associated
with maintaining the affordability of
New Isle for resettled residents.
II.A.1. Background and support for
the waivers and alternative
requirements necessary for the IDJC
Resettlement Project.
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The resettlement of the Isle de Jean
Charles community and the
development of the more resilient New
Isle community is a unique effort by the
State of Louisiana to demonstrate, with
the support of CDBG–NDR funds, how
communities nationwide may
implement the voluntary resettlement of
a community with diverse cultural
identities and traditions, when
confronted with repetitive disasterrelated losses of land mass due to
climate change. The IDJC Resettlement
Project has the potential to serve as a
model for other communities seeking to
manage the retreat and resettlement of
communities threatened by climate
change.
Almost every IDJC household
qualifies as low- or moderate-income,
many are elderly and on fixed incomes,
and nearly all will face increased overall
expenses in relocating from IDJC. The
State has therefore requested the
following waivers and alternative
requirements to address the challenges
related to the eligibility and carrying out
of activities, meeting of a national
objective within the approved period of
performance, and use of program
income for the IDJC Resettlement
Project.
The Department finds that there is
good cause for the waivers and
alternative requirements in this section
because they are necessary to facilitate
the IDJC Resettlement Project, which
HUD anticipates will serve as a model
for communities pursuing the
resettlement of low- and moderateincome residents to lower-risk areas,
and further the State’s recovery goal of
a holistic approach to resettlement of a
diverse and culturally rich community.
II.A.2. Activity eligibility of the Isle de
Jean Charles Resettlement Project.
In rare instances, when necessary to
achieve recovery goals, HUD has
previously granted waivers and
alternative requirements to allow a
grantee to treat a large complex project
with multiple components that
contribute to long-term recovery and
resilience as a single eligible activity.
HUD has determined that the
components of the IDJC Resettlement
Project are largely eligible CDBG–NDR
activities but that the complexity of
managing multiple separate eligible
activities as components of the overall
relocation would detrimentally delay
the timeline of this critical recovery
project. Therefore, based on the good
cause determination described in
paragraph II.A.1. and to further facilitate
an efficient implementation of the IDJC
Resettlement Project, HUD is waiving
section 105(a) of the HCDA (42 U.S.C.
5305(a)), as amended, to the extent
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necessary to create the new eligible
activity of the ‘‘IDJC Resettlement
Project,’’ comprised of the Residential
Assistance Fund (the ‘‘Fund’’) described
in the next paragraph, as well as the
acquisition, infrastructure, housing,
economic development, and public
service activities described in the State’s
current, HUD-approved, amended
CDBG–NDR action plan. The IDJC
Resettlement Project eligible activity is
subject to the alternative requirements
described below.
The State indicated that one of the
new activities of the IDJC Resettlement
Project eligible activity will be the
establishment of the Fund. The State
plans to use CDBG–NDR funds, CDBG–
NDR program income generated by
economic development activities at New
Isle, and other sources to capitalize the
Fund. The State indicated that the Fund
will be used to assist New Isle
homeowners with certain monthly costs
(e.g., termite treatment, property
insurance, and flood insurance) to
maintain the affordability and stability
of the New Isle community. HUD
recognizes that the relocated residents
of the New Isle community will have
new expenses than those incurred while
living in IDJC and may require
additional short-term assistance to
maintain their new homes in New Isle.
The Department therefore has
determined that the State’s use of
CDBG–NDR for the Fund advances the
Department’s priority to support
forward-thinking solutions to help lowand moderate-income households,
facing the imminent threat of sea level
rise attributable to climate change, to
relocate to new, more resilient, and
affordable communities.
Accordingly, under the waiver
provided above to establish the IDJC
Resettlement Project as a single new
eligible CDBG–NDR activity, the State
may use CDBG–NDR funds and program
income to assist low and moderateincome New Isle residents relocated
from the IDJC community with
allowable housing costs for up to five
years, meaning no beneficiary may
receive more than a total of 5 years of
this type of assistance or up to a specific
amount, as determined by the State, to
maintain the stability and affordability
of New Isle and resettlement of
relocated IDJC residents. HUD is also
establishing an alternative requirement
that no assistance shall be provided for
this purpose until the State submits a
substantial action plan amendment for
its CDBG–NDR grant. The substantial
action plan amendment must include
the following:
1. A budget for the Fund,
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2. Identify eligible costs under the
Fund,
3. Describe how identified costs are
allowable in accordance with 2 CFR part
200, subpart E,
4. Describe the criteria that will be
used to select beneficiaries and
determine the amount of assistance
under the Fund,
5. The mechanisms and process to
provide the assistance,
6. How the State will oversee and
monitor the administration and use of
the Fund, and
7. How the State will ensure public
transparency regarding the provision of
assistance and use of the Fund.
Additionally, CDBG–NDR funds and
program income, including any portion
used to finance the Fund, shall not be
used to compensate beneficiaries for
losses from disaster-related impacts.
Finally, as an alternative requirement,
and in addition to all other
modifications which constitute a
substantial amendment requiring HUD
approval as described in the Federal
Register notice published on August 7,
2017 (82 FR 36812 at 36819), the
deletion of the Fund or any activity that
is part of the ‘‘IDJC Resettlement
Project’’ as described in the State’s
current, HUD-approved, amended
CDBG–NDR action plan, or the addition
of any other activities as part of the
‘‘IDJC Resettlement Project’’ constitute a
substantial amendment requiring HUD
approval.
II.A.3. National objective compliance
for the IDJC Resettlement Project.
The additional regulatory waivers and
alternative requirements provided in
this section enable the State to
accomplish its goals for the IDJC
Resettlement Project. The IDJC
Resettlement Project aims to foster the
growth of the New Isle’s residents and
address their housing, economic, and
service needs. The IDJC Resettlement
Project is not merely replacing the
relocated households’ homes, but is also
carrying out acquisition, infrastructure,
housing, economic development, and
public service activities intended to
create a sustainable, long-term
community for these relocated
residents. For these reasons and based
on the good cause provided in
paragraph II.A.1., the Department
waives the criteria in 24 CFR 570.483(b)
for the IDJC Resettlement Project eligible
activity only and establishes the
following alternative requirement for
the criteria as a means of addressing the
objective of benefitting low- and
moderate-income (LMI) persons. To
demonstrate that the IDJC Resettlement
Project eligible activity addresses the
objective of benefitting LMI persons, the
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State must meet all the applicable
criteria described below:
1. The State must determine the
actual service area benefiting from the
IDJC Resettlement Project, in accordance
with the regulations. The service area
must be primarily residential in
character with related cultural and
recreational components (e.g.,
community centers with cultural
components);
2. The State must complete the
housing units for occupancy by the
households that are part of the original
IDJC resettlement (at least 34 units of
housing) and document that at least 70
percent of those households qualify as
LMI;
3. The State must complete the
community center, marketplace,
recreational facilities, parks, and
additional site improvements, as
described in its approved action plan, as
part of the New Isle community;
4. That State must require its Partners
(as defined in the National Disaster
Resilience Competition Phase 2 Notice
of Funding Availability) and
subrecipients to document that any
economic development activities
funded through the IDJC Resettlement
Project are complete and will increase
economic opportunity, primarily for
LMI persons, through the creation of
permanent jobs. The State may presume
that any jobs created are held by or
made available to a low- or moderateincome person, if the economic
development activities are located in the
New Isle community;
5. The State must submit a
sustainability plan with its substantial
action plan amendment adding the
Fund as an activity, that is then
approved by HUD. The sustainability
plan must include prominent posting on
the State’s official website and must
afford citizens, affected local
governments, and other interested
parties a reasonable opportunity to
examine the plan. The State must notify
affected citizens through electronic
mailings, press releases, statements by
public officials, media advertisements,
public service announcements, and/or
contacts with organizations located in or
serving the target area or neighborhood.
At a minimum, the sustainability plan
must include the following information:
a. An estimate of the amount of taxes
and insurance required for each home
per year;
b. A detailed description of the
process and timeline for New Isle
residents to pay for housing costs that
were once covered by the Fund, after
their assistance from the Fund has
ended (i.e., reaches 5 years of assistance
or maximum amount set by the State)
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and/or the State concludes its use of the
Fund;
c. A description of other financial
resources, if any, that will be available
to support beneficiaries with housing
costs after the State concludes use of the
Fund;
d. A detailed description of how the
State will inform beneficiaries about the
Fund, terms and conditions for Fund
assistance, and the beneficiaries’
financial responsibilities after assistance
from the Fund ends; and
e. How the State will detect and
prevent fraud, waste, and abuse in the
administration and use of the Fund.
II.A.4. Clarification on Public Services
for the Isle de Jean Charles Resettlement
Project.
Additionally, the Federal Register
notice published on June 7, 2016 (81 FR
36557) waives 42 U.S.C. 5305(e)(3), 24
CFR 570.482(f)(1), (2), (3), (4)(i), (5), and
(6), including the public benefit
standards at 24 CFR 570.482(g), for
economic development activities
designed to create or retain jobs or
businesses. This waiver continues to
apply to the State’s CDBG–NDR grant.
Finally, all public services carried out
as part of the IDJC Resettlement Project
shall be exempt from the cap on public
service expenditures found in section
105(a)(8) of the HCDA (42 U.S.C.
5305(a)), as amended.
II.B. Waivers and Alternative
Requirements for New Jersey’s CDBG–
DR Grant Under Public Law 113–2
(State of New Jersey Only)
In the Federal Register notices
published on March 5, 2013 (78 FR
14329) (the ‘‘March 2013 Notice’’),
November 18, 2013 (78 FR 69104) (the
‘‘November 2013 Notice’’), and October
16, 2014 (79 FR 62182) (the ‘‘October
2014 Notice’’), HUD awarded a total of
$4,174,110,000 in CDBG–DR funds to
the State of New Jersey for recovery
from Superstorm Sandy from Public
Law 113–2 of which $380,000,000 were
for Rebuild by Design (RBD) also under
Public Law 113–2.
The Federal Register notice published
on May 24, 2022 (87 FR 31636) (the
‘‘May 2022 Notice’’) announced the
allocation of $228,346,000 of CDBG–DR
funds under Public Law 117–43 (the
‘‘2022 Appropriations Act’’) and the
Federal Register notice published on
January 18, 2023 (87 FR 3198) (the
‘‘January 2023 Notice’’) announced the
allocation of $149,229,000 of CDBG–DR
funds under Public Law 117–180 (the
‘‘2023 Appropriations Act’’) for a total
of $377,575,000 in CDBG–DR funds to
the State of New Jersey for recovery
from Tropical Storm Ida (collectively
referred to as ‘‘the Appropriations
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Acts’’). The 2022 Appropriations Act
gives the Secretary authority to
authorize grantees receiving a CDBG–DR
grant under the 2022 Appropriations
Acts and prior or future appropriation
acts for activities authorized under title
I of the HCDA for a specific qualifying
disaster(s) to use these funds
interchangeably and without limitation
for the same activities in the most
impacted and distressed (MID) areas
resulting from a major disaster in prior
or future appropriation acts, as long as
the MID areas overlap and the activities
address unmet needs of both disasters.
Based on this authority, New Jersey’s
CDBG–DR grants for Tropical Storm Ida
and its CDBG–DR grants for Superstorm
Sandy may be used interchangeably and
without limitation for the same
activities in MID areas resulting from
Superstorm Sandy or Tropical Storm
Ida, if the MID areas of both disasters
overlap and the activities address unmet
needs of both disasters, as described in
the May 2022 Notice and the January
2023 Notice. The State has requested,
and HUD is providing the following
waivers and alternative requirements to
the State of New Jersey to carry out
activities that will benefit Tropical
Storm Ida beneficiaries. Both waivers
and alternative requirements provided
herein will help the State to expedite
the delivery of assistance through
programs that address the same
activities related to unmet recovery
needs resulting from Superstorm Sandy
and Tropical Storm Ida in the MID areas
that overlap. The grantee must describe
its use of funds in both its CDBG–DR
action plans for Superstorm Sandy and
Tropical Storm Ida.
II.B.1. Waiver to Allow the Use of
CDBG–DR Funds Provided Under Public
Law 113–2 for Rental Assistance (State
of New Jersey only).
The State’s request notes that after
Superstorm Sandy, the State identified
a significant shortage of rental housing
as a result of the storm, particularly in
the MID areas, with rental stock being
virtually non-existent. HUD and the
State have evaluated the State’s program
budgets and the State has forecasted
expenditures to determine that the
State’s Superstorm Sandy related unmet
needs will be satisfied with the existing
programs in place, while impacts
related to Tropical Storm Ida have
created new unmet rental needs that
have further exacerbated issues
associated with the COVID–19
pandemic.
Prior to Tropical Storm Ida, New
Jersey’s housing conditions were
already under significant strain from the
ongoing national housing crisis and
supply chain issues from the COVID–19
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3945
pandemic. These issues combined with
the subsequent impacts of the storm
drastically escalated the State’s housing
and homelessness crises. At the time of
the State’s waiver request, the risk of
eviction in New Jersey was greater than
anywhere else in the country as 393,000
households were delinquent on their
rent. These eviction pressures are faced
primarily by residents of color,
households with children, and in urban
areas—including those disasterimpacted urban areas—where lowincome populations are particularly
vulnerable. In the State, more than 25
percent of renter households are
extremely low income and 73 percent of
these extremely low-income renters
suffer from severe housing cost burden.
Due to the impacts of Tropical Storm
Ida, over 8,000 homeowners and 4,500
renters experienced major to severe
damage to their homes, as defined by
HUD. The State of New Jersey has
prioritized housing rehabilitation that
will primarily benefit LMI households,
through a phased approach for its
homeowner program and by limiting its
rehabilitation of rental housing to
housing that will be affordable to LMI
households. However, these units will
take several years to be fully repaired
and accessible. During that time, LMI
residents residing in the MID areas
could face unaffordable rents on top of
an affordable housing crisis. Rents in
the HUD MID-areas have considerably
increased since Tropical Storm Ida.
From 2021 to the anticipated launch of
the State’s CDBG–DR programs in 2023,
rents in the HUD MID areas will have
increased in some counties by over 10
percent and are expected to continue to
rise over the next two to three years.
The State plans to use its CDBG–DR
funds under Public Law 113–2 to offer
rental assistance and utility payments in
the form of direct payments to
homeowners or renters who are
displaced and homeless or at-risk of
homelessness as a result of the impacts
of Tropical Storm Ida when such
assistance payments are part of a
homelessness prevention, intermediate
housing, or rapid rehousing program
activity, including intermediate housing
during the repair and reconstruction of
homes.
After reviewing the State’s request
and based on the good cause that the
waiver and alternative requirements
will help homeowners and renters that
are displaced and impacted by Tropical
Storm Ida to obtain and remain in
housing that is in limited supply due to
New Jersey’s ongoing housing and
homelessness crises, the Department is
imposing an alternative requirement to
waive and modify 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(8)
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to expand the definition of public
service to include the following activity:
provision of rental assistance (e.g. rent,
security deposits, and utility deposits)
and utility payments for up to 24
months for the State of New Jersey’s
funds provided under Public Law 113–
2 to address unmet needs from Tropical
Storm Ida, subject to the following
alternative requirements.
This activity is subject to the 15
percent cap on public services, and no
beneficiary may receive more than a
total of 24 months of rental assistance
and utility payments. A homeowner
receiving any form of CDBG–DR interim
mortgage assistance that may be offered
by the State is not eligible for rental
assistance or utility payments, as
authorized by this waiver and
alternative requirement.
The State must determine that the
rental assistance and utility payments
are needed because the household
moved from their primary residence due
to rehabilitation or reconstruction needs
from Tropical Storm Ida, the household
is experiencing or is at risk of
experiencing homelessness and the
assistance is part of a homelessness
prevention or rapid rehousing program
or activity, or other disaster-related
pressures on the housing market
necessitate the assistance to support the
household’s recovery.
While this waiver and alternative
requirement will allow the State to
provide rental assistance and utility
payments to households impacted by
Tropical Storm Ida, this does not relieve
the State of the duty to comply with
other applicable requirements relating
to the temporary relocation or
displacement of households. If a
household meets the definition of a
‘‘displaced person’’ under the Uniform
Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, as
amended, (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.)
(‘‘URA’’) or Section 104(d) of the HCDA
(42 U.S.C. 5304(d)) (‘‘Section 104(d)’’),
the State must provide the displaced
person with any relocation assistance to
which they are entitled under law,
including but not limited to assistance
authorized under the URA or Section
104(d), pursuant to those requirements
in the applicable notices, as modified by
the waiver of Section 414 of the Stafford
Act in Section II.B.2., below.
The goals of this waiver and
alternative requirement are to prevent
and minimize the time households are
experiencing or are at risk of
experiencing homelessness as a result of
the qualifying disaster and to provide
additional time to stabilize persons or
households in permanent housing
through the use of CDBG–DR funds for
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rental assistance and utility payments.
The use of CDBG–DR funds for each of
these purposes advances the
Department’s priority to support
forward-thinking solutions to help
communities that are struggling to
house and serve persons and families
that are homeless or at risk of
homelessness as a result of a disaster.
When providing rental assistance and
utility payments to beneficiaries who
are at risk of homelessness, the State
must clearly demonstrate in their action
plan the concrete steps they will take to
prevent households from becoming
homeless after the exhaustion of the
CDBG–DR rental assistance. In addition,
in developing their policies and
procedures, the State must list services
to be provided and outline a referral
process that will enable the targeted
households to apply to live in affordable
housing units, including those that are
created under other CDBG–DR funded
programs.
HUD has previously certified the
State’s procedures to detect fraud,
waste, and abuse prior to the obligation
of Superstorm Sandy funding. To fortify
these requirements and achieve a
targeted use of funds and to safeguard
against fraud, the State must amend the
provisions in its policies and
procedures to show how the State will
verify the accuracy of information
provided by applicants to its rental
assistance and utility payment program,
how the State will document that the
applicant used the funds for only the
eligible uses defined in its action plan
or the program’s policies and
procedures, and how the State will
detect and prevent fraud, waste, and
abuse in its rental assistance and utility
payment programs. The State must
document, in its policies and
procedures, how it will determine the
basis of the rental assistance and utility
payments award for each household
assisted and that the amount of the
assistance to be provided is necessary
and reasonable and not duplicative of
any other funding source, including
insurance. To comply with the order of
assistance requirements in the
Appropriations Acts, any rental or
temporary housing assistance provided
by or made available by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) must first be exhausted prior to
providing CDBG–DR funds to a
household for the uses permitted by this
waiver and alternative requirement.
II.B.2. Waiver of Section 414 of the
Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5181 (State of
New Jersey only).
The State of New Jersey has requested
a waiver of section 414 of the Stafford
Act (42 U.S.C. 5181), as amended, for
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real property acquisition, rehabilitation,
and demolition of real property for
CDBG–DR activities funded by Public
Law 113–2 that will address the unmet
housing needs from Tropical storm Ida.
Section 414 of the Stafford Act
provides that ‘‘Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, no person
otherwise eligible for any kind of
replacement housing payment under the
Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real
Property Acquisition Policies Act of
1970 (Pub. L. 91–646) [42 U.S.C. 4601
et seq.] [(‘‘URA’’)] shall be denied such
eligibility as a result of his being unable,
because of a major disaster as
determined by the President, to meet the
occupancy requirements set by [the
URA].’’ Accordingly, homeowner
occupants and tenants displaced from
their homes as a result of an identified
disaster and who would have otherwise
been displaced as a direct result of any
acquisition, rehabilitation, or
demolition of real property for a
federally funded program or project may
become eligible for a replacement
housing payment notwithstanding their
inability to meet occupancy
requirements prescribed in the URA.
The State has requested a waiver of
section 414 of the Stafford Act to better
align its CDBG–DR grants funded by
Public Law 113–2 for Superstorm Sandy
with its grants funded by the 2022 and
2023 Appropriations Acts. The State
contends that this waiver, granted for all
funds under the 2022 and 2023
Appropriations Acts, will allow it to
implement its programs for Tropical
storm Ida beneficiaries consistently,
whether the program is being funded
under Public Law 113–2 or the 2022 and
2023 Appropriations Acts.
HUD provided the waiver for grants
under the 2022 and 2023
Appropriations Acts to simplify the
administration of the disaster recovery
process and reduce the administrative
burden associated with the
implementation of section 414
requirements for projects commencing
more than one year after the date of the
Presidentially declared disaster
considering most of such persons
displaced by the disaster will have
returned to their dwellings or found
another place of permanent residence.
Therefore, the Department has
determined that good cause exists for a
waiver for the State’s funds under
Public Law 113–2 and waives section
414 of the Stafford Act and its
implementing regulation at 49 CFR
24.403(d)(1) to the extent that they
would apply to real property
acquisition, rehabilitation, or
demolition of real property for a CDBG–
DR funded project commencing more
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than one year after the date of Tropical
Storm Ida undertaken by the State, or its
subrecipients, provided that the project
was not planned, approved, or
otherwise underway before the date of
the disaster.
For purposes of this waiver, a CDBG–
DR funded project shall be determined
to have commenced on the earliest of:
(1) the date of an approved Request for
Release of Funds and certification; (2)
the date of completion of the sitespecific review when a program utilizes
Tiering; or (3) the date of sign-off by the
approving official when a project
converts to exempt under 24 CFR
58.34(a)(12).
This waiver does not apply with
respect to persons that meet the
occupancy requirements to receive a
replacement housing payment under the
URA nor does it apply to persons
displaced or relocated temporarily by
other HUD-funded programs or projects.
Such persons’ eligibility for relocation
assistance and payments under the URA
is not impacted by this waiver.
III. Public Law 115–123 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
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Revision of Electrical Power System
Consultation Requirements
(Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and U.S.
Virgin Islands Only)
The Federal Register notice published
on June 22, 2021 (86 FR 32681) (the
‘‘June 2021 Notice’’) established the
requirements for the nearly $28 billion
in CDBG–DR funds approved February
9, 2018 by the Further Additional
Supplemental Appropriations for
Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2018
(Pub. L. 115–123), including $2 billion
for enhanced or improved electrical
power systems in the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico (the Commonwealth) and
the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) to
address the impact of Hurricanes Irma
and Maria on each grantee’s electrical
power system.
Because of the unique purpose of this
$2 billion allocation of CDBG–DR funds,
in recognition of the many Federal
agencies that would be providing
assistance to the Commonwealth and
the USVI to enhance and improve each
jurisdiction’s electrical power system,
and because of the historical and ongoing fiscal and operational challenges
of each of the public utilities that
operate the Commonwealth and USVI
systems, the June 2021
Noticeestablished a number of on-going
coordination requirements unique to
this allocation.
In February 2020, FEMA and the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) established
Energy Technical Coordination Teams
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(‘‘TCT’’) at each jurisdiction as a formal
mechanism for coordination among the
numerous local and Federal entities
involved in electricity grid recovery to
facilitate decision making and ensure
the best use of expertise, solutions, and
funds in the implementation of energy
recovery activities. Section V.A.2.e. of
the June 2021 Notice requires each
grantee to consult at least quarterly with
its respective TCT on one or more of the
following areas: on the action plan
required by the June 2021 Notice for the
use of the CDBG–DR funds and any
substantial amendments to that plan;
the evaluation of the capacity of any
public utility that will receive CDBG–
DR funds to carry out improvements;
the identification of opportunities to
sequence and coordinate on permits and
approvals necessary to carry out CDBG–
DR funded electrical power system
improvement activities, including
environmental reviews; the technical
evaluation of proposed electrical power
system improvements; and
implementation of applicable electrical
power system industry standards and
the commercial availability of system
components that the grantee proposed
to fund.
To ensure the coordination of
electrical power system improvements
that may be funded from each grantee’s
other allocations of CDBG–DR and
CDBG mitigation (CDBG–MIT) funds
provided in response to Hurricanes Irma
and Maria, the June 2021 Notice also
prohibits the use of other CDBG–DR and
CDBG–MIT funds for electrical power
system improvements until HUD
consults and coordinates with its
Federal members through the TCTs. The
June 2021 Notice also provides that
HUD shall determine when the required
consultations previously noted shall be
deemed complete.
Since the publication of the June 2021
Notice, each grantee has proactively
engaged with its respective TCT on a
wide range of issues associated with its
planned and on-going electrical power
system improvements. In January 2022,
HUD, FEMA, and DOE also executed a
memorandum of understanding
establishing a framework outside of the
TCT for coordination and providing
technical assistance to the
Commonwealth. Additionally, following
Hurricane Fiona, the Administration
announced the formation of a Puerto
Rico Grid Recovery and Modernization
Team, to be led by DOE, to coordinate
Federal grid recovery and
modernization efforts.
In recognition of these developments
and the critical importance of
accelerating electrical power system
improvements following the devastating
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3947
impact of Hurricane Fiona in September
2022, HUD finds good cause to waive
and revise the consultation
requirements of its June 2021 Notice as
follows:
Upon approval by HUD of an action
plan providing for the use of a grantee’s
total allocation of funds for electrical
power system improvements as
provided by the June 2021 Notice:
(1) Paragraph V.A.2.e of the June 2021
Notice, and as referenced elsewhere in the
June 2021 Notice, with respect to TCT
consultation shall no longer apply; provided
that, at the request of HUD, each grantee shall
engage with its TCT to provide updates on
its implementation of CDBG–DR, CDBG–MIT,
and other Federal funding for electrical
power system improvements until grant
closeout; and
(2) The consultation requirements at
paragraph V.B.4 of the June 2021 Notice that
prohibits grantees from using other CDBG–
DR and CDBG–MIT funds provided in
response to Hurricanes Irma and Maria for
activities to enhance or improve electrical
power systems until HUD consults and
coordinates with its Federal members
through the TCT shall no longer apply.
HUD will continue to engage its
Federal partners directly in providing
ongoing technical assistance to each
grantee and in monitoring each grantee’s
use of all CDBG–DR and CDBG–MIT
funds used for electrical power system
improvements. HUD will also continue
to engage its Federal partners through
the TCTs, the Recovery Support
Function Leadership Group (RSFLG)
energy subgroup, and other forums.
IV. Public Law 116–20 Waivers and
Alternative Requirements
Waiver and Alternative Requirement for
70 Percent Overall Low- and ModerateIncome Benefit Requirement (State of
California Only)
The Federal Register notice published
on January 27, 2020 (85 FR 4681)
(‘‘January 2020 Notice’’) included an
allocation of $38,057,527 appropriated
under the Additional Supplemental
Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act,
2019 (Pub. L. 116–20) to the State of
California for recovery from 2017
wildfires and 2017–2018 wildfires,
flooding, mudflows, and debris flows.
These funds have been provided to meet
the unmet infrastructure recovery needs
in the HUD-defined MID areas. Prior to
this award, HUD also allocated
$124,155,000 under Public Law 115–
123 to the State for recovery from the
same disasters in the Federal Register
notice published on August 14, 2018 (83
FR 40314).
The overall benefit requirement
established by the HCDA requires that
70 percent of the aggregate of a grantee’s
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CDBG–DR fund expenditures shall be
used to support activities benefiting LMI
persons. Under certain circumstances, it
can be difficult for grantees working in
disaster recovery to meet this overall
benefit test because the MID areas
resulting from a disaster may not be
low- and moderate-income areas, and
this requirement can therefore (in some
exceptional cases) limit a grantee’s
ability to assist those affected by the
disaster. The January 2020 Notice
maintained the 70 percent overall
benefit requirement for all CDBG–DR
grantees receiving funds under Public
Law 116–20 and the notice imposed the
requirements of the February 9, 2018
notice (83 FR 5844) (‘‘February 2018
Notice’’), which provides grantees with
the option of submitting a request to
HUD for a lower overall benefit
requirement. Specifically, the February
2018 Notice allows a grantee to request
to further reduce its overall benefit
requirement if it submitted a
justification that, at a minimum: (a)
identifies the planned activities that
meet the needs of its low- and moderateincome population; (b) describes
proposed activity(ies) and/or program(s)
that will be affected by the alternative
requirement, including their proposed
location(s) and role(s) in the grantee’s
long-term disaster recovery plan; (c)
describes how the activities/programs
identified in (b) prevent the grantee
from meeting the 70 percent
requirement; and (d) demonstrates that
low- and moderate-income persons’
disaster-related needs have been
sufficiently met and that the needs of
non-LMI persons or areas are
disproportionately greater, and that the
jurisdiction lacks other resources to
serve them.
The State submitted a request to
establish a lower overall benefit
requirement based on the above criteria.
In its request, the State contends that its
two established programs: OwnerOccupied Rehabilitation and
Reconstruction Program (OOR) and
Multifamily Housing Program funded
under Public Law 115–123 will meet the
unmet needs of its LMI populations.
Specifically, in its OOR program, the
State has prioritized the needs of LMI
persons and estimates that the program
will expend at least 90 percent of funds
for the benefit of LMI households. The
Multifamily Housing Program is limited
to projects that meet the LMI National
Objective criteria, and the State
estimates the program will expend 100
percent of funds for the benefit of LMI
households. Based on these estimates,
the total projected LMI benefit
percentage for the State’s allocation
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under Public Law 115–123 will be 96
percent, which demonstrates the State’s
commitment to meeting the needs of its
LMI populations. While the Department
evaluates overall benefit for each grant
separately, the allocations from Public
Laws 115–123 and 116–20 support
recovery from the same disasters in the
same MID areas, and the total projected
LMI benefit percentage when combining
the allocations would be 82 percent.
The State’s allocation under Public
Law 116–20 was limited to allow the
State to only address its unmet
infrastructure recovery needs. For this
allocation, the State expanded its
original Infrastructure Program
proposed in its initial action plan to
include standalone infrastructure
projects and FEMA Hazard Mitigation
Grant Program Non-Federal match
activities in addition to FEMA Public
Assistance non-federal match projects.
When considering its unmet
infrastructure needs, the State indicated
in its request that the total LMI
percentage of the population in the
HUD-identified MID areas is 42 percent,
and the City of Clearlake is the only
jurisdiction that is a MID area and
would also qualify as an eligible LMI
area. To address the needs of LMI
households throughout the MID areas,
the State prioritized infrastructure
projects in MID areas that would benefit
LMI areas through its Notice of Intent
(NOI) process where eligible applicants
submitted proposed infrastructure
projects to meet the unmet
infrastructure need in their community.
The State also conducted extensive
outreach to potential applicants by
hosting multiple webinars and holding
office hours for months during and after
the NOI process. Despite these efforts,
the State’s CDBG–DR funded
infrastructure program only received
nine project applications from four
eligible applicants: City of Clearlake,
City of Santa Rosa, Santa Barbara
County, and Sonoma County. Of the
nine applications, three projects qualify
for the LMI national objective, and all
LMI projects will derive from a single
eligible applicant, the City of Clearlake,
leading to the allocation’s total
projected LMI benefit percentage being
38 percent.
To enable the State to undertake the
activities it has determined to be the
most critical for its recovery and LMI
households in the MID areas, HUD is
granting a waiver and alternative
requirement to reduce the overall
benefit requirement from 70 percent to
not less than 38 percent of the State’s
total allocation of CDBG–DR funds for
its unmet infrastructure recovery needs.
This is a limited waiver modifying
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sections 101(c) and 104(b)(3)(A) of the
HCDA and 24 CFR 570.200(a)(3) only to
the extent necessary to reduce the LMI
overall benefit requirement that the
State must meet when carrying out
activities identified in its approved
action plan from 70 percent to not less
than 38 percent of the grantee’s
allocation of CDBG–DR funds under
Public Law 116–20 for its unmet
infrastructure recovery needs. Based on
the analysis submitted by the State, the
Secretary finds good cause for this
waiver and alternative requirement due
to the circumstances outlined in the
State’s request. In particular, HUD notes
that the State had demonstrated that it
has sufficiently addressed LMI unmet
recovery needs through both its CDBG–
DR allocations awarded under Public
Laws 115–123 and 116–20, conducted
significant amounts of public outreach
when determining LMI unmet
infrastructure needs, and prioritized and
selected infrastructure projects serving
LMI areas, even though the LMI
percentage of the MID areas was only 42
percent.
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
online on HUD’s CDBG–DR website at
https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/
comm_planning/cdbg-dr and for public
inspection between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
weekdays in the Regulations Division,
Office of General Counsel, 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, as well as individuals
with speech or communication
disabilities. To learn more about how to
make an accessible telephone call,
please visit https://www.fcc.gov/
consumers/guides/telecommunicationsrelay-service-trs.
Adrianne Todman,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024–01116 Filed 1–19–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 14 (Monday, January 22, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3942-3948]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-01116]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-6412-N-01]
Waivers and Alternative Requirements for Community Development
Block Grant Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) and Community Development Block
Grant National Disaster Resilience (CDBG-NDR) Grantees
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice governs Community Development Block Grant disaster
recovery (CDBG-DR) and Community Development Block Grant National
Disaster Resilience (CDBG-NDR) funds awarded under several
appropriations acts identified in the Table of Contents. Specifically,
this notice provides waivers and establishes alternative requirements
for certain CDBG-DR and CDBG-NDR grantees that have submitted requests
for waivers and alternative requirements for grants provided under the
public laws cited in this notice.
DATES: Applicability Date: January 29, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tennille Parker, Director, Office of
Disaster Recovery, U.S. Department of
[[Page 3943]]
Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room 7282,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone number 202-708-3587 (this is not a
toll-free number). HUD welcomes and is prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, as well as individuals
with speech or communication disabilities. To learn more about how to
make an accessible telephone call, please visit: https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/telecommunications-relay-service-trs. Email inquiries
may be sent to [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Authority To Grant Waivers
II. Public Law 113-2 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
III. Public Law 115-123 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
IV. Public Law 116-20 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
V. Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)
I. Authority To Grant Waivers
Each of the appropriations acts cited in the Table of Contents
authorize the Secretary to waive, or specify alternative requirements
for, any provision of any statute or regulation that the Secretary
administers in connection with the obligation by the Secretary, or use
by the recipient, of grant funds, except for requirements related to
fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor standards, and the environment.
HUD may also exercise its regulatory waiver authority under 24 CFR
5.110, 91.600, and 570.5.
All waivers and alternative requirements authorized in this notice
are based upon a determination by the Secretary that good cause exists
and that the waiver or alternative requirement is not inconsistent with
the overall purposes of title I of the Housing and Community
Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.) (HCDA). The good cause
for each waiver and alternative requirement is summarized in this
notice.
II. Public Law 113-2 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
II.A. Isle de Jean Charles Waiver and Alternative Requirement for
Eligibility and National Objective Compliance and Use of Program Income
(State of Louisiana Only)
The Federal Register notice published on June 7, 2016 (81 FR 36557)
announced the allocation of approximately $1 billion of CDBG-NDR funds
appropriated pursuant to Public Law 113-2 for competitive awards
through the National Disaster Resilience Competition (NDRC). Through
the NDRC, HUD awarded CDBG-NDR funds to 13 states and local governments
to implement innovative and replicable activities to increase the
resilience of communities to future disasters. HUD awarded $92.6
million in CDBG-NDR funds to the State of Louisiana, including $48.3
million to implement the Isle de Jean Charles (IDJC) Relocation.
Additionally, HUD published a Federal Register notice on February 19,
2019 (84 FR 4836) that included a clarification of certain actions
being taken by the State as part of the relocation of the IDJC
community.
The State is using its CDBG-NDR funds to support the voluntary
resettlement of current and former residents of the flood-prone Isle de
Jean Charles to a new and more resilient inland community (the ``IDJC
Resettlement Project''). In 1955, Isle de Jean Charles was a 22,400-
acre island. At the time of the CDBG-NDR award, IDJC had lost 98
percent of its land due to subsidence, with only 320 acres remaining.
The goals of the IDJC Resettlement Project are to move residents out of
harm's way, to engage the Isle de Jean Charles community residents in
the design of the new community, to identify means by which the new
community can be financially sustainable, and to safeguard the
preservation and continuity of IDJC's diverse cultural identities and
traditions.
In the Federal Register notice published on February 19, 2019, HUD
clarified that costs required to restrict the use of land as a primary
residence are eligible costs of the State's new construction and
disposition activities for relocating island residents. (84 FR at
4839). HUD also clarified that the placement of restrictions and
limitations on the use of land as a primary residence is a condition of
the new construction and disposition activities to relocate IDJC
residents out of harm's way into more resilient housing, and not
acquisition activities triggering buyout requirements. Since the award
of the CDBG-NDR funds, the State has moved forward in the planning and
development of the new community, New Isle, and has identified several
challenges related to the eligibility of some project activities and
the timeline for certain activities to meet a national objective, as
provided in the CDBG-NDR notice (81 FR 36557). The State has also
identified challenges associated with maintaining the affordability of
New Isle for resettled residents.
II.A.1. Background and support for the waivers and alternative
requirements necessary for the IDJC Resettlement Project.
The resettlement of the Isle de Jean Charles community and the
development of the more resilient New Isle community is a unique effort
by the State of Louisiana to demonstrate, with the support of CDBG-NDR
funds, how communities nationwide may implement the voluntary
resettlement of a community with diverse cultural identities and
traditions, when confronted with repetitive disaster-related losses of
land mass due to climate change. The IDJC Resettlement Project has the
potential to serve as a model for other communities seeking to manage
the retreat and resettlement of communities threatened by climate
change.
Almost every IDJC household qualifies as low- or moderate-income,
many are elderly and on fixed incomes, and nearly all will face
increased overall expenses in relocating from IDJC. The State has
therefore requested the following waivers and alternative requirements
to address the challenges related to the eligibility and carrying out
of activities, meeting of a national objective within the approved
period of performance, and use of program income for the IDJC
Resettlement Project.
The Department finds that there is good cause for the waivers and
alternative requirements in this section because they are necessary to
facilitate the IDJC Resettlement Project, which HUD anticipates will
serve as a model for communities pursuing the resettlement of low- and
moderate-income residents to lower-risk areas, and further the State's
recovery goal of a holistic approach to resettlement of a diverse and
culturally rich community.
II.A.2. Activity eligibility of the Isle de Jean Charles
Resettlement Project.
In rare instances, when necessary to achieve recovery goals, HUD
has previously granted waivers and alternative requirements to allow a
grantee to treat a large complex project with multiple components that
contribute to long-term recovery and resilience as a single eligible
activity. HUD has determined that the components of the IDJC
Resettlement Project are largely eligible CDBG-NDR activities but that
the complexity of managing multiple separate eligible activities as
components of the overall relocation would detrimentally delay the
timeline of this critical recovery project. Therefore, based on the
good cause determination described in paragraph II.A.1. and to further
facilitate an efficient implementation of the IDJC Resettlement
Project, HUD is waiving section 105(a) of the HCDA (42 U.S.C. 5305(a)),
as amended, to the extent
[[Page 3944]]
necessary to create the new eligible activity of the ``IDJC
Resettlement Project,'' comprised of the Residential Assistance Fund
(the ``Fund'') described in the next paragraph, as well as the
acquisition, infrastructure, housing, economic development, and public
service activities described in the State's current, HUD-approved,
amended CDBG-NDR action plan. The IDJC Resettlement Project eligible
activity is subject to the alternative requirements described below.
The State indicated that one of the new activities of the IDJC
Resettlement Project eligible activity will be the establishment of the
Fund. The State plans to use CDBG-NDR funds, CDBG-NDR program income
generated by economic development activities at New Isle, and other
sources to capitalize the Fund. The State indicated that the Fund will
be used to assist New Isle homeowners with certain monthly costs (e.g.,
termite treatment, property insurance, and flood insurance) to maintain
the affordability and stability of the New Isle community. HUD
recognizes that the relocated residents of the New Isle community will
have new expenses than those incurred while living in IDJC and may
require additional short-term assistance to maintain their new homes in
New Isle. The Department therefore has determined that the State's use
of CDBG-NDR for the Fund advances the Department's priority to support
forward-thinking solutions to help low- and moderate-income households,
facing the imminent threat of sea level rise attributable to climate
change, to relocate to new, more resilient, and affordable communities.
Accordingly, under the waiver provided above to establish the IDJC
Resettlement Project as a single new eligible CDBG-NDR activity, the
State may use CDBG-NDR funds and program income to assist low and
moderate-income New Isle residents relocated from the IDJC community
with allowable housing costs for up to five years, meaning no
beneficiary may receive more than a total of 5 years of this type of
assistance or up to a specific amount, as determined by the State, to
maintain the stability and affordability of New Isle and resettlement
of relocated IDJC residents. HUD is also establishing an alternative
requirement that no assistance shall be provided for this purpose until
the State submits a substantial action plan amendment for its CDBG-NDR
grant. The substantial action plan amendment must include the
following:
1. A budget for the Fund,
2. Identify eligible costs under the Fund,
3. Describe how identified costs are allowable in accordance with 2
CFR part 200, subpart E,
4. Describe the criteria that will be used to select beneficiaries
and determine the amount of assistance under the Fund,
5. The mechanisms and process to provide the assistance,
6. How the State will oversee and monitor the administration and
use of the Fund, and
7. How the State will ensure public transparency regarding the
provision of assistance and use of the Fund.
Additionally, CDBG-NDR funds and program income, including any
portion used to finance the Fund, shall not be used to compensate
beneficiaries for losses from disaster-related impacts.
Finally, as an alternative requirement, and in addition to all
other modifications which constitute a substantial amendment requiring
HUD approval as described in the Federal Register notice published on
August 7, 2017 (82 FR 36812 at 36819), the deletion of the Fund or any
activity that is part of the ``IDJC Resettlement Project'' as described
in the State's current, HUD-approved, amended CDBG-NDR action plan, or
the addition of any other activities as part of the ``IDJC Resettlement
Project'' constitute a substantial amendment requiring HUD approval.
II.A.3. National objective compliance for the IDJC Resettlement
Project.
The additional regulatory waivers and alternative requirements
provided in this section enable the State to accomplish its goals for
the IDJC Resettlement Project. The IDJC Resettlement Project aims to
foster the growth of the New Isle's residents and address their
housing, economic, and service needs. The IDJC Resettlement Project is
not merely replacing the relocated households' homes, but is also
carrying out acquisition, infrastructure, housing, economic
development, and public service activities intended to create a
sustainable, long-term community for these relocated residents. For
these reasons and based on the good cause provided in paragraph
II.A.1., the Department waives the criteria in 24 CFR 570.483(b) for
the IDJC Resettlement Project eligible activity only and establishes
the following alternative requirement for the criteria as a means of
addressing the objective of benefitting low- and moderate-income (LMI)
persons. To demonstrate that the IDJC Resettlement Project eligible
activity addresses the objective of benefitting LMI persons, the State
must meet all the applicable criteria described below:
1. The State must determine the actual service area benefiting from
the IDJC Resettlement Project, in accordance with the regulations. The
service area must be primarily residential in character with related
cultural and recreational components (e.g., community centers with
cultural components);
2. The State must complete the housing units for occupancy by the
households that are part of the original IDJC resettlement (at least 34
units of housing) and document that at least 70 percent of those
households qualify as LMI;
3. The State must complete the community center, marketplace,
recreational facilities, parks, and additional site improvements, as
described in its approved action plan, as part of the New Isle
community;
4. That State must require its Partners (as defined in the National
Disaster Resilience Competition Phase 2 Notice of Funding Availability)
and subrecipients to document that any economic development activities
funded through the IDJC Resettlement Project are complete and will
increase economic opportunity, primarily for LMI persons, through the
creation of permanent jobs. The State may presume that any jobs created
are held by or made available to a low- or moderate-income person, if
the economic development activities are located in the New Isle
community;
5. The State must submit a sustainability plan with its substantial
action plan amendment adding the Fund as an activity, that is then
approved by HUD. The sustainability plan must include prominent posting
on the State's official website and must afford citizens, affected
local governments, and other interested parties a reasonable
opportunity to examine the plan. The State must notify affected
citizens through electronic mailings, press releases, statements by
public officials, media advertisements, public service announcements,
and/or contacts with organizations located in or serving the target
area or neighborhood. At a minimum, the sustainability plan must
include the following information:
a. An estimate of the amount of taxes and insurance required for
each home per year;
b. A detailed description of the process and timeline for New Isle
residents to pay for housing costs that were once covered by the Fund,
after their assistance from the Fund has ended (i.e., reaches 5 years
of assistance or maximum amount set by the State)
[[Page 3945]]
and/or the State concludes its use of the Fund;
c. A description of other financial resources, if any, that will be
available to support beneficiaries with housing costs after the State
concludes use of the Fund;
d. A detailed description of how the State will inform
beneficiaries about the Fund, terms and conditions for Fund assistance,
and the beneficiaries' financial responsibilities after assistance from
the Fund ends; and
e. How the State will detect and prevent fraud, waste, and abuse in
the administration and use of the Fund.
II.A.4. Clarification on Public Services for the Isle de Jean
Charles Resettlement Project.
Additionally, the Federal Register notice published on June 7, 2016
(81 FR 36557) waives 42 U.S.C. 5305(e)(3), 24 CFR 570.482(f)(1), (2),
(3), (4)(i), (5), and (6), including the public benefit standards at 24
CFR 570.482(g), for economic development activities designed to create
or retain jobs or businesses. This waiver continues to apply to the
State's CDBG-NDR grant.
Finally, all public services carried out as part of the IDJC
Resettlement Project shall be exempt from the cap on public service
expenditures found in section 105(a)(8) of the HCDA (42 U.S.C.
5305(a)), as amended.
II.B. Waivers and Alternative Requirements for New Jersey's CDBG-DR
Grant Under Public Law 113-2 (State of New Jersey Only)
In the Federal Register notices published on March 5, 2013 (78 FR
14329) (the ``March 2013 Notice''), November 18, 2013 (78 FR 69104)
(the ``November 2013 Notice''), and October 16, 2014 (79 FR 62182) (the
``October 2014 Notice''), HUD awarded a total of $4,174,110,000 in
CDBG-DR funds to the State of New Jersey for recovery from Superstorm
Sandy from Public Law 113-2 of which $380,000,000 were for Rebuild by
Design (RBD) also under Public Law 113-2.
The Federal Register notice published on May 24, 2022 (87 FR 31636)
(the ``May 2022 Notice'') announced the allocation of $228,346,000 of
CDBG-DR funds under Public Law 117-43 (the ``2022 Appropriations Act'')
and the Federal Register notice published on January 18, 2023 (87 FR
3198) (the ``January 2023 Notice'') announced the allocation of
$149,229,000 of CDBG-DR funds under Public Law 117-180 (the ``2023
Appropriations Act'') for a total of $377,575,000 in CDBG-DR funds to
the State of New Jersey for recovery from Tropical Storm Ida
(collectively referred to as ``the Appropriations Acts''). The 2022
Appropriations Act gives the Secretary authority to authorize grantees
receiving a CDBG-DR grant under the 2022 Appropriations Acts and prior
or future appropriation acts for activities authorized under title I of
the HCDA for a specific qualifying disaster(s) to use these funds
interchangeably and without limitation for the same activities in the
most impacted and distressed (MID) areas resulting from a major
disaster in prior or future appropriation acts, as long as the MID
areas overlap and the activities address unmet needs of both disasters.
Based on this authority, New Jersey's CDBG-DR grants for Tropical
Storm Ida and its CDBG-DR grants for Superstorm Sandy may be used
interchangeably and without limitation for the same activities in MID
areas resulting from Superstorm Sandy or Tropical Storm Ida, if the MID
areas of both disasters overlap and the activities address unmet needs
of both disasters, as described in the May 2022 Notice and the January
2023 Notice. The State has requested, and HUD is providing the
following waivers and alternative requirements to the State of New
Jersey to carry out activities that will benefit Tropical Storm Ida
beneficiaries. Both waivers and alternative requirements provided
herein will help the State to expedite the delivery of assistance
through programs that address the same activities related to unmet
recovery needs resulting from Superstorm Sandy and Tropical Storm Ida
in the MID areas that overlap. The grantee must describe its use of
funds in both its CDBG-DR action plans for Superstorm Sandy and
Tropical Storm Ida.
II.B.1. Waiver to Allow the Use of CDBG-DR Funds Provided Under
Public Law 113-2 for Rental Assistance (State of New Jersey only).
The State's request notes that after Superstorm Sandy, the State
identified a significant shortage of rental housing as a result of the
storm, particularly in the MID areas, with rental stock being virtually
non-existent. HUD and the State have evaluated the State's program
budgets and the State has forecasted expenditures to determine that the
State's Superstorm Sandy related unmet needs will be satisfied with the
existing programs in place, while impacts related to Tropical Storm Ida
have created new unmet rental needs that have further exacerbated
issues associated with the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prior to Tropical Storm Ida, New Jersey's housing conditions were
already under significant strain from the ongoing national housing
crisis and supply chain issues from the COVID-19 pandemic. These issues
combined with the subsequent impacts of the storm drastically escalated
the State's housing and homelessness crises. At the time of the State's
waiver request, the risk of eviction in New Jersey was greater than
anywhere else in the country as 393,000 households were delinquent on
their rent. These eviction pressures are faced primarily by residents
of color, households with children, and in urban areas--including those
disaster-impacted urban areas--where low-income populations are
particularly vulnerable. In the State, more than 25 percent of renter
households are extremely low income and 73 percent of these extremely
low-income renters suffer from severe housing cost burden.
Due to the impacts of Tropical Storm Ida, over 8,000 homeowners and
4,500 renters experienced major to severe damage to their homes, as
defined by HUD. The State of New Jersey has prioritized housing
rehabilitation that will primarily benefit LMI households, through a
phased approach for its homeowner program and by limiting its
rehabilitation of rental housing to housing that will be affordable to
LMI households. However, these units will take several years to be
fully repaired and accessible. During that time, LMI residents residing
in the MID areas could face unaffordable rents on top of an affordable
housing crisis. Rents in the HUD MID-areas have considerably increased
since Tropical Storm Ida. From 2021 to the anticipated launch of the
State's CDBG-DR programs in 2023, rents in the HUD MID areas will have
increased in some counties by over 10 percent and are expected to
continue to rise over the next two to three years.
The State plans to use its CDBG-DR funds under Public Law 113-2 to
offer rental assistance and utility payments in the form of direct
payments to homeowners or renters who are displaced and homeless or at-
risk of homelessness as a result of the impacts of Tropical Storm Ida
when such assistance payments are part of a homelessness prevention,
intermediate housing, or rapid rehousing program activity, including
intermediate housing during the repair and reconstruction of homes.
After reviewing the State's request and based on the good cause
that the waiver and alternative requirements will help homeowners and
renters that are displaced and impacted by Tropical Storm Ida to obtain
and remain in housing that is in limited supply due to New Jersey's
ongoing housing and homelessness crises, the Department is imposing an
alternative requirement to waive and modify 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(8)
[[Page 3946]]
to expand the definition of public service to include the following
activity: provision of rental assistance (e.g. rent, security deposits,
and utility deposits) and utility payments for up to 24 months for the
State of New Jersey's funds provided under Public Law 113-2 to address
unmet needs from Tropical Storm Ida, subject to the following
alternative requirements.
This activity is subject to the 15 percent cap on public services,
and no beneficiary may receive more than a total of 24 months of rental
assistance and utility payments. A homeowner receiving any form of
CDBG-DR interim mortgage assistance that may be offered by the State is
not eligible for rental assistance or utility payments, as authorized
by this waiver and alternative requirement.
The State must determine that the rental assistance and utility
payments are needed because the household moved from their primary
residence due to rehabilitation or reconstruction needs from Tropical
Storm Ida, the household is experiencing or is at risk of experiencing
homelessness and the assistance is part of a homelessness prevention or
rapid rehousing program or activity, or other disaster-related
pressures on the housing market necessitate the assistance to support
the household's recovery.
While this waiver and alternative requirement will allow the State
to provide rental assistance and utility payments to households
impacted by Tropical Storm Ida, this does not relieve the State of the
duty to comply with other applicable requirements relating to the
temporary relocation or displacement of households. If a household
meets the definition of a ``displaced person'' under the Uniform
Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of
1970, as amended, (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) (``URA'') or Section 104(d)
of the HCDA (42 U.S.C. 5304(d)) (``Section 104(d)''), the State must
provide the displaced person with any relocation assistance to which
they are entitled under law, including but not limited to assistance
authorized under the URA or Section 104(d), pursuant to those
requirements in the applicable notices, as modified by the waiver of
Section 414 of the Stafford Act in Section II.B.2., below.
The goals of this waiver and alternative requirement are to prevent
and minimize the time households are experiencing or are at risk of
experiencing homelessness as a result of the qualifying disaster and to
provide additional time to stabilize persons or households in permanent
housing through the use of CDBG-DR funds for rental assistance and
utility payments. The use of CDBG-DR funds for each of these purposes
advances the Department's priority to support forward-thinking
solutions to help communities that are struggling to house and serve
persons and families that are homeless or at risk of homelessness as a
result of a disaster.
When providing rental assistance and utility payments to
beneficiaries who are at risk of homelessness, the State must clearly
demonstrate in their action plan the concrete steps they will take to
prevent households from becoming homeless after the exhaustion of the
CDBG-DR rental assistance. In addition, in developing their policies
and procedures, the State must list services to be provided and outline
a referral process that will enable the targeted households to apply to
live in affordable housing units, including those that are created
under other CDBG-DR funded programs.
HUD has previously certified the State's procedures to detect
fraud, waste, and abuse prior to the obligation of Superstorm Sandy
funding. To fortify these requirements and achieve a targeted use of
funds and to safeguard against fraud, the State must amend the
provisions in its policies and procedures to show how the State will
verify the accuracy of information provided by applicants to its rental
assistance and utility payment program, how the State will document
that the applicant used the funds for only the eligible uses defined in
its action plan or the program's policies and procedures, and how the
State will detect and prevent fraud, waste, and abuse in its rental
assistance and utility payment programs. The State must document, in
its policies and procedures, how it will determine the basis of the
rental assistance and utility payments award for each household
assisted and that the amount of the assistance to be provided is
necessary and reasonable and not duplicative of any other funding
source, including insurance. To comply with the order of assistance
requirements in the Appropriations Acts, any rental or temporary
housing assistance provided by or made available by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) must first be exhausted prior to
providing CDBG-DR funds to a household for the uses permitted by this
waiver and alternative requirement.
II.B.2. Waiver of Section 414 of the Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5181
(State of New Jersey only).
The State of New Jersey has requested a waiver of section 414 of
the Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5181), as amended, for real property
acquisition, rehabilitation, and demolition of real property for CDBG-
DR activities funded by Public Law 113-2 that will address the unmet
housing needs from Tropical storm Ida.
Section 414 of the Stafford Act provides that ``Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, no person otherwise eligible for any kind of
replacement housing payment under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and
Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (Pub. L. 91-646) [42
U.S.C. 4601 et seq.] [(``URA'')] shall be denied such eligibility as a
result of his being unable, because of a major disaster as determined
by the President, to meet the occupancy requirements set by [the
URA].'' Accordingly, homeowner occupants and tenants displaced from
their homes as a result of an identified disaster and who would have
otherwise been displaced as a direct result of any acquisition,
rehabilitation, or demolition of real property for a federally funded
program or project may become eligible for a replacement housing
payment notwithstanding their inability to meet occupancy requirements
prescribed in the URA.
The State has requested a waiver of section 414 of the Stafford Act
to better align its CDBG-DR grants funded by Public Law 113-2 for
Superstorm Sandy with its grants funded by the 2022 and 2023
Appropriations Acts. The State contends that this waiver, granted for
all funds under the 2022 and 2023 Appropriations Acts, will allow it to
implement its programs for Tropical storm Ida beneficiaries
consistently, whether the program is being funded under Public Law 113-
2 or the 2022 and 2023 Appropriations Acts.
HUD provided the waiver for grants under the 2022 and 2023
Appropriations Acts to simplify the administration of the disaster
recovery process and reduce the administrative burden associated with
the implementation of section 414 requirements for projects commencing
more than one year after the date of the Presidentially declared
disaster considering most of such persons displaced by the disaster
will have returned to their dwellings or found another place of
permanent residence.
Therefore, the Department has determined that good cause exists for
a waiver for the State's funds under Public Law 113-2 and waives
section 414 of the Stafford Act and its implementing regulation at 49
CFR 24.403(d)(1) to the extent that they would apply to real property
acquisition, rehabilitation, or demolition of real property for a CDBG-
DR funded project commencing more
[[Page 3947]]
than one year after the date of Tropical Storm Ida undertaken by the
State, or its subrecipients, provided that the project was not planned,
approved, or otherwise underway before the date of the disaster.
For purposes of this waiver, a CDBG-DR funded project shall be
determined to have commenced on the earliest of: (1) the date of an
approved Request for Release of Funds and certification; (2) the date
of completion of the site-specific review when a program utilizes
Tiering; or (3) the date of sign-off by the approving official when a
project converts to exempt under 24 CFR 58.34(a)(12).
This waiver does not apply with respect to persons that meet the
occupancy requirements to receive a replacement housing payment under
the URA nor does it apply to persons displaced or relocated temporarily
by other HUD-funded programs or projects. Such persons' eligibility for
relocation assistance and payments under the URA is not impacted by
this waiver.
III. Public Law 115-123 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
Revision of Electrical Power System Consultation Requirements
(Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands Only)
The Federal Register notice published on June 22, 2021 (86 FR
32681) (the ``June 2021 Notice'') established the requirements for the
nearly $28 billion in CDBG-DR funds approved February 9, 2018 by the
Further Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief
Requirements Act, 2018 (Pub. L. 115-123), including $2 billion for
enhanced or improved electrical power systems in the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico (the Commonwealth) and the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) to
address the impact of Hurricanes Irma and Maria on each grantee's
electrical power system.
Because of the unique purpose of this $2 billion allocation of
CDBG-DR funds, in recognition of the many Federal agencies that would
be providing assistance to the Commonwealth and the USVI to enhance and
improve each jurisdiction's electrical power system, and because of the
historical and on-going fiscal and operational challenges of each of
the public utilities that operate the Commonwealth and USVI systems,
the June 2021 Noticeestablished a number of on-going coordination
requirements unique to this allocation.
In February 2020, FEMA and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
established Energy Technical Coordination Teams (``TCT'') at each
jurisdiction as a formal mechanism for coordination among the numerous
local and Federal entities involved in electricity grid recovery to
facilitate decision making and ensure the best use of expertise,
solutions, and funds in the implementation of energy recovery
activities. Section V.A.2.e. of the June 2021 Notice requires each
grantee to consult at least quarterly with its respective TCT on one or
more of the following areas: on the action plan required by the June
2021 Notice for the use of the CDBG-DR funds and any substantial
amendments to that plan; the evaluation of the capacity of any public
utility that will receive CDBG-DR funds to carry out improvements; the
identification of opportunities to sequence and coordinate on permits
and approvals necessary to carry out CDBG-DR funded electrical power
system improvement activities, including environmental reviews; the
technical evaluation of proposed electrical power system improvements;
and implementation of applicable electrical power system industry
standards and the commercial availability of system components that the
grantee proposed to fund.
To ensure the coordination of electrical power system improvements
that may be funded from each grantee's other allocations of CDBG-DR and
CDBG mitigation (CDBG-MIT) funds provided in response to Hurricanes
Irma and Maria, the June 2021 Notice also prohibits the use of other
CDBG-DR and CDBG-MIT funds for electrical power system improvements
until HUD consults and coordinates with its Federal members through the
TCTs. The June 2021 Notice also provides that HUD shall determine when
the required consultations previously noted shall be deemed complete.
Since the publication of the June 2021 Notice, each grantee has
proactively engaged with its respective TCT on a wide range of issues
associated with its planned and on-going electrical power system
improvements. In January 2022, HUD, FEMA, and DOE also executed a
memorandum of understanding establishing a framework outside of the TCT
for coordination and providing technical assistance to the
Commonwealth. Additionally, following Hurricane Fiona, the
Administration announced the formation of a Puerto Rico Grid Recovery
and Modernization Team, to be led by DOE, to coordinate Federal grid
recovery and modernization efforts.
In recognition of these developments and the critical importance of
accelerating electrical power system improvements following the
devastating impact of Hurricane Fiona in September 2022, HUD finds good
cause to waive and revise the consultation requirements of its June
2021 Notice as follows:
Upon approval by HUD of an action plan providing for the use of a
grantee's total allocation of funds for electrical power system
improvements as provided by the June 2021 Notice:
(1) Paragraph V.A.2.e of the June 2021 Notice, and as referenced
elsewhere in the June 2021 Notice, with respect to TCT consultation
shall no longer apply; provided that, at the request of HUD, each
grantee shall engage with its TCT to provide updates on its
implementation of CDBG-DR, CDBG-MIT, and other Federal funding for
electrical power system improvements until grant closeout; and
(2) The consultation requirements at paragraph V.B.4 of the June
2021 Notice that prohibits grantees from using other CDBG-DR and
CDBG-MIT funds provided in response to Hurricanes Irma and Maria for
activities to enhance or improve electrical power systems until HUD
consults and coordinates with its Federal members through the TCT
shall no longer apply.
HUD will continue to engage its Federal partners directly in
providing ongoing technical assistance to each grantee and in
monitoring each grantee's use of all CDBG-DR and CDBG-MIT funds used
for electrical power system improvements. HUD will also continue to
engage its Federal partners through the TCTs, the Recovery Support
Function Leadership Group (RSFLG) energy subgroup, and other forums.
IV. Public Law 116-20 Waivers and Alternative Requirements
Waiver and Alternative Requirement for 70 Percent Overall Low- and
Moderate-Income Benefit Requirement (State of California Only)
The Federal Register notice published on January 27, 2020 (85 FR
4681) (``January 2020 Notice'') included an allocation of $38,057,527
appropriated under the Additional Supplemental Appropriations for
Disaster Relief Act, 2019 (Pub. L. 116-20) to the State of California
for recovery from 2017 wildfires and 2017-2018 wildfires, flooding,
mudflows, and debris flows. These funds have been provided to meet the
unmet infrastructure recovery needs in the HUD-defined MID areas. Prior
to this award, HUD also allocated $124,155,000 under Public Law 115-123
to the State for recovery from the same disasters in the Federal
Register notice published on August 14, 2018 (83 FR 40314).
The overall benefit requirement established by the HCDA requires
that 70 percent of the aggregate of a grantee's
[[Page 3948]]
CDBG-DR fund expenditures shall be used to support activities
benefiting LMI persons. Under certain circumstances, it can be
difficult for grantees working in disaster recovery to meet this
overall benefit test because the MID areas resulting from a disaster
may not be low- and moderate-income areas, and this requirement can
therefore (in some exceptional cases) limit a grantee's ability to
assist those affected by the disaster. The January 2020 Notice
maintained the 70 percent overall benefit requirement for all CDBG-DR
grantees receiving funds under Public Law 116-20 and the notice imposed
the requirements of the February 9, 2018 notice (83 FR 5844)
(``February 2018 Notice''), which provides grantees with the option of
submitting a request to HUD for a lower overall benefit requirement.
Specifically, the February 2018 Notice allows a grantee to request to
further reduce its overall benefit requirement if it submitted a
justification that, at a minimum: (a) identifies the planned activities
that meet the needs of its low- and moderate-income population; (b)
describes proposed activity(ies) and/or program(s) that will be
affected by the alternative requirement, including their proposed
location(s) and role(s) in the grantee's long-term disaster recovery
plan; (c) describes how the activities/programs identified in (b)
prevent the grantee from meeting the 70 percent requirement; and (d)
demonstrates that low- and moderate-income persons' disaster-related
needs have been sufficiently met and that the needs of non-LMI persons
or areas are disproportionately greater, and that the jurisdiction
lacks other resources to serve them.
The State submitted a request to establish a lower overall benefit
requirement based on the above criteria. In its request, the State
contends that its two established programs: Owner-Occupied
Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Program (OOR) and Multifamily Housing
Program funded under Public Law 115-123 will meet the unmet needs of
its LMI populations. Specifically, in its OOR program, the State has
prioritized the needs of LMI persons and estimates that the program
will expend at least 90 percent of funds for the benefit of LMI
households. The Multifamily Housing Program is limited to projects that
meet the LMI National Objective criteria, and the State estimates the
program will expend 100 percent of funds for the benefit of LMI
households. Based on these estimates, the total projected LMI benefit
percentage for the State's allocation under Public Law 115-123 will be
96 percent, which demonstrates the State's commitment to meeting the
needs of its LMI populations. While the Department evaluates overall
benefit for each grant separately, the allocations from Public Laws
115-123 and 116-20 support recovery from the same disasters in the same
MID areas, and the total projected LMI benefit percentage when
combining the allocations would be 82 percent.
The State's allocation under Public Law 116-20 was limited to allow
the State to only address its unmet infrastructure recovery needs. For
this allocation, the State expanded its original Infrastructure Program
proposed in its initial action plan to include standalone
infrastructure projects and FEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant Program Non-
Federal match activities in addition to FEMA Public Assistance non-
federal match projects.
When considering its unmet infrastructure needs, the State
indicated in its request that the total LMI percentage of the
population in the HUD-identified MID areas is 42 percent, and the City
of Clearlake is the only jurisdiction that is a MID area and would also
qualify as an eligible LMI area. To address the needs of LMI households
throughout the MID areas, the State prioritized infrastructure projects
in MID areas that would benefit LMI areas through its Notice of Intent
(NOI) process where eligible applicants submitted proposed
infrastructure projects to meet the unmet infrastructure need in their
community. The State also conducted extensive outreach to potential
applicants by hosting multiple webinars and holding office hours for
months during and after the NOI process. Despite these efforts, the
State's CDBG-DR funded infrastructure program only received nine
project applications from four eligible applicants: City of Clearlake,
City of Santa Rosa, Santa Barbara County, and Sonoma County. Of the
nine applications, three projects qualify for the LMI national
objective, and all LMI projects will derive from a single eligible
applicant, the City of Clearlake, leading to the allocation's total
projected LMI benefit percentage being 38 percent.
To enable the State to undertake the activities it has determined
to be the most critical for its recovery and LMI households in the MID
areas, HUD is granting a waiver and alternative requirement to reduce
the overall benefit requirement from 70 percent to not less than 38
percent of the State's total allocation of CDBG-DR funds for its unmet
infrastructure recovery needs. This is a limited waiver modifying
sections 101(c) and 104(b)(3)(A) of the HCDA and 24 CFR 570.200(a)(3)
only to the extent necessary to reduce the LMI overall benefit
requirement that the State must meet when carrying out activities
identified in its approved action plan from 70 percent to not less than
38 percent of the grantee's allocation of CDBG-DR funds under Public
Law 116-20 for its unmet infrastructure recovery needs. Based on the
analysis submitted by the State, the Secretary finds good cause for
this waiver and alternative requirement due to the circumstances
outlined in the State's request. In particular, HUD notes that the
State had demonstrated that it has sufficiently addressed LMI unmet
recovery needs through both its CDBG-DR allocations awarded under
Public Laws 115-123 and 116-20, conducted significant amounts of public
outreach when determining LMI unmet infrastructure needs, and
prioritized and selected infrastructure projects serving LMI areas,
even though the LMI percentage of the MID areas was only 42 percent.
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 online on HUD's CDBG-DR website at https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/comm_planning/cdbg-dr and for public inspection between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays in the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, 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, as well as individuals with speech or communication
disabilities. To learn more about how to make an accessible telephone
call, please visit https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Adrianne Todman,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024-01116 Filed 1-19-24; 8:45 am]
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