Veteran and Spouse Transitional Assistance Grant Program, 41312-41319 [2024-09862]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 93 / Monday, May 13, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
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Dated: May 7, 2024.
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[FR Doc. 2024–10428 Filed 5–10–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
38 CFR Part 80
RIN 2900–AR68
Veteran and Spouse Transitional
Assistance Grant Program
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is implementing provisions
in the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe,
M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits
Improvement Act to establish the
Veteran and Spouse Transitional
Assistance Grant Program (VSTAGP).
This final rule addresses general grant
application procedures and
requirements to apply for VSTAGP grant
funding and adopts the proposed rule
with some corrections and clarifying
changes.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
This rule is effective June 12,
2024.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lillian Miesemer, Senior Management
and Program Analyst, Outreach,
Transition and Economic Development,
Veterans Benefits Administration, 1800
G Street SW, Washington, DC 20006;
202–461–9558 (this is not a toll-free
telephone number). If you use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) or a text telephone (TTY), call the
Federal Relay Service (FRS) toll-free at
1–800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On July 5,
2023, VA published a proposed rule in
the Federal Register (88 FR 42891) that
would establish the VSTAGP program
in 38 CFR 80.1 through 80.17 pursuant
to section 4304 of Public Law 116–315,
the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe,
M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits
Improvement Act of 2020, which was
enacted on January 5, 2021.
VA provided a 30-day comment
period, which ended on August 4, 2023.
VA received four comments on the
proposed rule. One of the four
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comments was strongly in favor of the
rule. We thank the commenter for their
support and do not make any changes
based on that comment.
The second of the four comments
suggested grant recipients must have
access to separating Service members
and recently separated Service
members. More specifically, the
commenter advocated in favor of a
means by which grant recipients can
identify the geographical areas where
separating Service members have
relocated. Additionally, the commenter
suggested that the Department of
Defense (DoD) and VA should
collaborate to encourage those enrolled
in the DoD Transition Assistance
Program (TAP) to take advantage of
opportunities provided by recipients of
grants under VA’s VSTAGP program.
As noted in the proposed rule, a
Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO)
will be posted at Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov) in accordance with
§ 80.4 of the proposed rule. The NOFO
will require applicants for grant funding
to submit proposals addressing detailed
outreach strategies appropriate and
tailored to the specific service delivery
area served by the applicant. To meet
this requirement, VA will recommend
in the NOFO that applicants conduct an
environmental scan as a component or
means of strategic planning to gather
information about available supports
and services within the proposed
geographic area to be served.
Furthermore, the NOFO will require
applicants for grant funding to
demonstrate how their proposed
program will promote active outreach
to, recruitment of, and engagement with
former members of the U.S. Armed
Forces who are separated, retired, or
discharged, as well as their spouses.
Applicants for grant funding must
design, develop, and execute program
promotion and awareness activities as a
part of their outreach. The NOFO will
require applicants for grant funding to
submit proposals explaining how their
program will reach out to potentially
eligible individuals, and how they will
collaborate with local entities that may
serve former members of the U.S.
Armed Forces as well as their spouses
(e.g., local military bases, VA Regional
Offices, Veterans Service Organizations
(VSO), faith-based organizations, social
service agencies, community-based
clinics, other job-training organizations),
within their proposed geographic
service delivery area to introduce the
program to eligible participants. VA will
encourage applicants to reach out to
unique sub-groups of veterans and/or
spouses who are likely experiencing
inequitable access to jobs, job training
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programs, and/or other employment
services in the proposed service area.
Thus, VA will not be providing
information regarding the geographical
areas where separating Service members
have relocated. Grant applicants will
have to design, develop, and execute
program promotion and awareness
activities as part of their proposal, to
include strategies for reaching the
relevant population within their
proposed geographic service delivery
area. VA has no specific plans to
address opportunities provided by
VSTAGP grant recipients as part of the
TAP curriculum but, as noted above,
intends that grant applicants will be
responsible for developing strategies for
promotion and awareness of such
services. In any event, the comments
relating to how applicants are supposed
to identify certain areas or populations
to serve, as well as the comments
relating to encouraging TAP participants
to take advantage of opportunities
resulting from VSTAGP grants, are
beyond the scope of the rulemaking. We
do not make any changes based on these
comments.
The third and fourth comments were
supportive of the proposed rule. The
comments advocated for widespread
accessibility of applications and
establishment of clear evaluation
criteria. VA agrees with both comments.
To address the comment regarding the
accessibility of applications, as required
in § 80.4 of the proposed rule, and in
accordance with 2 CFR 200.204, VA will
publish a NOFO at Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov). The NOFO will
provide clear application procedures
including detailed guidance and
resources to help applicants apply for
funding and navigate the application
process.
Additionally, to address the comment
regarding clear application criteria the
NOFO will include detailed scoring
criteria as required in § 80.7, with
clearly identified point values for each
evaluation criterion. VA will establish
procedures to assess the technical merit
of applications to ensure an objective
review of applications. The NOFO will
contain information regarding the
evaluative criteria that will be used by
the review panel to evaluate submitted
applications to help applicants
understand the standards against which
an application will be scored. VA will
execute a merit review process for all
responsive applications, with the
objective of selecting recipients most
likely to be successful in delivering
results based on the program objectives.
See 2 CFR 200.205. This will ensure
that: (1) applicants for grant funding
have the opportunity to submit
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proposals responsive to the solicitation,
and (2) the application review process is
clear and transparent to applicants.
Applicants will be able to view all
application requirements in the NOFO
once published to Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov). We do not make any
changes based on these comments.
VA is clarifying the definition of the
term ‘‘institution of higher education
(IHE),’’ as that term was defined in
§ 80.2(f) of the proposed rule as one of
the various listed entities that would be
eligible to receive a VSTAGP grant. In
the proposed rule, VA had defined the
term ‘‘IHE’’ in a general manner that
referred to certain ‘‘public or private
educational institution[s].’’ In the final
rule, VA is clarifying that private
educational institutions must be
nonprofit. Specifically, VA adopts the
established definition of IHE specified
in 20 U.S.C. 1001 (‘‘General definition
of institution of higher education’’),
which provides that, to qualify, an
educational institution must be ‘‘a
public or other nonprofit institution,’’
id. 1001(a)(4); see id. 1001(b)(1).
Clarifying that ‘‘IHE’’ refers to only
public or other nonprofit educational
institutions ensures that the IHE
definition is aligned with the definitions
of other possible grant recipients, which
include government entities, nonprofit
organizations, and nonprofit faith-based
organizations. VA believes that applying
standards to IHEs that are similar to
those applied to other possible grant
recipients will promote greater
consistency in carrying out the purposes
of this grant program in different
locations nationwide.
In the heading for new part 80 and in
§ 80.1, we are correcting the erroneous
reference to ‘‘Veteran Transitional
Assistance Grant Program’’ in the
proposed rule to ‘‘Veteran and Spouse
Transitional Assistance Grant Program’’.
In §§ 80.2(h)(3), 80.7(b), 80.9 and 80.14,
we are changing the use of ‘‘may’’ to
‘‘will’’ or ‘‘must’’ to be more definitive
in those provisions. In § 80.5, we are
also clarifying that there will be a limit
of one application per submitting
organization serving the same
participant population and in the same
geographic service area. In the third
sentence of § 80.7(b), we are correcting
the erroneous reference to ‘‘each
selection’’ in the proposed rule to ‘‘each
criterion’’.
We also note that the proposed rule
included two provisions which we
inadvertently did not address in the
preamble. In § 80.2(k), we define the
term ‘‘In-demand industry sector or
occupation’’ because the term is likely
to be used in NOFOs. In § 80.3(f), we
explain that a grant must be in an
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amount that does not exceed 50 percent
of the amount required by the grantee to
provide the required services.
We are making technical changes in
§ 80.12(c) as proposed to remove
material that is precatory, informational,
or more appropriate for inclusion in the
NOFO. We are thus removing the
second sentence of the introductory
text, paragraphs (1) and (2), and the
second sentence of paragraph (3), and
we are moving the first sentence of
paragraph (c)(3), requiring grantees to
participate in a VA-led evaluation, to
the introductory text of paragraph (c).
VA adopts the proposed rule as final,
with changes as discussed above.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563 and
14094
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review) directs agencies
to assess the costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and,
when regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity).
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review)
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
promoting flexibility. Executive Order
14094 (Modernizing Regulatory Review)
supplements and reaffirms the
principles, structures, and definitions
governing contemporary regulatory
review established in Executive Orders
12866 and 13563. The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
determined that this rulemaking is a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, as amended by
Executive Order 14094. The Regulatory
Impact Analysis associated with this
rulemaking can be found as a
supporting document at
www.regulations.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that
this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities as they are
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612). Receiving or not
receiving a grant is unlikely to have a
significant economic impact on small
entity applicants. Therefore, pursuant to
5 U.S.C. 605(b), the initial and final
regulatory flexibility analysis
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603–604 do not
apply.
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Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C. 1532, that
agencies prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in the
expenditure by State, local and Tribal
governments, in the aggregate or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. This final rule will have no
such effect on State, local and Tribal
governments or on the private sector.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains provisions
constituting three new collections of
information and revisions to several
current/valid collections of information
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521). Both the
new and revised collections of
information require approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). Accordingly, under 44 U.S.C.
3507(d), VA has submitted a copy of
this rulemaking action to OMB for
review and approval. VA received no
comments on the revised collections of
information.
OMB has received the revised
collections of information. OMB’s
receipt of the revised collections of
information is not an approval to
conduct or sponsor an information
collection under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. In accordance
with 5 CFR 1320, the revised collections
of information associated with this
rulemaking are not approved by OMB at
this time. OMB’s approval of the revised
collections of information will occur
within 30 days after the final
rulemaking publishes. If OMB does not
approve the new collections of
information as requested, VA will
immediately remove the provision
containing the new collections of
information or take such other action as
is directed by OMB.
This final rule also includes a
provision constituting three new
collections of information under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521). The new collections
of information require approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) and the assignment of a new
OMB Control Number. Accordingly,
under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA has
submitted a copy of this rulemaking to
OMB for review and approval. VA
received no comments on the new
collections of information.
OMB Control Numbers 2900–0928,
2900–0929, and 2900–0930 have been
assigned to the new collections of
information associated with this final
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rule. Assignment of these new OMB
control numbers is not an approval to
conduct or sponsor an information
collection under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. In accordance
with 5 CFR 1320, the new collections of
information associated with this
rulemaking are not approved by OMB at
this time. OMB’s approval of the new
collections of information will occur
within 30 days after the final
rulemaking publishes. If OMB does not
approve the new collections of
information as requested, VA will
immediately remove the provision
containing new collections of
information or take such other action as
is directed by OMB.
The collections of information
contained in 38 CFR 80.5, 80.12 and
80.16 are described immediately
following this paragraph.
Title: SF–424 Application for
Federal Assistance.
OMB Control No: 4040–0004.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5
would require VSTAGP grant applicants
to submit the SF–424 as a minimum
requirement to qualify for a VSTAGP
grant.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
determine applicant eligibility for a
VSTAGP grant. VA would use this
information to score completed grant
applications.
• Description of likely respondents:
Eligible recipients, as defined in
proposed § 80.2, that are interested in
applying for a VSTAGP grant.
• Estimated number of respondents:
200 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Annually.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 1 hour.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $28.01, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $5,602.00 (200 respondents ×
1 burden hour × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000).
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
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incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the SF–424, Application
for Federal Assistance. OTED currently
has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to
receive and review their grant
applications. Any additional cost for
agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should
not be attributed to the use of SF–424,
and therefore its use is not expected to
alter annualized Federal costs.
Title: SF–424A Budget
Information—Non-Construction
Programs.
OMB Control No: 4040–0006.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5
would require VSTAGP grant applicants
to submit the SF–424A as a minimum
requirement to qualify for a VSTAGP
grant.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
determine applicant eligibility for a
VSTAGP grant, to document proposed
costs, and to determine allowability of
proposed costs. VA would use this
information to score completed grant
applications and for general
management of VSTAGP awards.
• Description of likely respondents:
Eligible recipients, as defined in
proposed § 80.2, that are interested in
applying for a VSTAGP grant.
• Estimated number of respondents:
200 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Annually.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 3 hours.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 3 hours.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $84.03, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $16,806.00 (200 respondents
× 3 burden hours × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the SF–424A, Budget
Information—Non-Construction
Programs. OTED currently has existing
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personnel, systems, and processes (or
other resources) in place to receive and
review their grant applications. Any
additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of the SF–424A, and therefore
its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Title: 4040–0010 Project/
Performance Site Location(s).
OMB Control No: 4040–0010.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5
would require VSTAGP grantees to
submit the primary location and any
other locations where project activity
would occur.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
ensure adequate geographic coverage.
• Description of likely respondents:
Eligible recipients, as defined in
proposed § 80.2, that are interested in
applying for a VSTAGP grant.
• Estimated number of respondents:
200 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Annually.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 5 minutes.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 5 minutes.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $2.33, making the
total cost for respondents an estimated
$466.83 (200 respondents × ((5 burden
minutes × $28.01 per hour)/60
minutes)). (Source: May 2021 BLS
National Occupational Employment and
Wage Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the 4040–0010 Project/
Performance Site Location(s). OTED
currently has existing personnel,
systems, and processes (or other
resources) in place to receive and
review their grant applications. Any
additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of form 4040–0010 Project/
Performance Site Location(s), and
therefore its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Title: 4040–0013 Certification
Regarding Lobbying.
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OMB Control No: 4040–0013.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5
would require VSTAGP applicants to
submit the Certification Regarding
Lobbying form if requesting an award
greater than $100,000.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary for
applicants to attest to the certifications
regarding lobbying. This collection may
not be required of every applicant.
• Description of likely respondents:
Eligible recipients, as defined in
proposed § 80.2, that are interested in
applying for a VSTAGP grant.
• Estimated number of respondents:
198 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Annually.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 15 minutes.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 15 minutes.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $7.00, making the
total cost for respondents an estimated
$1,386.49 (198 respondents × ((15
burden minutes × $28.01 per hour)/60
minutes)). (Source: May 2021 BLS
National Occupational Employment and
Wage Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the 4040–0013
Certification Regarding Lobbying. OTED
currently has existing personnel,
systems, and processes (or other
resources) in place to receive and
review grant applications. Any
additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of 4040–0013 Certification
Regarding Lobbying, and therefore its
use is not expected to alter annualized
Federal costs.
Title: Quarterly Performance Reports
(IT instrument).
OMB Control No: 2900–0928.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12
would require VSTAGP grantees to
submit quarterly performance reports.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
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information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
monitor grantee performance and
document the success of the program.
• Description of likely respondents:
Grantees.
• Estimated number of respondents:
10 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Quarterly.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour per quarter.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 4 hours.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $112.04, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $1,120.40 (10 respondents × 4
burden hours × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the Quarterly
Performance Reports (IT instrument).
OTED currently has existing personnel,
systems, and processes (or other
resources) in place to receive and
review grant applications. Any
additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of Quarterly Performance
Reports (IT instrument), and therefore
its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Title: SF–425 Federal Financial
Report.
OMB Control No: 4040–0014.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12
would require VSTAGP grantees to
submit quarterly financial reports to
assess financial expenditure compliance
under this grant program.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
monitor grantee compliance with
financial requirements.
• Description of likely respondents:
Grantees.
• Estimated number of respondents:
10 per year.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Quarterly.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour per quarter.
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• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 4 hours.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $112.04, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $1,120.40 (10 respondents × 4
burden hours × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the SF–425 Federal
Financial Report. OTED currently has
existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to
receive and review grant applications.
Any additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of SF–425 Federal Financial
Report, and therefore its use is not
expected to alter annualized Federal
costs.
Title: Additional Reports (IT
instrument).
OMB Control No: 2900–0929.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12
would require VSTAGP grantees to
provide additional performance reports,
as needed, to assess the provisions of
services under this grant program.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
assess project accountability and
effectiveness.
• Description of likely respondents:
Grantees.
• Estimated number of respondents:
10.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Once.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 1 hour.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $28.01, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $280.10 (10 respondents × 1
burden hour × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
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Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government with the
requirement of the Additional Reports
(IT instrument). OTED currently has
existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to
receive and review grant applications.
Any additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed
to the use of Additional Reports (IT
instrument), and therefore its use is not
expected to alter annualized Federal
costs.
Title: Recordkeeping.
OMB Control No: 2900–0930.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 80.16
would require VSTAGP records to be
maintained. VA officials are entitled
access to any documents, papers, or
other records which are pertinent to the
VSTAGP award for audits,
examinations, excerpts, and transcripts.
This also includes timely and
reasonable access to VSTAGP personnel
for interviews and discussions related to
such documents.
• Description of the need for
information and proposed use of
information: The collection of
information would be necessary to
access project records.
• Description of likely respondents:
Grantees.
• Estimated number of respondents:
10.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
Annually.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 1 hour.
• Estimated annual cost to
respondents for the hour burdens for
collections of information: According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Mean
Hourly Earnings, the cost to each
respondent would be $28.01, making
the total cost for respondents an
estimated $280.10 (10 respondents × 1
burden hour × $28.01 per hour).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00–0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
• Estimated cost to the Federal
Government: There is no projected
incremental increase in the cost burden
to the Federal Government as a result of
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this requirement. OTED currently has
existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to
receive and review their grant
applications. Any additional cost for
agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should
not be attributed to Recordkeeping, and
therefore its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Assistance Listing
The Assistance Listing number and
title for the program affected by this
document is 64.058, Veteran and
Spouse Transitional Assistance Grant
Program.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to Subtitle E of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (known as the
Congressional Review Act) (5 U.S.C. 801
et seq.), the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs designated this rule
as not satisfying the criteria under 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 80
Administrative practice and
procedure, Armed forces, Employment,
Grant programs—veterans, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Transition, Veterans.
Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, approved and signed
this document on April 30, 2024, and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Luvenia Potts,
Regulation Development Coordinator, Office
of Regulation Policy & Management, Office
of General Counsel, Department of Veterans
Affairs.
For the reasons stated in the preamble,
VA amends 38 CFR chapter I by adding
part 80 to read as follows:
■
PART 80—VETERAN AND SPOUSE
TRANSITIONAL ASSISTANCE GRANT
PROGRAM
Sec.
80.1
80.2
80.3
80.4
Purpose and use of grant funds.
Definitions.
Grants—general.
Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO).
80.5 Applications.
80.6 Additional factors for selecting
applications.
80.7 Scoring and selection.
80.8 Disposition of applications.
80.9 Withdrawal of grant application.
80.10 Grant agreement.
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80.11 Payments under the grant.
80.12 Grantee reporting requirements.
80.13 Termination of grant; recovery of
funds.
80.14 Compliance review requirements.
80.15 Financial management.
80.16 Recordkeeping.
80.17 Non-appealability of grant award
decisions.
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 512; Pub. L. 116–
315, sec. 4304.
§ 80.1
Purpose and use of grant funds.
Sections 80.1 through 80.17 establish
the Veteran and Spouse Transitional
Assistance Grant Program (VSTAGP).
Under this program, VA may provide
grants to eligible organizations defined
in § 80.2 to provide transition services
and intensive client centered case
management services tailored to the
unique employment needs of program
participants to include, but not limited
to such services, such as resume
assistance, interview training, job
recruitment training and related
services, that will help in a successful
transition from military to civilian life.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304)
§ 80.2
Definitions.
For purposes of this part and any
Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO)
issued pursuant to this part:
(a) Applicant means an organization
that submits an application for a
VSTAGP grant as announced in a
NOFO.
(b) Eligible recipient (organization)
means one of the following:
(1) State government;
(2) County government;
(3) Local government;
(4) Institution of Higher Education;
(5) Indian/Native American Tribal
government (federally recognized);
(6) Nonprofit organization; or
(7) Faith-based organization;
(c) State government means any of the
fifty States of the United States, the
District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United
States, or any agency or instrumentality
of a State government.
(d) County government means a
county government entity or any
corresponding unit of government under
any other name in States that do not
have county organizations and, in those
States in which the county government
does not have jurisdiction over
highways, any local government unit
vested with jurisdiction over local
highways.
(e) Local government means a
government entity for a county;
borough; municipality; city; town;
township; parish; local public authority
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(including any public housing agency
under the United States Housing Act of
1937); special district; school district;
intrastate district; council of
governments, whether or not
incorporated as a nonprofit corporation
under state law; and any other agency
or instrumentality of a multi-regional,
intra-State or local government.
(f) Institution of Higher Education
(IHE) means—
(1) An educational institution in any
State that—
(i) Admits as regular students only
persons having a certificate of
graduation from a school providing
secondary education, or the recognized
equivalent of such a certificate, or
persons who meet the requirements of
20 U.S.C. 1091(d);
(ii) Is legally authorized within such
State to provide a program of education
beyond secondary education;
(iii) Provides an educational program
for which the institution awards a
bachelor’s degree or provides not less
than a 2-year program that is acceptable
for full credit toward such a degree, or
awards a degree that is acceptable for
admission to a graduate or professional
degree program, subject to review and
approval by the Secretary of Education;
(iv) Is a public or other nonprofit
institution; and
(v) Is accredited by a nationally
recognized accrediting agency or
association, or if not so accredited, is an
institution that has been granted preaccreditation status by such an agency
or association that has been recognized
by the Secretary of Education for the
granting of pre-accreditation status, and
such Secretary has determined that
there is satisfactory assurance that the
institution will meet the accreditation
standards of such an agency or
association within a reasonable time;
(2) Any school that provides not less
than a 1-year program of training to
prepare students for gainful
employment in a recognized occupation
and that meets the provision of
paragraphs (f)(1)(i), (ii), (iv) and (v) of
this section; and
(3) A public or nonprofit private
educational institution in any State that,
in lieu of the requirement in paragraph
(f)(1)(i) of this section, admits as regular
students individuals—
(i) Who are beyond the age of
compulsory school attendance in the
State in which the institution is located;
or
(ii) Who will be dually or
concurrently enrolled in the institution
and a secondary school.
(g) Indian/Native American Tribal
government (federally recognized)
means a governing body of a tribe, band,
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pueblo, community, village, or group of
native American Indians, or Alaska
Natives, that qualifies as an Indian tribal
government upon a determination by
the Internal Revenue Service that the
governing body exercises governmental
functions.
(h) Nonprofit organization means any
corporation, trust, association,
cooperative, or other organization, not
including IHEs, that:
(1) Is operated primarily for scientific,
educational, service, charitable, or
similar purposes in the public interest;
(2) Is not organized primarily for
profit; and
(3) Uses net proceeds to maintain,
improve, or expand the operations of
the organization. In accordance with
section 18 of the Lobbying Disclosure
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–65) (codified
at 2 U.S.C. 1611), non-profit entities
incorporated under section 501(c)(4) of
the Internal Revenue Code that engage
in lobbying activities are not eligible to
receive Federal funds or grants. (Note:
After receiving a grant, such
organization must not engage in any
activities, including awareness-raising
or advocacy activities, that include
fundraising for, or lobbying of, U.S.
Federal, State, or local governments (see
2 CFR 200.450 for more information).)
(i) Faith-based organization means a
nonprofit organization that is affiliated
with, supported by, or based on a
religion or religious group.
(j) Grantee means an applicant that is
awarded a grant under this part.
(k) In-demand industry sector or
occupation means:
(1) An industry sector that has a
substantial current or potential impact
(including through jobs that lead to
economic self-sufficiency and
opportunities for advancement) on the
State, regional, or local economy, as
appropriate, and that contributes to the
growth or stability of other supporting
businesses, or the growth of other
industry sectors; or
(2) An occupation that currently has
or is projected to have a number of
positions (including positions that lead
to economic self-sufficiency and
opportunities for advancement) in an
industry sector so as to have a
significant impact on the State, regional,
or local economy, as appropriate.
(l) Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO) means a Notice of Funding
Opportunity published by VA at
Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov)
alerting eligible entities of the
availability of VSTAGP grants and
containing information about the
VSTAGP grant application process in
accordance with § 80.4.
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41317
(m) Grant agreement means a legal
instrument of financial assistance
between a Federal awarding agency or
pass-through entity and a non-Federal
entity that is consistent with 31 U.S.C.
6302 and 6304.
(n) Participant means a former
member of the U.S. Armed Forces who
was separated, retired, or discharged
from the U.S. Armed Forces, or spouse
of such former member, who receives
services for which a VSTAGP grant is
awarded.
(o) Spouse means an individual
lawfully married to a former member of
the U.S. Armed Forces who was
separated, retired, or discharged from
the U.S. Armed Forces.
(p) Covered public health emergency
means an emergency with respect to
COVID–19 declared by a Federal, State,
or local authority in accordance with
Public Law 117–4, sec. 2(e)(3).
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304)
§ 80.3
Grants—general.
(a) Grants. VA will award VSTAGP
grants to eligible applicants selected
under § 80.8(a)(1).
(b) Maximum amounts. The
maximum amount to be awarded to
each grantee and the total maximum
amount for all grants will be specified
in the annually published NOFO.
(c) Number of grants awarded. The
number of grants VA will award will
depend on the total amount of grant
funding available at VA’s discretion and
the funding amount awarded to each
grantee, which is based on each
grantee’s proposal.
(d) Grant award limitation. An
eligible entity may receive only one
VSTAGP grant, and only one VSTAGP
grant will be awarded in any one
location as specified in the NOFO.
(e) Period of performance. VSTAGP
grants will be awarded for a maximum
period of 5 years, beginning on the date
on which the VSTAGP grants are
awarded. They will not be extended or
renewed.
(f) Amount of grant. A grant under
this section shall be in an amount that
does not exceed 50% of the amount
required by the organization to provide
the services described in § 80.1.
(g) No participant charges. A grantee
may not charge any participants a fee for
services provided by the grantee or
require any participants to participate in
other activities sponsored by the grantee
as a condition of receiving services for
which the VSTAGP grant is made.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304)
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§ 80.4 Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO).
When funds are available for VSTAGP
grants, VA will publish a NOFO at
Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov).
The NOFO will identify:
(a) The location for obtaining
VSTAGP grant applications, including
the specific forms that will be required;
(b) The date, time, and place for
submitting completed VSTAGP grant
applications;
(c) Priority population categories;
(d) The estimated total amount of
funds available and the maximum funds
available to a single grantee;
(e) Matching funds requirements;
(f) The minimum number of total
points and points per category that an
applicant must receive to be considered
for a grant and information regarding
the scoring process;
(g) Any timeframes and manner for
payments under the VSTAGP grant;
(h) A description of eligible entities or
other eligibility requirements necessary
to receive the grant; and
(i) Other information necessary for the
VSTAGP grant application process, as
determined by VA, including contact
information for the office that will
oversee the VSTAGP within VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.5
Applications.
To apply for a grant, an eligible entity
must submit a complete application
package to VA, as described in the
NOFO. There will be a limit of one
application per submitting organization
serving the same participant population
and in the same geographic service area.
Applications will be accepted only
through www.grants.gov.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 2900–8080,
4040–0006, 4040–0010, and 4040–0013.)
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§ 80.6 Additional factors for selecting
applications.
(a) Applicant’s performance on prior
award. VA may consider the applicant’s
noncompliance with requirements
applicable to prior VA or other agency
awards as reflected in past written
evaluation reports and memoranda on
performance and the completeness of
required prior submissions.
(b) Applicant’s fiscal integrity.
Applicants must meet and maintain
standards of fiscal integrity for
participation in Federal grant programs
as reflected in 2 CFR 200.205.
(c) Priority preference. Priority
preference will be given to organizations
that either provide multiple forms of
services or are located in a State with:
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(1) A high rate of unemployment
among Veterans;
(2) A high rate of usage of
unemployment benefits for recently
separated members of the Armed
Forces; or
(3) A labor force or economy that has
been significantly impacted by a
covered public health emergency.
(d) Risk assessment evaluation. VA
will conduct a formal assessment, prior
to award, of the applicant’s financial
capability, adequacy of accounting
system, and internal controls to assess
the risk posed by each applicant.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.7
Scoring and selection.
(a) Scoring. VA will only score
complete applications received from
eligible applicants by the deadline
established in the NOFO. The
applications must meet the minimum
criteria set forth in the NOFO and will
be scored as specified in the NOFO, as
set forth in § 80.4.
(b) Selection of recipients. All
complete applications will be scored
using the criteria in paragraph (a) of this
section and ranked in order of highest
to lowest total score. NOFO
announcements may also clarify the
selection criteria in paragraph (a) of this
section. The relative weight (point
value) for each criterion will be
specified in the NOFO. VA will award
VSTAGP grants on the primary basis of
the scores but will also consider
additional factors listed in § 80.6.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.8
Disposition of applications.
(a) Disposition of applications. Upon
review of an application and dependent
on the availability of funds, VA will:
(1) Approve the application for
funding, in whole or in part, for such
amount of funds, and subject to such
conditions that VA deems necessary or
desirable;
(2) Determine that the application is
of acceptable quality for funding, in that
it meets minimum criteria, but
disapprove the application for funding
because it does not rank sufficiently
high in relation to other applications to
qualify for an award based on the level
of funding available, or for another
reason as provided in the decision
document; or
(3) Defer action on the application for
such reasons as lack of funds or a need
for further review.
(b) Notification of disposition. VA
will notify the applicant in writing of
the disposition of the application. A
signed grant agreement form, as defined
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in § 80.10, will be issued to the
applicant of an approved application.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.9
Withdrawal of grant application.
Applicants may withdraw a VSTAGP
application submitted through
Grants.gov by writing to the specified
VA point of contact. An applicant must
provide a rationale for the withdrawal
request as specified in the NOFO.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.10
Grant agreement.
(a) VA will draft a VSTAGP grant
agreement to be executed by VA and the
grantee.
(b) The VSTAGP grant agreement will
provide that the grantee agrees to, and
will ensure that each subgrantee (if
applicable) agrees to:
(1) Operate the project in accordance
with this part and the terms of the
agreement.
(2) Abide by the Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards under 2 CFR parts 25,
170, and 200 if applicable.
(3) Comply with such other terms and
conditions, including recordkeeping
and reports for project monitoring and
evaluation purposes, as VA may
establish for purposes of carrying out
the VSTAGP effectively and efficiently
and as described in the NOFO; and
(4) Provide any necessary additional
information requested by VA in the
manner and timeframe specified by VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.11
Payments under the grant.
(a) Payments. Grantees are to be paid
in accordance with the timeframes and
manner set forth in the NOFO.
(b) Availability of grant funds. Federal
financial assistance will become
available subsequent to the effective
date of the grant as set forth in the grant
agreement. Recipients will not be
reimbursed for costs resulting from
obligations incurred before the effective
date of the grant.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.12
Grantee reporting requirements.
(a) Quarterly reports. All grantees
must submit to VA quarterly reports, as
required in the NOFO, within 30 days
after the last day of each quarter based
on the Federal fiscal year—with the first
report due not later than 30 days after
the last day of the quarter for which a
grant is paid under this part—which
includes the following information:
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(1) Record of time and resources
expended in outreach activities and the
methods used;
(2) The number of participants served,
including demographics of this
population;
(3) Types of assistance provided;
(4) A full accounting of VSTAGP grant
funds received from VA and used or
unused funds during the quarter; and
(5) Results of routine monitoring and
any project variations.
(b) Final report. Per 2 CFR 200.344, all
grantees must submit to VA, not later
than 120 days after the last day of the
grant period (as defined in the NOFO)
for which a grant is awarded under this
part, a final report that meets the
requirement set forth in the NOFO. The
last quarterly performance and financial
report received will be recorded as the
final report. The financial report shall
be noted as ‘‘Final’’ on the SF–425
Federal Financial Report.
(c) Additional reports. VA may
request additional reports to allow VA
to assess project accountability and
effectiveness. In addition, recipients are
required to participate in a VA-led
evaluation if selected, which may be
carried out by a third-party on behalf of
VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 2900–0928
(Quarterly Performance Reports), 4040–0014,
and 2900–0929 (Additional Reports).)
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§ 80.13
funds.
Termination of grant; recovery of
(a) Termination of grant. VA may
terminate a grant agreement with any
VSTAGP grantee that does not comply
with the terms of the VSTAGP
agreement.
(b) Recovery of funds. VA may recover
from the grantee any funds paid if the
grantee violates the grant agreement or
may recover any funds that have not
been used in accordance with a
VSTAGP grant agreement. If VA decides
to recover funds, VA will issue the
grantee a notice of intent to recover
VSTAGP grant funds. The grantee will
then have 30 days from the date of the
notice to submit documentation
demonstrating why the VSTAGP grant
funds should not be recovered. If the
VSTAGP grantee does not respond or if
the grantee responds, but VA
determines the documentation is
insufficient to establish compliance, VA
will make a final determination to
recover the VSTAGP grant funds. If VA
determines that the grantee did not
violate the grant agreement, VA will
make a final determination not to
recover the grant funds.
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(c) Prohibition of further payment of
grant funds. When VA determines that
action will be taken to recover grant
funds from a grantee, the grantee will be
prohibited from receiving any further
VSTAGP grant funds under this part
until the grant funds are recovered and
the condition that led to the recovery of
the grant funds is resolved, unless the
grant agreement has been terminated. If
the grant agreement has been
terminated, no future payments would
be issued upon recovery.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
SUMMARY:
§ 80.14
Compliance review requirements.
(a) Site visits. VA will conduct, as
needed, site visits to grantee locations to
review grantee accomplishments and
management control systems.
(b) Inspections. VA will conduct, as
needed, inspections of grantee records
to determine compliance with the
provisions of this part. All visits and
evaluations will be performed with
minimal disruption to the grantee to the
extent practicable.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.203)
§ 80.15
Financial management.
(a) Compliance. All recipients will
comply with applicable requirements of
the Single Audit Act Amendments of
1996, as implemented by 2 CFR part
200.
(b) Financial Management. All
grantees must use a financial
management system that complies with
2 CFR part 200. Grantees must meet the
applicable requirements of the Office of
Management and Budget’s regulations
on Cost Principles at 2 CFR 200.400
through 200.475.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.400 through 200.475)
§ 80.16
Recordkeeping.
Grantees must ensure that records are
maintained in accordance with 2 CFR
200.337. Grantees must produce such
records at VA’s request.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116–315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR
200.337)
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 2900–0930
(Recordkeeping).)
§ 80.17 Non-appealability of grant award
decisions.
Grant award decisions are
discretionary and are not subject to
appeal to any VA official or board.
[FR Doc. 2024–09862 Filed 5–10–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
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40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2023–0338; FRL–11798–
02–R4]
Air Plan Approval; KY; Revisions to
Jefferson County Definitions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is approving changes to
the Jefferson County portion of the
Kentucky State Implementation Plan
(SIP) submitted by the Commonwealth
of Kentucky through the Kentucky
Energy and Environment Cabinet
(Cabinet) on May 31, 2023. The changes
were submitted by the Cabinet on behalf
of the Louisville Metro Air Pollution
Control District (District, also referred to
herein as Jefferson County). EPA is
approving changes to the District’s
definitions rule to include a list of
‘‘trivial activities’’ in a new appendix;
update the incorporation by reference
date of the Federal air quality regulation
that excludes certain organic
compounds from the definition of
‘‘volatile organic compounds (VOC);’’
and make minor grammatical changes.
This action is pursuant to the Clean Air
Act (CAA or Act) and its implementing
regulations.
DATES: This rule is effective June 12,
2024.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket
Identification No. EPA–R04–OAR–
2023–0338. All documents in the docket
are listed on the regulations.gov
website. Although listed in the index,
some information may not be publicly
available, i.e., Confidential Business
Information or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available either electronically through
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Air Regulatory Management Section,
Air Planning and Implementation
Branch, Air and Radiation Division,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 4, 61 Forsyth Street SW, Atlanta,
Georgia 30303–8960. EPA requests that
you contact the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to
schedule your inspection. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., excluding Federal holidays.
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13MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 93 (Monday, May 13, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 41312-41319]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-09862]
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
38 CFR Part 80
RIN 2900-AR68
Veteran and Spouse Transitional Assistance Grant Program
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is implementing
provisions in the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health
Care and Benefits Improvement Act to establish the Veteran and Spouse
Transitional Assistance Grant Program (VSTAGP). This final rule
addresses general grant application procedures and requirements to
apply for VSTAGP grant funding and adopts the proposed rule with some
corrections and clarifying changes.
DATES: This rule is effective June 12, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lillian Miesemer, Senior Management
and Program Analyst, Outreach, Transition and Economic Development,
Veterans Benefits Administration, 1800 G Street SW, Washington, DC
20006; 202-461-9558 (this is not a toll-free telephone number). If you
use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or a text telephone
(TTY), call the Federal Relay Service (FRS) toll-free at 1-800-877-
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On July 5, 2023, VA published a proposed
rule in the Federal Register (88 FR 42891) that would establish the
VSTAGP program in 38 CFR 80.1 through 80.17 pursuant to section 4304 of
Public Law 116-315, the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans
Health Care and Benefits Improvement Act of 2020, which was enacted on
January 5, 2021.
VA provided a 30-day comment period, which ended on August 4, 2023.
VA received four comments on the proposed rule. One of the four
comments was strongly in favor of the rule. We thank the commenter for
their support and do not make any changes based on that comment.
The second of the four comments suggested grant recipients must
have access to separating Service members and recently separated
Service members. More specifically, the commenter advocated in favor of
a means by which grant recipients can identify the geographical areas
where separating Service members have relocated. Additionally, the
commenter suggested that the Department of Defense (DoD) and VA should
collaborate to encourage those enrolled in the DoD Transition
Assistance Program (TAP) to take advantage of opportunities provided by
recipients of grants under VA's VSTAGP program.
As noted in the proposed rule, a Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO) will be posted at Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov) in
accordance with Sec. 80.4 of the proposed rule. The NOFO will require
applicants for grant funding to submit proposals addressing detailed
outreach strategies appropriate and tailored to the specific service
delivery area served by the applicant. To meet this requirement, VA
will recommend in the NOFO that applicants conduct an environmental
scan as a component or means of strategic planning to gather
information about available supports and services within the proposed
geographic area to be served. Furthermore, the NOFO will require
applicants for grant funding to demonstrate how their proposed program
will promote active outreach to, recruitment of, and engagement with
former members of the U.S. Armed Forces who are separated, retired, or
discharged, as well as their spouses. Applicants for grant funding must
design, develop, and execute program promotion and awareness activities
as a part of their outreach. The NOFO will require applicants for grant
funding to submit proposals explaining how their program will reach out
to potentially eligible individuals, and how they will collaborate with
local entities that may serve former members of the U.S. Armed Forces
as well as their spouses (e.g., local military bases, VA Regional
Offices, Veterans Service Organizations (VSO), faith-based
organizations, social service agencies, community-based clinics, other
job-training organizations), within their proposed geographic service
delivery area to introduce the program to eligible participants. VA
will encourage applicants to reach out to unique sub-groups of veterans
and/or spouses who are likely experiencing inequitable access to jobs,
job training programs, and/or other employment services in the proposed
service area.
Thus, VA will not be providing information regarding the
geographical areas where separating Service members have relocated.
Grant applicants will have to design, develop, and execute program
promotion and awareness activities as part of their proposal, to
include strategies for reaching the relevant population within their
proposed geographic service delivery area. VA has no specific plans to
address opportunities provided by VSTAGP grant recipients as part of
the TAP curriculum but, as noted above, intends that grant applicants
will be responsible for developing strategies for promotion and
awareness of such services. In any event, the comments relating to how
applicants are supposed to identify certain areas or populations to
serve, as well as the comments relating to encouraging TAP participants
to take advantage of opportunities resulting from VSTAGP grants, are
beyond the scope of the rulemaking. We do not make any changes based on
these comments.
The third and fourth comments were supportive of the proposed rule.
The comments advocated for widespread accessibility of applications and
establishment of clear evaluation criteria. VA agrees with both
comments. To address the comment regarding the accessibility of
applications, as required in Sec. 80.4 of the proposed rule, and in
accordance with 2 CFR 200.204, VA will publish a NOFO at Grants.gov
(https://www.grants.gov). The NOFO will provide clear application
procedures including detailed guidance and resources to help applicants
apply for funding and navigate the application process.
Additionally, to address the comment regarding clear application
criteria the NOFO will include detailed scoring criteria as required in
Sec. 80.7, with clearly identified point values for each evaluation
criterion. VA will establish procedures to assess the technical merit
of applications to ensure an objective review of applications. The NOFO
will contain information regarding the evaluative criteria that will be
used by the review panel to evaluate submitted applications to help
applicants understand the standards against which an application will
be scored. VA will execute a merit review process for all responsive
applications, with the objective of selecting recipients most likely to
be successful in delivering results based on the program objectives.
See 2 CFR 200.205. This will ensure that: (1) applicants for grant
funding have the opportunity to submit
[[Page 41313]]
proposals responsive to the solicitation, and (2) the application
review process is clear and transparent to applicants. Applicants will
be able to view all application requirements in the NOFO once published
to Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). We do not make any changes
based on these comments.
VA is clarifying the definition of the term ``institution of higher
education (IHE),'' as that term was defined in Sec. 80.2(f) of the
proposed rule as one of the various listed entities that would be
eligible to receive a VSTAGP grant. In the proposed rule, VA had
defined the term ``IHE'' in a general manner that referred to certain
``public or private educational institution[s].'' In the final rule, VA
is clarifying that private educational institutions must be nonprofit.
Specifically, VA adopts the established definition of IHE specified in
20 U.S.C. 1001 (``General definition of institution of higher
education''), which provides that, to qualify, an educational
institution must be ``a public or other nonprofit institution,'' id.
1001(a)(4); see id. 1001(b)(1). Clarifying that ``IHE'' refers to only
public or other nonprofit educational institutions ensures that the IHE
definition is aligned with the definitions of other possible grant
recipients, which include government entities, nonprofit organizations,
and nonprofit faith-based organizations. VA believes that applying
standards to IHEs that are similar to those applied to other possible
grant recipients will promote greater consistency in carrying out the
purposes of this grant program in different locations nationwide.
In the heading for new part 80 and in Sec. 80.1, we are correcting
the erroneous reference to ``Veteran Transitional Assistance Grant
Program'' in the proposed rule to ``Veteran and Spouse Transitional
Assistance Grant Program''. In Sec. Sec. 80.2(h)(3), 80.7(b), 80.9 and
80.14, we are changing the use of ``may'' to ``will'' or ``must'' to be
more definitive in those provisions. In Sec. 80.5, we are also
clarifying that there will be a limit of one application per submitting
organization serving the same participant population and in the same
geographic service area. In the third sentence of Sec. 80.7(b), we are
correcting the erroneous reference to ``each selection'' in the
proposed rule to ``each criterion''.
We also note that the proposed rule included two provisions which
we inadvertently did not address in the preamble. In Sec. 80.2(k), we
define the term ``In-demand industry sector or occupation'' because the
term is likely to be used in NOFOs. In Sec. 80.3(f), we explain that a
grant must be in an amount that does not exceed 50 percent of the
amount required by the grantee to provide the required services.
We are making technical changes in Sec. 80.12(c) as proposed to
remove material that is precatory, informational, or more appropriate
for inclusion in the NOFO. We are thus removing the second sentence of
the introductory text, paragraphs (1) and (2), and the second sentence
of paragraph (3), and we are moving the first sentence of paragraph
(c)(3), requiring grantees to participate in a VA-led evaluation, to
the introductory text of paragraph (c).
VA adopts the proposed rule as final, with changes as discussed
above.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563 and 14094
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) directs
agencies to assess the costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity). Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review) emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules,
and promoting flexibility. Executive Order 14094 (Modernizing
Regulatory Review) supplements and reaffirms the principles,
structures, and definitions governing contemporary regulatory review
established in Executive Orders 12866 and 13563. The Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has determined that this rulemaking
is a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, as
amended by Executive Order 14094. The Regulatory Impact Analysis
associated with this rulemaking can be found as a supporting document
at www.regulations.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
as they are defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-
612). Receiving or not receiving a grant is unlikely to have a
significant economic impact on small entity applicants. Therefore,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the initial and final regulatory
flexibility analysis requirements of 5 U.S.C. 603-604 do not apply.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C.
1532, that agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule that may result in the expenditure by
State, local and Tribal governments, in the aggregate or by the private
sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for inflation) in
any one year. This final rule will have no such effect on State, local
and Tribal governments or on the private sector.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains provisions constituting three new
collections of information and revisions to several current/valid
collections of information under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). Both the new and revised collections of
information require approval by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). Accordingly, under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), VA has submitted a copy of
this rulemaking action to OMB for review and approval. VA received no
comments on the revised collections of information.
OMB has received the revised collections of information. OMB's
receipt of the revised collections of information is not an approval to
conduct or sponsor an information collection under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. In accordance with 5 CFR 1320, the revised
collections of information associated with this rulemaking are not
approved by OMB at this time. OMB's approval of the revised collections
of information will occur within 30 days after the final rulemaking
publishes. If OMB does not approve the new collections of information
as requested, VA will immediately remove the provision containing the
new collections of information or take such other action as is directed
by OMB.
This final rule also includes a provision constituting three new
collections of information under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). The new collections of information require
approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the
assignment of a new OMB Control Number. Accordingly, under 44 U.S.C.
3507(d), VA has submitted a copy of this rulemaking to OMB for review
and approval. VA received no comments on the new collections of
information.
OMB Control Numbers 2900-0928, 2900-0929, and 2900-0930 have been
assigned to the new collections of information associated with this
final
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rule. Assignment of these new OMB control numbers is not an approval to
conduct or sponsor an information collection under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. In accordance with 5 CFR 1320, the new
collections of information associated with this rulemaking are not
approved by OMB at this time. OMB's approval of the new collections of
information will occur within 30 days after the final rulemaking
publishes. If OMB does not approve the new collections of information
as requested, VA will immediately remove the provision containing new
collections of information or take such other action as is directed by
OMB.
The collections of information contained in 38 CFR 80.5, 80.12 and
80.16 are described immediately following this paragraph.
Title: SF-424 Application for Federal Assistance.
OMB Control No: 4040-0004.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5 would require VSTAGP grant
applicants to submit the SF-424 as a minimum requirement to qualify for
a VSTAGP grant.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
determine applicant eligibility for a VSTAGP grant. VA would use this
information to score completed grant applications.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible recipients, as
defined in proposed Sec. 80.2, that are interested in applying for a
VSTAGP grant.
Estimated number of respondents: 200 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
1 hour.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$28.01, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $5,602.00
(200 respondents x 1 burden hour x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021
BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000,
All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000).
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the SF-424, Application for Federal
Assistance. OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to receive and review their
grant applications. Any additional cost for agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to the use of
SF-424, and therefore its use is not expected to alter annualized
Federal costs.
Title: SF-424A Budget Information--Non-Construction Programs.
OMB Control No: 4040-0006.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5 would require VSTAGP grant
applicants to submit the SF-424A as a minimum requirement to qualify
for a VSTAGP grant.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
determine applicant eligibility for a VSTAGP grant, to document
proposed costs, and to determine allowability of proposed costs. VA
would use this information to score completed grant applications and
for general management of VSTAGP awards.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible recipients, as
defined in proposed Sec. 80.2, that are interested in applying for a
VSTAGP grant.
Estimated number of respondents: 200 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Estimated average burden per response: 3 hours.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
3 hours.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$84.03, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $16,806.00
(200 respondents x 3 burden hours x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021
BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000,
All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the SF-424A, Budget Information--
Non-Construction Programs. OTED currently has existing personnel,
systems, and processes (or other resources) in place to receive and
review their grant applications. Any additional cost for agency system
development, maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to
the use of the SF-424A, and therefore its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Title: 4040-0010 Project/Performance Site Location(s).
OMB Control No: 4040-0010.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5 would require VSTAGP grantees to
submit the primary location and any other locations where project
activity would occur.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
ensure adequate geographic coverage.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible recipients, as
defined in proposed Sec. 80.2, that are interested in applying for a
VSTAGP grant.
Estimated number of respondents: 200 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Estimated average burden per response: 5 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
5 minutes.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$2.33, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $466.83 (200
respondents x ((5 burden minutes x $28.01 per hour)/60 minutes)).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00-0000, All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the 4040-0010 Project/Performance
Site Location(s). OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to receive and review their
grant applications. Any additional cost for agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to the use of
form 4040-0010 Project/Performance Site Location(s), and therefore its
use is not expected to alter annualized Federal costs.
Title: 4040-0013 Certification Regarding Lobbying.
[[Page 41315]]
OMB Control No: 4040-0013.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.5 would require VSTAGP applicants
to submit the Certification Regarding Lobbying form if requesting an
award greater than $100,000.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary for
applicants to attest to the certifications regarding lobbying. This
collection may not be required of every applicant.
Description of likely respondents: Eligible recipients, as
defined in proposed Sec. 80.2, that are interested in applying for a
VSTAGP grant.
Estimated number of respondents: 198 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Estimated average burden per response: 15 minutes.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
15 minutes.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$7.00, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $1,386.49
(198 respondents x ((15 burden minutes x $28.01 per hour)/60 minutes)).
(Source: May 2021 BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates, Code: 00-0000, All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the 4040-0013 Certification
Regarding Lobbying. OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to receive and review grant
applications. Any additional cost for agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to the use of
4040-0013 Certification Regarding Lobbying, and therefore its use is
not expected to alter annualized Federal costs.
Title: Quarterly Performance Reports (IT instrument).
OMB Control No: 2900-0928.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12 would require VSTAGP grantees
to submit quarterly performance reports.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
monitor grantee performance and document the success of the program.
Description of likely respondents: Grantees.
Estimated number of respondents: 10 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Quarterly.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour per quarter.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
4 hours.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$112.04, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $1,120.40
(10 respondents x 4 burden hours x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021
BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000,
All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the Quarterly Performance Reports
(IT instrument). OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to receive and review grant
applications. Any additional cost for agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to the use of
Quarterly Performance Reports (IT instrument), and therefore its use is
not expected to alter annualized Federal costs.
Title: SF-425 Federal Financial Report.
OMB Control No: 4040-0014.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12 would require VSTAGP grantees
to submit quarterly financial reports to assess financial expenditure
compliance under this grant program.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
monitor grantee compliance with financial requirements.
Description of likely respondents: Grantees.
Estimated number of respondents: 10 per year.
Estimated frequency of responses: Quarterly.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour per quarter.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
4 hours.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$112.04, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $1,120.40
(10 respondents x 4 burden hours x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021
BLS National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000,
All Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the SF-425 Federal Financial Report.
OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and processes (or other
resources) in place to receive and review grant applications. Any
additional cost for agency system development, maintenance, and
enhancements should not be attributed to the use of SF-425 Federal
Financial Report, and therefore its use is not expected to alter
annualized Federal costs.
Title: Additional Reports (IT instrument).
OMB Control No: 2900-0929.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.12 would require VSTAGP grantees
to provide additional performance reports, as needed, to assess the
provisions of services under this grant program.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
assess project accountability and effectiveness.
Description of likely respondents: Grantees.
Estimated number of respondents: 10.
Estimated frequency of responses: Once.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
1 hour.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$28.01, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $280.10 (10
respondents x 1 burden hour x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021 BLS
National
[[Page 41316]]
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government with the requirement of the Additional Reports (IT
instrument). OTED currently has existing personnel, systems, and
processes (or other resources) in place to receive and review grant
applications. Any additional cost for agency system development,
maintenance, and enhancements should not be attributed to the use of
Additional Reports (IT instrument), and therefore its use is not
expected to alter annualized Federal costs.
Title: Recordkeeping.
OMB Control No: 2900-0930.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 80.16 would require VSTAGP records to
be maintained. VA officials are entitled access to any documents,
papers, or other records which are pertinent to the VSTAGP award for
audits, examinations, excerpts, and transcripts. This also includes
timely and reasonable access to VSTAGP personnel for interviews and
discussions related to such documents.
Description of the need for information and proposed use
of information: The collection of information would be necessary to
access project records.
Description of likely respondents: Grantees.
Estimated number of respondents: 10.
Estimated frequency of responses: Annually.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
1 hour.
Estimated annual cost to respondents for the hour burdens
for collections of information: According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics Mean Hourly Earnings, the cost to each respondent would be
$28.01, making the total cost for respondents an estimated $280.10 (10
respondents x 1 burden hour x $28.01 per hour). (Source: May 2021 BLS
National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates, Code: 00-0000, All
Occupations: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000)
Estimated cost to the Federal Government: There is no
projected incremental increase in the cost burden to the Federal
Government as a result of this requirement. OTED currently has existing
personnel, systems, and processes (or other resources) in place to
receive and review their grant applications. Any additional cost for
agency system development, maintenance, and enhancements should not be
attributed to Recordkeeping, and therefore its use is not expected to
alter annualized Federal costs.
Assistance Listing
The Assistance Listing number and title for the program affected by
this document is 64.058, Veteran and Spouse Transitional Assistance
Grant Program.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to Subtitle E of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (known as the Congressional Review Act) (5 U.S.C.
801 et seq.), the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
designated this rule as not satisfying the criteria under 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 80
Administrative practice and procedure, Armed forces, Employment,
Grant programs--veterans, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Transition, Veterans.
Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, approved and signed
this document on April 30, 2024, and authorized the undersigned to sign
and submit the document to the Office of the Federal Register for
publication electronically as an official document of the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
Luvenia Potts,
Regulation Development Coordinator, Office of Regulation Policy &
Management, Office of General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs.
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, VA amends 38 CFR chapter I by
adding part 80 to read as follows:
PART 80--VETERAN AND SPOUSE TRANSITIONAL ASSISTANCE GRANT PROGRAM
Sec.
80.1 Purpose and use of grant funds.
80.2 Definitions.
80.3 Grants--general.
80.4 Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO).
80.5 Applications.
80.6 Additional factors for selecting applications.
80.7 Scoring and selection.
80.8 Disposition of applications.
80.9 Withdrawal of grant application.
80.10 Grant agreement.
80.11 Payments under the grant.
80.12 Grantee reporting requirements.
80.13 Termination of grant; recovery of funds.
80.14 Compliance review requirements.
80.15 Financial management.
80.16 Recordkeeping.
80.17 Non-appealability of grant award decisions.
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 512; Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304.
Sec. 80.1 Purpose and use of grant funds.
Sections 80.1 through 80.17 establish the Veteran and Spouse
Transitional Assistance Grant Program (VSTAGP). Under this program, VA
may provide grants to eligible organizations defined in Sec. 80.2 to
provide transition services and intensive client centered case
management services tailored to the unique employment needs of program
participants to include, but not limited to such services, such as
resume assistance, interview training, job recruitment training and
related services, that will help in a successful transition from
military to civilian life.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304)
Sec. 80.2 Definitions.
For purposes of this part and any Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO) issued pursuant to this part:
(a) Applicant means an organization that submits an application for
a VSTAGP grant as announced in a NOFO.
(b) Eligible recipient (organization) means one of the following:
(1) State government;
(2) County government;
(3) Local government;
(4) Institution of Higher Education;
(5) Indian/Native American Tribal government (federally
recognized);
(6) Nonprofit organization; or
(7) Faith-based organization;
(c) State government means any of the fifty States of the United
States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any
territory or possession of the United States, or any agency or
instrumentality of a State government.
(d) County government means a county government entity or any
corresponding unit of government under any other name in States that do
not have county organizations and, in those States in which the county
government does not have jurisdiction over highways, any local
government unit vested with jurisdiction over local highways.
(e) Local government means a government entity for a county;
borough; municipality; city; town; township; parish; local public
authority
[[Page 41317]]
(including any public housing agency under the United States Housing
Act of 1937); special district; school district; intrastate district;
council of governments, whether or not incorporated as a nonprofit
corporation under state law; and any other agency or instrumentality of
a multi-regional, intra-State or local government.
(f) Institution of Higher Education (IHE) means--
(1) An educational institution in any State that--
(i) Admits as regular students only persons having a certificate of
graduation from a school providing secondary education, or the
recognized equivalent of such a certificate, or persons who meet the
requirements of 20 U.S.C. 1091(d);
(ii) Is legally authorized within such State to provide a program
of education beyond secondary education;
(iii) Provides an educational program for which the institution
awards a bachelor's degree or provides not less than a 2-year program
that is acceptable for full credit toward such a degree, or awards a
degree that is acceptable for admission to a graduate or professional
degree program, subject to review and approval by the Secretary of
Education;
(iv) Is a public or other nonprofit institution; and
(v) Is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or
association, or if not so accredited, is an institution that has been
granted pre-accreditation status by such an agency or association that
has been recognized by the Secretary of Education for the granting of
pre-accreditation status, and such Secretary has determined that there
is satisfactory assurance that the institution will meet the
accreditation standards of such an agency or association within a
reasonable time;
(2) Any school that provides not less than a 1-year program of
training to prepare students for gainful employment in a recognized
occupation and that meets the provision of paragraphs (f)(1)(i), (ii),
(iv) and (v) of this section; and
(3) A public or nonprofit private educational institution in any
State that, in lieu of the requirement in paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this
section, admits as regular students individuals--
(i) Who are beyond the age of compulsory school attendance in the
State in which the institution is located; or
(ii) Who will be dually or concurrently enrolled in the institution
and a secondary school.
(g) Indian/Native American Tribal government (federally recognized)
means a governing body of a tribe, band, pueblo, community, village, or
group of native American Indians, or Alaska Natives, that qualifies as
an Indian tribal government upon a determination by the Internal
Revenue Service that the governing body exercises governmental
functions.
(h) Nonprofit organization means any corporation, trust,
association, cooperative, or other organization, not including IHEs,
that:
(1) Is operated primarily for scientific, educational, service,
charitable, or similar purposes in the public interest;
(2) Is not organized primarily for profit; and
(3) Uses net proceeds to maintain, improve, or expand the
operations of the organization. In accordance with section 18 of the
Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-65) (codified at 2 U.S.C.
1611), non-profit entities incorporated under section 501(c)(4) of the
Internal Revenue Code that engage in lobbying activities are not
eligible to receive Federal funds or grants. (Note: After receiving a
grant, such organization must not engage in any activities, including
awareness-raising or advocacy activities, that include fundraising for,
or lobbying of, U.S. Federal, State, or local governments (see 2 CFR
200.450 for more information).)
(i) Faith-based organization means a nonprofit organization that is
affiliated with, supported by, or based on a religion or religious
group.
(j) Grantee means an applicant that is awarded a grant under this
part.
(k) In-demand industry sector or occupation means:
(1) An industry sector that has a substantial current or potential
impact (including through jobs that lead to economic self-sufficiency
and opportunities for advancement) on the State, regional, or local
economy, as appropriate, and that contributes to the growth or
stability of other supporting businesses, or the growth of other
industry sectors; or
(2) An occupation that currently has or is projected to have a
number of positions (including positions that lead to economic self-
sufficiency and opportunities for advancement) in an industry sector so
as to have a significant impact on the State, regional, or local
economy, as appropriate.
(l) Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) means a Notice of Funding
Opportunity published by VA at Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov)
alerting eligible entities of the availability of VSTAGP grants and
containing information about the VSTAGP grant application process in
accordance with Sec. 80.4.
(m) Grant agreement means a legal instrument of financial
assistance between a Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity and
a non-Federal entity that is consistent with 31 U.S.C. 6302 and 6304.
(n) Participant means a former member of the U.S. Armed Forces who
was separated, retired, or discharged from the U.S. Armed Forces, or
spouse of such former member, who receives services for which a VSTAGP
grant is awarded.
(o) Spouse means an individual lawfully married to a former member
of the U.S. Armed Forces who was separated, retired, or discharged from
the U.S. Armed Forces.
(p) Covered public health emergency means an emergency with respect
to COVID-19 declared by a Federal, State, or local authority in
accordance with Public Law 117-4, sec. 2(e)(3).
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304)
Sec. 80.3 Grants--general.
(a) Grants. VA will award VSTAGP grants to eligible applicants
selected under Sec. 80.8(a)(1).
(b) Maximum amounts. The maximum amount to be awarded to each
grantee and the total maximum amount for all grants will be specified
in the annually published NOFO.
(c) Number of grants awarded. The number of grants VA will award
will depend on the total amount of grant funding available at VA's
discretion and the funding amount awarded to each grantee, which is
based on each grantee's proposal.
(d) Grant award limitation. An eligible entity may receive only one
VSTAGP grant, and only one VSTAGP grant will be awarded in any one
location as specified in the NOFO.
(e) Period of performance. VSTAGP grants will be awarded for a
maximum period of 5 years, beginning on the date on which the VSTAGP
grants are awarded. They will not be extended or renewed.
(f) Amount of grant. A grant under this section shall be in an
amount that does not exceed 50% of the amount required by the
organization to provide the services described in Sec. 80.1.
(g) No participant charges. A grantee may not charge any
participants a fee for services provided by the grantee or require any
participants to participate in other activities sponsored by the
grantee as a condition of receiving services for which the VSTAGP grant
is made.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304)
[[Page 41318]]
Sec. 80.4 Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO).
When funds are available for VSTAGP grants, VA will publish a NOFO
at Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). The NOFO will identify:
(a) The location for obtaining VSTAGP grant applications, including
the specific forms that will be required;
(b) The date, time, and place for submitting completed VSTAGP grant
applications;
(c) Priority population categories;
(d) The estimated total amount of funds available and the maximum
funds available to a single grantee;
(e) Matching funds requirements;
(f) The minimum number of total points and points per category that
an applicant must receive to be considered for a grant and information
regarding the scoring process;
(g) Any timeframes and manner for payments under the VSTAGP grant;
(h) A description of eligible entities or other eligibility
requirements necessary to receive the grant; and
(i) Other information necessary for the VSTAGP grant application
process, as determined by VA, including contact information for the
office that will oversee the VSTAGP within VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.5 Applications.
To apply for a grant, an eligible entity must submit a complete
application package to VA, as described in the NOFO. There will be a
limit of one application per submitting organization serving the same
participant population and in the same geographic service area.
Applications will be accepted only through www.grants.gov.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 2900-8080, 4040-0006, 4040-0010, and 4040-0013.)
Sec. 80.6 Additional factors for selecting applications.
(a) Applicant's performance on prior award. VA may consider the
applicant's noncompliance with requirements applicable to prior VA or
other agency awards as reflected in past written evaluation reports and
memoranda on performance and the completeness of required prior
submissions.
(b) Applicant's fiscal integrity. Applicants must meet and maintain
standards of fiscal integrity for participation in Federal grant
programs as reflected in 2 CFR 200.205.
(c) Priority preference. Priority preference will be given to
organizations that either provide multiple forms of services or are
located in a State with:
(1) A high rate of unemployment among Veterans;
(2) A high rate of usage of unemployment benefits for recently
separated members of the Armed Forces; or
(3) A labor force or economy that has been significantly impacted
by a covered public health emergency.
(d) Risk assessment evaluation. VA will conduct a formal
assessment, prior to award, of the applicant's financial capability,
adequacy of accounting system, and internal controls to assess the risk
posed by each applicant.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.7 Scoring and selection.
(a) Scoring. VA will only score complete applications received from
eligible applicants by the deadline established in the NOFO. The
applications must meet the minimum criteria set forth in the NOFO and
will be scored as specified in the NOFO, as set forth in Sec. 80.4.
(b) Selection of recipients. All complete applications will be
scored using the criteria in paragraph (a) of this section and ranked
in order of highest to lowest total score. NOFO announcements may also
clarify the selection criteria in paragraph (a) of this section. The
relative weight (point value) for each criterion will be specified in
the NOFO. VA will award VSTAGP grants on the primary basis of the
scores but will also consider additional factors listed in Sec. 80.6.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.8 Disposition of applications.
(a) Disposition of applications. Upon review of an application and
dependent on the availability of funds, VA will:
(1) Approve the application for funding, in whole or in part, for
such amount of funds, and subject to such conditions that VA deems
necessary or desirable;
(2) Determine that the application is of acceptable quality for
funding, in that it meets minimum criteria, but disapprove the
application for funding because it does not rank sufficiently high in
relation to other applications to qualify for an award based on the
level of funding available, or for another reason as provided in the
decision document; or
(3) Defer action on the application for such reasons as lack of
funds or a need for further review.
(b) Notification of disposition. VA will notify the applicant in
writing of the disposition of the application. A signed grant agreement
form, as defined in Sec. 80.10, will be issued to the applicant of an
approved application.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.9 Withdrawal of grant application.
Applicants may withdraw a VSTAGP application submitted through
Grants.gov by writing to the specified VA point of contact. An
applicant must provide a rationale for the withdrawal request as
specified in the NOFO.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.10 Grant agreement.
(a) VA will draft a VSTAGP grant agreement to be executed by VA and
the grantee.
(b) The VSTAGP grant agreement will provide that the grantee agrees
to, and will ensure that each subgrantee (if applicable) agrees to:
(1) Operate the project in accordance with this part and the terms
of the agreement.
(2) Abide by the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards under 2 CFR parts
25, 170, and 200 if applicable.
(3) Comply with such other terms and conditions, including
recordkeeping and reports for project monitoring and evaluation
purposes, as VA may establish for purposes of carrying out the VSTAGP
effectively and efficiently and as described in the NOFO; and
(4) Provide any necessary additional information requested by VA in
the manner and timeframe specified by VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.11 Payments under the grant.
(a) Payments. Grantees are to be paid in accordance with the
timeframes and manner set forth in the NOFO.
(b) Availability of grant funds. Federal financial assistance will
become available subsequent to the effective date of the grant as set
forth in the grant agreement. Recipients will not be reimbursed for
costs resulting from obligations incurred before the effective date of
the grant.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.12 Grantee reporting requirements.
(a) Quarterly reports. All grantees must submit to VA quarterly
reports, as required in the NOFO, within 30 days after the last day of
each quarter based on the Federal fiscal year--with the first report
due not later than 30 days after the last day of the quarter for which
a grant is paid under this part--which includes the following
information:
[[Page 41319]]
(1) Record of time and resources expended in outreach activities
and the methods used;
(2) The number of participants served, including demographics of
this population;
(3) Types of assistance provided;
(4) A full accounting of VSTAGP grant funds received from VA and
used or unused funds during the quarter; and
(5) Results of routine monitoring and any project variations.
(b) Final report. Per 2 CFR 200.344, all grantees must submit to
VA, not later than 120 days after the last day of the grant period (as
defined in the NOFO) for which a grant is awarded under this part, a
final report that meets the requirement set forth in the NOFO. The last
quarterly performance and financial report received will be recorded as
the final report. The financial report shall be noted as ``Final'' on
the SF-425 Federal Financial Report.
(c) Additional reports. VA may request additional reports to allow
VA to assess project accountability and effectiveness. In addition,
recipients are required to participate in a VA-led evaluation if
selected, which may be carried out by a third-party on behalf of VA.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 2900-0928 (Quarterly Performance Reports), 4040-0014, and
2900-0929 (Additional Reports).)
Sec. 80.13 Termination of grant; recovery of funds.
(a) Termination of grant. VA may terminate a grant agreement with
any VSTAGP grantee that does not comply with the terms of the VSTAGP
agreement.
(b) Recovery of funds. VA may recover from the grantee any funds
paid if the grantee violates the grant agreement or may recover any
funds that have not been used in accordance with a VSTAGP grant
agreement. If VA decides to recover funds, VA will issue the grantee a
notice of intent to recover VSTAGP grant funds. The grantee will then
have 30 days from the date of the notice to submit documentation
demonstrating why the VSTAGP grant funds should not be recovered. If
the VSTAGP grantee does not respond or if the grantee responds, but VA
determines the documentation is insufficient to establish compliance,
VA will make a final determination to recover the VSTAGP grant funds.
If VA determines that the grantee did not violate the grant agreement,
VA will make a final determination not to recover the grant funds.
(c) Prohibition of further payment of grant funds. When VA
determines that action will be taken to recover grant funds from a
grantee, the grantee will be prohibited from receiving any further
VSTAGP grant funds under this part until the grant funds are recovered
and the condition that led to the recovery of the grant funds is
resolved, unless the grant agreement has been terminated. If the grant
agreement has been terminated, no future payments would be issued upon
recovery.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.14 Compliance review requirements.
(a) Site visits. VA will conduct, as needed, site visits to grantee
locations to review grantee accomplishments and management control
systems.
(b) Inspections. VA will conduct, as needed, inspections of grantee
records to determine compliance with the provisions of this part. All
visits and evaluations will be performed with minimal disruption to the
grantee to the extent practicable.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.203)
Sec. 80.15 Financial management.
(a) Compliance. All recipients will comply with applicable
requirements of the Single Audit Act Amendments of 1996, as implemented
by 2 CFR part 200.
(b) Financial Management. All grantees must use a financial
management system that complies with 2 CFR part 200. Grantees must meet
the applicable requirements of the Office of Management and Budget's
regulations on Cost Principles at 2 CFR 200.400 through 200.475.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.400 through
200.475)
Sec. 80.16 Recordkeeping.
Grantees must ensure that records are maintained in accordance with
2 CFR 200.337. Grantees must produce such records at VA's request.
(Authority: Pub. L. 116-315, sec. 4304; 2 CFR 200.337)
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 2900-0930 (Recordkeeping).)
Sec. 80.17 Non-appealability of grant award decisions.
Grant award decisions are discretionary and are not subject to
appeal to any VA official or board.
[FR Doc. 2024-09862 Filed 5-10-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P