[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR570.208]

[Page 51-59]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
  CHAPTER V--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND 
        DEVELOPMENT, DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
PART 570_COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart C_Eligible Activities
 
Sec. 570.208  Criteria for national objectives.

    The following criteria shall be used to determine whether a CDBG-
assisted activity complies with one or more of the national objectives 
as required under Sec. 570.200(a)(2):
    (a) Activities benefiting low- and moderate-income persons. 
Activities meeting the criteria in paragraph (a) (1), (2), (3), or (4) 
of this section as applicable, will be considered to benefit low and 
moderate income persons unless there is substantial evidence to the 
contrary. In assessing any such evidence, the full

[[Page 52]]

range of direct effects of the assisted activity will be considered. 
(The recipient shall appropriately ensure that activities that meet 
these criteria do not benefit moderate income persons to the exclusion 
of low income persons.)
    (1) Area benefit activities. (i) An activity, the benefits of which 
are available to all the residents in a particular area, where at least 
51 percent of the residents are low and moderate income persons. Such an 
area need not be coterminous with census tracts or other officially 
recognized boundaries but must be the entire area served by the 
activity. An activity that serves an area that is not primarily 
residential in character shall not qualify under this criterion.
    (ii) For metropolitan cities and urban counties, an activity that 
would otherwise qualify under Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(i) except that the 
area served contains less than 51 percent low and moderate income 
residents will also be considered to meet the objective of benefiting 
low and moderate income persons where the proportion of low and moderate 
income persons in the area is within the highest quartile of all areas 
in the recipient's jurisdiction in terms of the degree of concentration 
of such persons. In applying this exception, HUD will determine the 
lowest proportion a recipient may use to qualify an area for this 
purpose as follows:
    (A) All census block groups in the recipient's jurisdiction shall be 
rank ordered from the block group of highest proportion of low and 
moderate income persons to the block group with the lowest. For urban 
counties, the rank ordering shall cover the entire area constituting the 
urban county and shall not be done separately for each participating 
unit of general local government.
    (B) In any case where the total number of a recipient's block groups 
does not divide evenly by four, the block group which would be 
fractionally divided between the highest and second quartiles shall be 
considered to be part of the highest quartile.
    (C) The proportion of low and moderate income persons in the last 
census block group in the highest quartile shall be identified. Any 
service area located within the recipient's jurisdiction and having a 
proportion of low and moderate income persons at or above this level 
shall be considered to be within the highest quartile.
    (D) If block group data are not available for the entire 
jurisdiction, other data acceptable to the Secretary may be used in the 
above calculations.
    (iii) An activity to develop, establish, and operate for up to two 
years after the establishment of, a uniform emergency telephone number 
system serving an area having less than the percentage of low- and 
moderate-income residents required under paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this 
section or (as applicable) paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section, 
provided the recipient obtains prior HUD approval. To obtain such 
approval, the recipient must:
    (A) Demonstrate that the system will contribute significantly to the 
safety of the residents of the area. The request for approval must 
include a list of the emergency services that will participate in the 
emergency telephone number system;
    (B) Submit information that serves as a basis for HUD to determine 
whether at least 51 percent of the use of the system will be by low- and 
moderate-income persons. As available, the recipient must provide 
information that identifies the total number of calls actually received 
over the preceding 12-month period for each of the emergency services to 
be covered by the emergency telephone number system and relates those 
calls to the geographic segment (expressed as nearly as possible in 
terms of census tracts, block numbering areas, block groups, or 
combinations thereof that are contained within the segment) of the 
service area from which the calls were generated. In analyzing this data 
to meet the requirements of this section, HUD will assume that the 
distribution of income among the callers generally reflects the income 
characteristics of the general population residing in the same 
geographic area where the callers reside. If HUD can conclude that the 
users have primarily consisted of low- and moderate-income persons, no 
further submission is needed by the recipient. If a recipient plans to 
make other submissions for this purpose, it may request that HUD review 
its planned

[[Page 53]]

methodology before expending the effort to acquire the information it 
expects to use to make its case;
    (C) Demonstrate that other Federal funds received by the recipient 
are insufficient or unavailable for a uniform emergency telephone number 
system. For this purpose, the recipient must submit a statement 
explaining whether the lack of funds is due to the insufficiency of the 
amount of the available funds, restrictions on the use of such funds, or 
the prior commitment of funds by the recipient for other purposes; and
    (D) Demonstrate that the percentage of the total costs of the system 
paid for by CDBG funds does not exceed the percentage of low- and 
moderate-income persons in the service area of the system. For this 
purpose, the recipient must include a description of the boundaries of 
the service area of the emergency telephone number system, the census 
divisions that fall within the boundaries of the service area (census 
tracts or block numbering areas), the total number of persons and the 
total number of low- and moderate-income persons within each census 
division, the percentage of low- and moderate-income persons within the 
service area, and the total cost of the system.
    (iv) An activity for which the assistance to a public improvement 
that provides benefits to all the residents of an area is limited to 
paying special assessments (as defined in Sec. 570.200(c)) levied 
against residential properties owned and occupied by persons of low and 
moderate income.
    (v) For purposes of determining qualification under this criterion, 
activities of the same type that serve different areas will be 
considered separately on the basis of their individual service area.
    (vi) In determining whether there is a sufficiently large percentage 
of low- and moderate-income persons residing in the area served by an 
activity to qualify under paragraph (a)(1) (i), (ii), or (vii) of this 
section, the most recently available decennial census information must 
be used to the fullest extent feasible, together with the section 8 
income limits that would have applied at the time the income information 
was collected by the Census Bureau. Recipients that believe that the 
census data does not reflect current relative income levels in an area, 
or where census boundaries do not coincide sufficiently well with the 
service area of an activity, may conduct (or have conducted) a current 
survey of the residents of the area to determine the percent of such 
persons that are low and moderate income. HUD will accept information 
obtained through such surveys, to be used in lieu of the decennial 
census data, where it determines that the survey was conducted in such a 
manner that the results meet standards of statistical reliability that 
are comparable to that of the decennial census data for areas of similar 
size. Where there is substantial evidence that provides a clear basis to 
believe that the use of the decennial census data would substantially 
overstate the proportion of persons residing there that are low and 
moderate income, HUD may require that the recipient rebut such evidence 
in order to demonstrate compliance with section 105(c)(2) of the Act.
    (vii) Activities meeting the requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i) of 
this section may be considered to qualify under this paragraph, provided 
that the area covered by the strategy is either a Federally-designated 
Empowerment Zone or Enterprise Community or primarily residential and 
contains a percentage of low- and moderate-income residents that is no 
less than the percentage computed by HUD pursuant to paragraph 
(a)(1)(ii) of this section or 70 percent, whichever is less, but in no 
event less than 51 percent. Activities meeting the requirements of 
paragraph (d)(6)(i) of this section may also be considered to qualify 
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
    (2) Limited clientele activities. (i) An activity which benefits a 
limited clientele, at least 51 percent of whom are low- or moderate-
income persons. (The following kinds of activities may not qualify under 
paragraph (a)(2) of this section: activities, the benefits of which are 
available to all the residents

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of an area; activities involving the acquisition, construction or 
rehabilitation of property for housing; or activities where the benefit 
to low- and moderate-income persons to be considered is the creation or 
retention of jobs, except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)(iv) of this 
section.) To qualify under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the 
activity must meet one of the following tests:
    (A) Benefit a clientele who are generally presumed to be principally 
low and moderate income persons. Activities that exclusively serve a 
group of persons in any one or a combination of the following categories 
may be presumed to benefit persons, 51 percent of whom are low- and 
moderate-income: abused children, battered spouses, elderly persons, 
adults meeting the Bureau of the Census' Current Population Reports 
definition of ``severely disabled,'' homeless persons, illiterate 
adults, persons living with AIDS, and migrant farm workers; or
    (B) Require information on family size and income so that it is 
evident that at least 51 percent of the clientele are persons whose 
family income does not exceed the low and moderate income limit; or
    (C) Have income eligibility requirements which limit the activity 
exclusively to low and moderate income persons; or
    (D) Be of such nature and be in such location that it may be 
concluded that the activity's clientele will primarily be low and 
moderate income persons.
    (ii) An activity that serves to remove material or architectural 
barriers to the mobility or accessibility of elderly persons or of 
adults meeting the Bureau of the Census' Current Population Reports 
definition of ``severely disabled'' will be presumed to qualify under 
this criterion if it is restricted, to the extent practicable, to the 
removal of such barriers by assisting:
    (A) The reconstruction of a public facility or improvement, or 
portion thereof, that does not qualify under paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section;
    (B) The rehabilitation of a privately owned nonresidential building 
or improvement that does not qualify under paragraph (a)(1) or (4) of 
this section; or
    (C) The rehabilitation of the common areas of a residential 
structure that contains more than one dwelling unit and that does not 
qualify under paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
    (iii) A microenterprise assistance activity carried out in 
accordance with the provisions of Sec. 570.201(o) with respect to those 
owners of microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises 
assisted under the activity during each program year who are low- and 
moderate-income persons. For purposes of this paragraph, persons 
determined to be low and moderate income may be presumed to continue to 
qualify as such for up to a three-year period.
    (iv) An activity designed to provide job training and placement and/
or other employment support services, including, but not limited to, 
peer support programs, counseling, child care, transportation, and other 
similar services, in which the percentage of low- and moderate-income 
persons assisted is less than 51 percent may qualify under this 
paragraph in the following limited circumstance:
    (A) In such cases where such training or provision of supportive 
services assists business(es), the only use of CDBG assistance for the 
project is to provide the job training and/or supportive services; and
    (B) The proportion of the total cost of the project borne by CDBG 
funds is no greater than the proportion of the total number of persons 
assisted who are low or moderate income.
    (3) Housing activities. An eligible activity carried out for the 
purpose of providing or improving permanent residential structures 
which, upon completion, will be occupied by low- and moderate-income 
households. This would include, but not necessarily be limited to, the 
acquisition or rehabilitation of property by the recipient, a 
subrecipient, a developer, an individual homebuyer, or an individual 
homeowner; conversion of nonresidential structures; and new housing 
construction. If the structure contains two dwelling units, at least one 
must be so occupied, and if the structure contains more than two 
dwelling units, at least

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51 percent of the units must be so occupied. Where two or more rental 
buildings being assisted are or will be located on the same or 
contiguous properties, and the buildings will be under common ownership 
and management, the grouped buildings may be considered for this purpose 
as a single structure. Where housing activities being assisted meet the 
requirements of paragraph Sec. 570.208 (d)(5)(ii) or (d)(6)(ii) of this 
section, all such housing may also be considered for this purpose as a 
single structure. For rental housing, occupancy by low and moderate 
income households must be at affordable rents to qualify under this 
criterion. The recipient shall adopt and make public its standards for 
determining ``affordable rents'' for this purpose. The following shall 
also qualify under this criterion:
    (i) When less than 51 percent of the units in a structure will be 
occupied by low and moderate income households, CDBG assistance may be 
provided in the following limited circumstances:
    (A) The assistance is for an eligible activity to reduce the 
development cost of the new construction of a multifamily, non-elderly 
rental housing project;
    (B) Not less than 20 percent of the units will be occupied by low 
and moderate income households at affordable rents; and
    (C) The proportion of the total cost of developing the project to be 
borne by CDBG funds is no greater than the proportion of units in the 
project that will be occupied by low and moderate income households.
    (ii) When CDBG funds are used to assist rehabilitation eligible 
under Sec. 570.202(b)(9) or (10) in direct support of the recipient's 
Rental Rehabilitation program authorized under 24 CFR part 511, such 
funds shall be considered to benefit low and moderate income persons 
where not less than 51 percent of the units assisted, or to be assisted, 
by the recipient's Rental Rehabilitation program overall are for low and 
moderate income persons.
    (iii) When CDBG funds are used for housing services eligible under 
Sec. 570.201(k), such funds shall be considered to benefit low- and 
moderate-income persons if the housing units for which the services are 
provided are HOME-assisted and the requirements at 24 CFR 92.252 or 
92.254 are met.
    (4) Job creation or retention activities. An activity designed to 
create or retain permanent jobs where at least 51 percent of the jobs, 
computed on a full time equivalent basis, involve the employment of low- 
and moderate-income persons. To qualify under this paragraph, the 
activity must meet the following criteria:
    (i) For an activity that creates jobs, the recipient must document 
that at least 51 percent of the jobs will be held by, or will be 
available to, low- and moderate-income persons.
    (ii) For an activity that retains jobs, the recipient must document 
that the jobs would actually be lost without the CDBG assistance and 
that either or both of the following conditions apply with respect to at 
least 51 percent of the jobs at the time the CDBG assistance is 
provided:
    (A) The job is known to be held by a low- or moderate-income person; 
or
    (B) The job can reasonably be expected to turn over within the 
following two years and that steps will be taken to ensure that it will 
be filled by, or made available to, a low- or moderate-income person 
upon turnover.
    (iii) Jobs that are not held or filled by a low- or moderate-income 
person may be considered to be available to low- and moderate-income 
persons for these purposes only if:
    (A) Special skills that can only be acquired with substantial 
training or work experience or education beyond high school are not a 
prerequisite to fill such jobs, or the business agrees to hire 
unqualified persons and provide training; and
    (B) The recipient and the assisted business take actions to ensure 
that low- and moderate-income persons receive first consideration for 
filling such jobs.
    (iv) For purposes of determining whether a job is held by or made 
available to a low- or moderate-income person, the person may be 
presumed to be a low- or moderate-income person if:
    (A) He/she resides within a census tract (or block numbering area) 
that either:

[[Page 56]]

    (1) Meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(4)(v) of this section; 
or
    (2) Has at least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and 
moderate-income persons; or
    (B) The assisted business is located within a census tract (or block 
numbering area) that meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(4)(v) of 
this section and the job under consideration is to be located within 
that census tract.
    (v) A census tract (or block numbering area) qualifies for the 
presumptions permitted under paragraphs (a)(4)(iv)(A)(1) and (B) of this 
section if it is either part of a Federally-designated Empowerment Zone 
or Enterprise Community or meets the following criteria:
    (A) It has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent as determined by 
the most recently available decennial census information;
    (B) It does not include any portion of a central business district, 
as this term is used in the most recent Census of Retail Trade, unless 
the tract has a poverty rate of at least 30 percent as determined by the 
most recently available decennial census information; and
    (C) It evidences pervasive poverty and general distress by meeting 
at least one of the following standards:
    (1) All block groups in the census tract have poverty rates of at 
least 20 percent;
    (2) The specific activity being undertaken is located in a block 
group that has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent; or
    (3) Upon the written request of the recipient, HUD determines that 
the census tract exhibits other objectively determinable signs of 
general distress such as high incidence of crime, narcotics use, 
homelessness, abandoned housing, and deteriorated infrastructure or 
substantial population decline.
    (vi) As a general rule, each assisted business shall be considered 
to be a separate activity for purposes of determining whether the 
activity qualifies under this paragraph, except:
    (A) In certain cases such as where CDBG funds are used to acquire, 
develop or improve a real property (e.g., a business incubator or an 
industrial park) the requirement may be met by measuring jobs in the 
aggregate for all the businesses which locate on the property, provided 
such businesses are not otherwise assisted by CDBG funds.
    (B) Where CDBG funds are used to pay for the staff and overhead 
costs of an entity making loans to businesses exclusively from non-CDBG 
funds, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs created by 
all of the businesses receiving loans during each program year.
    (C) Where CDBG funds are used by a recipient or subrecipient to 
provide technical assistance to businesses, this requirement may be met 
by aggregating the jobs created or retained by all of the businesses 
receiving technical assistance during each program year.
    (D) Where CDBG funds are used for activities meeting the criteria 
listed at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v), this requirement may be met by 
aggregating the jobs created or retained by all businesses for which 
CDBG assistance is obligated for such activities during the program 
year, except as provided at paragraph (d)(7) of this section.
    (E) Where CDBG funds are used by a Community Development Financial 
Institution to carry out activities for the purpose of creating or 
retaining jobs, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs 
created or retained by all businesses for which CDBG assistance is 
obligated for such activities during the program year, except as 
provided at paragraph (d)(7) of this section.
    (F) Where CDBG funds are used for public facilities or improvements 
which will result in the creation or retention of jobs by more than one 
business, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs created or 
retained by all such businesses as a result of the public facility or 
improvement.
    (1) Where the public facility or improvement is undertaken 
principally for the benefit of one or more particular businesses, but 
where other businesses might also benefit from the assisted activity, 
the requirement may be met by aggregating only the jobs created or 
retained by those businesses for which the facility/improvement is 
principally undertaken, provided that

[[Page 57]]

the cost (in CDBG funds) for the facility/improvement is less than 
$10,000 per permanent full-time equivalent job to be created or retained 
by those businesses.
    (2) In any case where the cost per job to be created or retained (as 
determined under paragraph (a)(4)(vi)(F)(1) of this section) is $10,000 
or more, the requirement must be met by aggregating the jobs created or 
retained as a result of the public facility or improvement by all 
businesses in the service area of the facility/improvement. This 
aggregation must include businesses which, as a result of the public 
facility/improvement, locate or expand in the service area of the 
facility/improvement between the date the recipient identifies the 
activity in its action plan under part 91 of this title and the date one 
year after the physical completion of the facility/improvement. In 
addition, the assisted activity must comply with the public benefit 
standards at Sec. 570.209(b).
    (b) Activities which aid in the prevention or elimination of slums 
or blight. Activities meeting one or more of the following criteria, in 
the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary, will be considered 
to aid in the prevention or elimination of slums or blight:
    (1) Activities to address slums or blight on an area basis. An 
activity will be considered to address prevention or elimination of 
slums or blight in an area if:
    (i) The area, delineated by the recipient, meets a definition of a 
slum, blighted, deteriorated or deteriorating area under State or local 
law;
    (ii) Throughout the area there is a substantial number of 
deteriorated or deteriorating buildings or the public improvements are 
in a general state of deterioration;
    (iii) Documentation is maintained by the recipient on the boundaries 
of the area and the condition which qualified the area at the time of 
its designation; and
    (iv) The assisted activity addresses one or more of the conditions 
which contributed to the deterioration of the area. Rehabilitation of 
residential buildings carried out in an area meeting the above 
requirements will be considered to address the area's deterioration only 
where each such building rehabilitated is considered substandard under 
local definition before rehabilitation, and all deficiencies making a 
building substandard have been eliminated if less critical work on the 
building is undertaken. At a minimum, the local definition for this 
purpose must be such that buildings that it would render substandard 
would also fail to meet the housing quality standards for the Section 8 
Housing Assistance Payments Program-Existing Housing (24 CFR 882.109).
    (2) Activities to address slums or blight on a spot basis. 
Acquisition, clearance, relocation, historic preservation and building 
rehabilitation activities which eliminate specific conditions of blight 
or physical decay on a spot basis not located in a slum or blighted area 
will meet this objective. Under this criterion, rehabilitation is 
limited to the extent necessary to eliminate specific conditions 
detrimental to public health and safety.
    (3) Activities to address slums or blight in an urban renewal area. 
An activity will be considered to address prevention or elimination of 
slums or blight in an urban renewal area if the activity is:
    (i) Located within an urban renewal project area or Neighborhood 
Development Program (NDP) action area; i.e., an area in which funded 
activities were authorized under an urban renewal Loan and Grant 
Agreement or an annual NDP Funding Agreement, pursuant to title I of the 
Housing Act of 1949; and
    (ii) Necessary to complete the urban renewal plan, as then in 
effect, including initial land redevelopment permitted by the plan.
    Note: Despite the restrictions in (b) (1) and (2) of this section, 
any rehabilitation activity which benefits low and moderate income 
persons pursuant to paragraph (a)(3) of this section can be undertaken 
without regard to the area in which it is located or the extent or 
nature of rehabilitation assisted.
    (c) Activities designed to meet community development needs having a 
particular urgency. In the absence of substantial evidence to the 
contrary, an activity will be considered to address this objective if 
the recipient certifies

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that the activity is designed to alleviate existing conditions which 
pose a serious and immediate threat to the health or welfare of the 
community which are of recent origin or which recently became urgent, 
that the recipient is unable to finance the activity on its own, and 
that other sources of funding are not available. A condition will 
generally be considered to be of recent origin if it developed or became 
critical within 18 months preceding the certification by the recipient.
    (d) Additional criteria. (1) Where the assisted activity is 
acquisition of real property, a preliminary determination of whether the 
activity addresses a national objective may be based on the planned use 
of the property after acquisition. A final determination shall be based 
on the actual use of the property, excluding any short-term, temporary 
use. Where the acquisition is for the purpose of clearance which will 
eliminate specific conditions of blight or physical decay, the clearance 
activity shall be considered the actual use of the property. However, 
any subsequent use or disposition of the cleared property shall be 
treated as a ``change of use'' under Sec. 570.505.
    (2) Where the assisted activity is relocation assistance that the 
recipient is required to provide, such relocation assistance shall be 
considered to address the same national objective as is addressed by the 
displacing activity. Where the relocation assistance is voluntary on the 
part of the grantee the recipient may qualify the assistance either on 
the basis of the national objective addressed by the displacing activity 
or on the basis that the recipients of the relocation assistance are low 
and moderate income persons.
    (3) In any case where the activity undertaken for the purpose of 
creating or retaining jobs is a public improvement and the area served 
is primarily residential, the activity must meet the requirements of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section as well as those of paragraph (a)(4) of 
this section in order to qualify as benefiting low and moderate income 
persons.
    (4) CDBG funds expended for planning and administrative costs under 
Sec. 570.205 and Sec. 570.206 will be considered to address the 
national objectives.
    (5) Where the grantee has elected to prepare an area revitalization 
strategy pursuant to the authority of Sec. 91.215(e) of this title and 
HUD has approved the strategy, the grantee may also elect the following 
options:
    (i) Activities undertaken pursuant to the strategy for the purpose 
of creating or retaining jobs may, at the option of the grantee, be 
considered to meet the requirements of this paragraph under the criteria 
at paragraph (a)(1)(vii) of this section in lieu of the criteria at 
paragraph (a)(4) of this section; and
    (ii) All housing activities in the area for which, pursuant to the 
strategy, CDBG assistance is obligated during the program year may be 
considered to be a single structure for purposes of applying the 
criteria at paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
    (6) Where CDBG-assisted activities are carried out by a Community 
Development Financial Institution whose charter limits its investment 
area to a primarily residential area consisting of at least 51 percent 
low- and moderate-income persons, the grantee may also elect the 
following options:
    (i) Activities carried out by the Community Development Financial 
Institution for the purpose of creating or retaining jobs may, at the 
option of the grantee, be considered to meet the requirements of this 
paragraph under the criteria at paragraph (a)(1)(vii) of this section in 
lieu of the criteria at paragraph (a)(4) of this section; and
    (ii) All housing activities for which the Community Development 
Financial Institution obligates CDBG assistance during the program year 
may be considered to be a single structure for purposes of applying the 
criteria at paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
    (7) Where an activity meeting the criteria at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v) 
may also meet the requirements of either paragraph (d)(5)(i) or 
(d)(6)(i) of this section, the grantee may elect to qualify the activity 
under either the area benefit criteria at paragraph (a)(1)(vii) of this 
section or the job aggregation criteria at paragraph (a)(4)(vi)(D) of 
this section, but not both. Where an activity may meet the job 
aggregation criteria at both paragraphs (a)(4)(vi)(D) and (E) of this 
section, the grantee may elect

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to qualify the activity under either criterion, but not both.

[53 FR 34439, Sept. 6, 1988; 53 FR 41330, Oct. 21, 1988, as amended at 
60 FR 1945, Jan. 5, 1995; 60 FR 17445, Apr. 6, 1995; 60 FR 56912, Nov. 
9, 1995; 61 FR 18674, Apr. 29, 1996]