Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Technical Assistance Program for Fiscal Year 2024, 52012-52018 [2024-13691]
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52012
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 120 / Friday, June 21, 2024 / Notices
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Timothy Gilloon, Designated Federal
Officer, at 208–765–7223 or email at
timothy.gilloon@usda.gov; or Patrick
Lair, Resource Advisory Committee
Coordinator, at 208–765–7211 or email
at patrick.lair@usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
purpose of the meeting is to:
1. Hear from Title II project
proponents and discuss Title II project
proposals;
2. Make funding recommendations on
Title II projects;
3. Approve meeting minutes; and
4. Schedule the next meeting.
The agenda will include time for
individuals to make oral statements of
three minutes or less. To be scheduled
on the agenda, individuals wishing to
make an oral statement should make a
request in writing at least three days
prior to the meeting date. Written
comments may be submitted to the
Forest Service up to 14 days after the
meeting date listed under DATES.
Please contact the person listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT, by
or before the deadline, for all questions
related to the meeting. All comments,
including names and addresses when
provided, are placed in the record and
are available for public inspection and
copying. The public may inspect
comments received upon request.
Meeting Accommodations: The
meeting location is compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act, and the
USDA provides reasonable
accommodation to individuals with
disabilities where appropriate. If you are
a person requiring reasonable
accommodation, please make requests
in advance for sign language
interpretation, assistive listening
devices, or other reasonable
accommodation to the person listed
under the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section or contact USDA’s
TARGET Center at 202–720–2600 (voice
and TTY) or USDA through the Federal
Relay Service at 800–877–8339.
Additionally, program information may
be made available in languages other
than English.
USDA programs are prohibited from
discriminating based on race, color,
national origin, religion, sex, gender
identity (including gender expression),
sexual orientation, disability, age,
marital status, family/parental status,
income derived from a public assistance
program, political beliefs, or reprisal or
retaliation for prior civil rights activity,
in any program or activity conducted or
funded by USDA (not all bases apply to
all programs). Remedies and complaint
filing deadlines vary by program or
incident.
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Equal opportunity practices in
accordance with USDA’s policies will
be followed in all appointments to the
committee. To ensure that the
recommendations of the Committee
have taken into account the needs of the
diverse groups served by the
Department, membership shall include,
to the extent practicable, individuals
with demonstrated ability to represent
the many communities, identities, races,
ethnicities, backgrounds, abilities,
cultures, and beliefs of the American
people, including underserved
communities. USDA is an equal
opportunity provider, employer, and
lender.
Dated: June 14, 2024.
Cikena Reid,
USDA Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2024–13477 Filed 6–20–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
[DOCKET#: RUS–24–TELECOM–0019]
Notice of Funding Opportunity for the
Broadband Technical Assistance
Program for Fiscal Year 2024
Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Rural Utilities Service
(RUS or the Agency), a Rural
Development (RD) agency of the United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), announces the acceptance of
applications for the Broadband
Technical Assistance (BTA) Program for
fiscal year (FY) 2024. The BTA Program
provides competitive cooperative
agreement funding to eligible entities to
receive or deliver broadband technical
assistance and training that promotes
the expansion of broadband into rural
areas. Examples of broadband technical
assistance projects may include
conducting feasibility studies,
completing network designs, and
developing broadband financial
assistance applications. This
announcement lists the information
needed to submit an application.
DATES: Applications must be submitted
through www.grants.gov/ and received
no later than August 20, 2024 to be
eligible for funding under this funding
opportunity. Late or incomplete
applications will not be eligible for
funding.
SUMMARY:
All applications must be
submitted electronically at
www.grants.gov.
ADDRESSES:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laurel Leverrier, Assistant
Administrator, Telecommunications
Program, Rural Utilities Service, United
States Department of Agriculture,
telephone: (202) 720–9556, email:
Laurel.Leverrier@usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Federal Awarding Agency Name:
USDA, RD, Rural Utilities Service.
Funding Opportunity Title:
Broadband Technical Assistance.
Announcement Type: Notice of
Funding Opportunity.
Funding Opportunity Number: RUS–
BTA–2024.
Assistance Listing Number: 10.752.
Dates: Applications must be
submitted through www.grants.gov/ and
received no later than August 20, 2024
to be eligible for funding under this
opportunity. Late or incomplete
applications will not be eligible for
funding under this opportunity.
Rural Development Key Priorities: The
Agency encourages applicants to
consider projects that will advance the
following key priorities (more details
available at rd.usda.gov/priority-points):
• Creating More and Better Market
Opportunities; Assisting rural
communities recover economically
through more and better market
opportunities and through improved
infrastructure.
• Advancing Racial Justice, PlaceBased Equity, and Opportunity;
Ensuring all rural residents have
equitable access to RD programs and
benefits from RD funded projects; and
• Addressing Climate Change and
Environmental Justice; Reducing
climate pollution and increasing
resilience to the impacts of climate
change through economic support to
rural communities.
Rural Partners Network (RPN): In
addition, the Agency encourages
applicants to work with the RPN. The
RPN is an all-of-government program
that demonstrates to rural America that
the federal government can work
differently to serve their unique needs
in a way that is community-centered
and locally-driven. The RPN is a
recognition by the Biden Administration
that it is time to do more for rural
communities. Applicants to this funding
opportunity are encouraged to include
RPN Community Networks in their
proposals by identifying Community
Networks as collaborative partners or
recipients of service. The RPN is
supported by over 20 federal agencies
and regional commissions, so including
RPN Community Networks can help
facilitate coordination with other federal
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agencies that fund broadband technical
assistance (i.e., NTIA, ARC, EDA) to
ensure complimentary efforts and
reduce the chance of duplicative
awards. Please visit www.rural.gov/
community-networks for more
information on locations of the 36 RPN
Community Networks spanning ten
states and Puerto Rico. To access
specific contact information for
prospective network participants to
determine fit, please contact
RuralPartnersNetwork@usda.gov.
A. Program Description
1. Purpose of the Program
The BTA Program provides financial
assistance to eligible entities to receive
or deliver broadband technical
assistance and training. Program funds
must be used to support broadband
technical assistance activities that
promote the expansion of broadband
into rural areas. Broadband technical
assistance activities include, but are not
limited to, project planning and
community engagement, financial
sustainability, environmental
compliance, construction and
engineering planning, accessing federal
resources, and data collection and
reporting.
All applicants should carefully review
and prepare their applications according
to instructions in the FY 2024 BTA
Application Guide (Application Guide)
and program resources available on the
program website at: www.rd.usda.gov/
programs-services/telecommunicationsprograms/broadband-technicalassistance-program. Expenses incurred
prior to submission of an application
will be at the applicant’s own risk.
2. Statutory and Regulatory Authority
The Rural eConnectivity Program is
authorized under 7 U.S.C. 901 et seq.,
and Public Law 115–141, Section 779
(2018). This BTA NOFO will use
technical assistance funds appropriated
under the Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act (IIJA) (Pub. L. 117–58).
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3. Definitions
The terms and conditions provided in
this NOFO are applicable to and for the
purposes of this NOFO only. Unless
otherwise provided in the award
documents, all financial terms not
defined herein shall have the meaning
as defined by Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles.
Administrator means the
Administrator of RUS, or the
Administrator’s designee.
Applicant means an entity requesting
funding under this NOFO.
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Application means the Applicant’s
request for federal funding, which may
be approved in whole or in part by RUS.
Award documents mean, as
applicable, all associated award
agreements.
Award means a cooperative agreement
entered into under this NOFO.
Awardee means an eligible entity that
has applied and been awarded federal
assistance under this part.
Broadband technical assistance refers
to activities that support broadband
expansion into eligible rural areas and
predevelopment planning activities,
which may include, but are not limited
to, project planning and community
engagement, financial sustainability,
environmental compliance, construction
planning and engineering, accessing
federal resources, and data collection
and reporting.
Cooperative agreement is the
instrument used to fund the support of
RD’s goals of increasing rural economic
growth. In a cooperative agreement,
federal employees participate more
closely in project activities, often
working side-by-side with the
cooperator.
Distressed communities are identified
as communities whose economic wellbeing ranks in the most distressed tier
of the Distressed Communities Index.
The most distressed tier of the index are
those communities with a score over 80.
A GIS layer identifying distressed
communities can be found at
www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/
telecommunications-programs/
broadband-technical-assistanceprogram.
Indirect costs are costs that are not
readily identified with a particular
grant, contract, project function or
activity, but are necessary for the
general operation of the organization
and the conduct of activities it performs.
Rural area means any area, as
confirmed by the most recent decennial
Census of the U.S., which is not located
within a city, town, or incorporated area
that has a population of greater than
20,000 inhabitants; or an urbanized area
contiguous and adjacent to a city or
town that has a population of greater
than 50,000 inhabitants; and which
excludes certain populations pursuant
to 7 U.S.C. 1991(a)(13)(H) and (I). For
purposes of the definition of rural area,
an urbanized area means a densely
populated territory as defined in the
most recent decennial Census.
Socially Vulnerable Communities
means rural communities with a Social
Vulnerability Index (SVI) with a score of
0.75 or higher are eligible. For the
purposes of this NOFO, Puerto Rico,
Guam, America Samoa, the Northern
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Mariana Islands, Palau, the Marshall
Islands, the Federated States of
Micronesia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and
Hawaiian Census Tribal areas are
considered Socially Vulnerable
Communities. A GIS layer identifying
socially vulnerable communities can be
found at https://www.rd.usda.gov/
programs-services/telecommunicationsprograms/broadband-technicalassistance-program.
Tribe means the term as defined in the
Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List
Act of 1994 (Pub. L. 103–454; 108 Stat.
4791, 4792). An American Indian or
Alaska Native Tribe, band, nation,
pueblo, village, or community that the
Secretary of the Interior acknowledges
to exist as an Indian Tribe under the
Federally Recognized Tribe List Act of
1994 (25 U.S.C. 5131).
Tribal entity includes all entities
falling under the eligible legal
structures, including but not limited to:
tribal owned corporations, tribal
enterprises, subsidiaries of triballyowned corporations and enterprises,
tribal authorities, tribal utilities,
intertribal non-profits and associations,
Alaska Native Corporations and Alaska
Native entities within the State of
Alaska recognized by and eligible to
receive services from the U.S.
Department of the Interior’s Bureau of
Indian Affairs, Native Hawaiian
organizations including Homestead
Associations, State recognized tribes/
nonprofits, and individually-owned
Native American entities.
Tribal Land means any area identified
by the U.S. Department of Interior as
Tribal Land. A GIS layer of most Tribal
Lands can be found on the RUS
mapping tool located at:
www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/
telecommunications-programs/
broadband-technical-assistanceprogram.
4. Application of Awards
Applications will be reviewed for
eligibility and completeness based on
Sections C and D of this NOFO.
Applications determined to be eligible
and complete will be further evaluated
based on criteria outlined in Section E.
All applications will be competitively
scored and ranked. Notifications will be
sent to Applicants‘ in accordance with
Section F of this NOFO.
B. Federal Award Information
Type of Award: Cooperative
Agreement.
Fiscal Year Funds: FY 2024.
Available Funds: The Agency
estimates that approximately $25
million is available for funding under
this NOFO. RUS may, at its discretion,
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increase the total level of funding
available from any available funding
source provided the awards meet the
requirements of the statute which made
the funding available to the Agency.
Award Amounts: The minimum and
maximum award amounts vary by
funding category. The Agency reserves
the right to make the applicant an offer
that varies in amount or scope from the
applicant’s original request.
Funding Categories: Applicant must
choose one of the following funding
categories to be considered for funding:
• Technical Assistance Providers.
The Agency estimates that up to $15
million is available. The minimum
award amount is $100,000 and the
maximum award amount is $1,000,000.
Entities submitting an application under
this funding category must propose to
deliver broadband technical assistance
that will benefit rural communities.
• Technical Assistance Recipients.
The Agency estimates that up to $10
million is available. The minimum
award amount is $50,000 and the
maximum award amount is $500,000.
Entities submitting an application under
this funding category must be
beneficiaries of broadband technical
assistance.
Anticipated Award Date: Awards are
anticipated to be made by December 31,
2024.
Period of Performance: Two-year
period, beginning the date funds are
released.
Renewal or Supplemental Awards:
Not Applicable.
Type of Assistance Instrument:
Cooperative Agreement. RD is
authorized to administer cooperative
agreement awards in accordance with 7.
U.S.C. 2204b(b)(4) for BTA.
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C. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Only entities legally organized as one
of the following are eligible for financial
assistance:
(a) Federally recognized Tribes and
Tribal entities;
(b) States or local governments,
including any agency, subdivision,
instrumentality, or political subdivision
thereof;
(c) A territory or possession of the
U.S.;
(d) An institution of higher education
(including 1862 Land-Grant Institutions,
1890 Land-Grant Institutions, 1994
Land-Grant Institutions, HispanicServing Institutions, and Historically
Black Colleges and Universities);
(e) Nonprofit organizations with
501(c)(3) IRS status;
(f) Cooperatives or mutual
organizations;
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(g) Corporations; or
(h) Limited Liability Companies or
Limited Liability Partnerships.
2. Project Eligibility
(a) To be eligible for funding
assistance, the proposed project must
promote the expansion of broadband
services into eligible rural areas.
(b) Award funds may be used to assist
eligible entities in identifying and
planning for the following purposes to
deliver broadband services to rural
areas:
(i) Identify resources to finance
broadband facilities from public and
private sources;
(ii) Prepare feasibility studies,
financial forecasts, market surveys,
environmental studies, and technical
design information to support
broadband services;
(iii) Prepare reports and surveys
necessary to support the need for
broadband services, the price range and
to request financial assistance;
(iv) Analyze and improve operations
related to the management of broadband
facilities (i.e., implement automation,
adopt new software, conduct training,
etc.) and to the efficiency of the entity.
(c) The proposed project must include
a component that allows for active
participation and substantial
involvement by RD in the applicant’s
project proposal. Examples of
measurable substantial involvement
include, but are not limited to the
following:
(i) Joint convenings of community
members, partners, and stakeholders;
(ii) Joint delivery of training for RD
programs; and
(iii) The development of training
sessions and outreach materials;
It is the intent of the proposed project
to engage RD staff in broadband
technical assistance activities, and it is
the responsibility of the applicant to
identify specific tasks where RD staff
can provide measurable, substantial
involvement in the project. If such tasks
are not identified, the application will
not be eligible for funding.
(d) A certification from the
appropriate Tribal official is required if
a project is being proposed by a nontribal applicant over or on Tribal Lands.
The appropriate Tribal official is the
Tribal Council of the Tribal Government
with jurisdiction over the Tribal Lands
at issue. Any non-tribal applicant that
fails to provide a certification to
administer a project on Tribal Lands
will not be considered for funding.
3. Cost Sharing or Matching
There are no cost sharing or matching
requirements associated with this
funding opportunity.
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D. Application and Submission
Information
1. Address To Request Application
Package
Application and supporting materials
are available at Grants.gov. Applications
must contain all required information.
To apply electronically, applicants must
follow the instructions for this funding
announcement at Grants.gov.
2. Content and Form of Application
Submission
(a) A fully completed application is
required to be considered eligible for
funding. For an application to be
considered complete, the applicant
must complete and submit all forms,
information, and supporting
documentation described below.
(i) Written narrative proposal. The
written proposal should be assembled
into one or more pdf file(s) and should
conform to the order in which the
evaluation criteria are presented in
Section E. The completed pdf file(s)
should be uploaded into Grants.gov as
an attachment to the application. The
maximum limit for the written narrative
section is 25 pages. Information
exceeding 25 pages for the written
narrative may not be considered for
evaluation by the scoring panel. The
written narrative proposal must clearly
identify the funding category chosen.
(ii) Standard Form (SF) 424,
‘‘Application for Federal Assistance.’’
(iii) SF 424B, ‘‘Assurances—NonConstruction Programs.’’
(iv) The Agency reserves the right to
contact applicants to seek clarification
on submitted materials or request
additional information.
(b) The Application Guide provides
specific, detailed instructions for each
item of a complete application. The
Agency emphasizes the importance of
including every item and strongly
encourages applicants to follow the
instructions carefully, using the
examples and illustrations in the
Application Guide.
3. System for Award Management and
Unique Entity Identifier
(a) At the time of application, each
applicant must have an active
registration in the System for Award
Management (SAM) before submitting
its application in accordance with 2
CFR part 25 (www.ecfr.gov/current/title2/subtitle-A/chapter-I/part-25). In order
to register in SAM, entities will be
required to obtain a Unique Entity
Identifier (UEI). Instructions for
obtaining the UEI are available at
sam.gov/content/entity-registration.
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(b) Each applicant must maintain an
active SAM registration, with current,
accurate and complete information, at
all times during which it has an active
Federal award or an application under
consideration by a Federal awarding
agency.
(c) Each applicant must ensure they
complete the Financial Assistance
General Representations and
Certifications in SAM.
(d) Applicants must provide a valid
UEI in its application, unless
determined exempt under 2 CFR 25.110.
(e) The Agency will not make an
award until the applicant has complied
with all SAM requirements including
providing the UEI. If an applicant has
not fully complied with the
requirements by the time the Agency is
ready to make an award, the Agency
may determine that the applicant is not
qualified to receive a Federal award and
use that determination as a basis for
making a Federal award to another
applicant.
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4. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted
through Grants.gov and received no
later than August 20, 2024 to be eligible
for funding under this opportunity. Late
or incomplete applications will not be
eligible for funding.
Grants.gov requires some
credentialing and online authentication
procedures that may take several
business days to complete. Therefore,
the applicant should complete the
registration, credentialing, and
authorization procedures at Grants.gov
in order to submit an application.
Instructions on all required passwords,
credentialing, and software are available
on Grants.gov. If system errors or
technical difficulties occur, use the
customer support resources available at
the Grants.gov website.
The Agency will not consider new
scoring or eligibility information that is
submitted after the application
deadline. RUS reserves the right to ask
applicants for clarifying information
and additional verification of assertions
in the application.
5. Intergovernmental Review
This program is not subject to
Executive Order 12372,
‘‘Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs.’’
6. Funding Restrictions
In addition to costs identified as
unallowable by 2 CFR part 200, award
funds cannot be used to pay for the
following types of expenses (this is not
a comprehensive list of unallowable
costs, see 2 CFR part 200).
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(a) Construction (in any form).
(b) Activities serving communities in
a non-rural area or those with existing
broadband access.
(c) Duplicative project costs funded
by another federal award.
(d) Indirect Costs.
7. Other Submission Requirements
Applications must be submitted
electronically using Grants.gov. No
other form of application will be
accepted. RUS will not accept
applications through mail or courier
delivery, in-person delivery, email, or
fax. RUS will approve no more than one
application per applicant. If an
applicant submits more than one
application for different projects, then
the Agency will only consider the
application with the highest score. If an
applicant submits more than one
application for the same project, then
the Agency will only consider the latest
submission.
E. Application Review Information
1. Evaluation Criteria
The Agency will review each eligible,
complete application based on the
evaluation criteria identified in this
section. The written narrative proposal
addressed in Section D of this NOFO
must address the criteria in the
following order:
(a) Project Work Plan (up to 30
points). The applicant can receive up to
30 points for providing a detailed
project work plan that demonstrates the
soundness of the proposed broadband
technical assistance approach. The
scoring criterion will be based on the
following:
(i) Work Plan Approach. The work
plan approach should identify and
detail project objectives, rural
communities to be served, project key
goals, partnerships developed or to be
developed, and anticipated deliverables
of the project. Applicants must list all
rural communities that will benefit from
the broadband technical assistance
project and describe characteristics of
the communities being served including
information such as population size,
population density, poverty rate, and
other economic indicators.
Communities may be defined at various
geographic scales, including but not
limited to, census blocks, towns, cities,
and counties.
(ii) Work Plan Implementation.
Applicants should include details on
how the technical assistance will be
provided and how it will lead to
expanded broadband service in rural
areas. Applicants should detail major
task(s), involvement of key personnel,
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time period of task(s), substantial
involvement of RD staff, and expected
deliverables.
(iii) Budget and Work Plan Alignment.
A detailed budget and budget
justification must be provided. The
budget justification should align with
the tasks detailed in the workplan.
Discuss how the budget specifically
supports the proposed activities
discussed in the project key tasks (as
described above). The format of the
budget’s narrative can be in a chart,
spreadsheet, table, etc., but it should be
readable on letter-size, printable pages.
The information needs to be presented
in such a way that the reviewers can
readily understand what expenses are
incurred to support the project.
Statement(s) of work for any
subcontractors and consultants must be
included as part of the application.
(b) Organizational capacity (up to 20
points). All applicants must
demonstrate the capacity to deliver and/
or support broadband technical
assistance activities. The applicant can
receive up to 20 points based on
organizational capacity and
qualifications. The maximum 20 points
for this criterion will be based on the
following:
(i) The applicant’s proposal must
demonstrate that the applicant has
identified appropriate key personnel,
both in terms of number of personnel
and qualifications of personnel and
should provide specific detail of
qualifications of key personnel relating
to broadband technical assistance.
Capacity of personnel to access data for
needs assessments and access to
planners and other technical experts
will be evaluated.
(ii) Applicants that are technical
assistance providers must specify the
number of years of providing broadband
technical assistance, detail experience
in providing broadband technical
assistance to rural communities,
identify types of rural communities
previously served, and detail experience
in performance evaluation.
(c) Rurality (up to 20 points). Points
will be awarded for serving the least
dense rural areas as measured by the
population of the communities served.
(d) Economic Need (up to 20 points).
Economic need is based on the county
poverty percentage of the communities
proposed to be served in the
application. The percentages must be
determined by utilizing the U.S. Census
Small Area Income and Poverty
Estimates (SAIPE) Program.
Communities located in geographic
areas, for which no SAIPE data exist,
will be determined to have an average
SAIPE poverty percentage of 30 percent.
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SAIPE data can be found on the program
website.
(e) Creating More and Better Markets
(10 points). Projects located in or
serving a rural community whose
economic well-being ranks in the most
distressed tier of the Distressed
Communities Index are eligible for 10
points. The most distressed tier of the
index are those communities with a
score over 80. A list of Distressed
Communities can be found at:
www.rd.usda.gov/media/file/download/
fy24distressedcommunityindexlist-.xlsx.
Points will be awarded for projects
serving at least one distressed
community.
(f) Projects advancing Racial Justice,
Place-Based Equity, and Opportunity
(10 points). Projects that meet one of the
criteria below will receive 10 points.
(i) Projects proposing to serve at least
one rural community with a Social
Vulnerability Index (SVI) with a score of
0.75 or higher are eligible. For the
purposes of this NOFO, Puerto Rico,
Guam, America Samoa, the Northern
Mariana Islands, Palau, the Marshall
Islands, the Federated States of
Micronesia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and
Hawaiian Census Tribal areas are
considered Socially Vulnerable
Communities. A GIS layer identifying
the Socially Vulnerable Communities
can be found using the mapping tool
available at: www.rd.usda.gov/
programs-services/telecommunicationsprograms/broadband-technicalassistance-program.
(ii) Projects that promote the
expansion of broadband service on
Tribal Lands. Tribal Lands will be
identified in GIS layers included in the
BTA mapping tool available at:
www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/
telecommunications-programs/
broadband-technical-assistanceprogram.
(iii) Projects proposed by a federally
recognized Tribe, including Tribal
instrumentalities and entities that are
wholly owned by Tribes.
(iv) Projects from or benefiting an
RPN community network. A GIS layer
identifying RPN community networks
can be found using the mapping tool
available at: www.rd.usda.gov/
programs-services/telecommunicationsprograms/broadband-technicalassistance-program.
(g) Performance measures (up to 10
points). The applicant can receive up to
10 points based on the proposed
performance measures to evaluate the
progress and impact of the proposed
project.
Performance measures should be
based on the applicant’s proposal and
must include a description for how the
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results of the technical assistance will
be measured and the benchmarks to be
used for measuring effectiveness.
Indicators to be used should be specific
and be quantifiable.
2. Review and Selection Process
Applications are ranked by the final
score. RUS selects applications based on
those rankings, subject to the
availability of funds. RUS will approve
no more than one application per
applicant. If an applicant submits more
than one application for different
projects, then the Agency will only
consider the application with the
highest score. If an applicant submits
more than one application for the same
project, then the Agency will only
consider the latest submission. The
Agency has the authority to limit the
number of applications selected in any
one state or for any one project during
a fiscal year. An application receiving
fewer points can be selected over a
higher scoring application if there are
insufficient funds available to cover the
costs of the higher scoring application.
The Agency reserves the right to offer
the applicant less than the amount of
funding requested.
F. Federal Award Administration
Information
1. Federal Award Notices
RUS notifies applicants whose
projects are selected for awards by
mailing or emailing a copy of an award
letter. The receipt of an award letter
does not authorize the applicant to
commence performance under the
award. The award letter will include an
agreement that contains all the terms
and conditions for the cooperative
agreement. An applicant must execute
and return the agreement, accompanied
by any additional items required by the
agreement, within the number of days
specified in the selection notice letter.
2. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
The items listed in this NOFO, the
Application Guide, and program
resources implement the appropriate
administrative and national policy
requirements, which include but are not
limited to:
(a) Using Form SF 270, ‘‘Request for
Advance or Reimbursement,’’ to request
reimbursements (along with the
submission of receipts for expenditures
and any other documentation to support
the request for reimbursement).
(b) Submitting an annual project
performance activity report, no later
than January 31st of the year following
the year in which all or any portion of
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Sfmt 4703
the award is first advanced and
continuing in subsequent years until
completion of the project.
(c) Ensuring that records are
maintained to document all activities
and expenditures utilizing program
funds and matching funds (receipts for
expenditures are to be included in this
documentation).
(d) Providing a final project
performance report, no later than one
hundred twenty (120) days after the
expiration date, termination of the
award, the project completion, or the
final disbursement of the award by the
awardee, whichever event occurs last.
(e) Complying with policies,
guidance, and requirements as
described in the following applicable
Code of Federal Regulations, and any
successor regulations:
(i) 2 CFR parts 200 and 400 (Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards).
(ii) 2 CFR parts 180 and 417
(Government-wide Nonprocurement
Debarment and Suspension).
(iii) Complying with Executive Order
13166, ‘‘Improving Access to Services
for Persons with Limited English
Proficiency.’’ For information on limited
English proficiency and agency-specific
guidance, go to www.LEP.gov.
(iv) Accountability and Compliance
with Civil Rights Laws. The regulation
found at 7 CFR part 1901 subpart E
(www.ecfr.gov/current/title-7/subtitle-B/
chapter-XVIII/subchapter-H/part-1901/
subpart-E) contains policies and
procedures for implementing the
regulations of the Department of
Agriculture issued pursuant to title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VIII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, title IX,
section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, Executive Order 13166, Executive
Order 11246, and the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act of 1974, as they relate
to RD. Nothing herein shall be
interpreted to prohibit preference to
American Indians on Indian
Reservations.
The policies contained in this subpart
apply to recipients. As recipients of
federal financial assistance, awardees
are required to comply with the
applicable federal, state and local laws.
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
and section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act prohibits discrimination by
recipients of federal financial assistance.
Recipients are required to adhere to
specific outreach activities. These
outreach activities include contacting
community organizations and leaders
that include minority leaders;
advertising in local newspapers and
other media throughout the entire
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service area; and including the
nondiscrimination slogan, ‘‘This is an
Equal Opportunity Program.’’
Discrimination is prohibited by
Federal Law, in methods that may
include, but not be limited to,
advertisements, public broadcasts, and
printed materials, such as brochures and
pamphlets.
By completing the Financial
Assistance Representations and
Certifications in SAM, recipients affirm
that they will operate the program free
from discrimination. The recipient will
maintain the race and ethnic data on the
board members and beneficiaries of the
program. The recipient will provide
alternative forms of communication to
persons with limited English
proficiency. The Agency will conduct
Civil Rights Compliance Reviews on
recipients to identify the collection of
racial and ethnic data on program
beneficiaries. In addition, the
compliance review will ensure that
equal access to the program benefits and
activities are provided for persons with
disabilities and language barriers.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
3. Reporting
(a) Performance Reporting. All
recipients of financial assistance must
provide annual performance activity
reports to RUS until the project is
complete and the funds are expended. A
final performance report is also
required; the final report may serve as
the last annual report. The final report
must include an evaluation of the
success of the project in meeting the
program objectives. Success of the
project can be demonstrated by
identifying the progress achieved in
securing financing to bring broadband
service to the eligible rural area. Project
performance reports should include, but
are not limited to, the following:
(i) A comparison of actual
accomplishments to the objectives
established for that period;
(ii) A description of any problems,
delays, or adverse conditions which
have occurred, or are anticipated, and
which may affect the attainment of
overall project objectives, prevent the
meeting of time schedules or objectives,
or preclude the attainment of particular
project work elements during
established time periods. This
disclosure shall be accompanied by a
statement of the action taken or planned
to resolve the situation; and
(iii) Objectives and timetable
established for the next reporting
period.
(iv) Activities demonstrating the
coordination with the State Broadband
Office.
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(b) Recipient and sub-recipient
reporting. The applicant must have the
necessary processes and systems in
place to comply with the reporting
requirements for first-tier sub-awards
and executive compensation under the
Federal Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act of 2006
(Transparency Act) in the event the
applicant receives funding, unless such
applicant is exempt from such reporting
requirements pursuant to 2 CFR
170.110(b). The reporting requirements
under the Transparency Act are found at
2 CFR part 170 (www.ecfr.gov/current/
title-2/subtitle-A/chapter-I/part-170).
(c) Accounting Requirements: Agency
accounting requirements include
compliance with Accounting Principles
Generally Accepted in the United
States, (GAAP), as well as compliance
with the requirements of the applicable
regulations: 2 CFR part 200 subpart E,
Cost Principles, and 48 CFR part 31
Federal Acquisition Regulations
Contract Cost Principles, and when
applicable, 48 CFR part 30 Cost
Accounting Standards. Awardees
subject to non-GAAP or other
accounting requirements should provide
reconciling schedules with annual
reporting. The Administrator may
modify the accounting requirements if it
is deemed necessary.
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
1. Website: www.rd.usda.gov/
programs-services/telecommunicationsprograms/broadband-technicalassistance-program. The BTA website
maintains up-to-date resources and
contact information for the Program.
2. For inquiries regarding eligibility
concerns, please contact program staff at
www.usda.gov/reconnect/contact-us.
Other inquiries, please contact
Christopher Proctor, Technical
Assistance Branch Chief,
Telecommunications Program, Rural
Utilities Service, U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), email
Christopher.Proctor@usda.gov,
telephone: (202) 619–1739.
H. Other Information
1. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the information
collection requirements associated with
the program, as covered in this notice,
have been approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
OMB Control Number 0572–0160.
2. National Environmental Policy Act
All recipients under this notice are
subject to the requirements of 7 CFR
part 1970.
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52017
However, awards for technical
assistance and training under this notice
are classified as a Categorical Exclusion
according to 7 CFR 1970.53(b), and
usually do not require any additional
documentation. RUS will review each
application to determine its compliance
with 7 CFR part 1970. The applicant
may be asked to provide additional
information or documentation to assist
RUS with this determination.
3. USDA Non-Discrimination Statement
In accordance with Federal civil
rights laws and USDA civil rights
regulations and policies, the USDA, its
Mission Areas, agencies, staff offices,
employees, and institutions
participating in or administering USDA
programs are prohibited from
discriminating based on race, color,
national origin, religion, sex, gender
identity (including gender expression),
sexual orientation, disability, age,
marital status, family/parental status,
income derived from a public assistance
program, political beliefs, or reprisal or
retaliation for prior civil rights activity,
in any program or activity conducted or
funded by USDA (not all bases apply to
all programs). Remedies and complaint
filing deadlines vary by program or
incident.
Program information may be made
available in languages other than
English. Persons with disabilities who
require alternative means of
communication to obtain program
information (e.g., Braille, large print,
audiotape, American Sign Language)
should contact the responsible Mission
Area, agency, or staff office; or the 711
Relay Service.
To file a program discrimination
complaint, a complainant should
complete a Form AD–3027, USDA
Program Discrimination Complaint
Form, which can be obtained online at
www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/
documents/ad-3027.pdf, from any
USDA office, by calling (866) 632–9992,
or by writing a letter addressed to
USDA. The letter must contain the
complainant’s name, address, telephone
number, and a written description of the
alleged discriminatory action in
sufficient detail to inform the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights (ASCR) about
the nature and date of an alleged civil
rights violation. The completed AD–
3027 form or letter must be submitted to
USDA by:
(a) Mail: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20250–9410; or
(b) Fax: (833) 256–1665 or (202) 690–
7442; or
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 120 / Friday, June 21, 2024 / Notices
(c) Email: program.intake@usda.gov.
4. Equal Opportunity for Religious
Organizations
(a) Faith-based organizations may
apply for this award on the same basis
as any other organization, as set forth at,
and subject to the protections and
requirements of, this part and any
applicable constitutional and statutory
requirements, including 42 U.S.C.
2000bb et seq. USDA will not, in the
selection of recipients, discriminate for
or against an organization on the basis
of the organization’s religious character,
motives, or affiliation, or lack thereof, or
on the basis of conduct that would not
be considered grounds to favor or
disfavor a similarly situated secular
organization.
(b) A faith-based organization that
participates in this program will retain
its independence from the Government
and may continue to carry out its
mission consistent with religious
freedom and conscience protections in
Federal law. Religious accommodations
may also be sought under many of these
religious freedom and conscience
protection laws.
(c) A faith-based organization may not
use direct Federal financial assistance
from USDA to support or engage in any
explicitly religious activities except
when consistent with the Establishment
Clause of the First Amendment and any
other applicable requirements. An
organization receiving Federal financial
assistance also may not, in providing
services funded by USDA, or in their
outreach activities related to such
services, discriminate against a program
beneficiary or prospective program
beneficiary on the basis of religion, a
religious belief, a refusal to hold a
religious belief, or a refusal to attend or
participate in a religious practice.
Andrew Berke,
Administrator, Rural Utilities Service, USDA
Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 2024–13691 Filed 6–20–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–15–P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Notice of Public Briefing of the Utah
Advisory Committee to the U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights
U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights.
ACTION: Notice of public briefing.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given,
pursuant to the provisions of the rules
and regulations of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights (Commission) and the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, that
SUMMARY:
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17:46 Jun 20, 2024
Jkt 262001
the Utah Advisory Committee
(Committee) to the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights will hold a virtual, public
briefing via Zoom at 2:00 p.m. MT on
Monday, July 8, 2024. The purpose of
the briefing is to collect testimony on
the topic, The Civil Rights Implications
of Disparate Outcomes in Utah’s K–12
Education System.
DATES: Monday, July 8, 2024, from 2:00
p.m.–4:00 p.m. Mountain Time.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held
via Zoom Webinar.
Registration Link (Audio/Visual):
https://www.zoomgov.com/webinar/
register/WN_CWEJ3euhQAGvZo
RHxdQH-Q
Join by Phone (Audio Only): (833) 435–
1820 USA Toll-Free; Meeting ID: 161
817 7129
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Barreras, Designated Federal
Officer, at dbarreras@usccr.gov or (202)
656–8937.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
committee meeting is available to the
public through the registration link
above. Any interested member of the
public may listen to the meeting. An
open comment period will be provided
to allow members of the public to make
a statement as time allows. Per the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, public
minutes of the meeting will include a
list of persons who are present at the
meeting. If joining via phone, callers can
expect to incur regular charges for calls
they initiate over wireless lines,
according to their wireless plan. The
Commission will not refund any
incurred charges. Callers will incur no
charge for calls they initiate over landline connections to the toll-free
telephone number. Closed captioning
will be available for individuals who are
deaf, hard of hearing, or who have
certain cognitive or learning
impairments. To request additional
accommodations, please email Liliana
Schiller, Support Services Specialist, at
lschiller@usccr.gov at least 10 business
days prior to the meeting.
Members of the public are entitled to
submit written comments; the
comments must be received in the
regional office within 30 days following
the meeting. Written comments may be
emailed to David Barreras at dbarreras@
usccr.gov. Persons who desire
additional information may contact the
Regional Programs Coordination Unit at
(312) 353–8311.
Records generated from this meeting
may be inspected and reproduced at the
Regional Programs Coordination Unit
Office, as they become available, both
before and after the meeting. Records of
the meetings will be available via
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www.facadatabase.gov under the
Commission on Civil Rights, Utah
Advisory Committee link. Persons
interested in the work of this Committee
are directed to the Commission’s
website, https://www.usccr.gov, or may
contact the Regional Programs
Coordination Unit at lschiller@
usccr.gov.
Agenda
I. Welcome & Roll Call
II. Panelist Presentations & Committee
Q&A
III. Public Comment
IV. Closing Remarks
V. Committee Busineess
VI. Adjournment
Dated: June 14, 2024.
David Mussatt,
Supervisory Chief, Regional Programs Unit.
[FR Doc. 2024–13529 Filed 6–20–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
Notice of Public Briefing of the North
Carolina Advisory Committee to the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights.
ACTION: Notice of public briefing.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given,
pursuant to the provisions of the rules
and regulations of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights (Commission) and the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, that
the North Carolina Advisory Committee
(Committee) to the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights will hold a virtual, public
briefing via Zoom at 1:00 p.m. ET on
Friday, August 23, 2024. The purpose of
this briefing is to hear testimony from
impacted individuals on the topic, Civil
Rights and the Child Welfare System in
North Carolina.
DATES: Friday, August 23, 2024, from
1:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. Eastern Time.
ADDRESSES: The briefing will be held via
Zoom Webinar.
Registration Link (Audio/Visual):
https://www.zoomgov.com/webinar/
register/WN_
GcFUteCBQQGE5KMnCrNrjA
Join by Phone (Audio Only): (833) 435–
1820 USA Toll-Free; Meeting ID: 160
374 0449
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Victoria Moreno, Designated Federal
Officer, at vmoreno@usccr.gov or (434)
515–0204.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
committee meeting is available to the
public through the registration link
above. Any interested member of the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\21JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 120 (Friday, June 21, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 52012-52018]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-13691]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
[DOCKET#: RUS-24-TELECOM-0019]
Notice of Funding Opportunity for the Broadband Technical
Assistance Program for Fiscal Year 2024
AGENCY: Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Rural Utilities Service (RUS or the Agency), a Rural
Development (RD) agency of the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), announces the acceptance of applications for the Broadband
Technical Assistance (BTA) Program for fiscal year (FY) 2024. The BTA
Program provides competitive cooperative agreement funding to eligible
entities to receive or deliver broadband technical assistance and
training that promotes the expansion of broadband into rural areas.
Examples of broadband technical assistance projects may include
conducting feasibility studies, completing network designs, and
developing broadband financial assistance applications. This
announcement lists the information needed to submit an application.
DATES: Applications must be submitted through www.grants.gov/ and
received no later than August 20, 2024 to be eligible for funding under
this funding opportunity. Late or incomplete applications will not be
eligible for funding.
ADDRESSES: All applications must be submitted electronically at
www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laurel Leverrier, Assistant
Administrator, Telecommunications Program, Rural Utilities Service,
United States Department of Agriculture, telephone: (202) 720-9556,
email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Federal Awarding Agency Name: USDA, RD, Rural Utilities Service.
Funding Opportunity Title: Broadband Technical Assistance.
Announcement Type: Notice of Funding Opportunity.
Funding Opportunity Number: RUS-BTA-2024.
Assistance Listing Number: 10.752.
Dates: Applications must be submitted through www.grants.gov/ and
received no later than August 20, 2024 to be eligible for funding under
this opportunity. Late or incomplete applications will not be eligible
for funding under this opportunity.
Rural Development Key Priorities: The Agency encourages applicants
to consider projects that will advance the following key priorities
(more details available at rd.usda.gov/priority-points):
Creating More and Better Market Opportunities; Assisting
rural communities recover economically through more and better market
opportunities and through improved infrastructure.
Advancing Racial Justice, Place-Based Equity, and
Opportunity; Ensuring all rural residents have equitable access to RD
programs and benefits from RD funded projects; and
Addressing Climate Change and Environmental Justice;
Reducing climate pollution and increasing resilience to the impacts of
climate change through economic support to rural communities.
Rural Partners Network (RPN): In addition, the Agency encourages
applicants to work with the RPN. The RPN is an all-of-government
program that demonstrates to rural America that the federal government
can work differently to serve their unique needs in a way that is
community-centered and locally-driven. The RPN is a recognition by the
Biden Administration that it is time to do more for rural communities.
Applicants to this funding opportunity are encouraged to include RPN
Community Networks in their proposals by identifying Community Networks
as collaborative partners or recipients of service. The RPN is
supported by over 20 federal agencies and regional commissions, so
including RPN Community Networks can help facilitate coordination with
other federal
[[Page 52013]]
agencies that fund broadband technical assistance (i.e., NTIA, ARC,
EDA) to ensure complimentary efforts and reduce the chance of
duplicative awards. Please visit www.rural.gov/community-networks for
more information on locations of the 36 RPN Community Networks spanning
ten states and Puerto Rico. To access specific contact information for
prospective network participants to determine fit, please contact
[email protected].
A. Program Description
1. Purpose of the Program
The BTA Program provides financial assistance to eligible entities
to receive or deliver broadband technical assistance and training.
Program funds must be used to support broadband technical assistance
activities that promote the expansion of broadband into rural areas.
Broadband technical assistance activities include, but are not limited
to, project planning and community engagement, financial
sustainability, environmental compliance, construction and engineering
planning, accessing federal resources, and data collection and
reporting.
All applicants should carefully review and prepare their
applications according to instructions in the FY 2024 BTA Application
Guide (Application Guide) and program resources available on the
program website at: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
Expenses incurred prior to submission of an application will be at the
applicant's own risk.
2. Statutory and Regulatory Authority
The Rural eConnectivity Program is authorized under 7 U.S.C. 901 et
seq., and Public Law 115-141, Section 779 (2018). This BTA NOFO will
use technical assistance funds appropriated under the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) (Pub. L. 117-58).
3. Definitions
The terms and conditions provided in this NOFO are applicable to
and for the purposes of this NOFO only. Unless otherwise provided in
the award documents, all financial terms not defined herein shall have
the meaning as defined by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
Administrator means the Administrator of RUS, or the
Administrator's designee.
Applicant means an entity requesting funding under this NOFO.
Application means the Applicant's request for federal funding,
which may be approved in whole or in part by RUS.
Award documents mean, as applicable, all associated award
agreements.
Award means a cooperative agreement entered into under this NOFO.
Awardee means an eligible entity that has applied and been awarded
federal assistance under this part.
Broadband technical assistance refers to activities that support
broadband expansion into eligible rural areas and predevelopment
planning activities, which may include, but are not limited to, project
planning and community engagement, financial sustainability,
environmental compliance, construction planning and engineering,
accessing federal resources, and data collection and reporting.
Cooperative agreement is the instrument used to fund the support of
RD's goals of increasing rural economic growth. In a cooperative
agreement, federal employees participate more closely in project
activities, often working side-by-side with the cooperator.
Distressed communities are identified as communities whose economic
well-being ranks in the most distressed tier of the Distressed
Communities Index. The most distressed tier of the index are those
communities with a score over 80. A GIS layer identifying distressed
communities can be found at www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
Indirect costs are costs that are not readily identified with a
particular grant, contract, project function or activity, but are
necessary for the general operation of the organization and the conduct
of activities it performs.
Rural area means any area, as confirmed by the most recent
decennial Census of the U.S., which is not located within a city, town,
or incorporated area that has a population of greater than 20,000
inhabitants; or an urbanized area contiguous and adjacent to a city or
town that has a population of greater than 50,000 inhabitants; and
which excludes certain populations pursuant to 7 U.S.C. 1991(a)(13)(H)
and (I). For purposes of the definition of rural area, an urbanized
area means a densely populated territory as defined in the most recent
decennial Census.
Socially Vulnerable Communities means rural communities with a
Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) with a score of 0.75 or higher are
eligible. For the purposes of this NOFO, Puerto Rico, Guam, America
Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, the Marshall Islands, the
Federated States of Micronesia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Hawaiian
Census Tribal areas are considered Socially Vulnerable Communities. A
GIS layer identifying socially vulnerable communities can be found at
https://www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
Tribe means the term as defined in the Federally Recognized Indian
Tribe List Act of 1994 (Pub. L. 103-454; 108 Stat. 4791, 4792). An
American Indian or Alaska Native Tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village,
or community that the Secretary of the Interior acknowledges to exist
as an Indian Tribe under the Federally Recognized Tribe List Act of
1994 (25 U.S.C. 5131).
Tribal entity includes all entities falling under the eligible
legal structures, including but not limited to: tribal owned
corporations, tribal enterprises, subsidiaries of tribally-owned
corporations and enterprises, tribal authorities, tribal utilities,
intertribal non-profits and associations, Alaska Native Corporations
and Alaska Native entities within the State of Alaska recognized by and
eligible to receive services from the U.S. Department of the Interior's
Bureau of Indian Affairs, Native Hawaiian organizations including
Homestead Associations, State recognized tribes/nonprofits, and
individually-owned Native American entities.
Tribal Land means any area identified by the U.S. Department of
Interior as Tribal Land. A GIS layer of most Tribal Lands can be found
on the RUS mapping tool located at: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
4. Application of Awards
Applications will be reviewed for eligibility and completeness
based on Sections C and D of this NOFO. Applications determined to be
eligible and complete will be further evaluated based on criteria
outlined in Section E. All applications will be competitively scored
and ranked. Notifications will be sent to Applicants` in accordance
with Section F of this NOFO.
B. Federal Award Information
Type of Award: Cooperative Agreement.
Fiscal Year Funds: FY 2024.
Available Funds: The Agency estimates that approximately $25
million is available for funding under this NOFO. RUS may, at its
discretion,
[[Page 52014]]
increase the total level of funding available from any available
funding source provided the awards meet the requirements of the statute
which made the funding available to the Agency.
Award Amounts: The minimum and maximum award amounts vary by
funding category. The Agency reserves the right to make the applicant
an offer that varies in amount or scope from the applicant's original
request.
Funding Categories: Applicant must choose one of the following
funding categories to be considered for funding:
Technical Assistance Providers. The Agency estimates that
up to $15 million is available. The minimum award amount is $100,000
and the maximum award amount is $1,000,000. Entities submitting an
application under this funding category must propose to deliver
broadband technical assistance that will benefit rural communities.
Technical Assistance Recipients. The Agency estimates that
up to $10 million is available. The minimum award amount is $50,000 and
the maximum award amount is $500,000. Entities submitting an
application under this funding category must be beneficiaries of
broadband technical assistance.
Anticipated Award Date: Awards are anticipated to be made by
December 31, 2024.
Period of Performance: Two-year period, beginning the date funds
are released.
Renewal or Supplemental Awards: Not Applicable.
Type of Assistance Instrument: Cooperative Agreement. RD is
authorized to administer cooperative agreement awards in accordance
with 7. U.S.C. 2204b(b)(4) for BTA.
C. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Only entities legally organized as one of the following are
eligible for financial assistance:
(a) Federally recognized Tribes and Tribal entities;
(b) States or local governments, including any agency, subdivision,
instrumentality, or political subdivision thereof;
(c) A territory or possession of the U.S.;
(d) An institution of higher education (including 1862 Land-Grant
Institutions, 1890 Land-Grant Institutions, 1994 Land-Grant
Institutions, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, and Historically Black
Colleges and Universities);
(e) Nonprofit organizations with 501(c)(3) IRS status;
(f) Cooperatives or mutual organizations;
(g) Corporations; or
(h) Limited Liability Companies or Limited Liability Partnerships.
2. Project Eligibility
(a) To be eligible for funding assistance, the proposed project
must promote the expansion of broadband services into eligible rural
areas.
(b) Award funds may be used to assist eligible entities in
identifying and planning for the following purposes to deliver
broadband services to rural areas:
(i) Identify resources to finance broadband facilities from public
and private sources;
(ii) Prepare feasibility studies, financial forecasts, market
surveys, environmental studies, and technical design information to
support broadband services;
(iii) Prepare reports and surveys necessary to support the need for
broadband services, the price range and to request financial
assistance;
(iv) Analyze and improve operations related to the management of
broadband facilities (i.e., implement automation, adopt new software,
conduct training, etc.) and to the efficiency of the entity.
(c) The proposed project must include a component that allows for
active participation and substantial involvement by RD in the
applicant's project proposal. Examples of measurable substantial
involvement include, but are not limited to the following:
(i) Joint convenings of community members, partners, and
stakeholders;
(ii) Joint delivery of training for RD programs; and
(iii) The development of training sessions and outreach materials;
It is the intent of the proposed project to engage RD staff in
broadband technical assistance activities, and it is the responsibility
of the applicant to identify specific tasks where RD staff can provide
measurable, substantial involvement in the project. If such tasks are
not identified, the application will not be eligible for funding.
(d) A certification from the appropriate Tribal official is
required if a project is being proposed by a non-tribal applicant over
or on Tribal Lands. The appropriate Tribal official is the Tribal
Council of the Tribal Government with jurisdiction over the Tribal
Lands at issue. Any non-tribal applicant that fails to provide a
certification to administer a project on Tribal Lands will not be
considered for funding.
3. Cost Sharing or Matching
There are no cost sharing or matching requirements associated with
this funding opportunity.
D. Application and Submission Information
1. Address To Request Application Package
Application and supporting materials are available at Grants.gov.
Applications must contain all required information. To apply
electronically, applicants must follow the instructions for this
funding announcement at Grants.gov.
2. Content and Form of Application Submission
(a) A fully completed application is required to be considered
eligible for funding. For an application to be considered complete, the
applicant must complete and submit all forms, information, and
supporting documentation described below.
(i) Written narrative proposal. The written proposal should be
assembled into one or more pdf file(s) and should conform to the order
in which the evaluation criteria are presented in Section E. The
completed pdf file(s) should be uploaded into Grants.gov as an
attachment to the application. The maximum limit for the written
narrative section is 25 pages. Information exceeding 25 pages for the
written narrative may not be considered for evaluation by the scoring
panel. The written narrative proposal must clearly identify the funding
category chosen.
(ii) Standard Form (SF) 424, ``Application for Federal
Assistance.''
(iii) SF 424B, ``Assurances--Non-Construction Programs.''
(iv) The Agency reserves the right to contact applicants to seek
clarification on submitted materials or request additional information.
(b) The Application Guide provides specific, detailed instructions
for each item of a complete application. The Agency emphasizes the
importance of including every item and strongly encourages applicants
to follow the instructions carefully, using the examples and
illustrations in the Application Guide.
3. System for Award Management and Unique Entity Identifier
(a) At the time of application, each applicant must have an active
registration in the System for Award Management (SAM) before submitting
its application in accordance with 2 CFR part 25 (www.ecfr.gov/current/title-2/subtitle-A/chapter-I/part-25). In order to register in SAM,
entities will be required to obtain a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI).
Instructions for obtaining the UEI are available at sam.gov/content/entity-registration.
[[Page 52015]]
(b) Each applicant must maintain an active SAM registration, with
current, accurate and complete information, at all times during which
it has an active Federal award or an application under consideration by
a Federal awarding agency.
(c) Each applicant must ensure they complete the Financial
Assistance General Representations and Certifications in SAM.
(d) Applicants must provide a valid UEI in its application, unless
determined exempt under 2 CFR 25.110.
(e) The Agency will not make an award until the applicant has
complied with all SAM requirements including providing the UEI. If an
applicant has not fully complied with the requirements by the time the
Agency is ready to make an award, the Agency may determine that the
applicant is not qualified to receive a Federal award and use that
determination as a basis for making a Federal award to another
applicant.
4. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted through Grants.gov and received no
later than August 20, 2024 to be eligible for funding under this
opportunity. Late or incomplete applications will not be eligible for
funding.
Grants.gov requires some credentialing and online authentication
procedures that may take several business days to complete. Therefore,
the applicant should complete the registration, credentialing, and
authorization procedures at Grants.gov in order to submit an
application. Instructions on all required passwords, credentialing, and
software are available on Grants.gov. If system errors or technical
difficulties occur, use the customer support resources available at the
Grants.gov website.
The Agency will not consider new scoring or eligibility information
that is submitted after the application deadline. RUS reserves the
right to ask applicants for clarifying information and additional
verification of assertions in the application.
5. Intergovernmental Review
This program is not subject to Executive Order 12372,
``Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs.''
6. Funding Restrictions
In addition to costs identified as unallowable by 2 CFR part 200,
award funds cannot be used to pay for the following types of expenses
(this is not a comprehensive list of unallowable costs, see 2 CFR part
200).
(a) Construction (in any form).
(b) Activities serving communities in a non-rural area or those
with existing broadband access.
(c) Duplicative project costs funded by another federal award.
(d) Indirect Costs.
7. Other Submission Requirements
Applications must be submitted electronically using Grants.gov. No
other form of application will be accepted. RUS will not accept
applications through mail or courier delivery, in-person delivery,
email, or fax. RUS will approve no more than one application per
applicant. If an applicant submits more than one application for
different projects, then the Agency will only consider the application
with the highest score. If an applicant submits more than one
application for the same project, then the Agency will only consider
the latest submission.
E. Application Review Information
1. Evaluation Criteria
The Agency will review each eligible, complete application based on
the evaluation criteria identified in this section. The written
narrative proposal addressed in Section D of this NOFO must address the
criteria in the following order:
(a) Project Work Plan (up to 30 points). The applicant can receive
up to 30 points for providing a detailed project work plan that
demonstrates the soundness of the proposed broadband technical
assistance approach. The scoring criterion will be based on the
following:
(i) Work Plan Approach. The work plan approach should identify and
detail project objectives, rural communities to be served, project key
goals, partnerships developed or to be developed, and anticipated
deliverables of the project. Applicants must list all rural communities
that will benefit from the broadband technical assistance project and
describe characteristics of the communities being served including
information such as population size, population density, poverty rate,
and other economic indicators. Communities may be defined at various
geographic scales, including but not limited to, census blocks, towns,
cities, and counties.
(ii) Work Plan Implementation. Applicants should include details on
how the technical assistance will be provided and how it will lead to
expanded broadband service in rural areas. Applicants should detail
major task(s), involvement of key personnel, time period of task(s),
substantial involvement of RD staff, and expected deliverables.
(iii) Budget and Work Plan Alignment. A detailed budget and budget
justification must be provided. The budget justification should align
with the tasks detailed in the workplan. Discuss how the budget
specifically supports the proposed activities discussed in the project
key tasks (as described above). The format of the budget's narrative
can be in a chart, spreadsheet, table, etc., but it should be readable
on letter-size, printable pages. The information needs to be presented
in such a way that the reviewers can readily understand what expenses
are incurred to support the project. Statement(s) of work for any
subcontractors and consultants must be included as part of the
application.
(b) Organizational capacity (up to 20 points). All applicants must
demonstrate the capacity to deliver and/or support broadband technical
assistance activities. The applicant can receive up to 20 points based
on organizational capacity and qualifications. The maximum 20 points
for this criterion will be based on the following:
(i) The applicant's proposal must demonstrate that the applicant
has identified appropriate key personnel, both in terms of number of
personnel and qualifications of personnel and should provide specific
detail of qualifications of key personnel relating to broadband
technical assistance. Capacity of personnel to access data for needs
assessments and access to planners and other technical experts will be
evaluated.
(ii) Applicants that are technical assistance providers must
specify the number of years of providing broadband technical
assistance, detail experience in providing broadband technical
assistance to rural communities, identify types of rural communities
previously served, and detail experience in performance evaluation.
(c) Rurality (up to 20 points). Points will be awarded for serving
the least dense rural areas as measured by the population of the
communities served.
(d) Economic Need (up to 20 points). Economic need is based on the
county poverty percentage of the communities proposed to be served in
the application. The percentages must be determined by utilizing the
U.S. Census Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE) Program.
Communities located in geographic areas, for which no SAIPE data exist,
will be determined to have an average SAIPE poverty percentage of 30
percent.
[[Page 52016]]
SAIPE data can be found on the program website.
(e) Creating More and Better Markets (10 points). Projects located
in or serving a rural community whose economic well-being ranks in the
most distressed tier of the Distressed Communities Index are eligible
for 10 points. The most distressed tier of the index are those
communities with a score over 80. A list of Distressed Communities can
be found at: www.rd.usda.gov/media/file/download/fy24distressedcommunityindexlist-.xlsx. Points will be awarded for
projects serving at least one distressed community.
(f) Projects advancing Racial Justice, Place-Based Equity, and
Opportunity (10 points). Projects that meet one of the criteria below
will receive 10 points.
(i) Projects proposing to serve at least one rural community with a
Social Vulnerability Index (SVI) with a score of 0.75 or higher are
eligible. For the purposes of this NOFO, Puerto Rico, Guam, America
Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, the Marshall Islands, the
Federated States of Micronesia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Hawaiian
Census Tribal areas are considered Socially Vulnerable Communities. A
GIS layer identifying the Socially Vulnerable Communities can be found
using the mapping tool available at: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
(ii) Projects that promote the expansion of broadband service on
Tribal Lands. Tribal Lands will be identified in GIS layers included in
the BTA mapping tool available at: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
(iii) Projects proposed by a federally recognized Tribe, including
Tribal instrumentalities and entities that are wholly owned by Tribes.
(iv) Projects from or benefiting an RPN community network. A GIS
layer identifying RPN community networks can be found using the mapping
tool available at: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program.
(g) Performance measures (up to 10 points). The applicant can
receive up to 10 points based on the proposed performance measures to
evaluate the progress and impact of the proposed project.
Performance measures should be based on the applicant's proposal
and must include a description for how the results of the technical
assistance will be measured and the benchmarks to be used for measuring
effectiveness. Indicators to be used should be specific and be
quantifiable.
2. Review and Selection Process
Applications are ranked by the final score. RUS selects
applications based on those rankings, subject to the availability of
funds. RUS will approve no more than one application per applicant. If
an applicant submits more than one application for different projects,
then the Agency will only consider the application with the highest
score. If an applicant submits more than one application for the same
project, then the Agency will only consider the latest submission. The
Agency has the authority to limit the number of applications selected
in any one state or for any one project during a fiscal year. An
application receiving fewer points can be selected over a higher
scoring application if there are insufficient funds available to cover
the costs of the higher scoring application.
The Agency reserves the right to offer the applicant less than the
amount of funding requested.
F. Federal Award Administration Information
1. Federal Award Notices
RUS notifies applicants whose projects are selected for awards by
mailing or emailing a copy of an award letter. The receipt of an award
letter does not authorize the applicant to commence performance under
the award. The award letter will include an agreement that contains all
the terms and conditions for the cooperative agreement. An applicant
must execute and return the agreement, accompanied by any additional
items required by the agreement, within the number of days specified in
the selection notice letter.
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
The items listed in this NOFO, the Application Guide, and program
resources implement the appropriate administrative and national policy
requirements, which include but are not limited to:
(a) Using Form SF 270, ``Request for Advance or Reimbursement,'' to
request reimbursements (along with the submission of receipts for
expenditures and any other documentation to support the request for
reimbursement).
(b) Submitting an annual project performance activity report, no
later than January 31st of the year following the year in which all or
any portion of the award is first advanced and continuing in subsequent
years until completion of the project.
(c) Ensuring that records are maintained to document all activities
and expenditures utilizing program funds and matching funds (receipts
for expenditures are to be included in this documentation).
(d) Providing a final project performance report, no later than one
hundred twenty (120) days after the expiration date, termination of the
award, the project completion, or the final disbursement of the award
by the awardee, whichever event occurs last.
(e) Complying with policies, guidance, and requirements as
described in the following applicable Code of Federal Regulations, and
any successor regulations:
(i) 2 CFR parts 200 and 400 (Uniform Administrative Requirements,
Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards).
(ii) 2 CFR parts 180 and 417 (Government-wide Nonprocurement
Debarment and Suspension).
(iii) Complying with Executive Order 13166, ``Improving Access to
Services for Persons with Limited English Proficiency.'' For
information on limited English proficiency and agency-specific
guidance, go to www.LEP.gov.
(iv) Accountability and Compliance with Civil Rights Laws. The
regulation found at 7 CFR part 1901 subpart E (www.ecfr.gov/current/title-7/subtitle-B/chapter-XVIII/subchapter-H/part-1901/subpart-E)
contains policies and procedures for implementing the regulations of
the Department of Agriculture issued pursuant to title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, title
IX, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Executive Order
13166, Executive Order 11246, and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act of
1974, as they relate to RD. Nothing herein shall be interpreted to
prohibit preference to American Indians on Indian Reservations.
The policies contained in this subpart apply to recipients. As
recipients of federal financial assistance, awardees are required to
comply with the applicable federal, state and local laws. Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
prohibits discrimination by recipients of federal financial assistance.
Recipients are required to adhere to specific outreach activities.
These outreach activities include contacting community organizations
and leaders that include minority leaders; advertising in local
newspapers and other media throughout the entire
[[Page 52017]]
service area; and including the nondiscrimination slogan, ``This is an
Equal Opportunity Program.''
Discrimination is prohibited by Federal Law, in methods that may
include, but not be limited to, advertisements, public broadcasts, and
printed materials, such as brochures and pamphlets.
By completing the Financial Assistance Representations and
Certifications in SAM, recipients affirm that they will operate the
program free from discrimination. The recipient will maintain the race
and ethnic data on the board members and beneficiaries of the program.
The recipient will provide alternative forms of communication to
persons with limited English proficiency. The Agency will conduct Civil
Rights Compliance Reviews on recipients to identify the collection of
racial and ethnic data on program beneficiaries. In addition, the
compliance review will ensure that equal access to the program benefits
and activities are provided for persons with disabilities and language
barriers.
3. Reporting
(a) Performance Reporting. All recipients of financial assistance
must provide annual performance activity reports to RUS until the
project is complete and the funds are expended. A final performance
report is also required; the final report may serve as the last annual
report. The final report must include an evaluation of the success of
the project in meeting the program objectives. Success of the project
can be demonstrated by identifying the progress achieved in securing
financing to bring broadband service to the eligible rural area.
Project performance reports should include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(i) A comparison of actual accomplishments to the objectives
established for that period;
(ii) A description of any problems, delays, or adverse conditions
which have occurred, or are anticipated, and which may affect the
attainment of overall project objectives, prevent the meeting of time
schedules or objectives, or preclude the attainment of particular
project work elements during established time periods. This disclosure
shall be accompanied by a statement of the action taken or planned to
resolve the situation; and
(iii) Objectives and timetable established for the next reporting
period.
(iv) Activities demonstrating the coordination with the State
Broadband Office.
(b) Recipient and sub-recipient reporting. The applicant must have
the necessary processes and systems in place to comply with the
reporting requirements for first-tier sub-awards and executive
compensation under the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency
Act of 2006 (Transparency Act) in the event the applicant receives
funding, unless such applicant is exempt from such reporting
requirements pursuant to 2 CFR 170.110(b). The reporting requirements
under the Transparency Act are found at 2 CFR part 170 (www.ecfr.gov/current/title-2/subtitle-A/chapter-I/part-170).
(c) Accounting Requirements: Agency accounting requirements include
compliance with Accounting Principles Generally Accepted in the United
States, (GAAP), as well as compliance with the requirements of the
applicable regulations: 2 CFR part 200 subpart E, Cost Principles, and
48 CFR part 31 Federal Acquisition Regulations Contract Cost
Principles, and when applicable, 48 CFR part 30 Cost Accounting
Standards. Awardees subject to non-GAAP or other accounting
requirements should provide reconciling schedules with annual
reporting. The Administrator may modify the accounting requirements if
it is deemed necessary.
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
1. Website: www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/telecommunications-programs/broadband-technical-assistance-program. The BTA website
maintains up-to-date resources and contact information for the Program.
2. For inquiries regarding eligibility concerns, please contact
program staff at www.usda.gov/reconnect/contact-us. Other inquiries,
please contact Christopher Proctor, Technical Assistance Branch Chief,
Telecommunications Program, Rural Utilities Service, U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), email [email protected], telephone:
(202) 619-1739.
H. Other Information
1. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
information collection requirements associated with the program, as
covered in this notice, have been approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under OMB Control Number 0572-0160.
2. National Environmental Policy Act
All recipients under this notice are subject to the requirements of
7 CFR part 1970.
However, awards for technical assistance and training under this
notice are classified as a Categorical Exclusion according to 7 CFR
1970.53(b), and usually do not require any additional documentation.
RUS will review each application to determine its compliance with 7 CFR
part 1970. The applicant may be asked to provide additional information
or documentation to assist RUS with this determination.
3. USDA Non-Discrimination Statement
In accordance with Federal civil rights laws and USDA civil rights
regulations and policies, the USDA, its Mission Areas, agencies, staff
offices, employees, and institutions participating in or administering
USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color,
national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender
expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status,
family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance
program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil
rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA
(not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing
deadlines vary by program or incident.
Program information may be made available in languages other than
English. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of
communication to obtain program information (e.g., Braille, large
print, audiotape, American Sign Language) should contact the
responsible Mission Area, agency, or staff office; or the 711 Relay
Service.
To file a program discrimination complaint, a complainant should
complete a Form AD-3027, USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form,
which can be obtained online at www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ad-3027.pdf, from any USDA office, by calling (866) 632-9992,
or by writing a letter addressed to USDA. The letter must contain the
complainant's name, address, telephone number, and a written
description of the alleged discriminatory action in sufficient detail
to inform the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights (ASCR) about the
nature and date of an alleged civil rights violation. The completed AD-
3027 form or letter must be submitted to USDA by:
(a) Mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC
20250-9410; or
(b) Fax: (833) 256-1665 or (202) 690-7442; or
[[Page 52018]]
(c) Email: [email protected].
4. Equal Opportunity for Religious Organizations
(a) Faith-based organizations may apply for this award on the same
basis as any other organization, as set forth at, and subject to the
protections and requirements of, this part and any applicable
constitutional and statutory requirements, including 42 U.S.C. 2000bb
et seq. USDA will not, in the selection of recipients, discriminate for
or against an organization on the basis of the organization's religious
character, motives, or affiliation, or lack thereof, or on the basis of
conduct that would not be considered grounds to favor or disfavor a
similarly situated secular organization.
(b) A faith-based organization that participates in this program
will retain its independence from the Government and may continue to
carry out its mission consistent with religious freedom and conscience
protections in Federal law. Religious accommodations may also be sought
under many of these religious freedom and conscience protection laws.
(c) A faith-based organization may not use direct Federal financial
assistance from USDA to support or engage in any explicitly religious
activities except when consistent with the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment and any other applicable requirements. An organization
receiving Federal financial assistance also may not, in providing
services funded by USDA, or in their outreach activities related to
such services, discriminate against a program beneficiary or
prospective program beneficiary on the basis of religion, a religious
belief, a refusal to hold a religious belief, or a refusal to attend or
participate in a religious practice.
Andrew Berke,
Administrator, Rural Utilities Service, USDA Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 2024-13691 Filed 6-20-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-15-P