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1 California Department of Housing and Community Development Thomas Brandeberry CDBG Section Chief 2012 CDBG PROGRAM NOFA APPLICATION WORKSHOP.

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Presentation on theme: "1 California Department of Housing and Community Development Thomas Brandeberry CDBG Section Chief 2012 CDBG PROGRAM NOFA APPLICATION WORKSHOP."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 California Department of Housing and Community Development Thomas Brandeberry CDBG Section Chief 2012 CDBG PROGRAM NOFA APPLICATION WORKSHOP

2 2 TODAY’S WORKSHOP Regulation Changes What’s New? Who Can Apply - Threshold NOFA Basics Eligible Activities Federal Overlays NOFA Application (Summary) Table Discussions

3 Proposed Regulation changes documents can be found here: http://www.hcd.ca.gov/fa/cdbg/about.html http://www.hcd.ca.gov/fa/cdbg/about.html Comment period ends: February 6, 2012 3 REGULATION CHANGES

4 4 PURPOSE To Allow the CDBG Section and Jurisdictions to Consolidate Workload: Super-NOFA. To Repeal Multi-Year Funding. Increase the State’s Expenditure Rate. To Clean Up Regulations That Need Immediate Change.

5 REGULATION CHANGES Organize Sections and Subjects Change Terms Define Eligible Activities Define National Objectives Realign Scoring including Point Categories and Maximum Points 5

6 REGULATION CHANGES ELIGIBILITY 50% Rule. Housing Element and A-133 Audit Submission Compliance as of Application Due Date. 6

7 REGULATION CHANGES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Micro-Enterprise Removed from Job Creation Requirement. Removes Maximum Grant (Award) Amounts (NOFA will have the Maximums). Removes Language Related to Dates for Funding. 7

8 REGULATION CHANGES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (cont’d) Removes the $50,000 per Job Language to Comply with State Statute. Clarifies ED OTC is “First-Come, First- Served” Awarding Process. Removes ED PTA Maximum Award Amounts. 8

9 REGULATION CHANGES COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT Removes Language Related to the Blender Scoring. Removes Language Related to Dates for Funding. Removes Language for Multi-Year Funding. 9

10 REGULATION CHANGES NEW SCORING MECHANISM Activity Based Scoring  4 Over-Arching Categories: Need – up to 400 points Readiness – up to 300 points Capacity – up to 200 points State Objectives – up to 100 points (beginning w/2013 NOFA, NOT in 2012 NOFA) 10

11 Planning Activity (PTA) Match will no longer be a calculation based on sales use and tax data. Match will now be announced in the NOFA each year. This year it will be 5% (cash) for all jurisdictions. 11 REGULATION CHANGES

12 12 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA One annual NOFA, announcing all CDBG activities in one document. ED OTC will have a separate application process, funding process and contract. Application and funding cycle once per year for all allocations/activities.

13 13 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA ONE AWARD/ONE CONTRACT FOR ALL ACTIVITIES One award/one contract for all awarded activities, whether CD, ED EF, PTA, Native American or Colonia. Only ED OTC will have a separate contract in any given fiscal year. All contract reporting will be consolidated.

14 NEW TERM OF CONTRACT Contract EXPIRES no later than 60 months from award date. EXPENDITURE deadline no more than 36 months from award date. 14 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

15 15 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA TERMINOLOGY “General” Allocation Activities – NOW “Community Development” or “CD”. “Targeted Income Group” or “TIG” - Reverting to HUD terms “Low- and Moderate-Income,” “low-income,” or “Low-Mod”. LMI refers to a Low-Mod Individual, and LMA refers to Low-Mod Area.

16 TERMINOLOGY (cont’d) Single Family Residential - 1 to 4 residential units on a single property. (Housing Rehabilitation (HR) and Homeownership Assistance (HA) Programs). Multi-Family Residential– 5 residential units or more on a single property or within a single development complex. (Multi-Family Housing (MFH) Rehabilitation and MFH Acquisition/Rehabilitation Projects). 16 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

17 17 TERMINOLOGY (cont’d) HR and HA are considered Programs. MFH Acquisition and/or Rehabilitation are considered Projects. Application requirements and scoring criteria are significantly different. Example: Programs require Program Guidelines to be submitted as part of the application. Projects do not. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

18 18 STATE CDBG EXPENDITURE RATE For 2012 and 2013 NOFAs, the Department will make available 150% of its HUD allocation. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

19 19 NEW THRESHOLD FACTORS Holdouts: No holdouts (moved to scoring criteria). Single Audit Report Submittal Required Prior to Application as of the date of application submittal. Housing Element and Other Threshold Requirements as of the date of application submittal. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

20 20 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA “50% RULE” FOR APPLICATION ELIGIBILITY Beginning FY 2013-14 NOFA: One or more open CDBG contracts executed in 2012 or later. Expenditure deadline established in the contract(s) has not yet passed. Not Expiration date. Ineligible for additional CDBG funds unless expended at least 50% of all funds awarded 2012 and later. Except ED OTC.

21 21 NEW ACTIVITY AND ALLOCATION FUNDING LIMITS Application maximum for the 2011-12 funding year is $2,000,000. Maximum of 3 eligible activities. ED OTC Program - Application maximum is $3,000,000 for one year. ED OTC, Native American and Colonia activities are NOT counted as one of the maximum 3 eligible activities. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

22 22 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA NEW ACTIVITY LIMITS (cont’d) Colonia and Native American (NA) 2012 maximums:  Colonia Allocation - Must Meet Colonia Definition  NA Allocation - Must Meet Native American Definition  Activities are in addition to the 3 activities from other Allocations.

23 23 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA NEW ACTIVITY LIMITS (cont’d) Of the three (3), one may be either: A PTA activity (up to two studies); or, A Set-Aside (not scored) activity with a maximum funding limit of $100,000 for any other eligible activity (EF, Public Improvements, Public Facilities, or Public Services).

24 24 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA NEW ACTIVITY LIMITS (cont’d) May apply for the PTA activity as a stand-alone or as one of the three maximum activities in an application. Two PTA application pools created: (1) PTA only (stand- alone); & (2) Both PTA and another rated activity(s).  Both from the amount set aside for PTA, based on demand.  Tie breaker process, as described in NOFA, if the demand is greater that the amount available. No assurances can be made that an application including PTA activities will be funded, regardless if it is the sole activity or part of a multi-activity application.

25 25 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA NEW ACTIVITY LIMITS (cont’d) Set-Aside (not scored) - Funded only if one or more scored activities are funded. Some activities may allow implementation of more than one Program or Project. See NOFA.

26 26 INDIVIDUAL ACTIVITY ALLOCATIONS Each activity allocated a specific amount of funding. Actual activity allocation amounts will be based on the application demand, expressed as a dollar amount, requested in each activity application. Funding will continue in rank order until that activity allocation has been exhausted. Under-subscribed Activity - Remaining funds will be redistributed to remaining activities. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

27 FUNDING MAXIMUMS (cont’d ) Over-the-Counter: Annual Limit for one or more projects:  Up to $3,000,000 Two year award for single project:  Up to $6,000,000 NOTE: ED OTC activities require a separate application process and have different opening and closing dates 27 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

28 FUNDING MAXIMUMS (cont’d ) Enterprise Fund: Business Assistance Program: Up to $300,000 Microenterprise Assistance Program: Up to $300,000 Combo Program of Micro and Business Assistance: Up to $500,000 28 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

29 29 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA FUNDING MAXIMUMS BY ACTIVITY Housing ($1 million maximum total): $600,000 Homeownership Assistance (Acquisition) or Housing Rehabilitation. $1 million – Combo of Single Family Residential Homeownership Assistance and Housing Rehabilitation. $1 million – Multi-Family Rental Rehabilitation With or Without Acquisition (1 Project) $600,000 – Land Acquisition for Multi-Family Affordable Housing (1 Project)

30 30 FUNDING MAXIMUMS (cont’d ) Public Improvements: $1,500,000 (one project) Public Facilities: $1,500,000 (one project) Public Services: $500,000 No more than 3 services per application. WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

31 31 FUNDING MAXIMUMS (cont’d) Planning and Technical Assistance: $100,000 Maximum Maximum of 2 studies May include either two CD studies, two ED studies, or one of each WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

32 32 WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA NEW METHOD FOR SCORING APPLICATIONS Revised scoring criteria and process for all activities. Scored using the new individual activity scoring system. Rate and rank each activity against applications for the same activity. No blending of scores for multiple activities. Awarded or denied funding based on scores for each activity.

33 33 NEW METHOD FOR SCORING (cont’d) Points categories: Need, Readiness, Jurisdictional Capacity/Past Performance, and State Objective. Each category applied to all activities: Type and weighting of the criteria within each category may differ by activity. Maximum of 1,000 points per Activity This year 900--No State Objective Points This Year! WHAT’S NEW IN 2012 NOFA

34 NEW METHOD FOR SCORING (cont’d) Scoring for Service Areas (Target Area) Activities with 100% income restricted or Limited Clientele beneficiaries will be scored using jurisdiction-wide data only. Programs or Projects that use a Service Area to meet Low Mod National Objective will be scored based on that same area. 34

35 35 ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS & AREAS NON-ENTITLEMENT JURISDICTIONS ARE: Cities with populations under 50,000. Counties with populations under 200,000. Not currently a party to an Urban County Agreement. Not eligible to participate in the HUD administered CDBG Entitlement Program. See Appendix A.

36 36 ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS & AREAS NATIVE AMERICAN ALLOCATION APPLICANTS ARE: Non-entitlement jurisdictions that apply to assist non-federally recognized Native American communities. For housing and housing-related activities only.

37 37 ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS & AREAS COLONIA ALLOCATION APPLICANTS ARE: Eligible jurisdictions which contain Colonia communities, as defined by the National Affordable Housing Act of 1990.

38 THRESHOLD REQUIREMENTS The applicant shall submit a complete application on the forms provided; and, Application must be submitted by due date ( April 6, 2012, by 5:00 PM ). Application must be able to be evaluated on the scoring criteria found in the NOFA. 38

39 THRESHOLD REQUIREMENTS Applicant must be in compliance with the submittal requirements of OMB A- 133, Single Audit Report. 39

40 THRESHOLD REQUIREMENTS Applicants must be in compliance with federal CDBG Public Participation regulations. Applicants must have complied with CDBG Housing Element requirements. 40

41 NOFA BASICS Applications Due: April 6, 2012, 5:00 PM Awards by July 2012 Contracts Issued Within 60 Days of Awards Approximately $48 Million will be Available (150% of HUD Allocation) 41

42 NOFA BASICS ED OTC Not Included In This Workshop Opening Date: January 9, 2012 Closing Date: April 30, 2013 42

43 NOFA BASICS ALLOCATIONS 30% Economic Development 5% Colonia 1.25% Native American No More than 15% Public Services 43

44 NOFA BASICS ALLOCATIONS Planning Grant Awards Limited to $2 Million Total. Community Development Activity Allocation Will be Based on Demand. 44

45 45 Three National Objectives Documentation of National Objective NATIONAL OBJECTIVES

46 46 THREE NATIONAL OBJECTIVES Benefit to Low-Income Persons/Households Benefit of Eliminating Slum / Blighted Condtions Benefit of Meeting an Urgent Need NATIONAL OBJECTIVES

47 47 LOW-INCOME NATIONAL OBJECTIVE Direct Benefit to Low-Income Persons/Households Area Benefit or Restricted Use to Low- Income Persons/Households Limited Clientele Public Benefit Jobs for Low-Income Persons on ED projects NATIONAL OBJECTIVES

48 48 REFER TO: “FUNDING LIMITS AND ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES TABLE” ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

49 49 ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (ED) ACTIVITIES Over-The-Counter (OTC) Activity Separate application for Individual Projects Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $3,000,000 for projects in single funding year Up to $6,000,000 for a project with two year award

50 50 ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES ED ACTIVITIES (cont’d) Enterprise Fund (EF) Activity Business Assistance (BA) Program or Microenterprise (ME) Program Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $300,000 for either BA or ME program Up to $500,000 for Combo BA and ME program

51 51 ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES ED ACTIVITIES (cont’d) Business Assistance (BA) Program Overview Business loan program participants must create jobs Applicant must have capacity for BA loan underwriting Applicant must document market demand for BA loan program BA loans restricted to eligible costs

52 52 ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES ED ACTIVITIES (cont’d) Microenterprise (ME) Program Overview Must be eligible ME Program Participants: Income Eligible, Maximum of 5 Employees (Includes Owner) Micro financial assistance requires Part 5 Income Determination Eligible ME can get technical assistance services, financial assistance (loan or grant) and support services Applicant must have capacity for: providing technical assistance, financial underwriting Applicant to document market demand for ME program

53 53 HOUSING ACTIVITIES Real Property Acquisition (housing-related) Multi-Family Housing Acquisition, or Acquisition & Rehabilitation Project Multi-Family Housing Rehabilitation Project Single-Family Housing Rehabilitation Program Homeownership Assistance Program Housing COMBO Program ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

54 54 HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE & HOUSING REHABILITATION ACTIVITIES Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $600,000 for either HA or HR Activity Up to $1,000,000 for Combo (HA + HR) Activities ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

55 55 MULTI-FAMILY HOUSING REHABILITATION PROJECT ACTIVITY Maximum Award Limit: Up to $1,000,000 Limited to One Project With our without Acquisition ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

56 56 REAL PROPERTY ACQUISITION ACTIVITY Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $600,000 for Vacant Land Acquisition for Multi-Family Development Up to $1,000,000 for Multi-Family Housing (MFH) Acquisition or MFH Acquisition & Rehabilitation Project Limited to one project per application Multi-Family Housing (MFH) Projects Only ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

57 57 PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS (PI) ACTIVITIES Maximum Award Limit: Up to $1,500,000 Limited to One Project Example #1: Water/Sewer System Expansion Example #2: Infrastructure In-Support-Of Housing New Construction (PIHNC) ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

58 58 PUBLIC FACILITIES (PF) ACTIVITY Maximum Award Limit: Up to $1,500,000 Limited to One Project Includes Acquisition, New Construction or Rehabilitation Must support an eligible CDBG Public Services Activity Example: Homeless Shelter, Food Bank or Fire Station ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

59 59 PUBLIC SERVICES (PS) ACTIVITY Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $500,000 Limited to no more than three Public Services activities per application ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

60 60 PUBLIC SERVICES (PS) ACTIVITY Limited to no more than three Public Service activities per application Example #1: Employment Training$250,000 Food Bank $150,000 Homeless Shelter$100,000 TOTAL:$500,000 Example #2 (with set-aside) : Employment Training$250,000 Food Bank $250,000 Set-aside P/S Activity$100,000 TOTAL:$600,000 ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

61 61 PLANNING & TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE (PTA) ACTIVITY Maximum Award Limit(s): Up to $100,000 Maximum of two studies per grant May be either CD or ED Cash match required ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

62 62 SET-ASIDE (UN-SCORED) ACTIVITY Available for all other traditionally scored CDBG eligible activities Maximum Award Limit: Up to $100,000 NOTE:Applicants may apply for maximum funding of an un- scored set-aside for the same activity they have already applied for – for maximum funding: Example: Public Facility (PF) Activity $1,500,000 Max. Single Un-scored Public Facility (PF) set-aside Activity $ 100,000 Max. Single TOTAL MAXIMUM COMBINED AWARD ALLOWED $1,600,000 Max. Combined ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

63 63 ELIGIBLE COLONIAS ACTIVITY Eligible activities may include only those which address potable water supplies, sewage systems, and decent, safe and sanitary housing. Maximum Activity Limit(s): Same as Community Development Program ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

64 64 ELIGIBLE NATIVE AMERICAN ACTIVITY Eligible activities include those involving housing or housing-related activities only Maximum Activity Limit(s): Same as Community Development Program ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES

65 65 NEPA Environmental Review Relocation / Displacement Review Labor Standards / Prevailing Wage Compliance Review Federal Procurement Standards FEDERAL OVERLAYS

66 66 NEPA COMPLIANCE TIMING & DETERMINING NEPA REVIEW LEVEL All CDBG Activities must have NEPA clearance (even General Admin). Grantee to review NEPA timing for EACH activity proposed. Grantee to aggregate scope of work for each activity proposed. Grantee to determine level of review required for each activity proposed based on scope of work. Grantee to assign proper person for NEPA review.

67 67 RELOCATION COMPLIANCE TIMING & DISPLACEMENT DETERMINATION All CDBG activities are subject to relocation laws. Review relocation impacts for each activity proposed prior to application submittal. Review initial actions for activities with relocation (pre-application General Information Notice (GIN)). Plan and budget for relocation actions as part of activity implementation. Hire professional consultants for relocation actions.

68 68 LABOR STANDARDS COMPLIANCE DETERMINING COMPLIANCE & PLAN FOR MONITORING Applies to CDBG funded construction activities. Review activity for compliance prior to application submittal. Plan for proper wage monitoring in activity design and execution. Hire professional wage compliance consultant. Work with CDBG staff to ensure compliance.

69 69 PROCUREMENT COMPLIANCE USE OF PROPER PROCUREMENT / SUBRECIPIENT Most grantees hire consultants to implement CDBG activities. Three ways to secure CDBG admin services. Choosing a method of securing consultant. Timing for securing a consultant. Typical problems with securing consultants.

70 70 NOFA APPLICATION ACTIVITY APPLICATIONS Activity Specific Training Will be Completed through the Webinars. One Webinar per Activity. Participate in the Webinars for proposed activities in application! Webinars will be posted on web

71 NOFA APPLICATION SUMMARY APPLICATION Must Be Completed by All Applicants 71


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