[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: 24CFR570.402]

[Page 70-73]
 
                 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 E_Special Purpose Grants
 
Sec. 570.402  Technical assistance awards.

    (a) General. (1) The purpose of the Community Development Technical 
Assistance Program is to increase the effectiveness with which States, 
units of general local government, and Indian tribes plan, develop, and 
administer assistance under title I and section 810 of the Act. Title I 
programs are the Entitlement Program (24 CFR part 570, subpart D); the 
section 108 Loan Guarantee Program (24 CFR part

[[Page 71]]

570, subpart M); the Urban Development Action Grant Program (24 CFR part 
570, subpart G); the HUD-administered Small Cities Program (24 CFR part 
570, subpart F); the State-administered Program for Non-Entitlement 
Communities (24 CFR part 570, subpart I); the grants for Indian Tribes 
program (24 CFR part 571); and the Special Purpose Grants for Insular 
Areas, Community Development Work Study and Historically Black Colleges 
and Universities (24 CFR part 570, subpart E). The section 810 program 
is the Urban Homesteading Program (24 CFR part 590).
    (2) Funding under this section is awarded for the provision of 
technical expertise in planning, managing or carrying out such programs 
including the activities being or to be assisted thereunder and other 
actions being or to be undertaken for the purpose of the program, such 
as increasing the effectiveness of public service and other activities 
in addressing identified needs, meeting applicable program requirements 
(e.g., citizen participation, nondiscrimination, OMB Circulars), 
increasing program management or capacity building skills, attracting 
business or industry to CDBG assisted economic development sites or 
projects, assisting eligible CDBG subrecipients such as neighborhood 
nonprofits or small cities in how to obtain CDBG funding from cities and 
States. The provision of technical expertise in other areas which may 
have some tangential benefit or effect on a program is insufficient to 
qualify for funding.
    (3) Awards may be made pursuant to HUD solicitations for assistance 
applications or procurement contract proposals issued in the form of a 
publicly available document which invites the submission of applications 
or proposals within a prescribed period of time. HUD may also enter into 
agreements with other Federal agencies for awarding the technical 
assistance funds:
    (i) Where the Secretary determines that such funding procedures will 
achieve a particular technical assistance objective more effectively and 
the criteria for making the awards will be consistent with this section, 
or
    (ii) The transfer of funds to the other Federal agency for use under 
the terms of the agreement is specifically authorized by law. The 
Department will not accept or fund unsolicited proposals.
    (b) Definitions. (1) Areawide planning organization (APO) means an 
organization authorized by law or local agreement to undertake planning 
and other activities for a metropolitan or non-metropolitan area.
    (2) Technical assistance means the facilitating of skills and 
knowledge in planning, developing and administering activities under 
title I and section 810 of the Act in entities that may need but do not 
possess such skills and knowledge, and includes assessing programs and 
activities under title I.
    (c) Eligible applicants. Eligible applicants for award of technical 
assistance funding are:
    (1) States, units of general local government, APOs, and Indian 
Tribes; and
    (2) Public and private non-profit or for-profit groups, including 
educational institutions, qualified to provide technical assistance to 
assist such governmental units to carry out the title I or Urban 
Homesteading programs. An applicant group must be designated as a 
technical assistance provider to a unit of government's title I program 
or Urban Homesteading program by the chief executive officer of each 
unit to be assisted, unless the assistance is limited to conferences/
workshops attended by more than one unit of government.
    (d) Eligible activities. Activities eligible for technical 
assistance funding include:
    (1) The provision of technical or advisory services;
    (2) The design and operation of training projects, such as 
workshops, seminars, or conferences;
    (3) The development and distribution of technical materials and 
information; and
    (4) Other methods of demonstrating and making available skills, 
information and knowledge to assist States, units of general local 
government, or Indian Tribes in planning, developing, administering or 
assessing assistance under title I and Urban Homesteading programs in 
which they are participating or seeking to participate.

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    (e) Ineligible activities. Activities for which costs are ineligible 
under this section include:
    (1) In the case of technical assistance for States, the cost of 
carrying out the administration of the State CDBG program for non-
entitlement communities;
    (2) The cost of carrying out the activities authorized under the 
title I and Urban Homesteading programs, such as the provision of public 
services, construction, rehabilitation, planning and administration, for 
which the technical assistance is to be provided;
    (3) The cost of acquiring or developing the specialized skills or 
knowledge to be provided by a group funded under this section;
    (4) Research activities;
    (5) The cost of identifying units of governments needing assistance 
(except that the cost of selecting recipients of technical assistance 
under the provisions of paragraph (k) is eligible); or
    (6) Activities designed primarily to benefit HUD, or to assist HUD 
in carrying out the Department's responsibilities; such as research, 
policy analysis of proposed legislation, training or travel of HUD 
staff, or development and review of reports to the Congress.
    (f) Criteria for competitive selection. In determining whether to 
fund competitive applications or proposals under this section, the 
Department will use the following criteria:
    (1) For solicited assistance applications. The Department will use 
two types of criteria for reviewing and selecting competitive assistance 
applications solicited by HUD:
    (i) Evaluation criteria: These criteria will be used to rank 
applications according to weights which may vary with each competition:
    (A) Probable effectiveness of the application in meeting needs of 
localities and accomplishing project objectives;
    (B) Soundness and cost-effectiveness of the proposed approach;
    (C) Capacity of the applicant to carry out the proposed activities 
in a timely and effective fashion;
    (D) The extent to which the results may be transferable or 
applicable to other title I or Urban Homesteading program participants.
    (ii) Program policy criteria: These factors may be used by the 
selecting official to select a range of projects that would best serve 
program objectives for a particular competition:
    (A) Geographic distribution;
    (B) Diversity of types and sizes of applicant entities; and
    (C) Diversity of methods, approaches, or kinds of projects.

The Department will publish a Notice of Fund Availability (NOFA) in the 
Federal Register for each competition indicating the objective of the 
technical assistance, the amount of funding available, the application 
procedures, including the eligible applicants and activities to be 
funded, any special conditions applicable to the solicitation, including 
any requirements for a matching share or for commitments for CDBG or 
other title I funding to carry out eligible activities for which the 
technical assistance is to be provided, the maximum points to be awarded 
each evaluation criterion for the purpose of ranking applications, and 
any special factors to be considered in assigning the points to each 
evaluation criterion. The Notice will also indicate which program policy 
factors will be used, the impact of those factors on the selection 
process, the justification for their use and, if appropriate, the 
relative priority of each program policy factor.
    (2) For competitive procurement contract bids/proposals. The 
Department's criteria for review and selection of solicited bids/
proposals for procurement contracts will be described in its public 
announcement of the availability of an Invitation for Bids (IFB) or a 
Request for Proposals (RFP). The public notice, solicitation and award 
of procurement contracts, when used to acquire technical assistance, 
shall be procured in accordance with the Federal Acquisition Regulation 
(48 CFR chapter 1) and the HUD Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR chapter 
24).
    (g) Submission procedures. Solicited assistance applications shall 
be submitted in accordance with the time and place and content 
requirements described in the Department's NOFA. Solicited bids/
proposals for procurement

[[Page 73]]

contracts shall be submitted in accordance with the requirements in the 
IFB or RFP.
    (h) Approval procedures--(1) Acceptance. HUD's acceptance of an 
application or proposal for review does not imply a commitment to 
provide funding.
    (2) Notification. HUD will provide notification of whether a project 
will be funded or rejected.
    (3) Form of award. (i) HUD will award technical assistance funds as 
a grant, cooperative agreement or procurement contract, consistent with 
this section, the Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act of 1977, 
31 U.S.C. 6301-6308, the HUD Acquisition Regulation, and the Federal 
Acquisition Regulation.
    (ii) When HUD's primary purpose is the transfer of technical 
assistance to assist the recipients in support of the title I or Section 
810 programs, an assistance instrument (grant or cooperative agreement) 
will be used. A grant instrument will be used when substantial Federal 
involvement is not anticipated. A cooperative agreement will be used 
when substantial Federal involvement is anticipated. When a cooperative 
agreement is selected, the agreement will specify the nature of HUD's 
anticipated involvement in the project.
    (iii) A contract will be used when HUD's primary purpose is to 
obtain a provider of technical assistance to act on the Department's 
behalf. In such cases the Department will define the specific tasks to 
be performed. However, nothing in this section shall preclude the 
Department from awarding a procurement contract in any other case when 
it is determined to be in the Department's best interests.
    (4) Administration. Project administration will be governed by the 
terms of individual awards and relevant regulations. As a general rule, 
proposals will be funded to operate for one to two years, and periodic 
and final reports will be required.
    (i) Environmental and intergovernmental review. The requirements for 
Environmental Reviews and Intergovernmental Reviews do not apply to 
technical assistance awards.
    (j) Selection of recipients of technical assistance. Where under the 
terms of the funding award the recipient of the funding is to select the 
recipients of the technical assistance to be provided, the funding 
recipient shall publish, and publicly make available to potential 
technical assistance recipients, the availability of such assistance and 
the specific criteria to be used for the selection of the recipients to 
be assisted. Selected recipients must be entities participating or 
planning to participate in the title I or Urban Homesteading programs or 
activities for which the technical assistance is to be provided.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control numbers 
2535-0085 and 2535-0084)

[56 FR 41938, Aug. 26, 1991]