MSA Delineations Used in FEMA's Grant Programs, 81925-81927 [2024-23365]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Docket ID: FEMA–2024–0027]
MSA Delineations Used in FEMA’s
Grant Programs
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, Department of
Homeland Security.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
AGENCY:
Consistent with the
Metropolitan Areas Protection and
Standardization Act of 2021, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) requests public comment on the
adoption of updated Metropolitan
Statistical Area delineations for use in
certain of FEMA’s grant programs.
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than December 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket ID: FEMA–2024–
SUMMARY:
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81925
0027, via the Federal eRulemaking
Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Edgardo Santos, Risk Methodology
Branch Chief, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, FEMA-MSAProcess@fema.dhs.gov, (800) 368–6498.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Participation
Interested persons are invited to
participate in this notice by submitting
comments and related materials. We
will consider all comments and
materials received during the comment
period.
If you submit a comment, include the
Docket ID, indicate the specific section
of this document to which each
comment applies, and give the reason
for each comment. All submissions may
be posted, without change, to the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov, and will include
any personal information you provide.
Therefore, submitting this information
makes it public. For more about privacy
and the docket, visit https://
www.regulations.gov/privacy-notice.
For access to the docket to read
background documents or comments
received, go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov.
II. Background
A. FEMA Grant Programs and Core
Based Statistical Areas
FEMA has the statutory authority to
deliver numerous disaster and nondisaster financial assistance programs in
support of its mission, and that of the
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(DHS), largely through grants and
cooperative agreements. Preparedness
grants 1 support our citizens and first
responders to ensure we work together
as a nation to build, sustain and
improve our capability to prepare for,
protect against, respond to, recover from
and mitigate terrorism and other highconsequence disasters and emergencies.
When determining eligibility for the
Urban Area Security Initiative, the
Tribal Homeland Security Grant
Program, the Nonprofit Security Grant
Program, the Port Security Grant
Program, the Transit Security Grant
1 For the purposes of this notice, the relevant
grants programs are the Urban Area Security
Initiative, the Tribal Homeland Security Grant
Program, the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, the
Port Security Grant Program, the Transit Security
Grant Program, and the Regional Catastrophic
Preparedness Grant Program. FEMA’s authority to
administer these programs is provided below.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2024 / Notices
Program, and the Regional Catastrophic
Preparedness Grant Program, one factor
is the applicant’s location with respect
to a given set of Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (MSAs).2 MSAs are a type of core
based statistical area (CBSA). The
general concept of a CBSA is that of an
area containing a large population
nucleus, or urban area, and adjacent
communities that have a high degree of
integration with that nucleus. CBSAs
are composed of entire counties:
‘‘central counties’’ that contain the
population nucleus, and ‘‘outlying
counties’’ that qualify to join a central
county based on demonstrating
sufficient commuting ties with the
central county or counties of the area.3
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) establishes and maintains these
statistical areas to provide a nationally
consistent set of delineations for
collecting, tabulating, and publishing
Federal statistics for geographic areas.
OMB establishes standards for defining
CBSAs and then applies those standards
to U.S. Census Bureau data to delineate
individual CBSAs. Every decade, OMB
reviews the CBSA standards and, if
warranted, revises them, and then
applies the new standards to new
decennial census data to produce
updated CBSA delineations. OMB
published the 2020 Standards for
Delineating Core Based Statistical Areas
on July 16, 2021,4 and published revised
CBSA delineations on July 21, 2023.5
Between censuses, OMB releases
annual updates, which make minor
changes to the delineations (or no
changes, if warranted by the data) and
five-year updates that address broader
revisions that generally include more
changes to the delineations.6
Under the Homeland Security Grant
Program,7 the FEMA Administrator
designates high-risk urban areas to
receive Urban Area Security Initiative
2 See,
e.g., 6 U.S.C. 601(5), 604(b).
more information, see U.S. Census Bureau,
Metropolitan and Micropolitan, About (July 25,
2023), https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/
metro-micro/about.html.
4 86 FR 37770 (July 16, 2021).
5 OMB Bulletin No. 23–01 (July 21, 2023), https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/
OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
6 For more information, see 86 FR at 37775.
7 Homeland Security Act of 2002, as amended,
Public Law 107–296, Title XX, 6 U.S.C. 321a, 603,
604, 605, 607, 608, 609; section 702 of the Security
and Accountability For Every Port Act of 2006,
Public Law 109–347, 6 U.S.C. 470.
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3 For
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(UASI) grants.8 To determine which
areas should receive assistance each
fiscal year, the Administrator is directed
to assess the relative threat,
vulnerability, and consequences from
acts of terrorism faced by each ‘‘eligible
metropolitan area.’’ 9 The HSA defines
‘‘Eligible Metropolitan Area’’ to mean
any of the 100 most populous
metropolitan statistical areas 10 and
defines ‘‘Metropolitan Statistical Area’’
to mean a metropolitan statistical area,
as defined by OMB.11
Before the Department of Homeland
Security Appropriations Act, 2024
(FY24 DHS Appropriations Act),12 the
Nonprofit Security Grant Program
(NSGP) 13 functioned as a ‘‘carve-out’’ of
UASI, so eligibility for NSGP was tied
to the MSA delineations in the same
way as UASI. Pursuant to the FY24 DHS
Appropriations Act, fiscal year 2024
NSGP awards are authorized under 6
U.S.C. 609a.14 Currently, as a matter of
policy, FEMA ties eligibility for
assistance under the program to the
MSA framework. The fiscal year 2024
NSGP Notice Funding Opportunity
(NOFO) states that eligible nonprofit
subapplicants may be eligible for
assistance specifically because of their
location with respect to an MSA.15
Under the Tribal Homeland Security
Grant Program (THSGP),16 the FEMA
Administrator may make awards ‘‘to
directly eligible tribes’’ under the State
Homeland Security Grant Program.17
The definition of a ‘‘directly eligible
tribe’’ provides four area-based criteria,
one of which must be met in order for
a Tribal Nation to be eligible for
assistance under THSGP.18 One of those
four criteria is that the Tribal Nation is
located within or contiguous to 1 of the
50 most populous metropolitan
statistical areas in the United States.19
Thus, although many Tribal Nations
that are eligible for THSGP will be
8 Section
2003 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 604(b)(1).
U.S.C. 604(b)(2)(A).
10 6 U.S.C. 601(5).
11 6 U.S.C. 601(8).
12 Public Law 118–47, Div. C.
13 Section 2009 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 609a.
14 Public Law 118–47, Div. C, Title III.
15 See DHS NOFO Fiscal Year 2024 Nonprofit
Security Grant Program (Apr. 16, 2024), https://
www.fema.gov/grants/preparedness/nonprofitsecurity/fy-24-nofo.
16 Section 2005 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 606.
17 6 U.S.C. 606(a).
18 See 6 U.S.C. 601(4)(A)(iii).
19 6 U.S.C. 601(4)(A)(iii)(III).
96
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eligible through one of the other criteria,
some Tribal Nations will be eligible for
THSGP assistance specifically because
of their location with respect to an
MSA.
FEMA’s Regional Catastrophic
Preparedness Grant Program (RCPGP),20
as a matter of policy, ties eligibility for
assistance under the program to the
MSA framework. The fiscal year 2023
RCPGP NOFO states that eligible
applicants must be either a State or
Territory that contains one or more of
the 100 most populous MSAs or be a
local government located within one of
the 100 most populous MSAs.21
Eligibility and allocation of funding
under the Port Security Grant Program
(PSGP) 22 and the Transit Security Grant
Program (TSGP) 23 are informed by risk,
which is calculated using
methodologies that include threat,
vulnerability, and consequence
components that align with the UASI
risk methodology. Both grant programs
use the MSA delineations as part of the
threat component through using the
UASI counterterrorism threat levels and
values. The threat level and value that
DHS Intelligence & Analysis and FEMA
assign to the 100 most populous MSAs
is assigned to any PSGP port and transit
agency within that MSA. The TSGP risk
methodology also uses the MSA
delineations as part of the vulnerability
component through using the Special
Events Metric (SEM). The SEM value for
bus entities is based on the SEM value
of the MSA they serve (as assessed for
the most recent UASI risk assessment).24
20 Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public
Law 117–328, Division F—Department of
Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2023, Title
III—Protection, Preparedness, Response, and
Recovery, Federal Emergency Management Agency,
Federal Assistance.
21 See DHS NOFO Fiscal Year 2023 Regional
Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program (RCPGP)
(May 24, 2023), https://www.fema.gov/grants/
preparedness/regional-catastrophic/fy-23-nofo.
NOFOs for affected FEMA grants programs issued
since the enactment of the MAPS Act have used the
2020 MSA delineations.
22 Section 102 of the Maritime Transportation
Security Act of 2002, as amended, Public Law 107–
295, 46 U.S.C. 70107.
23 Section 1406 of the Implementing
Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of
2007, Public Law 110–53, 6 U.S.C. 1135.
24 For more information on these risk
methodologies, see Fiscal Year 2023 SHSP/UASI
Risk Methodology Updates (Feb. 27, 2023), https://
www.fema.gov/sites/default/files/documents/fema_
gpd-shsp-fy-23-risk-methodology-updates.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 196 / Wednesday, October 9, 2024 / Notices
B. Metropolitan Areas Protection and
Standardization Act of 2021
The Metropolitan Areas Protection
and Standardization Act of 2021 (MAPS
Act),25 enacted on December 5, 2022,
prohibits changes to the standards of
CBSA delineations to propagate 26
automatically for any non-statistical use
by any domestic assistance program and
instead requires changes to propagate if
they are affirmatively adopted through
notice and comment rulemaking
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553, by a relevant
agency that determines such a
propagation supports the purposes of
the program and is in the public
interest.27
Since an applicant’s eligibility for
certain of FEMA’s grant programs (i.e.,
UASI, NSGP, PSGP, TSGP, THSGP, and
RCPGP) depends in part on the
applicant’s location with respect to
specific MSAs, changing which version
of the MSA delineations is used could
change which applicants are eligible.
Consistent with the requirements of the
MAPS Act, FEMA is now requesting
comment on whether the use of the
latest editions of OMB’s MSA
delineations in these grant programs
supports the purposes of the programs
and is in the public’s interest.
III. 2023 CBSA Delineations
OMB published revised CBSA
delineations on July 21, 2023, based on
the application of the 2020 Standards to
Census Bureau data from the 2020
Decennial Census, the American
Community Survey, and Census
Population Estimates Program for 2020
and 2021.28 The 2023 delineations
update and supersede the previous
version of the delineations issued on
March 6, 2020,29 and make the
following changes:
1. The Springfield, MA, and New
Haven, CT, MSAs are no longer among
the 100 most populous MSAs due to
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25 Public
Law 117–219, 136 Stat. 2271.
26 Propagate is defined as reproduce or spread
information., Black’s Law Dictionary, https://
thelawdictionary.org/propagate/ (last accessed July
24, 2024). Here, this refers to how statutory,
regulatory, or administrative provisions referring to
CBSAs, but not specifying a particular version of
the CBSA standards or delineations, should be
read—do these provisions always mean the latest
versions of the CBSA standards or delineations, or
some older versions? The MAPS Act requires that
these provisions not be read to refer to CBSA
delineations issued after the enactment of the
MAPS Act, unless an agency follows the
appropriate processes.
27 See 31 U.S.C. 6309.
28 OMB Bulletin No. 23–01 (July 21, 2023),
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
29 OMB Bulletin No. 20–01 (Mar. 6, 2020), https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/
Bulletin-20-01.pdf.
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changes to the county composition of
some MSAs.
2. The Jackson, MS, and Fayetteville,
AR, MSAs now do qualify as part of the
100 most populous MSAs due to either
changes in county composition or due
to changes in population values.
3. Twenty-seven MSAs changed their
name due to changes in principal city
population or due to changes in which
States are part of the MSA. For example,
Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI
MSA is now Chicago-Naperville-Elgin,
IL-IN MSA due to the removal of the
one Wisconsin county that was part of
the MSA.30
4. MSAs in Connecticut were updated
to use the new planning regions in place
of counties.31
5. The composition of 29 MSAs,
including the 2 MSAs that join the top100 list and the 2 that drop off, changed
because counties or county equivalents
were added or removed from the MSA
delineations. For example, Virginia
Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC
MSA lost two counties and gained
another and is now Virginia BeachChesapeake-Norfolk, VA-NC MSA.
5.1. There are 22 counties removed
from MSAs, of which 6 are old
Connecticut counties that get replaced
by the 5 new planning regions.
5.2. There are 30 counties added to
MSAs, of which 5 are the new
Connecticut planning regions and 11 are
in the MSAs of Jackson, MS, and
Fayetteville, AR.
FEMA’s assessment of the changes in
the 2023 MSA delineations found that
there would be no changes in the
geographic eligibility for any Tribal
Nations under THSGP.
The revisions in the 2023 MSA
delineations change which MSAs
qualify as the 100 most populous MSAs
considered for the UASI risk
assessment. Changes to this list impact
which jurisdictions are eligible to
receive funding, the overall risk
methodology, the resultant risk scores,
and the allocations. In addition to the
UASI grant program, the MSA
delineations are also used to determine
eligibility for THSGP, NSGP, PSGP,
TSGP, and RCPGP.
Based on a review of FEMA historical
grant data, there was no UASI data
30 For more information on principal cities and
Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Area
titles, see U.S. Census Bureau, Metropolitan and
Micropolitan, About (July 25, 2023), https://
www.census.gov/programs-surveys/metro-micro/
about.html.
31 For more information on Connecticut planning
regions, see State of Connecticut Office of Policy
and Management, Planning Regions and Regional
Councils of Governments, https://portal.ct.gov/
opm/igpp/org/planning-regions/planning-regions-overview (last accessed July 25, 2024).
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81927
available for the 22 counties that were
removed from the 2023 MSA
delineations, which indicates that
FEMA did not provide any UASI
funding for these areas in the past 10
years. Therefore, FEMA expects that the
removal of these counties would not
impact grant allocations under the 2023
delineations. Furthermore, we do not
have any grant data for the 30 counties
that were newly added due to MSA
updates, so we are unable to measure
the impact of these changes on grant
allocations. Because UASI funding is
capped, any economic impacts would
result in a different distribution of funds
(the newly added counties would
become eligible while the removed
counties would lose eligibility), but total
funding would not change.
Consistent with the requirements of
the MAPS Act, FEMA seeks public
comment on the use of the 2023 MSA
delineations for the following FEMA
grant programs: UASI, NSGP, PSGP,
TSGP, THSGP, and RCPGP.
Stakeholders are encouraged to provide
specific feedback on whether using the
2023 MSA delineations would support
the purposes of these grant programs
and be in the public interest.
Deanne Criswell,
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2024–23365 Filed 10–8–24; 8:45 am]
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[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 196 (Wednesday, October 9, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 81925-81927]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-23365]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management Agency
[Docket ID: FEMA-2024-0027]
MSA Delineations Used in FEMA's Grant Programs
AGENCY: Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Consistent with the Metropolitan Areas Protection and
Standardization Act of 2021, the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) requests public comment on the adoption of updated Metropolitan
Statistical Area delineations for use in certain of FEMA's grant
programs.
DATES: Comments must be received no later than December 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket ID: FEMA-2024-
0027, via the Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Edgardo Santos, Risk Methodology
Branch Chief, Federal Emergency Management Agency, [email protected], (800) 368-6498.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Participation
Interested persons are invited to participate in this notice by
submitting comments and related materials. We will consider all
comments and materials received during the comment period.
If you submit a comment, include the Docket ID, indicate the
specific section of this document to which each comment applies, and
give the reason for each comment. All submissions may be posted,
without change, to the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, and will include any personal information you
provide. Therefore, submitting this information makes it public. For
more about privacy and the docket, visit https://www.regulations.gov/privacy-notice.
For access to the docket to read background documents or comments
received, go to the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
II. Background
A. FEMA Grant Programs and Core Based Statistical Areas
FEMA has the statutory authority to deliver numerous disaster and
non-disaster financial assistance programs in support of its mission,
and that of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), largely
through grants and cooperative agreements. Preparedness grants \1\
support our citizens and first responders to ensure we work together as
a nation to build, sustain and improve our capability to prepare for,
protect against, respond to, recover from and mitigate terrorism and
other high-consequence disasters and emergencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For the purposes of this notice, the relevant grants
programs are the Urban Area Security Initiative, the Tribal Homeland
Security Grant Program, the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, the
Port Security Grant Program, the Transit Security Grant Program, and
the Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program. FEMA's
authority to administer these programs is provided below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When determining eligibility for the Urban Area Security
Initiative, the Tribal Homeland Security Grant Program, the Nonprofit
Security Grant Program, the Port Security Grant Program, the Transit
Security Grant
[[Page 81926]]
Program, and the Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program, one
factor is the applicant's location with respect to a given set of
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs).\2\ MSAs are a type of core based
statistical area (CBSA). The general concept of a CBSA is that of an
area containing a large population nucleus, or urban area, and adjacent
communities that have a high degree of integration with that nucleus.
CBSAs are composed of entire counties: ``central counties'' that
contain the population nucleus, and ``outlying counties'' that qualify
to join a central county based on demonstrating sufficient commuting
ties with the central county or counties of the area.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See, e.g., 6 U.S.C. 601(5), 604(b).
\3\ For more information, see U.S. Census Bureau, Metropolitan
and Micropolitan, About (July 25, 2023), https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/metro-micro/about.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) establishes and maintains
these statistical areas to provide a nationally consistent set of
delineations for collecting, tabulating, and publishing Federal
statistics for geographic areas. OMB establishes standards for defining
CBSAs and then applies those standards to U.S. Census Bureau data to
delineate individual CBSAs. Every decade, OMB reviews the CBSA
standards and, if warranted, revises them, and then applies the new
standards to new decennial census data to produce updated CBSA
delineations. OMB published the 2020 Standards for Delineating Core
Based Statistical Areas on July 16, 2021,\4\ and published revised CBSA
delineations on July 21, 2023.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 86 FR 37770 (July 16, 2021).
\5\ OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 (July 21, 2023), https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Between censuses, OMB releases annual updates, which make minor
changes to the delineations (or no changes, if warranted by the data)
and five-year updates that address broader revisions that generally
include more changes to the delineations.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ For more information, see 86 FR at 37775.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Homeland Security Grant Program,\7\ the FEMA
Administrator designates high-risk urban areas to receive Urban Area
Security Initiative (UASI) grants.\8\ To determine which areas should
receive assistance each fiscal year, the Administrator is directed to
assess the relative threat, vulnerability, and consequences from acts
of terrorism faced by each ``eligible metropolitan area.'' \9\ The HSA
defines ``Eligible Metropolitan Area'' to mean any of the 100 most
populous metropolitan statistical areas \10\ and defines ``Metropolitan
Statistical Area'' to mean a metropolitan statistical area, as defined
by OMB.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Homeland Security Act of 2002, as amended, Public Law 107-
296, Title XX, 6 U.S.C. 321a, 603, 604, 605, 607, 608, 609; section
702 of the Security and Accountability For Every Port Act of 2006,
Public Law 109-347, 6 U.S.C. 470.
\8\ Section 2003 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 604(b)(1).
\9\ 6 U.S.C. 604(b)(2)(A).
\10\ 6 U.S.C. 601(5).
\11\ 6 U.S.C. 601(8).
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Before the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2024
(FY24 DHS Appropriations Act),\12\ the Nonprofit Security Grant Program
(NSGP) \13\ functioned as a ``carve-out'' of UASI, so eligibility for
NSGP was tied to the MSA delineations in the same way as UASI. Pursuant
to the FY24 DHS Appropriations Act, fiscal year 2024 NSGP awards are
authorized under 6 U.S.C. 609a.\14\ Currently, as a matter of policy,
FEMA ties eligibility for assistance under the program to the MSA
framework. The fiscal year 2024 NSGP Notice Funding Opportunity (NOFO)
states that eligible nonprofit subapplicants may be eligible for
assistance specifically because of their location with respect to an
MSA.\15\
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\12\ Public Law 118-47, Div. C.
\13\ Section 2009 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 609a.
\14\ Public Law 118-47, Div. C, Title III.
\15\ See DHS NOFO Fiscal Year 2024 Nonprofit Security Grant
Program (Apr. 16, 2024), https://www.fema.gov/grants/preparedness/nonprofit-security/fy-24-nofo.
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Under the Tribal Homeland Security Grant Program (THSGP),\16\ the
FEMA Administrator may make awards ``to directly eligible tribes''
under the State Homeland Security Grant Program.\17\ The definition of
a ``directly eligible tribe'' provides four area-based criteria, one of
which must be met in order for a Tribal Nation to be eligible for
assistance under THSGP.\18\ One of those four criteria is that the
Tribal Nation is located within or contiguous to 1 of the 50 most
populous metropolitan statistical areas in the United States.\19\ Thus,
although many Tribal Nations that are eligible for THSGP will be
eligible through one of the other criteria, some Tribal Nations will be
eligible for THSGP assistance specifically because of their location
with respect to an MSA.
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\16\ Section 2005 of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 606.
\17\ 6 U.S.C. 606(a).
\18\ See 6 U.S.C. 601(4)(A)(iii).
\19\ 6 U.S.C. 601(4)(A)(iii)(III).
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FEMA's Regional Catastrophic Preparedness Grant Program
(RCPGP),\20\ as a matter of policy, ties eligibility for assistance
under the program to the MSA framework. The fiscal year 2023 RCPGP NOFO
states that eligible applicants must be either a State or Territory
that contains one or more of the 100 most populous MSAs or be a local
government located within one of the 100 most populous MSAs.\21\
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\20\ Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public Law 117-328,
Division F--Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act,
2023, Title III--Protection, Preparedness, Response, and Recovery,
Federal Emergency Management Agency, Federal Assistance.
\21\ See DHS NOFO Fiscal Year 2023 Regional Catastrophic
Preparedness Grant Program (RCPGP) (May 24, 2023), https://www.fema.gov/grants/preparedness/regional-catastrophic/fy-23-nofo.
NOFOs for affected FEMA grants programs issued since the enactment
of the MAPS Act have used the 2020 MSA delineations.
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Eligibility and allocation of funding under the Port Security Grant
Program (PSGP) \22\ and the Transit Security Grant Program (TSGP) \23\
are informed by risk, which is calculated using methodologies that
include threat, vulnerability, and consequence components that align
with the UASI risk methodology. Both grant programs use the MSA
delineations as part of the threat component through using the UASI
counterterrorism threat levels and values. The threat level and value
that DHS Intelligence & Analysis and FEMA assign to the 100 most
populous MSAs is assigned to any PSGP port and transit agency within
that MSA. The TSGP risk methodology also uses the MSA delineations as
part of the vulnerability component through using the Special Events
Metric (SEM). The SEM value for bus entities is based on the SEM value
of the MSA they serve (as assessed for the most recent UASI risk
assessment).\24\
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\22\ Section 102 of the Maritime Transportation Security Act of
2002, as amended, Public Law 107-295, 46 U.S.C. 70107.
\23\ Section 1406 of the Implementing Recommendations of the 9/
11 Commission Act of 2007, Public Law 110-53, 6 U.S.C. 1135.
\24\ For more information on these risk methodologies, see
Fiscal Year 2023 SHSP/UASI Risk Methodology Updates (Feb. 27, 2023),
https://www.fema.gov/sites/default/files/documents/fema_gpd-shsp-fy-23-risk-methodology-updates.pdf.
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[[Page 81927]]
B. Metropolitan Areas Protection and Standardization Act of 2021
The Metropolitan Areas Protection and Standardization Act of 2021
(MAPS Act),\25\ enacted on December 5, 2022, prohibits changes to the
standards of CBSA delineations to propagate \26\ automatically for any
non-statistical use by any domestic assistance program and instead
requires changes to propagate if they are affirmatively adopted through
notice and comment rulemaking pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553, by a relevant
agency that determines such a propagation supports the purposes of the
program and is in the public interest.\27\
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\25\ Public Law 117-219, 136 Stat. 2271.
\26\ Propagate is defined as reproduce or spread information.,
Black's Law Dictionary, https://thelawdictionary.org/propagate/
(last accessed July 24, 2024). Here, this refers to how statutory,
regulatory, or administrative provisions referring to CBSAs, but not
specifying a particular version of the CBSA standards or
delineations, should be read--do these provisions always mean the
latest versions of the CBSA standards or delineations, or some older
versions? The MAPS Act requires that these provisions not be read to
refer to CBSA delineations issued after the enactment of the MAPS
Act, unless an agency follows the appropriate processes.
\27\ See 31 U.S.C. 6309.
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Since an applicant's eligibility for certain of FEMA's grant
programs (i.e., UASI, NSGP, PSGP, TSGP, THSGP, and RCPGP) depends in
part on the applicant's location with respect to specific MSAs,
changing which version of the MSA delineations is used could change
which applicants are eligible. Consistent with the requirements of the
MAPS Act, FEMA is now requesting comment on whether the use of the
latest editions of OMB's MSA delineations in these grant programs
supports the purposes of the programs and is in the public's interest.
III. 2023 CBSA Delineations
OMB published revised CBSA delineations on July 21, 2023, based on
the application of the 2020 Standards to Census Bureau data from the
2020 Decennial Census, the American Community Survey, and Census
Population Estimates Program for 2020 and 2021.\28\ The 2023
delineations update and supersede the previous version of the
delineations issued on March 6, 2020,\29\ and make the following
changes:
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\28\ OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 (July 21, 2023), https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
\29\ OMB Bulletin No. 20-01 (Mar. 6, 2020), https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Bulletin-20-01.pdf.
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1. The Springfield, MA, and New Haven, CT, MSAs are no longer among
the 100 most populous MSAs due to changes to the county composition of
some MSAs.
2. The Jackson, MS, and Fayetteville, AR, MSAs now do qualify as
part of the 100 most populous MSAs due to either changes in county
composition or due to changes in population values.
3. Twenty-seven MSAs changed their name due to changes in principal
city population or due to changes in which States are part of the MSA.
For example, Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI MSA is now Chicago-
Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN MSA due to the removal of the one Wisconsin
county that was part of the MSA.\30\
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\30\ For more information on principal cities and Metropolitan
and Micropolitan Statistical Area titles, see U.S. Census Bureau,
Metropolitan and Micropolitan, About (July 25, 2023), https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/metro-micro/about.html.
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4. MSAs in Connecticut were updated to use the new planning regions
in place of counties.\31\
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\31\ For more information on Connecticut planning regions, see
State of Connecticut Office of Policy and Management, Planning
Regions and Regional Councils of Governments, https://portal.ct.gov/opm/igpp/org/planning-regions/planning-regions--overview (last
accessed July 25, 2024).
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5. The composition of 29 MSAs, including the 2 MSAs that join the
top-100 list and the 2 that drop off, changed because counties or
county equivalents were added or removed from the MSA delineations. For
example, Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC MSA lost two
counties and gained another and is now Virginia Beach-Chesapeake-
Norfolk, VA-NC MSA.
5.1. There are 22 counties removed from MSAs, of which 6 are old
Connecticut counties that get replaced by the 5 new planning regions.
5.2. There are 30 counties added to MSAs, of which 5 are the new
Connecticut planning regions and 11 are in the MSAs of Jackson, MS, and
Fayetteville, AR.
FEMA's assessment of the changes in the 2023 MSA delineations found
that there would be no changes in the geographic eligibility for any
Tribal Nations under THSGP.
The revisions in the 2023 MSA delineations change which MSAs
qualify as the 100 most populous MSAs considered for the UASI risk
assessment. Changes to this list impact which jurisdictions are
eligible to receive funding, the overall risk methodology, the
resultant risk scores, and the allocations. In addition to the UASI
grant program, the MSA delineations are also used to determine
eligibility for THSGP, NSGP, PSGP, TSGP, and RCPGP.
Based on a review of FEMA historical grant data, there was no UASI
data available for the 22 counties that were removed from the 2023 MSA
delineations, which indicates that FEMA did not provide any UASI
funding for these areas in the past 10 years. Therefore, FEMA expects
that the removal of these counties would not impact grant allocations
under the 2023 delineations. Furthermore, we do not have any grant data
for the 30 counties that were newly added due to MSA updates, so we are
unable to measure the impact of these changes on grant allocations.
Because UASI funding is capped, any economic impacts would result in a
different distribution of funds (the newly added counties would become
eligible while the removed counties would lose eligibility), but total
funding would not change.
Consistent with the requirements of the MAPS Act, FEMA seeks public
comment on the use of the 2023 MSA delineations for the following FEMA
grant programs: UASI, NSGP, PSGP, TSGP, THSGP, and RCPGP. Stakeholders
are encouraged to provide specific feedback on whether using the 2023
MSA delineations would support the purposes of these grant programs and
be in the public interest.
Deanne Criswell,
Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2024-23365 Filed 10-8-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111-78-P