HomeMy WebLinkAboutIowa Department of Economic Development-1/11/2010 (4)Iowa Department of Economic Development
Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program
Contract Amendment
Recipient: City of Waterloo
Contract Number: 08 -DRB -205
Contract Amendment Number: TWO
Amendment Effective Date: November 30, 2009
The Iowa Department of Economic Development (IDED) hereby amends the above referenced Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program contract by increasing the funding.
The contract by and between the Iowa Department of Economic Development ("Department or IDED") and
Waterloo ("Recipient") is amended as of the date shown above as follows:
AMEND each Article in the Contract that refers to "Attachment A, Program Description and Budget" to "Attachment
A, Program Description and Budget, as amended."
AMEND "Award Amount" on page one of the contract from $1,157,000 to $2,000,000 and End Date on page one of
the contract from April 30, 2010 to August 31, 2012
AMEND ATTACHMENT A " Program Description and Budget", as attached
AMEND ATTACHMENT D " CDBG Program Waivers for the Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2008"
(P.L. 110-329) by adding Federal Register / Vol 74 No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
AMEND ATTACHMENT E "Requirements for Business Activities for the CDBG Disaster Recovery
Supplemental Funds" by adding Program Guidelines for Expanded Business Rental Assistance, Loan Interest
Supplement Program, Commercial Rental Income Gap, and Residential Landlord Business Support.
Except as otherwise revised above, the terms, provisions, and conditions of the Contract remain unchanged and are in
full force and effect.
RECIPIE)N- : City of Waterloo
BY:
Mayor, City of Waterloo -nest U• O a-rL
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
BY:
Timothy R. Waddell, Division Administrator
CDBG Major Amendment
Format Approved 1/2/02
IOWA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG)
BUSINESS DISASTER RECOVERY FUND CONTRACT
RECIPIENT:
CONTRACT NUMBER:
CONTRACT EFFECTIVE DATE:
AWARD AMOUNT:
END DATE:
City of Waterloo
08 -DRB -205
September 23, 2008
See Attachment A(47 -503000)-($4-,435T000)
$2,000,000
April --30;-201-0 August 31, 2012
THIS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT PROGRAM ("CDBG") DISASTER RECOVERY FUND
CONTRACT is made by and between the IOWA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, 200 East Grand
Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa 50309 ("Department" or "IDED") and the Recipient, effective as of the date stated above.
WHEREAS, the Department is designated to receive, administer, and disburse CDBG funds in the State of Iowa; and
WHEREAS, the Department received funds under the Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2009 (P.L. 110-329) under the CDBG program; and
WHEREAS, the Department desires to disburse grant funds to the Recipient for eligible purposes primarily benefiting
low and moderate income persons, eliminating slums and blight, or meeting community development needs having particular
urgency; and
WHEREAS, the Recipient submitted an Application for funding to the Department and the Department has approved
the Application; and
WHEREAS, in approving the Application the Department has relied upon the representations of proposed activities;
management and financial condition of the Recipient; investment of other funds; and other material information contained
therein; and
WHEREAS, the Recipient has certified to the Department that the primary purpose for obtaining CDBG funds is to
primarily benefit low and moderate income persons, eliminate slums and blight, or meet community development needs having
a particular urgency; and
WHEREAS, the Recipient has agreed to provide project services to the following geographic areas: City of Waterloo
NOW, THEREFORE, the Recipient accepts this grant upon the terms and conditions set forth in this Contract. In
consideration of the mutual promises contained in this Contract and other good and valuable consideration, it is agreed as
follows:
ARTICLE 1
DEFINITIONS
As used in this Contract, the following terms shall apply:
1.1
seq.).
ACT. "Act" means Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 as amended (42 U.S.C. 5301 et
1.2 ACTIVITY. "Activity" means the description of work, services, and other accomplishments to be performed by the
Recipient as described in the Disaster Recovery Fund Application approved by the Department.
1.3 ALLOWABLE COSTS. "Allowable Costs" are those costs which are identified on Attachment A, "Program
Description and Budget;" and consistent with Federal regulations and guidelines applicable to the CDBG program.
Attachment A
Program Description & Budget
IOWA CDBG DISASTER RECOVERY FUND PROGRAM DESCRIPTION & BUDGET
ATTACHMENT A
Name of Recipient: City of Waterloo
Contract Number: 08 -DRB -205 AMENDMENT TWO
Business Assistance Programs
BRAP (Business Rental Assistance Program)
EBRAP (Expanded Business Rental Assistance Program)
LIS (Loan Interest Supplement)
CRRG (Commercial Rental Revenue Gap)
RLBS (Residential Landlord Business Support)
PO IVrANOI
MeV MS-1-llit
Assist up to 25 businesses
DATE: 11/30/2009
UN
$1,135,000
$980,000
Business Assistance Programs
BRAP (Business Rental Assistance Program)
EBRAP (Expanded Rental Assistance Program)
LIS (Loan Interest Supplement)
CRRG (Commercial Rental Revenue Gap)
RLBS (Residential Landlord Business Support)
Assist up to 25 businesses
LMI
$980.000
GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
181
$22,000
$40,000
TOTAL BUDGET:
$1,157,000
$2,000,000
G:\BCF\Recipients\Disaster\08DRB\Waterloo - 205\Amendments\Waterloo 08-DRB-205-AmendmentTWO-Attachment A.xls
Attachment D
CDBG Program Waivers for the Supplemental
Appropriations Act of 2008
Federal Register /Vol. 74, No. 156 /Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
41155
FEMA Extract: April 14, 2009.
Calculating Economic Revitalization
Needs
Based on SBA disaster loans to
businesses, HUD used the sum of real
property and real content loss of small
businesses not receiving an SBA
disaster loan. This is adjusted upward
by the proportion of applications that
were received for a disaster for which
content and real property loss were not
calculated because the applicant had
inadequate credit or income. For
example, if a state had 160 applications
for assistance, and if 150 had calculated
needs and 10 were denied in the pre-
processing stage for not enough income
or poor credit, the estimated unmet
need calculation would be increased as
(1 + 10/160), multiplied by the
calculated unmet real content loss.
SBA business loan data shows that
verified real estate damage and content
loss not approved for an SBA loan
equaled $972 million. Across all of the
disasters there were 17,157 applications
for a business disaster loan from SBA.
No inspections were done (and loss
calculated) for 14 percent of those
applications. SBA maintains
information on why an application was
denied. There are dozens of reasons'for
such denials, but the most common
relate to income and credit. Of those
denied at the pre-processing stage 59
percent were denied because of a low
credit score and 10 percent for not being
able to establish repayment ability. The
remaining applications denied in pre-
processing are largely denied for being
ineligible for the program or similar
reasons. For the applications that get
processed and a loss determined but are
subsequently not approved, the reasons
for not being approved are 38 percent
for inability to repay, 2 percent for poor
credit, and dozens of other reasons, but
mostly because the applications are
withdrawn by the applicant.
Because applications denied for poor
credit or inadequate income are the
most likely measure of requiring the
type of assistance available with CDBG
recovery funds, the calculated unmet
business needs for each state are
adjusted upwards by the proportion of
total applications that were denied at
the pre-process stage because of poor
credit or inability to show repayment
ability.
Calculating Challenge To Recover
The 2005 hurricanes damaged more
than 1.2 million homes. One year after
the disaster, 90 percent of those homes
were occupied. It is in the areas that
homes were vacant a year after the
storms that the recovery has been
especially slow, and a large number of
those homes vacant a year after the
storms continue to remain vacant. As
described in more detail below, two
variables are very strong predictors of
whether a home becomes vacant and
remains vacant over an extended period
of time. Those variables are the percent
of homes with serious damage within
the neighborhood (Census Tract is the
proxy) and if a home received very
severe damage.
The vast majority of households
impacted by a disaster are able to return
to their homes within a relatively short
time frame. For those households
displaced longer than a year and for the
neighborhoods where that displacement
occurs, the recovery challenges are
much more pronounced. For example,
areas may decide not to build back and
to build elsewhere, using buyout
programs and other strategies.
Alternatively, homes built back might
need to be built to a higher standard of
construction to better resist future
disasters. These are factors not
accounted for in the basic repair costs
calculated in the needs calculations for
housing, infrastructure, and economic
revitalization. To account for these
above normal recovery needs that are
associated with only the most severe of
disasters, HUD has used data from
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma to
develop a model for estimating if a
home is at a high or low risk for
overcoming these recovery challenges.
There are many reasons why a recovery
might not happen for a particular house,
but just two factors can predict 34
percent of the variance between homes.
According to the model, any home with
serious damage (FEMA -estimated
damage of greater than $5,200 in a 2005
disaster) had about a one percent risk
for being vacant for some period during
the 43 months following the disaster. A
home with severe damage (more than 50
percent damaged) had an additional 20
percent risk, and if that home was in a
Census Tract where many other homes
had major or severe damage, it had an
additional risk of that proportion of
homes affected, multiplied by 34
percent. Such a risk factor can be a
useful tool for adjusting grants so that
states with a higher per -damaged home
risk score get relatively more than states
with a relatively lower per -damaged
home risk score.
Disasters with
project(s)
Total estimate
Percent
B Protective Measures
75
995,171,090
19
C Roads Bridges
73
494,369,300
9
D Water Control Facilities
43
57,455,582
1
E PublicBuildings
69
1509,980,683
28
F Public__Utilities
74
837,448,078
16
G_Recreationai_Other
64
243,532,488
5
FEMA Extract: April 14, 2009.
Calculating Economic Revitalization
Needs
Based on SBA disaster loans to
businesses, HUD used the sum of real
property and real content loss of small
businesses not receiving an SBA
disaster loan. This is adjusted upward
by the proportion of applications that
were received for a disaster for which
content and real property loss were not
calculated because the applicant had
inadequate credit or income. For
example, if a state had 160 applications
for assistance, and if 150 had calculated
needs and 10 were denied in the pre-
processing stage for not enough income
or poor credit, the estimated unmet
need calculation would be increased as
(1 + 10/160), multiplied by the
calculated unmet real content loss.
SBA business loan data shows that
verified real estate damage and content
loss not approved for an SBA loan
equaled $972 million. Across all of the
disasters there were 17,157 applications
for a business disaster loan from SBA.
No inspections were done (and loss
calculated) for 14 percent of those
applications. SBA maintains
information on why an application was
denied. There are dozens of reasons'for
such denials, but the most common
relate to income and credit. Of those
denied at the pre-processing stage 59
percent were denied because of a low
credit score and 10 percent for not being
able to establish repayment ability. The
remaining applications denied in pre-
processing are largely denied for being
ineligible for the program or similar
reasons. For the applications that get
processed and a loss determined but are
subsequently not approved, the reasons
for not being approved are 38 percent
for inability to repay, 2 percent for poor
credit, and dozens of other reasons, but
mostly because the applications are
withdrawn by the applicant.
Because applications denied for poor
credit or inadequate income are the
most likely measure of requiring the
type of assistance available with CDBG
recovery funds, the calculated unmet
business needs for each state are
adjusted upwards by the proportion of
total applications that were denied at
the pre-process stage because of poor
credit or inability to show repayment
ability.
Calculating Challenge To Recover
The 2005 hurricanes damaged more
than 1.2 million homes. One year after
the disaster, 90 percent of those homes
were occupied. It is in the areas that
homes were vacant a year after the
storms that the recovery has been
especially slow, and a large number of
those homes vacant a year after the
storms continue to remain vacant. As
described in more detail below, two
variables are very strong predictors of
whether a home becomes vacant and
remains vacant over an extended period
of time. Those variables are the percent
of homes with serious damage within
the neighborhood (Census Tract is the
proxy) and if a home received very
severe damage.
The vast majority of households
impacted by a disaster are able to return
to their homes within a relatively short
time frame. For those households
displaced longer than a year and for the
neighborhoods where that displacement
occurs, the recovery challenges are
much more pronounced. For example,
areas may decide not to build back and
to build elsewhere, using buyout
programs and other strategies.
Alternatively, homes built back might
need to be built to a higher standard of
construction to better resist future
disasters. These are factors not
accounted for in the basic repair costs
calculated in the needs calculations for
housing, infrastructure, and economic
revitalization. To account for these
above normal recovery needs that are
associated with only the most severe of
disasters, HUD has used data from
Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma to
develop a model for estimating if a
home is at a high or low risk for
overcoming these recovery challenges.
There are many reasons why a recovery
might not happen for a particular house,
but just two factors can predict 34
percent of the variance between homes.
According to the model, any home with
serious damage (FEMA -estimated
damage of greater than $5,200 in a 2005
disaster) had about a one percent risk
for being vacant for some period during
the 43 months following the disaster. A
home with severe damage (more than 50
percent damaged) had an additional 20
percent risk, and if that home was in a
Census Tract where many other homes
had major or severe damage, it had an
additional risk of that proportion of
homes affected, multiplied by 34
percent. Such a risk factor can be a
useful tool for adjusting grants so that
states with a higher per -damaged home
risk score get relatively more than states
with a relatively lower per -damaged
home risk score.
Dependent Variable: A time weighted
average vacancy risk due to the
2005 Hurricanes =
[16 * (1 — ratio of 12-2006 active
address rate to 2005 pre -storm
active address rate)
14 * (1 — ratio of 2-2008 active address
rate to 2005 pre -storm active
address rate)
Unstandardized
Standardized
coefficients
Std. Error
coefficients
t
Sig.
B
Beta
(Constant)
0.010695
0.000909
11.76848
5.77E-32
Percent of homes in Census Tract with seri-
ous damage
0.347154
0.001615
0.375916
214.9506
0
Home with severe damage
0.195913
0.001158
0295827
169.1555
0
Dependent Variable: A time weighted
average vacancy risk due to the
2005 Hurricanes =
[16 * (1 — ratio of 12-2006 active
address rate to 2005 pre -storm
active address rate)
14 * (1 — ratio of 2-2008 active address
rate to 2005 pre -storm active
address rate)
41154 Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
[(State sum of HUD -calculated unmet housing, business, and infrastructure needs)
(All disaster sum of HUD -calculated unmet housing, business, and infrastructure needs)
* (State Per Seriously Damaged Home Challenge Score)8 61
(20% power) J
(Basic Allocation National Weighted Challenge Score)
—State total: November $2.145 billion
allocation
* Pro -rata adjustment after minimum grant
threshold and reserve grant set-aside
a No state can have its grant adjusted up or
down by more than 10 percent using this
factor.
b Mathematically, each state's challenge
factor is divided by the weighted national
rate (14.7) and multiplied by 0.2 (that is, if
a state's ratio was above 1; for example, 1.5
would become 1.10, [1 + ((1 – 0.5) * 0.2)];
if the ratio was below 1, for example, 0.5
would become 0.9 [1 – ((1 – 0.5) * 0.2)].
This allocation does not duplicate
funding already provided under the
Supplemental Appropriations Act of
2008 (Pub. L. 110-252, 122 Stat. 2323),
enacted on June 30, 2008, which
appropriated $300 million for disasters
that were declared and occurred in May
and June of 2008. This current
allocation subtracts out of the unmet
housing and business need estimates the
amount of funds allocated for housing
and business under the 2008 June
appropriation.
Calculating Unmet Housing Needs
The core data on housing damage for
both the unmet housing needs
calculation and the concentrated
damage are based on home inspection
data for FEMA's Individual Assistance
program. For unmet housing needs, the
FEMA data are supplemented by SBA
data from its Disaster Loan Program.
HUD calculates "unmet housing needs"
as the number of housing units with
unmet needs, multiplied by the
estimated cost to repair those units,
minus the amount of repair funding
already provided by FEMA, where:
• The number of owner -occupied
units with unmet needs are units FEMA
housing inspectors determined would
require more than $3,000 to become
habitable and were determined by
FEMA to be eligible for a repair or
replacement grant (now up to $30,300,
earlier disasters in the year had a cap of
$28,800). In general, when HUD refers
to units "seriously damaged," it is
referring to units with a FEMA damage
assessment of $3,000 or greater.
• The number of rental units with
unmet needs are units FEMA housing
inspectors determined would require
more than $3,000 to become habitable
AND are occupied by households with
an income reported to FEMA of less
than $20,000. The use of the $20,000
income cut-off for calculating rental
unmet needs is in response to the
statutory language that emphasized the
use of the funds for affordable rental
housing.
• Each of the FEMA inspected units
are categorized by HUD into one of five
categories:
o Minor -Low: Less than $3,000 of
FEMA -inspected damage
o Minor -High: $3,000 to $7,999 of
FEMA -inspected damage
o Major -Low: $8,000 to $14,999 of
FEMA -inspected damage
o Major -High: $15,000 to $28,800 of
FEMA -inspected damage
o Severe: Greater than $28,800 of
FEMA -inspected damage or -determined
destroyed.
Note: FEMA has recently raised its
maximum grant to $30,300. For this first
round allocation, HUD continues to use the
$28,800 as the threshold, because it applied
for most of the declared disasters.
• The average cost to fully repair a
home for a specific disaster within each
of the damage categories noted above is
calculated using the average real
property damage repair costs
determined by the SBA for its disaster
loan program for the subset of homes
inspected by both SBA and FEMA.
Because SBA is inspecting for full repair
costs, it is presumed to reflect the full
cost to repair the home, which is
generally more than FEMA estimates on
the cost to make the home habitable. If
fewer than 100 SBA inspections are
made for homes within a FEMA damage
category, the estimated damage amount
in the category for that disaster has a
cap applied at the 75th percentile of all
damaged units for that category for all
disasters and has a floor applied at the
25th percentile.
• The base amount of unmet housing
needs is then increased by 20 percent to
reflect an assumed premium associated
with the additional costs needed to run
a repair program with CDBG funding.
Calculating Infrastructure Needs
As noted above, the statute for this
allocation states that "such funds may
not be used for activities reimbursable
by, or for which funds are made •
available by, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency or the Army Corps
of Engineers" and that "none of the
funds * * * may be used * * * as a
matching requirement, share, or
contribution for any other Federal
program." In past disasters, unmet
infrastructure need has been calculated
at the required match portion for the
public assistance program. Because
these funds cannot be used as match, we
must identify a proxy for what
infrastructure activities are likely to
require funding beyond FEMA's Public
Assistance funding and the state match
requirement. To best proxy unmet needs
that would exceed what FEMA and state
match will pay for under the Public
Assistance program, this allocation uses
only a subset of the Public Assistance
damage estimates reflecting the
categories of activities most likely to
require CDBG funding above the Public
Assistance and State Match
requirement. Those activities are the
following categories: C—Roads and
Bridges; D—Water Control Facilities;
E—Public Buildings; F—Public Utilities;
and G—Recreational—Other. Categories
A (Debris Removal) and B (Protective
Measures) are largely expended
immediately after a disaster and reflect
interim recovery measures, rather than
the long-term recovery measures the
CDBG funds are generally used for.
"Unmet" infrastructure needs assume
that the subset categories of Public
Assistance needs will have state
aggregate costs 25 percent higher than
that covered by FEMA or the state
match requirement.
Disasters with
project(s)
Total estimate
Percent
Public Assistance Total
75
71
$5,322,992,430
1,185,035,209
22
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices 41153
the final compensation payment. If the
state also provides rehabilitation
assistance, it must include in its
evaluation a comparison of the results of
the compensation and rehabilitation
activities.
9. Housing incentives to encourage
housing resettlement consistent with
local recovery plans. The states of
Louisiana and Texas may offer disaster
recovery or mitigation housing
incentives to promote suitable housing
development or resettlement in
particular geographic areas. Any state
choosing to provide incentives must
maintain documentation at least at a
programmatic level describing how the
amount of assistance was determined to
be necessary and reasonable. Note that
if the grantee requires the funds to be
used for a particular purpose by the
household receiving the assistance, then
the activity will be that required use,
not an eligible incentive. The
Department is waiving 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)
and associated regulations to make these
uses of grant funds eligible.
10. Three-month limitation on
emergency grant payments. 42 U.S.C.
5305(a) is waived so that Iowa may
extend interim mortgage assistance to
qualified individuals for up to 20
months. This waiver applies to funds
received under the First 2008 Act (Pub.
L. 110-252), and to funds received
under the Second 2008 Act (Pub. L.
110-329).
Duration of Funding
Availability of funds provisions in 31
U.S.C. 1551-1557, added by section
1405 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991
(Pub. L. 101-510), limit the availability
of certain appropriations for
expenditure. This limitation may not be
waived. However, the Second 2008 Act
directs that these funds be available
until expended unless, in accordance
with 31 U.S.C. 1555, the Department
determines that the purposes for which
the appropriation has been made have
been carried out and no disbursement
has been made against the appropriation
for 2 consecutive fiscal years. In such a
case, the Department shall close out the
grant prior to expenditure of all funds.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance numbers for the disaster recovery
grants under this Notice are as follows:
14.219; 14.228.
Finding of No Significant Impact
A Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in
accordance with HUD regulations at 24
CFR part 50, which implement section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332). The
FONSI is available for public inspection
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays in
the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street, SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410-0500. Due to
security measures at the HUD
Headquarters building, an advance
appointment to review the docket file
must be scheduled by calling the
Regulations Division at telephone
number 202-708-3055 (this is not a toll-
free number). Hearing- or speech -
impaired individuals may access this
number through TTY by calling the toll-
free Federal Information Relay Service
at 800-877-8339.
Dated: July 20, 2009.
Mercedes Marquez,
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Appendix 1—Allocation Methodology
Detail
The Consolidated Security, Disaster
Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2009 (Pub. L. 110-
329), enacted on September 30, 2008,
appropriated $6.5 billion through the
CDBG program for "necessary expenses
related to disaster relief, long-term
recovery, and restoration of
infrastructure, housing, and economic
revitalization in areas affected by
hurricanes, floods, and other natural
disasters occurring during 2008 for
which the President declared a major
disaster."
It went on to say that "such funds
may not be used for activities
reimbursable by, or for which funds are
made available by, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency or the
Army Corps of Engineers" and that
"none of the funds * * * may be used
* * * as a matching requirement, share,
or contribution for any other Federal
program." It also stated that "not less
than $650,000,000 from funds made
available on a pro -rata basis according
to the allocation made to each State"
shall be used for affordable rental
housing.
Finally, the statute called for "not
less" than 33 percent of the funds to be
allocated within 60 days of enactment
(that is, by November 28th) based "on
the best estimates available of relative
damage and anticipated assistance from
other Federal sources."
Schedule for Allocations
While Congress appropriated $6.5
billion, $377,139,920 has been
rescinded, $6.5 million has been set
aside for HUD administrative costs, and
$2,145,000,000 was allocated in
November 2008. This allocation
distributes the remaining
$3,971,360,080, with a $311,603,923 set-
aside to the Disaster Recovery
Enhancement Fund.
Disasters in 2008
There were 76 major disasters that
occurred in 2008 in 35 states, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Data on
damaged housing are available for 36
disasters from FEMA and Small
Business Administration (SBA);
business loss data are available for 39
disasters from SBA; and 72 disasters
have data on the cost FEMA and states
are estimated to spend on infrastructure
and other Public Assistance costs.
Available Data
The data HUD staff have identified as
being available to calculate "relative
damage and anticipated assistance from
Federal sources" at this time for the
targeted disasters come from the
following data sources:
• FEMA Individual Assistance
program data concerning housing unit
damage;
• SBA for management of its disaster
assistance loan program for housing
repair and replacement;
• SBA for management of its disaster
assistance loan program for business
real estate repair and replacement, as
well as content loss; and
• FEMA estimated and obligated
amounts under its Public Assistance
program, including the federal and state
cost share.
Formula
This formula "allocates" the full
$6,116,360,080 available for allocation
under this appropriation and then
subtracts out the $2,145,000,000 that
was previously allocated and the
$311,602,923 set-aside reserve fund (on
a pro -rata basis). HUD has adopted this
practice to adjust grants to reflect better
data than were available at the time of
the November 2008 allocation and to
treat disasters occurring after November
equally with disasters that occurred
earlier in the year.
The formula mechanics are as follows:
$6,116,360,080
41152 Federal Register/Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
allocation of grant funds under this
Notice. Each of the states has requested,
in writing, that HUD grant it the waivers
and alternative requirements of that
Notice.
3. Planning activities. For CDBG
disaster recovery -assisted general
planning activities that will guide
recovery in accordance with the First
2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-252) and the
Second 2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-329), the
State CDBG program rules at 24 CFR
570.483(b)(5) and (c)(3) are waived and
the presumption at 24 CFR
570.208(d)(4) applies for all First 2008
Act and Second 2008 Act grantees.
4. National Objective Documentation
for Economic Development Activities.
24 CFR 570.483(b)(4)(i) is waived to
allow the states of Texas, Iowa, and
Louisiana to establish low- and
moderate -income jobs benefit by
documenting, for each person
employed, the name of the business,
type of job, and the annual wages or
salary of the job. HUD will consider the
person income -qualified if the annual
wages or salary of the job is at or under
the HUD -established income limit for a
one-person family.
5. Section 414 of the Stafford Act.
Section 414 of the Stafford Act, 42
U.S.C. 5181 (including its implementing
regulation at 49 CFR 24.403(d)), is
waived to the extent that it would apply
to CDBG disaster recovery -funded
programs or projects initiated within 3
years of the incident -date of Hurricane
Ike or Hurricane Gustav (as applicable)
by the states of Texas and Louisiana
under an approved Action Plan for
Disaster Recovery for its grants under
the Second 2008 Act, provided that
such program or project was not
planned, approved, or otherwise under
way prior to the disaster.
a. For all programs or projects covered
by this waiver ("covered programs or
projects") that are within 3 years after
the applicable disaster, the states of
Texas and Louisiana must comply with
one of the following two alternative
requirements (for programs or projects
initiated after the 3 -year period, the
alternative requirements would not
apply; only the waiver would be
applicable): (1) Relocation Assistance.
The state may provide relocation
assistance to a former residential
occupant whose former dwelling is
acquired, rehabilitated, or demolished
for a covered program or project
initiated within 3 years after the
disaster, even though the actual
displacements were caused by the
effects of the disaster. To the extent
practicable, such relocation assistance
must be offered in a manner consistent
with the URA, as amended, and its
implementing regulations, except as
modified by prior waivers and
alternative requirements granted to the
states. (2) Re -housing Plan. If the state
determines that the first alternative
would substantially conflict with
meeting the disaster recovery purposes
of the Second 2008 Act, the grantee may
establish a re -housing plan for a covered
program or project initiated within 3
years after the disaster. Such a
determination must be made on a
program or project basis (not person or
household). The re -housing plan must
include, at minimum, the following:
(i) A description of the class(es) of
persons eligible for assistance, including
all residents displaced from their
residences by either certain enumerated
or all effects of the covered disaster, and
including all disaster -displaced
residents still receiving temporary
housing assistance from FEMA for the
covered disasters;
(ii) A description of the types and
amount of financial assistance to be
provided, if any;
(iii) A description of other services to
be made available, including, at a
minimum, outreach efforts to eligible
persons and housing counseling, that
provide information about available
housing resources;
(iv) Contact information for additional
program information;
(v) A description of any applicable
application process, including any
deadlines; and
(vi) If the program or project covered
by this waiver involves rental housing,
the grantee shall establish procedures
for the following:
A. Application materials, award
letters, and operating procedures that
require property owners to make
reasonable attempts to contact their
former tenants and to offer a unit, upon
completion, to those tenants meeting the
program's eligibility requirements;
B. Placement services for former and
prospective tenants; and
C. A public registry of available rental
units assisted with CDBG disaster
recovery and/or other funds.
b. Eligible Project Costs. The costs of
relocation assistance and the
reoccupancy plan are eligible project
costs in the same manner and to the
same extent as other project costs
authorized under the Second 2008 Act.
For covered programs or projects
involving affordable rental housing, the
relocation and planning costs required
by this Notice may be paid from funds
reserved for the affordable rental
housing stock in the impacted areas
under the Second 2008 Act.
c. Persons in physical occupancy who
are displaced by a HUD -assisted disaster
recovery project will continue to be
eligible for URA assistance.
6. Buildings for the general conduct of
government. 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) is waived
to the extent necessary to allow the
states of Texas and Louisiana to fund
the rehabilitation or reconstruction of
public buildings that are otherwise
ineligible and that the state selects in
accordance with its approved Action
Plan for Disaster Recovery and that the
state has determined have substantial
value in promoting disaster recovery.
The state of Indiana may use funds
allocated under the September 11, 2008,
Federal Register Notice (73 FR 52870)
or December 19, 2008, Federal Register
Notice (73 FR 77818) to fund the
rehabilitation or reconstruction of
public buildings that are otherwise
ineligible.
7. Public benefit for certain economic
development activities. For economic
development activities designed to
create or retain jobs or businesses
(including, but not limited to, long-term,
short-term, and infrastructure projects),
the public benefit standards at 42 U.S.C.
5305(e)(3) and 24 CFR 570.482(f)(1), (2),
(3), (4)(i), (5), and (6) are waived for the
states of Texas, Louisiana, and Iowa,
except that these states shall report and
maintain documentation on the creation
and retention of total jobs; the number
of jobs within certain salary ranges; the
average amount of assistance provided
per job, by activity or program; and the
types of jobs. Paragraph (g) of 24 CFR
570.482 is also waived for these states
to the extent its provisions are related to
public benefit.
8. Compensation for disaster -related
losses. HUD is granting a compensation
waiver together with alternative
requirements for the states of Louisiana
and Texas. Either state deciding to assist
a compensationactivity must address
the following in its action plan and
program design:
a. How the state will ensure that
compensation payments will result in
disaster recovery or economic
revitalization;
b. Why a housing rehabilitation or
reconstruction or buyouts program is
not a more appropriate choice than
providing housing compensation. The
state must compare and contrast
schedules, delivery costs, and projected
recovery resulting from each type of
activity; and
c. How the state determined the
appropriate compensation amount(s).
Further, any state choosing to provide
compensation assistance must also carry
out and publish an evaluation of
outcomes of the program for a
statistically valid sample of the program
participants within a year of providing
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 /Friday, August 14, 2009 /Notices 41151
addition to buyouts) for households that
volunteer to relocate within a particular
period of time, or who choose to resettle
outside a 100- or 500 -year floodplain.
Note, however, that if the grantee
requires the funds to be used for a
particular purpose by the household
receiving the assistance, then the
activity will be that required use, not an
eligible incentive. The Department is
waiving 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) and
associated regulations to make these
uses of grant funds eligible.
Compensation for disaster -related
losses. The states of Louisiana and
Texas plan to provide compensation to
certain homeowners whose homes were
affected during the covered disasters, if
the homeowners agree to meet the
stipulations of the state's or
subawardee's published program
design. Such stipulations may not
include requirements related to how the
homeowner may use the funds, because
then the assisted activity would be that
required use, not compensation. Such
programs were carried out by the states
of Louisiana and Mississippi following
the 2005 hurricanes. A strength of these
compensation programs is that they may
be able to disburse funding more
quickly than traditional CDBG
rehabilitation programs. However, a
major weakness is the lack of certainty
about whether an assisted homeowner
will use the granted assistance in a way
that supports the community's long-
term recovery goals. Very little data
exists to verify the degree to which
compensation funds have been used for
reconstruction or rehabilitation. Existing
data suggest that a certain percentage of
those receiving assistance fail to comply
with the program stipulations. By
contrast, a rehabilitation program is
typically able to demonstrate that all or
nearly all of its assisted households
reside (after receiving assistance) in
reconstructed or rehabilitated homes,
according to the grantee's standards.
Therefore, HUD is granting this
compensation waiver together with
alternative requirements. HUD will
disapprove an action plan if a
compensation program is not adequately
justified in accordance with these
alternative requirements. Any state
deciding to assist a compensation
activity must address in its action plan
and program design:
(1) How the state will ensure that
compensation payments will result in
disaster recovery or economic
revitalization;
(2) Why a housing rehabilitation or
reconstruction or buyouts program is
not a more appropriate choice; and
(3) How the state determined the
appropriate compensation amount(s).
Further, any state choosing to provide
compensation assistance must also carry
out an evaluation of outcomes of the
program, for a statistically valid sample
of the program participants, within a
year of providing the final payment.
Three-month limitation on emergency
grant payments. In response to the state
of Iowa's request, HUD is waiving 42
U.S.C. 5305(a) to allow it to extend
interim mortgage assistance to qualified
individuals for up to 20 months. The
state is currently operating an Interim
Mortgage Assistance Program, limited to
a maximum of 3 months and a
maximum of $1,000 per month. It has
now been almost 12 months since the
original flooding event occurred but
many families still require this
assistance. Furthermore, it will still be
several months before FEMA buyout
decisions will be made and
implemented. Therefore, to permit the
state of Iowa to adequately assist
households through this period, and to
be consistent with the state funding that
has been supplied separately for this
purpose, HUD will waive the normal 3 -
month limitation, to provide a total of
20 months of Interim Mortgage
Assistance to qualified individuals.
Summary of States Receiving Waivers
Texas. Texas has requested and HUD
has approved the following waivers and
alternative requirements for funds
provided to the state under the Second
2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-329): (1)
Documentation of job retention, (2)
section 414 of the Stafford Act, (3)
eligibility of buildings for the general
conduct of government, (4) public
benefit for certain economic
development activities, and (5)
compensation for disaster -related losses
or housing incentives to resettle in
disaster -affected communities. Texas
has justified each request and
documented the need for each waiver.
Iowa. Iowa has requested and HUD
has approved the following waivers and
alternative requirements: (1)
Documentation of job retention, (2)
public benefit for certain economic
development activities, and (3) three-
month limitation on emergency grant
payments. Iowa has justified each
request and documented the need for
each waiver. The waivers granted by
this Notice will apply to funds received
under the First 2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-
252), and to all funds received under the
Second 2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-329).
Louisiana. Louisiana has requested
and HUD has approved the following
waivers and alternative requirements for
funds provided to the state under the
Second 2008 Act: (1) Documentation of
job retention, (2) section 414 of the
Stafford Act, (3) eligibility of buildings
for the general conduct of government,
(4) public benefit for certain economic
development activities, and (5)
compensation for disaster -related losses
or housing incentives to resettle in
disaster -affected communities.
Louisiana has justified each request and
documented the need for each waiver.
Indiana. Indiana has requested and
HUD has approved a waiver regarding
the eligibility of buildings for the
general conduct of government for all
funds received under the First 2008 Act,
2008 (Pub. L. 110-252). Note, this
waiver has been neither requested nor
approved for funds received under the
Second 2008 Act (Pub. L. 110-329).
Application for Allocations Under the
Second 2008 Act
The waivers and alternative
requirements streamline the pre -grant
process and set the guidelines for states'
applications for their allocations. Each
grantee receiving an allocation under
the Second 2008 Act (which includes
allocations made under this Notice, as
well as those made under the February
13, 2009, Notice) is required, with the
exception of California, to submit and/
or amend its Action Plan for Disaster
Recovery to program all of each state's
allocations by September 30, 2009. The
state of California (which did not
receive an allocation under the February
13, 2009, Notice) is required to submit
an Action Plan for Disaster Recovery by
December 30, 2009. Any allocation not
applied for by these dates may be added
to the funds available under the DREF
and reallocated. If any grantee fails to
meet the requirement to program its
allocations within the relevant
timelines, HUD, on the first business
day after that deadline, will commence
an action to recapture the funds.
Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers,
and Alternative Requirements
1. General note. Prerequisites to a
grantee's receipt of CDBG disaster
recovery assistance include adoption of
a citizen participation plan; publication
of its proposed Action Plan for Disaster
Recovery; public notice and comment;
and submission to HUD of an Action
Plan for Disaster Recovery, including
certifications. Except as described in
this Notice, statutory and regulatory
provisions governing the CDGB program
for states, including those at 42 U.S.C.
5301 et seq. and 24 CFR part 570, shall
apply to the use of these funds.
2. The waivers provided in the
February 13, 2009, Federal Register
Notice (74 FR 7244) are granted and the
alternative requirements of that Notice
apply to all the states receiving an
41150 Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
with meeting the disaster recovery
purposes of the Second 2008 Act, the
state may establish a re -housing plan for
a covered program or project initiated
within 3 years after the disaster. Such
determinations must be made on a
program or project basis (not person or
household). The re -housing plan must
include, at minimum, the following:
1. A description of the class(es) of
persons eligible for assistance, including
all persons displaced from their
residences by particular, enumerated, or
by all, effects of the disaster, and
including all persons still receiving
temporary housing assistance from
FEMA for the covered disaster(s);
2. A description of the types and
amount of financial assistance to be
offered, if any;
3. A description of other services to be
made available, including, at minimum,
outreach efforts to eligible persons and
housing counseling providing
information about available housing
resources. Outreach efforts and housing
counseling information should be
provided in languages other than
English to persons with limited English
proficiency; and
4. Contact information and a
description of any applicable
application process, including any
deadlines.
5. If the program or project involves
rental housing, the re -housing plan must
also include the following:
(i) Placement services for former and
prospective tenants;
(ii) A public registry of available
rental units assisted with CDBG disaster
recovery and/or other funds; and
(iii) Application materials, award
letters, and operating procedures
requiring property owners to make
reasonable attempts to contact their
former residential tenants and offer a
unit, upon completion, to those tenants
meeting the program's eligibility
requirements.
(iv) Persons in physical occupancy
who are displaced by a HUD -assisted
disaster recovery project will continue
to be eligible for URA assistance.
Justification for Waiver
The reasons for granting this waiver
are several, and are ably represented by
the states in their requests. The
principal reasons are highlighted here:
• Hurricanes Ike and Gustav caused
significant destruction that resulted in
massive displacements and decimated
the region's affordable housing stock
Continued ambiguity on section 414's
applicability may cause substantial
delays in long-term recovery,
particularly in Texas and Louisiana; and
• Simplify the administration of
disaster recovery projects or programs
initiated years following the disaster.
Persons displaced by the effects of the
disaster may continue to apply for
assistance under the states' approved
disaster recovery programs, which are
designed to bring affordable housing to
the affected areas. This waiver does not
address programs or projects receiving
other HUD funding, or funding from
other federal sources.
A state may already be performing
some elements of a re -housing plan,
such as providing a public rental
registry or undertaking outreach and
placement services to those former
residents still receiving FEMA housing
assistance. A description in the re-
housing plan of how those existing
efforts will be available for covered
programs or projects may be used in
satisfying the requirements of this
Notice.
Eligibility—buildings for the general
conduct of government—States of
Indiana, Louisiana, and Texas. The
states of Indiana, Louisiana, and Texas
requested a limited waiver of the
prohibition on funding buildings for the
general conduct of government. HUD
has considered the request and agrees
that it is consistent with the overall
purposes of the 1974 Act for requesting
states to be able to use the grant funds
under this notice to repair or reconstruct
buildings used for the general conduct
of government and that the states have
selected in accordance with the method
described in their Action Plans for
Disaster Recovery and that they have
determined have substantial value in
promoting disaster recovery. However,
as stated by the Second 2008 Act, funds
allocated under today's Federal Register
Notice, or the February 13, 2009,
Federal Register Notice (74 FR 7244),
may not be used for activities
reimbursable by or for which funds are
made available by FEMA or the Army
Corps of Engineers. Further, none of the
funds may be used as the required
match, share, or contribution for another
federal program.
Public benefit for certain economic
development activities—States of Iowa,
Louisiana, and Texas. The states of
Iowa, Louisiana, and Texas have
requested a waiver of the public benefit
standards for their economic
development activities. The public
benefit provisions set standards for
individual economic development
activities (such as a single loan to a
business) and for economic
development activities in the annual
aggregate. Currently, public benefit
standards limit the amount of CDBG
assistance per job retained or created, or
the amount of CDBG assistance per low -
and moderate -income person to which
goods or services are provided by the
activity. Essentially, the public benefit
standards are a proxy for all the other
possible public benefits provided by an
assisted activity. These dollar
thresholds were set more than a decade
ago and, under disaster recovery
conditions (which often require a larger
investment to achieve a given result),
can be too low and, thus, impede
recovery by limiting the amount of
assistance the grantee may provide to a
critical activity. States requesting this
waiver have made public in their Action
Plans the disaster recovery needs each
activity is addressing and the public
benefits expected.
After consideration, today's Federal
Register Notice waives the public
benefit standards for the cited activities,
except that each requesting state shall
report and maintain documentation on
the creation and retention of: (a) Total
jobs, (b) number of jobs within certain
salary ranges, (c) the average amount of
assistance per job and activity or
program, and (d) the types of jobs. As a
conforming change for the same
activities or programs, HUD is also
waiving paragraph (g) of 24 CFI( 570.482
to the extent its provisions are related to
public benefit.
Housing incentives to encourage
housing resettlement consistent with
local recovery plans; States of Louisiana
and Texas. The states of Louisiana and
Texas may offer disaster recovery or
mitigation housing incentives to
promote suitable housing development
or resettlement in particular geographic
areas. By "resettlement," HUD is
referring to resettling the community as
a whole, which may include buyouts
and relocation, as well as repopulation
initiatives if part of a recovery plan. In
the past, the state of New York
successfully used an incentive program
to induce rapid and stable resettlement
of lower Manhattan following
September 11, 2001. Also, the city of
Grand Forks, North Dakota, provided a
very affordable soft -second loan as an
incentive to help induce households to
resettle within the city during its
recovery. Any state choosing to provide
incentives must maintain
documentation, at least at a
programmatic level, describing how the
amount of assistance was determined to
be necessary and reasonable. Generally,
incentives are offered in addition to
other programs or funding (such as
insurance), to try to influence
individual residential location
decisions, when these decisions are in
doubt. For example, a grantee may offer
an incentive payment (possibly in
Federal Register/Vol. 74, No. 156 /Friday, August 14, 2009 /Notices 41149
Appropriations with regard to all steps
taken to prevent fraud and abuse of
funds made available under this
heading, including duplication of
benefits.
To meet this directive, HUD is
pursuing four courses of action. First,
the Federal Register Notice published
February 13, 2009 (74 FR 7244),
includes specific reporting, written
procedures, monitoring, and internal
audit requirements for grantees. Second,
to the extent its resources allow, HUD
will institute risk analysis and on-site
monitoring of grantee management of
the grants and of the specific uses of
funds. Third, HUD will be extremely
cautious in considering any waiver
related to basic financial management
requirements. The standard, time -tested
CDBG financial requirements will
continue to apply. Fourth, HUD is
collaborating with the HUD Office of
Inspector General to plan and
implement oversight of these funds.
Waiver Justification
The waivers, alternative requirements,
and statutory changes described in the
February 13, 2009, Federal Register
Notice (74 FR 7244) apply to all of the
CDBG supplemental disaster recovery
funds appropriated in the Second 2008
Act (Pub. L. 110-329), but not to funds
provided under the regular CDBG
program. Similarly, the waivers,
alternative requirements, and statutory
changes described in the September 11,
2008, Federal Register Notice (73 FR
52870) apply to the CDBG supplemental
disaster recovery funds appropriated in
the First 2008 Act, not to funds
provided under the regular CDBG
program. These actions, below, provide
additional flexibility in program design
and implementation and implement
statutory requirements. The previous
notices, referenced above, provide
further justification for the waivers.
Common Waivers
Previously published waivers to
streamline application and program
launch. Funds allocated by today's
Federal Register Notice will be subject
to the waivers, alternative requirements,
and statutory changes described in this
Notice and those previously published
in the February 13, 2009, Federal
Register Notice (74 FR 7244).
General planning activities use
entitlement presumption, all grantees.
Today's Federal Register Notice notifies
Congress and the public that the states
receiving funds under the First 2008 Act
and/or the Second 2008 Act have
requested this waiver and HUD is
granting the waiver. The annual State
CDBG program requires that local
government grant recipients for
planning -only grants must document
that the use of funds meets a national
objective. In the State CDBG program,
these planning grants are typically used
for individual project plans. By contrast,
planning activities carried out by
entitlement communities are more
likely to include nonproject specific
plans such as functional land -use plans,
historic preservation plans,
comprehensive plans, development of
housing codes, and neighborhood plans
related to guiding long-term community
development efforts comprising
multiple activities funded by multiple
sources. In the annual entitlement
program, these more general stand-alone
planning activities are presumed to
meet a national objective under the
requirements at 24 CFR 570.208(d)(4).
The Department notes that almost all
effective CDBG disaster recoveries in the
past have relied on some form of area -
wide or comprehensive planning
activity to guide overall redevelopment
independent of the ultimate source of
implementation funds. Therefore, the
Department is removing the eligibility
requirement that CDBG disaster
recovery -assisted planning -only grants
or state directly administered planning
activities that will guide recovery in
accordance with the appropriations act
must comply with the State CDBG
program rules at 24 CFR 570.483(b)(5) or
(c)(3). Instead, 24 LER 570.208(d)(4) will
apply.
State -Specific Waivers
National Objective Documentation for
Economic Development Activities—
States of Iowa, Louisiana, and Texas.
For the national objective
documentation for business assistance
activities, the states of Iowa, Louisiana
and Texas, which have received funds
under the First 2008 Act and Second
2008 Act, have asked to apply
individual salaries or wages -per -job and
the income limits for a household of
one, rather than the usual CDBG
standard of total household income and
the limits by total household size. The
states have asserted that this proposed
documentation would be simpler and
quicker for participating lenders to
administer, easier to verify, and would
not misrepresent the amount of low -
and moderate -income benefit provided.
Upon consideration, HUD is granting
this waiver, which also was granted for
recovery in lower Manhattan following
September 11, 2001, and in certain
states following the Gulf Coast
hurricanes of 2005. Due to the
significant breadth of many states'
economic development programs, this
waiver will play a key role in
streamlining the documentation process
because it allows collection of wage data
for each position created or retained
from the assisted businesses, rather than
from each individual household.
Section 414 of the Stafford Act—
States
ctStates of Louisiana and Texas. In
addition to the above, the states of
Louisiana and Texas have also
requested a waiver of section 414 of the
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act, as amended,
for their disaster recovery programs.
Section 414 directs that persons who
were displaced by a disaster be
considered to be displaced by a federal
action, as defined under the Uniform
Relocation Act (URA), if the property in
which they were living prior to the
disaster is assisted with certain federal
funds. Today's Federal Register Notice
grants, in part, the request that the
Secretary waive that section and
provides alternative requirements more
consistent with the purpose of the
Second 2008 Act, which is to assist and
support disaster recovery in the areas
most affected by the effects of the
disasters in 2008.
Several states suffered significant
destruction in the wake of Hurricanes
Ike and Gustav, and the reconstruction
will likely last for many years to come—
much like in the Gulf Coast states
affected by the hurricanes in 2005. For
programs or projects covered by this
waiver ("covered programs or projects")
that are initiated within 3 years after the
applicable disaster, each state receiving
this wavier must comply with one of the
two alternative requirements (for
programs or projects initiated after the
3 -year period, the alternative
requirements would not apply; only the
waiver would be applicable):
Alternative One
The state may provide relocation
assistance to a former residential
occupant whose former dwelling is
acquired, rehabilitated, or demolished
for a covered program or project
initiated within 3 years after the
disaster, even though the actual
displacements were caused by the
effects of the disaster. To the extent
practicable, such relocation assistance
should be offered in a manner
consistent with the Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (URA),
as amended, and its implementing
regulations, except as modified by
applicable waivers and alternative
requirements.
Alternative Two
If the state determines that the first
alternative would substantially conflict
41148 Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
TABLE 2—FIRST 2008 ACT DISASTER RECOVERY ALLOCATIONS Continued
State
Disaster No.
Incident date
Declared date
Allocation
Illinois
1771
6/1 to 7/22
6/24/08
17,341,434
Minnesota
1772
6/7 to 6/12
6/25/08
925,926
Missouri
1773
6/1 to 8/13
6/25/08
7,512,572
Congress required that states devote
"not less than $650,000,000" of the total
Second 2008 Act to support "repair,
rehabilitation, and reconstruction
(including demolition, site clearance
and remediation) of the affordable rental
housing stock (including public and
other HUD -assisted housing) hi the
impacted areas where there is a
demonstrated need as determined by the
Secretary." Table 1 above shows the
minimum amount each grantee must
spend on affordable rental housing from
its total combined allocation of first and
second round funding under the Second
2008 Act.
Disaster Recovery Enhancement
Allocations. As stated above, HUD
calculates CDBG disaster recovery
allocations, including the above
allocations, to each grantee based on
unmet needs data (see Appendix 1).
These data largely represent an estimate
of the costs for repairs to a pre -disaster
condition. Often, this data does not
adequately reflect the full recovery costs
associated with a disaster. Also, because
of cost considerations, state disaster
recovery grantees may not always
choose recovery activities that are the
most advantageous for long-term
recovery and resilience from a federal
perspective. For example, relocating a
repetitively flooded community from a
floodplain limits future calls on the
National Flood Insurance program and
other federal recovery programs. From a
federal perspective, flood buyouts are
frequently a good idea; locally, they can
be politically difficult and somewhat
more costly to administer than a
traditional rehabilitation program.
Therefore, the Secretary has created a
$311,602,923 Disaster Recovery
Enhancement Fund (DREF) for
secondary allocations to grantees that
anticipate that they will still have
unmet disaster recovery needs after
developing and undertaking forward -
thinking recovery strategies and
activities in a timely manner. To be
eligible to receive an additional
allocation, a grantee must budget its
allocated Second 2008 Act funds for the
specific activities listed in this Notice
by programming the funds in an Action
Plan for Disaster Recovery (or an
amendment thereof) submitted to HUD
by June 30, 2010. A state receiving an
additional allocation may use the funds
for any activity eligible for assistance
under the Second 2008 Act in
accordance with this Notice.
Note that the Stafford Act and the
Second 2008 Act prohibit use of these
funds as a substitute or match for
Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) Hazard Mitigation Grant
Program (HMGP) funds. Also note that
CDBG disaster recovery funds must be
used in the counties declared in the
applicable covered disaster(s) for each
state, while HMGP funds may generally
be used statewide.
By setting a specific deadline for the
Action Plan submissions for this DREF
allocation, HUD is signaling that the
Department intends to assist grantees
that will implement these forward -
thinking approaches to long-term
recovery in a timely manner. Funds will
be allocated dollar -for -dollar for the first
$15 million budgeted for enhanced
disaster recovery activities for an
individual state and on a pro rata basis
for amounts budgeted above $15 million
as measured by funds budgeted by grant
recipients by June 30, 2010, on the
following specific enhanced disaster
recovery activities that reduce the risk
of damage from a future disaster:
1. Development and adoption of a
forward -thinking land -use plan that will
guide use of long-term recovery efforts
and subsequent land -use decisions
throughout the community and that
reduces existing or future development
in disaster -risk areas;
2. Floodplain or critical fire or seismic
hazard area buyouts programs under an
optional relocation plan that includes
incentives so that families and private
sector employers move out of areas at
severe risk for a future disaster;
3. Individual mitigation measures
(IMM) to improve residential properties
and make them less prone to damage. If
such activities are incorporated into the
grantee's rehabilitation or new
construction programs generally, the
cost increment attributed to IMM will be
the amount considered for the
additional allocation, not the total
construction amount budget; or
4. Implementation of modern disaster
resistant building codes, including, but
not limited to, training on new
standards and code enforcement.
A grantee must include start and end
dates for each activity in its Action Plan.
A grantee must demonstrate in its
Action Plan submission for any
additional allocation that it still has
eligible unmet needs to receive
assistance from the DREF before HUD
will add the additional allocation to the
state's line of credit. Furthermore, the
Secretary reserves the right to allocate
more or less than $311,602,923 under
this fund, depending on the amount
grantees actually budget on such
activities and any amounts available for
reallocation.
A grantee may reprogram funds from
one of the listed enhanced disaster
recovery activities to another, but if the
grantee reprograms grant funds to any
other activity, HUD may recapture the
DREF allocation, in whole or in part, in
accordance with section 111 of the HCD
Act, 24 CFR part 570, subpart 0, and
this Notice.
The Second 2008 Act requires funds
to be used in accordance with its
specific purposes. The statute directs
that each grantee will describe in its
Action Plan for Disaster Recovery
criteria for eligibility and how the use
of grant funds will address long-term
recovery and infrastructure restoration,
housing, and economic revitalization in
the affected areas. HUD will monitor
compliance with this direction and may
be compelled to disallow expenditures
if it finds uses of funds do not meet the
statutory purposes, or duplicate other
benefits. HUD encourages grantees to
contact their assigned HUD offices for
guidance in complying with these
requirements during development of
their Action Plans for Disaster Recovery
or if they have any questions regarding
meeting these requirements.
As provided for in the Second 2008
Act, the funds may not be used for
activities reimbursable by or for which
funds are made available by FEMA or
the Army Corps of Engineers. Further,
none of the funds may be used as the
required match, share, or contribution
for another federal program.
Prevention of Fraud, Abuse, and
Duplication of Benefits
Additionally, the Second 2008 Act
directs the Secretary to:
Establish procedures to prevent
recipients from receiving any
duplication of benefits and report
quarterly to the Committees on
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices 41147
shall apply to the use of these funds. In
accordance with the First and Second
2008 Acts„HUD will reconsider every
waiver in today's Federal Register
Notice on the 2 -year anniversary of the
day this Notice is published.
Additional Waivers
Each state receiving an allocation may
request additional waivers from the
Department as needed to address the
specific needs related to that state's
recovery activities. The Department will
respond separately to the state's
requests for waivers of provisions not
covered in this Notice, after working
with the state to tailor the program to
best meet the unique disaster recovery
needs in its impacted areas. HUD has
included some additional waivers and
alternative requirements for individual
states in this Notice.
Allocations
Today's Notice makes available the
remainder of the Second Act's
supplemental appropriation,
$3,971,360,080 for the CDBG program
for necessary expenses related to
disaster relief, long-term recovery, and
restoration of infrastructure, housing,
and economic revitalization in areas
affected by hurricanes, floods, and other
natural disasters occurring in 2008, for
which the President declared a major
disaster under title IV of the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.).
The Second 2008 Act notes:
That funds provided under this heading
shall be administered through an entity or
entities designated by the Governor of each
state * * * Provided further, that funds .
allocated under this heading shall not
adversely affect the amount of any formula
assistance received by a state under the
Community Development Fund: Provided
further, that each state may use up to five
percent of its allocation for administrative
costs.
HUD computes allocations based on
data that are generally available
covering all the eligible affected areas.
The 11 states receiving an allocation in
today's Notice are indicated in Table 1,
below. Their estimated unmet needs
represent more than 97 percent of the
estimated unmet needs across all 76
disasters that occurred in 2008. The
allocation was based on two factors: (i)
The sum of estimated unmet housing,
infrastructure, and business needs,
adjusted by (ii) a HUD calculated risk
level for recovery challenge. More
detailed information about the data
reviewed, the formula process, and the
possible risks affecting recovery can be
found in Appendix 1 of this Notice.
Initial allocations made under the
Second 2008 Act were announced by
HUD on November 26, 2008, and
published in the Federal Register on
February 13, 2009 (74 FR 7244). Initial
allocations are included in Table 1. The
states of Kentucky, Georgia, and
Mississippi, and the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico received allocations in the
February 13, 2009, Federal Register
Notice, but are not receiving additional
funds under today's Notice, bringing to
15 the total number of grantees allocated
funding from the Second 2008 Act.
Table 2 is a reprint from the initial
allocation notice that shows what the
allocations were under the First 2008
Act. Unlike funds allocated under the
Second 2008 Act, which may be used
for recovery from any disaster occurring
during Calendar Year 2008, funds under
the First 2008 Act are available only for
use in areas covered by specific
declarations, so these are also noted.
TABLE 1—SECOND 2008 ACT DISASTER RECOVERY ALLOCATIONS
State
This Notice's
Second 2008 Act
allocation
Initial Second
2008 Act
allocation
(Notice 74 FR
7244)
Total Second
2008 Act
allocation
Minimum amount
for affordable
rental housing
Texas
$1,743,001,247
$1,314,990,193
$3,057,991,440
$342,521,992
Louisiana
620,467,205
438,223,344
1,058,690,549
118,582,672
Iowa
516,713,868
125,297,142
642,011,010
71,910,891
Indiana
253,340,079
95,042,622
348,382,701
39,021,933
Illinois
127,207,128
41,984,121
169,191,249
18,950,911
Missouri
78,625,549
13,979,941
92,605,490
10,372,631
Wisconsin
75,200,572
25,039,963
100,240,535
11,227,823
Tennessee
71,881,834
20,636,056
92,517,890
10,362,819
Arkansas
70,181,041
20,294,857
90,475,898
10,134,098
Florida
63,606,850
17,457,005
81,063,855
9,079,866
California
39,531,784
0
39,531,784
4,427,908
Kentucky
0
3,217,686
3,217,686
341,943
Georgia
0
4,570,779
4,570,779
485,736
Mississippi
0
6,283,404
6,283,404
667,737
Puerto Rico
0
17,982,887
17,982,887
1,911,040
TABLE 2—FIRST 2008 ACT DISASTER RECOVERY ALLOCATIONS
State
Disaster No.
Incident date
Declared date
Allocation
Mississippi
Maine
Oklahoma
Arkansas
South Dakota
Missouri
Colorado
Iowa
Indiana
Montana
Wisconsin
West Virginia
Nebraska
1753
1755
1756
1758
1759
1760
1762
1763
1766
1767
1768
1769
1770
3/20 to 5/19
4/28 to 5/14
5/10 to 5/13
5/2 to 5/12
5/1
5/10 to 5/11
5/21
5/25 and continuing
5/30 to 6/27
5/1
6/5 and continuing
6/3 to 6/7
5/22
5/8/08
5/9/08
5/14/08
5/20/08
5/22/08
5/23/08
5/26/08
5/27/08
6/8/08
6/13/08
6/14/08
6/19/08
6/20/08
$2,281,287
2,187,114
1,793,876
4,747,501
1,987,271
3,519,866
589,651
156,690,815
67,012,966
666,672
24,057,378
3,127,935
5,557,736
41146 Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 156 / Friday, August 14, 2009 / Notices
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice of
this meeting is given under the Federal
Advisory Committee Act, 5 U.S.C. App.
(Pub. L. 92-463).
Agenda of the Meeting
The agenda for the September 9
meeting will be as follows:
(1) Opening comments.
(2) Introductions.
(3) Administrative announcements.
(4) Pre -approved presentations from
the public.
(5) Debriefs from each DRBOSAC Sub-
committee.
(6) Public comments.
(7) Future Committee business.
(8) Closing.
More information and detail on the
meeting will be available at the
committee Web site, located at https://
homeport.uscg.mil/drbosac. Additional
detail may be added to the agenda up to
September 2, 2009.
Procedural
This meeting is open to the public.
All persons entering the Harbor Room
will need to sign in at the door. Please
note that the meeting may close early if
all business is finished.
The public will be able to make oral
presentations during the meeting when
given the opportunity to do so. Members
of the public may seek pre -approval for
their oral presentations by contacting
the Coast Guard no later than September
2, 2009. The public may file written
statements with the committee; written
material should reach the Coast Guard
no later than September 2, 2009. If you
would like a copy of your material
distributed to each member of the
committee in advance of the meeting,
please submit 35 copies to the Liaison
to the DFO no later than September 2,
2009, and indicate that the material is
to be distributed to committee members
in advance of the September 9 meeting.
Please register your attendance with
the Liaison to the DFO no later than
September 2, 2009.
Information on Services for Individuals
with Disabilities
For information on facilities, or
services for individuals with
disabilities, or to request special
assistance at the meeting, contact the
Liaison to the DFO as soon as possible.
Dated: August 6, 2009.
Nakeisha B. Hills,
Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Coast Guard,
Preparedness Officer, Sector Delaware Bay
Acting Designated Federal Officer.
[FR Doc. E9-19550 Filed 8-13-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-15-P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR -5337—N-01]
Additional Allocations and Waivers
Granted to and Alternative
Requirements for 2008 Community
Development Block Grant (CDBG)
Disaster Recovery Grantees
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of allocations, waivers,
and alternative requirements.
SUMMARY: This Notice advises the public
of the second allocation for grant funds
for CDBG disaster recovery grants for
the purpose of assisting in the recovery
in areas covered by a declaration of
major disaster under title IV of the
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C.
5121 et seq.) as a result of recent natural
disasters. As described in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this Notice, HUD is authorized by
statute and regulations to waive
statutory and regulatory requirements
and specify alternative requirements for
this purpose, upon the request of the
state grantees. This Notice also
describes: (1) How the allocatees may
implement the common application,
eligibility, and administrative waivers
and the common alternative and
statutory requirements for the grants;
and (2) additional waivers and
alternative requirements for certain
earlier grants.
DATES: Effective Date: August 19, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott Davis, Director, Disaster Recovery
and Special Issues Division, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street, SW., Room 7286,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone
number 202-708-3587. Persons with
hearing or speech impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Information Relay Service at
telephone number 800-877-8339.
Facsimile inquiries may be sent to Mr.
Davis at facsimile number 202-401-
2044. (Except for the "800" number,
these telephone numbers are not toll
free.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority To Grant Waivers
The Consolidated Security, Disaster
Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2009 (Pub. L. 110-
329, approved September 30, 2008)
(hereinafter, "Second 2008 Act" to
differentiate it from the earlier 2008
Supplemental Appropriations Act) (Pub.
L. 110-252 approved June 30, 2008)
(hereinafter "First 2008 Act"),
appropriated $6.5 billion, to remain
available until expended, in CDBG
funds for necessary expenses related to
disaster relief, long-term recovery, and
restoration of infrastructure, housing,
and economic revitalization in areas
affected by hurricanes, floods, and other
natural disasters occurring during 2008,
for which the President declared a major
disaster under title IV of the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.).
To date, $377,139,920 has been
rescinded, $6,500,000 was set-aside for
HUD administrative costs, and
$2,145,000,000 was allocated by HUD in
November 2008. This Notice allocates
the remaining $3,971,360,080.
The First 2008 Act also appropriated
funds for 2008 disaster recovery
grantees, although it only provided
funds for disasters occurring in May and
June 2008. Both the First 2008 Act and
the Second 2008 Act authorize the
Secretary to waive, or specify alternative
requirements for, any provision of any
statute or regulation that the Secretary
administers in connection with the
obligation by the Secretary or use of
these funds and guarantees by the
recipient, except for requirements
related to fair housing,
nondiscrimination, labor standards, and
the environment (including
requirements concerning lead-based
paint), upon a request by the state
explaining why such waiver is required
to facilitate the use of such funds or
guarantees, and a finding by the
Secretary that such a waiver would not
be inconsistent with the overall purpose
of title I of the Housing and Community
Development Act of 1974 (HCD Act).
Additionally, regulatory waiver
authority is provided by 24 CFR 5.110,
91.600, and 570.5. The following
application and reporting waivers and
alternative requirements are in response
to requests from the states receiving an
allocation under today's Federal
Register Notice.
The Secretary finds that the following
waivers and alternative requirements, as
described below, are necessary to
facilitate use of the funds for the
statutory purposes and are not
inconsistent with the overall purpose of
title I of the HCD Act or the Cranston -
Gonzalez National Affordable Housing
Act, as amended.
Under the requirements of the First
2008 Act and the Second 2008 Act,
statutory and regulatory waivers must
be published in the Federal Register.
Except as described in this Notice,
statutory and regulatory provisions
governing the CDBG program for states,
including those at 24 CFR part 570,
41156 Federal Register/Vol. 74, No. 156 /Friday, August 14, 2009 /Notices
10 * (1 — ratio of 12-2008 active
address rate to 2005 pre -storm
active address rate)
3 * (1 — ratio of 3-2009 active address
rate to 2005 pre -storm active
address rate)]
Divided by 43 months. (the longer the
vacancy the higher the average
score)
R -square: 0.340
N: 287,190
To adjust for this greater recovery
challenge, the results of the analysis
above are used in the following model
for 2008:
Vacancy Risk Score =
0.010695 (Constant)
+ 0.347154 Percent of homes in
Census Tract with serious damage
+ 0.195913 Home with major -high or
severe damage
The risk score is then aggregated for
each disaster and divided by the total
number of housing units with more than
very minor damage. That is, we
determine a per -damaged home
recovery challenge risk score. Such a
risk factor can be a useful tool for
adjusting grants so that states with a
higher risk for long-term recovery
challenges get a somewhat higher grant
because of this risk.
[FR Doc. E9-19488 Filed 8-13-09; 8:45 am]
BIWNG CODE 4210-67-P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR -5282—N-04]
Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Comment Request;
Community Development Block Grant
Recovery (CDBG—R) Program
AGENCY: Office of Community Planning
and Development, Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
ACTION: Notice of proposed information
collection.
SUMMARY: The proposed information
collection requirement described below
will be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act. The Department is
soliciting public comments on the
subject proposal.
DATES: Comments Due Date: October 13,
2009.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
Lillian L. Deitzer, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street,
SW., Room 4176, Washington, DC
20410; telephone 202-402-8048 (this is
not a toll-free number) or e-mail Ms.
Deitzer at Lillian.L.Deitzer@hud.gov for
a copy of the proposed form and other
available information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steve Johnson, Director, Entitlement
Communities Division, Office of Block
Grant Assistance, 451 7th Street, SW.,
Room 7282, Washington, DC 20410;
telephone (202) 708-1577 (this is not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department is submitting the proposed
information collection to OMB for
review, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35, as amended). The
Department submitted to OMB for
emergency processing a proposed
information collection for the
Community Development Block Grant
Recovery (CDBG—R) program. It was
approved by OMB on April 17, 2009
and expires on October 31, 2009. Since
HUD will be using the form (SF 424)
beyond the emergency clearance time
period, this is a resubmission to OMB
under the normal paperwork clearance
process for a three-year approval.
This Notice is soliciting comments
from members of the public and affected
agencies concerning the proposed
collection of information to: (1) Evaluate
whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information; (3) Enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
Minimize the burden of the collection of
information on those who are to
respond; including through the use of
appropriate automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology, e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
This Notice also lists the following
information:
Title of Proposal: Community
Development Block Grant Recovery
Program.
OMB Control Number, if Applicable:
2506-0184.
Description of the Need for the
Information and Proposed Use: This
request identifies the estimated
reporting burden associated with
information that CDBG—R grantees will
report in IDIS for CDBG—R assisted
activities, recordkeeping requirements,
and reporting requirements. Section
1512 of the Recovery Act requires that
not later than 10 days after the end of
each calendar quarter, each recipient
that received recovery funds from a
Federal agency shall submit a report to
that agency that contains: (1) The total
amount of recovery funds received from
that agency; (2) the amount of recovery
funds received that were expended or
obligated to projects or activities; and
(3) a detailed list of all projects or
activities for which recovery funds were
expended or obligated, including the
name of the project or activity; a
description of the project or activity; an
evaluation of the completion status of
the project or activity; an estimate of the
number of jobs created and the number
of jobs retained by the project or
activity; and for infrastructure
investments made by State and local
governments, the purpose, total cost,
and rationale of the agency for funding
the infrastructure investment with funds
made available under the Recovery Act
and name of the person to contact at the
agency if there are concerns with the
infrastructure investment. Not later than
30 calendar days after the end of each
calendar quarter, each agency that made
Recovery Act funds available to any
recipient shall make the information in
reports submitted publicly available by
posting the information on a Web site.
Agency Form Numbers: Not
applicable.
Members of the Affected Public:
Eligible CDBG grantees (metropolitan
cities, urban counties, nonentitlement
counties in Hawaii, and States).
Estimation of the total numbers of
hours needed to prepare the information
collection including number of
responses, frequency of responses, and
hours of responses: The number of
respondents is 1,196. The proposed
frequency of the response to the
collection is on a quarterly basis. The
total estimated burden is 28,704
quarterly hours.
Status of the proposed information
collection: This submission is an
extension of a previously approved
emergency information collection. The
current OMB approval expires on
October 31, 2009.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35, as amended.
Dated: August 6, 2009.
Mercedes Marquez,
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
[FR Doc. E9-19485 Filed 8-13-09; 8:45 am]
BIWNG CODE 4210-67-P
Attachment E
Requirements for Business Activities for the CDBG
Disaster Recovery Supplemental Funds
Business Disaster Recovery Programs
Expanded Business Rental Assistance Program
Program Guidelines
Purpose
The purpose of the disaster recovery business rental assistance program (BRAP) is to provide financial assistance to
a business located in or planning to locate in a business rental space that was physically damaged by the 2008 natural
disaster(s). Assistance will be in the form of rental assistance to help offset building rental lease payments for a
maximum of six months. This expanded program (EBRAP) also provides assistance in the form of reimbursement
for up to 50% of replacement costs associated with machinery and equipment, office equipment, furniture, supplies
and inventory physically damaged by the 2008 natural disaster(s), or for start-up businesses. Awards are not to
exceed a total award of $50,000 per business. In-home businesses are not eligible for the funds.
Definitions
• `Administrative entii' means the direct applicants for this activity who are the cities of Cedar Falls, Cedar
Rapids, Des Moines, Iowa City and Waterloo, and "lead" counties applying on behalf of the six Disaster
Recovery Areas designated by IDF.D.
■ `Business" means a corporation, a professional corporation, a limited liability company, a partnership, a sole
proprietorship, or a nonprofit corporation.
■ `Department" or IDED"means the Iowa department of economic development.
■ `Disaster—damaged apace"means a business rental space that was physically damaged by the 2008 natural
disaster(s). This definition includes upper stories of a building that was physically damaged in the basement
or ground floor, or both, as well as a building constructed at the same site to replace a building that was
destroyed due to damage resulting from the 2008 natural disaster(s). In-home businesses are not eligible for
assistance.
• `Physically damaged" for the purpose of this program means physical damage caused by flooding including
overland flow, or physical damage caused by tornado. Damage caused by sanitary or storm sewer backup is
not induded unless the department determines that such damage was a direct result of the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
Eligible Business for Expanded Program
• Business Rental Assistance Program (BRAD) provides financial assistance to a business located in or
planning to locate in a business rental space that was physically damaged by the 2008 natural disaster(s).
■ To apply for reimbursement of replacement costs, a business must have been open and operating at the
time of the 2008 natural disaster(s) and is operating at the time of the application.
■ Business can document a loss resulting from direct disaster damage to machinery and equipment, office
equipment, furniture, supplies and/or inventory, as a result of the 2008 natural disaster(s).
• Business can document a loss for which business did not receive private/business insurance, federal
funding, state or local grants or forgivable loans for the purpose of replacing machinery and equipment,
office equipment, furniture and fixtures, supplies and inventory physically damaged by the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
■ Commercial portion of mixed use facilities are eligible. However, residential facilities are not eligible.
■ Rental reimbursement (BRAP) is available to pay for space one time. Reimbursement is first available to
the primary leaseholder, then to the holder of the sublease.
Ineligible Business for Replacement of Equipment under the Expanded Program (EBRAP)
■ Start-up business or existing businesses relocating from a non -disaster damaged space to a disaster damaged
space are not eligible for reimbursement for damaged equipment However, these businesses are eligible for
rental reimbursement.
■ Businesses located on the upper floors of disaster impacted buildings that did not sustain any direct physical
damage to equipment are not eligible. However, these businesses are eligible for rental reimbursement.
Eligible expanded program activities: maximum amount of assistance
■ BRAP/EBRAP is one Assistance Program with a maximum combined award of $50,000.
■ Maximum award amount for Expand Rental Assistance (EBRAP) is 50% of actual replacement costs
associated with machinery and equipment, office equipment, furniture, supplies and inventory, physically
damaged by the 2008 natural disaster(s) and not reimbursed by insurance, government sources, forgivable
loans or grants, up to the $50,000 BRAP/EBRAP combined amount.
Ineligible Program Expenditures
■ Construction/maintenance/leaseholder expenses, purchase/lease of vehicles and leased equipment are not
eligible for reimbursement
Duplication of Benefits
■ Business has completed and submitted the required Consent and Release Form, Subrogation Agreement,
and Duplication of Benefits Affidavit
Distribution of funds to administrative entities
• Funds will be awarded to administrative entities on a first-come, first served, based on amount needed for
business applications approved and forwarded to IDED.
• An administrative entity shall award funds to an eligible business in the form of a grant for reimbursement
for replacement costs or in the form of a forgivable loan to a business that has entered into a minimum
one-year, market -rate lease agreement. A forgivable loan is a loan that will be forgiven if the business
remains open for the duration of the six-month period for which rental assistance is awarded.
• An eligible business must apply to the administrative entity by June 30, 2010 for reimbursement of
replacement equipment damaged by the 2008 natural disaster(s). Funds for this activity are available
through September 30, 2010.
• An eligible business must apply to the administrative entity by June 30, 2010 for rental reimbursement
Funds for this activity are available until December 31, 2010.
■ Application period may be terminated if funds are not sufficient.
Program administration: reporting requirements
• Each local administrative entity shall enter into a contract with an eligible business to provide assistance
under this program. The contract will include terms and conditions that meet the requirements of these
guidelines and include provisions requiring repayment if funds are not used in compliance with the program
guidelines.
• Each administrative entity will provide oversight and administration to ensure that the recipients of the
program funds are meeting the contract requirements. Each administrative entity will collect data and
submit reports to the department about the program in the form and content required by IDED.
Business Disaster Recovery Programs
Loan Interest Supplement Program
Program Guidelines
Purpose
The purpose of the Loan Interest Supplement Program is to provide assistance in the form of interest supplements to
businesses who have obtained physical disaster loans or economic injury disaster loans from an eligible lender. Funds
will be provided to individual businesses, for a maximum of three (3) years, not to exceed $50,000 per business.
Program Description
■ This program is designed to supplement the interest related to post disaster debt.
Based on existing loans, the loan interest is calculated, and these dollars are available quarterly, to offset the
cost of carrying debt associated with the 2008 natural disaster(s).
Definitions
• `Administrative entity" means the direct applicants for this activity who are the cities of Cedar Falls, Cedar
Rapids, Des Moines, Iowa City and Waterloo, and "lead" counties applying on behalf of the six Disaster
Recovery Areas designated by IDED.
• `Business" means a corporation, a professional corporation, a limited liability company, a partnership, a sole
proprietorship, or a nonprofit corporation.
■ `Department" or "IDED"means the Iowa department of economic development
• `Disaster Loan" means one of the following types of loans:
1) `Physical Disaster Loan"- financial assistance provided to a businesses, by an eligible lender, to repair or
replace physically damaged property owned by the business at the time of the 2008 natural disaster(s),
including real estate, inventories, supplies, machinery and equipment
2) `Economic injury disaster loan"- a loan provided by an eligible lender for: lost income or lost profits; to pay
liabilities which the business could have paid if the disaster had not occurred; working capital for a
limited period so business can operate until conditions return to normal.
• `Eligible Lender" means any of the following entities that provide disaster recovery loans to business: the
SBA; a financial institution; an economic development organization; a rural electric or telephone cooperative
with an established Economic Development Administration (EDA) or U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) revolving loan fund program or intermediary re -lending program.
`Physically damaged" for the purpose of this program means physical damage caused by flooding including
overland flow, or physical damage caused by tornado. Damage caused by sanitary or storm sewer backup is
not included unless the department determines that such damage was a direct result of the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
■ `SBA"means the U.S. Small Business Administration
Eligibility
■ Business has received a disaster loan for economic injury and/or physical damage as a result of the 2008
natural disaster(s).
• Business is open and operating at the time of application and at each disbursement period.
• Common ownership must be in place both pre -disaster and active post -disaster.
• If both a holding company and operating company have received disaster loans both are eligible for
assistance.
• Commercial portion of a mixed-use facility is eligible.
■ Residential facilities are not eligible.
Eligible program activities: maximum amount of assistance
■ An eligible business may apply for interest supplements of up to $50,000, for the first three (3) years of the
disaster related loans executed prior to June 1, 2009.
• The maximum allowable reimbursement is calculated on the first 36 -months of interest on the original
disaster related loan or original line of credit. The amount of quarterly reimbursement is for actual interest
paid in that quarter with total reimbursement equal to or less than 36 -month of interest calculated from -the
original disaster loan.
■ If a disaster loan is restructured, the maximum amount of reimbursement is equal to or less than 36 months
of interest calculated from the original disaster loan.
• Interest supplements will be disbursed quarterly for the previous quarter's follows:
For the Quarter Ending
GAX accepted after this date
September 30, 2009
For interest receipts thru 8/31/2009
October 1, 2009
December 31
For interest receipts from Oct 1- Dec 31
January 1
March 31s,
For interest receipts from Jan 1— March 31
April 1
June 30
For interest receipts from April 1— June 30
July 1st
September 30
For interest receipts from July 1— September 30
October 1st
■ The business will submit to the administrative entity, receipts of interest supplement for each quarter.
• The business with a line of credit, will submit to the administrative entity, documentation that expenditures
related to the draw meet qualifications of disaster recovery loan.
■ An eligible business must apply to the administrative entity by June 30, 2010.
Duplication of Benefits
• Business has completed and submitted the required Consent and Release Form, Subrogation Agreement, and
Duplication of Benefits Affidavit.
Distribution of Funds and Program Termination
• IDED will disburse funds in the form of a grant to administrative entities. The grant shall be used to provide
financial assistance to eligible business in the form of a grant for supplemental reimbursement of interest on
disaster loans related to the 2008 natural disaster(s)
• Application will be processed by an administrative entity. Funds will be distributed quarterly, upon request to
the department from an administrative entity.
■ Funds for this program shall be available through August 31, 2012.
■ Application period may be terminated if funds are not sufficient.
Program Administration and reporting
• Each administrative entity will provide oversight and contract administration to ensure that program's
recipients are meeting contract requirements.
• Each administrative entity will collect data and report to IDED in the form and content required by law.
Business Disaster Recovery Programs
Commercial Rental Revenue Gap
Program Guidelines
Purpose/Program Description
The program element is designed to assist with cash flow for commercial building owners to offset the loss of
revenue from rental space that was physically damaged by the disaster. Up to 12 months lost rental revenue is
available to businesses who own commercial rental property, up to $25,000 per unit.
Definitions
• `Administrative entity" means the direct applicants for this activity who are the cities of Cedar Falls, Cedar
Rapids, Des Moines, Iowa City and Waterloo, and "lead" counties applying on behalf of the six Disaster
Recovery Areas designated by IDED.
■ `Business" means a corporation, a professional corporation, a limited liability company, a partnership, a sole
proprietorship, or a nonprofit corporation.
• `Disaster—damaged Jpace"means a business rental space that was physically damaged by the 2008 natural
disaster(s). This definition includes upper stories of a building that was physically damaged in the basement
or ground floor, or both, as well as a building constructed at the same site to replace a building that was
destroyed due to damage resulting from the 2008 natural disaster(s).
Physically damaged" for the purpose of this program means physical damage caused by flooding including
overland flow, or physical damage caused by tornado. Damage caused by sanitary or storm sewer backup is
not included unless the department determines that such damage was a direct result of the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
• 'Lost Rental Revenue" means the amount of base rent stated in property lease at the time of the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
Eligibility
• Business currently owns a commercial building that was physically damaged by the 2008 natural disaster(s)
and business was the owner of record prior to the disaster(s).
• Common ownership must have been in place both pre -disaster and active post -disaster.
• Business has provided lease agreements from tenants prior to the 2008 natural disaster(s).
■ Business has provided lease agreement from current tenant or documentation of final inspection by local
government showing rehab/repair of the building is complete and ready to be occupied by a new tenant.
• Lost rental revenue from a sublease, including chair rental, is not eligible.
Eligible program activities: maximum amount of assistance
• An eligible business may apply for reimbursement of up to $ 25,000 of actual lost rental revenues based on
executed leases at the time of the 2008 natural disaster(s). Assistance is not available for units vacant at the
time of the disaster.
• One payment will be issued for up to the first 12 months the unit was vacant and remained vacant,
beginning at the time of the disaster.
Duplication of Benefits
■ Business has completed and submitted the required Consent and Release Form, Subrogation Agreement,
and Duplication of Benefits Affidavit.
Distribution of funds to administrative entities
■ Funds will be awarded to administrative entities on a first-come, first served, based on amount needed for
business applications approved and forwarded to IDED.
■ An administrative entity shall award funds to an eligible business in the form of a grant
■ Applications for funding shall be received by the administrative entities by June 30, 2010.
• Funds for this program will be available through August 31, 2010.
• Application period may be terminated if funds are not sufficient.
Program administration; reporting requirements
■ Each local administrative entity shall enter into a contract with an eligible business to provide assistance
under this program. The contract will include terms and conditions that meet the requirements of these
guidelines and include provisions requiring repayment if funds are not used in compliance with the program
guidelines.
■ Each administrative entity will provide oversight and administration to ensure that the recipients of the
program funds are meeting the contract requirements. Each administrative entity will collect data and
submit reports to the department about the program in the form and content required by IDED.
Business Disaster Recovery Programs
Residential Landlord Business Support
Program Guidelines
Program Description
The program element is designed to compensate for lost rental revenue for residential rental landlords providing
affordable housing, whose rental units were physically damaged by the disaster. Landlords may receive up to
$15,000 per business tax identification number.
Definitions
■ `Administrative entitj' means the direct applicants for this activity who are the cities of Cedar Falls, Cedar
Rapids, Des Moines, Iowa City and Waterloo, and "lead" counties applying on behalf of the six Disaster
Recovery Areas designated by IDED.
• Affordable Rental Units — means those units contained in the mortgaged property and contained in the
agreement for covenants and restriction that are occupied by low and moderate income families at any given
time. Affordable rental units (in the appropriate number as described later in these guidelines under
national objective) are to be retained at all times as affordable rental units throughout the period of
affordability (5 years) through income limitations of the tenants occupying those units and through rent
limitations for the tenants occupying those units.
• `Project"— means a site or sites together with any building or buildings (including manufactured structures
that are taxed as real property) located on a site or sites that are under common ownership, management
and financing and are to be assisted with CDBG Supplement funds as a single undertaking and includes all
activities associated with the site(s) and building(s).
■ `Disaster Event"means the federally declared 2008 Iowa tornado, flood and storm events, which occurred
between May 25 and Aug 13, 2008.
• Physically damaged" for the purpose of this program means physical damage caused by flooding including
overland flow, or physical damage caused by tornado. Damage caused by sanitary or storm sewer backup is
not included unless the department determines that such damage was a direct result of the 2008 natural
disaster(s).
Eligible applicant must meet the following.
• A residential rental property owner (individual; for-profit entities; and non-profit entities)
• Rental property owners must have been the owner of record of the property (or properties) for which
funding is sought prior to the date of the 2008 natural disaster(s).
• Common ownership must have been in place both pre -disaster and active post -disaster.
• This activity is available only to residential rental property owners that agree to comply with all federal, state
and local requirements' (including but not limited to: these guidelines; Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity;
accessibility for persons with disabilities; local rental housing codes and requirements; etc.)
• Residential property owner provides executed lease agreements from tenants prior to the disaster.
• Owner provides documentation that rehab of the building is complete and it has been rented with a
minimum one year lease by a verifiable tenant.
Eligible properties:
• The activity is available only to rental property owners whose properties were physically damaged by flooding,
including overland flow, or physical damage caused by tornado. Damage caused by sanitary or storm sewer
back up is not included unless the department determines that such damage was a direct result of the disaster
event.
• At least one residential rental unit in the project had to have been affected (damaged, impacted) by a
disaster event in order for the project to be eligible for assistance. For individual structures (buildings) in
scattered sites types of projects, all structures must have had at least one residential rental unit affected
(damaged, impacted) by a disaster event in order for those structures to be eligible for assistance. An
example of a rental unit impacted by a disaster event might include items such as mechanical systems or
electrical systems located in a flooded basement that serve rental units located on first or upper floors of the
structure.;
• In order to be eligible for assistance, the rental property owner must be able to demonstrate and document
that their property was physically damaged by a disaster event.
• The property must meet all applicable property standards after being rehab. The CDBG Entitlement Cities
and communities with populations at or greater that 15,000 need to comply with locally adopted and
enforced codes, standards and ordinances. For the remainder of the State, in the absence of any locally
adopted and enforced codes or standards, the requirements of the State Building Code apply;
• The CDBG Supplemental funds are subject to the requirements of the Federal Lead Safe Housing
regulations, impacting all multi -family dwelling units and projects that are constructed prior to January 1,
1978.
• No assistance for structures or projects located within the 100 -year floodplain will be allowed, unless the
activity meets all HUD environmental requirements, all applicable flood mitigation design standards, and
the property is insured by Federal Flood Insurance.
• No assistance is available for lost rental revenue to property owners whose structures or projects are located
in designated or proposed buy-out areas will be allowed.
• No assistance is available for property owners for lost revenue to an owner occupied unit.
Additional guidelines
• CDBG National Objective — All assisted rental properties must meet the national objective of "Primarily
benefits persons of low and moderate income — Housing". Effectively, this means that at least 51% of the
units in an assisted property must be occupied by persons or households whose incomes are at or below
80% of the area median income limits (LMI).
- In a one unit project — the one unit must be made available to and occupied by a LMI tenant.
- In a two unit project — one of the two units must be made available to and occupied by a LMI tenant.
- Projects of three or more units — 51% of all units in the project (rounded up to the nearest whole
number) must be made available to and occupied by a LMI tenant (e.g., in a four unit project, three
units must be made available to and occupied by LMI tenants).
Scattered site projects accomplished as a single undertaking shall take into consideration the individual
properties on the various sites when determining national objective compliance (e.g., a seven single unit
project on seven different sites must all be available to and occupied by a LMI tenant).
Following the provision of CDBG Supplemental Funds assistance to a project (i.e., following
reimbursement of costs, rehabilitation costs, lead hazard reduction costs, etc.), when all work has been
completed and accepted and the forgivable loan and deed restriction has been recorded; the 5 -year term of
affordability begins. It is at this juncture (initial occupancy following the provision of assistance) that the
appropriate number of units in the project needs to be occupied by LMI tenants and subsequent rents
limited on those units. If any rental units are occupied with over -income tenants at this juncture, there may
be a need to permanently displace over -income tenants. Permanent displacement is subject to the
requirements of the Uniform Act, for which the applicant is responsible.
• Maximum (gross) rent limits on the CDBG Supplemental Funds assisted (affordable) rental units (by
bedroom size) shall not exceed the most current HOME Program Fair Market Rents (HOME FMRs). Net
rents must be calculated based upon the utility allowances established by the local public housing authority
that has jurisdiction for the area served.
• Rental property owners of CDBG Supplemental funds assisted projects shall agree to a five-year period of
affordability in terms of tenant income restrictions (limitations) and through affordable rent limitations
(controls) on all CDBG Supplemental funds assisted rental units serving LMI tenants, maintaining the
appropriate number of affordable rental units for the entire five-year period.
Long term affordability requirements shall be secured through an agreement for covenants and restrictions
that ride with the assisted property's land.
Through the period of affordability, assisted rental property owners shall ensure that the appropriate
number of rental units remains affordable to, and are occupied by, income eligible and verified LMI tenants.
All assisted rental units shall be subject to the maximum rent limitations (HOME Program FMRs, by
bedroom size) applicable to all assisted rental units for the five-year period of affordability.
■ Award will result in a contract between the IDED designated Disaster Recovery recipient and the rental
property owner.
■ Disaster Recovery administrative entity will upload into Service Point the approved application for
Residential Landlord Program and all supporting documentation used to determine eligibility.
Eligible program activities: maximum amount of assistance
• Amount of assistance is limited to $15,000 per business taxing entity.
• Loss is computed at the pre -disaster lease rate.
Duplication of Benefits
• Business has completed and submitted the required Duplication of Benefits Affidavit.
Program Termination
• Applications for funding for this program shall be received by the administrative entity by June 30, 2010.
• Application period may be terminated if funds are not sufficient