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Title 42, Chapter 69 Contents
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Sec.
5301 Congressional findings and declaration of
purpose. |
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Sec.
5302 General provisions |
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Sec.
5303 Grants to States, units of general local
government and Indian tribes |
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Sec. 5304 Statement of activities
and review |
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Sec.
5305 Activities eligible for assistance |
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Sec. 5306 Allocation and
distribution of funds |
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Sec.
5307 Special purpose grants |
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Sec. 5308 Guarantee and
commitment to guarantee loans for acquisition of property |
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Sec.
5309 Nondiscrimination in programs and activities |
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Sec. 5310 Labor standards;
rate of wages; exceptions; enforcement powers |
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Sec.
5311 Remedies for noncompliance with community
development requirements |
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Sec. 5312 Use of grants
for settlement of outstanding urban renewal loans |
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Sec. 5313 Reporting requirements |
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Sec. 5314 Consultation by
Secretary with other Federal departments, etc |
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Sec.
5315 Interstate agreements or compacts; purposes |
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Sec. 5316 Transition provisions |
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Sec. 5317 Liquidation of
superseded or inactive programs |
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Sec. 5318 Urban development
action grants |
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Sec. 5319 Community participation
in programs |
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Sec.
5320 Historic preservation requirements |
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Sec. 5321 Suspension of
requirements for disaster areas |
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Section 5318a (John Heinz Neighborhood
Development Program) is not included |
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to the Laws Page |
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From the U.S. Code
[Laws in effect as of January 20, 1999]
[CITE: 42USC5305]
(a)
Enumeration of eligible activities
Activities
assisted under this chapter may include only--
(1)
the acquisition of real property (including air rights, water
rights, and other interests therein) which is
(A)
blighted, deteriorated, deteriorating, undeveloped, or inappropriately
developed from the standpoint of sound community development
and growth;
(B)
appropriate for rehabilitation or conservation activities;
(C)
appropriate for the preservation or restoration of historic
sites, the beautification of urban land, the conservation of
open spaces, naturalresources, and scenic areas, the provision
of recreational opportunities, or the guidance of urban development;
(D)
to be used for the provision of public works, facilities, and
improvements eligible for assistance under this chapter; or
(E)
to be used for other public purposes;
(2)
the acquisition, construction, reconstruction, or installation
(including design features and improvements with respect to such
construction, reconstruction, or installation that promote energy
efficiency) of public works, facilities (except for buildings
for the general conduct of government), and site or other improvements;
(3)
code enforcement in deteriorated or deteriorating areas in which
such enforcement, together with public or private improvements
or services to be provided, may be expected to arrest the decline
of the area;
(4)
clearance, demolition, removal, reconstruction, and rehabilitation
(including rehabilitation which promotes energy efficiency) of
buildings and improvements (including interim assistance, and
financing public or private acquisition for reconstruction or
rehabilitation, and reconstruction or rehabilitation, of privately
owned properties, and including the renovation of closed school
buildings);
(5)
special projects directed to the removal of material and architectural
barriers which restrict the mobility and accessibility of elderly
and handicapped persons;
(6)
payments to housing owners for losses of rental income incurred
in holding for temporary periods housing units to be utilized
for the relocation of individuals and families displaced by activities
under this chapter;
(7)
disposition (through sale, lease, donation, or otherwise)
of any real property acquired pursuant to this chapter or its
retention for public purposes;
(8)
provision of public services, including but not limited to those
concerned with employment, crime prevention, child care, health,
drug abuse, education, energy conservation, welfare or recreation
needs, if such services have not been provided by the unit of
general local government (through funds raised by such unit, or
received by such unit from the State in which it is located) during
any part of the twelve-month period immediately preceding the
date of submission of the statement with respect to which funds
are to be made available under this chapter, and which are to
be used for such services, unless the Secretary finds that the
discontinuation of such services was the result of events not
within the control of the unit of general local government, except
that not more than 15 per centum of the amount of any assistance
to a unit of general local government (or in the case of nonentitled
communities not more than 15 per centum statewide) under this
chapter including program income may be used for activities under
this paragraph unless such unit of general local government used
more than 15 percent of the assistance received under this chapter
for fiscal year 1982 or fiscal year 1983 for such activities (excluding
any assistance received pursuant to Public Law 98-8), in which
case such unit of general local government may use not more than
the percentage or amount of such assistance used for such activities
for such fiscal year, whichever method of calculation yields the
higher amount, except that of any amount of assistance under this
chapter (including program income) in each of fiscal years 1993
through 2001 to the City of Los Angeles and County of Los Angeles,
each such unit of general government may use not more than 25
percent in each such fiscal year for activities under this paragraph,
and except that of any amount of assistance under this chapter
(including program income) in each of the fiscal years 1999, 2000,
and 2001, to the City of Miami, such city may use not more than
25 percent in each fiscal year for activities under this paragraph;
(1)
Section 218 of the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act
of 1998, title V of Public Law 105-276, approved October 21, 1998
amended this paragraph by striking "1998" and inserting "1999",
as shown, to extend the public services cap exception applicable
to the City and County of Los Angeles through the end of fiscal
year 1999. However, section 596 of such Act also amended this
paragraph, but by striking "1998" and inserting "2000". The result
of including both amendments in the same Act is unclear.
(9) payment of the non-Federal share required in connection
with a Federal grant-in-aid program undertaken as part of activities
assisted under this chapter;
(10)
payment of the cost of completing a project funded under title
I of the Housing Act of 1949 [42 U.S.C. 1450 et seq.];
(11) relocation payments and assistance for displaced
individuals, families, businesses, organizations, and farm operations,
when determined by the grantee to be appropriate;
(12)
activities necessary
(A)
to develop a comprehensive community development plan, and
(B)
to develop a policy-planning- management capacity so that the
recipient of assistance under this chapter may more rationally
and effectively
(i)
determine its needs,
(ii) set long-term goals and short-term objectives,
(iii)
devise programs and activities to meet these goals and objectives,
(iv)
evaluate the progress of such programs in accomplishing these
goals and objectives, and
(v)
carry out management, coordination, and monitoring of activities
necessary for effective planning implementation;
(13)
payment of reasonable administrative costs related to establishing
and administering federally approved enterprise zones and payment
of reasonable administrative costs and carrying charges related
to
(A)
administering the HOME program under title II of the Cranston-Gonzalez
National Affordable Housing Act [42 U.S.C. 12721 et seq.];
and
(B)
the planning and execution of community development and housing
activities, including the provision of information and resources
to residents of areas in which community development and housing
activities are to be concentrated with respect to the planning
and execution of such activities, and including the carrying
out of activities as described in section 461(e) of title 40
on August 12, 1981;
(14)
provision of assistance including loans (both interim and long-term)
and grants for activities which are carried out by public or private
nonprofit entities, including
(A)
acquisition of real property;
(B)
acquisition, construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, or
installation of
(i)
public facilities (except for buildings for the general conduct
of government), site improvements, and utilities, and
(ii)
commercial or industrial buildings or structures
and other commercial or industrial real property improvements;
and
(C)
planning;
(15)
assistance to neighborhood-based nonprofit organizations,
local development corporations, nonprofit organizations serving
the development needs of the communities in nonentitlement areas,
or entities organized under section 681(d) of title 15 to carry
out a neighborhood revitalization or community economic development
or energy conservation project in furtherance of the objectives
of section 5301(c) of this
title, and assistance to neighborhood-based nonprofit organizations,
or other private or public nonprofit organizations, for the purpose
of assisting, as part of neighborhood revitalization or other
community development, the development of shared housing opportunities
(other than by construction of new facilities) in which elderly
families (as defined in section 1437a(b)(3) of this title) benefit
as a result of living in a dwelling in which the facilities are
shared with others in a manner that effectively and efficiently
meets the housing needs of the residents and thereby reduces their
cost of housing;
(16)
activities necessary to the development of energy use strategies
related to a recipient's development goals, to assure that those
goals are achieved with maximum energy efficiency, including items
such as--
(A)
an analysis of the manner in, and the extent to, which energy
conservation objectives will be integrated into local government
operations, purchasing and service delivery, capital improvements
budgeting, waste management, district heating and cooling, land
use planning and zoning, and traffic control, parking, and public
transportation functions; and
(B)
a statement of the actions the recipient will take to foster
energy conservation and the use of renewable energy resources
in the private sector, including the enactment and enforcement
of local codes and ordinances to encourage or mandate energy
conservation or use of renewable energy resources, financial
and other assistance to be provided (principally for the benefit
of low- and moderate-income persons) to make energy conserving
improvements to residential structures, and any other proposed
energy conservation activities;
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(17)
provision of assistance to private, for-profit entities, when
the assistance is appropriate to carry out an economic development
project (that shall minimize, to the extent practicable, displacement
of existing businesses and jobs in neighborhoods) that--
(A)
creates or retains jobs for low- and moderate-income persons;
(B)
prevents or eliminates slums and blight;
(C)
meets urgent needs;
(D)
creates or retains businesses owned by community residents;
(E)
assists businesses that provide goods or services needed by,
and affordable to, low- and moderate-income residents; or
(F)
provides technical assistance to promote any of the activities
under subparagraphs (A) through (E);
(18)
the rehabilitation or development of housing assisted under section
1437o of this title;
(19)
provision of technical assistance to public or nonprofit
entities to increase the capacity of such entities to carry out
eligible neighborhood revitalization or economic development activities,
which assistance shall not be considered a planning cost as defined
in paragraph (12) or administrative cost as defined in paragraph
(13);
(20)housing
services, such as housing counseling in connection with tenant-based
rental assistance and affordable housing projects assisted under
title II of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing
Act [42 U.S.C. 12721 et seq.], energy auditing,
preparation of work specifications, loan processing, inspections,
tenant selection, management of tenant-based rental assistance,
and other services related to assisting owners, tenants, contractors,
and other entities, participating or seeking to participate in
housing activities assisted under title II of the Cranston-Gonzalez
National Affordable Housing Act;
(21)
provision of assistance by recipients under this chapter to institutions
of higher education having a demonstrated capacity to carry out
eligible activities under this subsection for carrying out such
activities;
(22)
provision of assistance to public and private organizations,
agencies, and other entities (including nonprofit and for-profit
entities) to enable such entities to facilitate economic development
by--
(A)
providing credit (including providing direct loans and loan
guarantees, establishing revolving loan funds, and facilitating
peer lending programs) for the establishment, stabilization,
and expansion of microenterprises;
(B)
providing technical assistance, advice, and business
support services (including assistance, advice, and support
relating to developing business plans, securing funding, conducting
marketing, and otherwise engaging in microenterprise activities)
to owners of microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises;
and
(C)
providing general support (such as peer support programs and
counseling) to owners of microenterprises and persons developing
microenterprises;
(23)
activities necessary to make essential repairs and to pay operating
expenses necessary to maintain the habitability of housing units
acquired through tax foreclosure proceedings in order to prevent
abandonment and deterioration of such housing in primarily low-
and moderate-income neighborhoods;
(24)
provision of direct assistance to facilitate and expand homeownership
\1\ among persons of low and moderate income (except
that such assistance shall not be considered a public service
for purposes of paragraph (8)) by using such assistance to--
(A)
subsidize interest rates and mortgage principal amounts for
low- and moderate-income homebuyers;
(B)
finance the acquisition by low- and moderate-income homebuyers
of housing that is occupied by the homebuyers;
(C)
acquire guarantees for mortgage financing obtained by low- and
moderate-income homebuyers from private lenders (except that
amounts received under this chapter may not be used under this
subparagraph to directly guarantee such mortgage financing and
grantees under this chapter may not directly provide such guarantees);
(D)
provide up to 50 percent of any downpayment required from low-
or moderate-income homebuyer; or
(E)
pay reasonable closing costs (normally associated with the purchase
of a home) incurred by a low- or moderate-income homebuyer;
and
\1\
The previous "sunset" provision for paragraph (24) has been repealed.
(25)
lead-based paint hazard evaluation and reduction, as defined in
section 4851b of this title.
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(b)
Reimbursement of Secretary for administrative services connected
with rehabilitation of properties
Upon
the request of the recipient of assistance under this chapter, the
Secretary may agree to perform administrative services on a reimbursable
basis on behalf of such recipient in connection with loans or grants
for the rehabilitation of properties as authorized under subsection
(a)(4) of this section.
(c)
Activities benefiting persons of low and moderate income
(1)
In any case in which an assisted activity described in paragraph
(14) or (17) of subsection (a) of this section is identified as
principally benefiting persons of low and moderate income, such
activity shall--
(A)
be carried out in a neighborhood consisting predominately of
persons of low and moderate income and provide services for
such persons; or
(B)
involve facilities designed for use predominately by persons
of low and moderate income; or
(C)
involve employment of persons, a majority of whom are persons
of low and moderate income.
(2)
(A)
In any case in which an assisted activity described in subsection
(a) of this section is designed to serve an area generally and
is clearly designed to meet identified needs of persons of low
and moderate income in such area, such activity shall be considered
to principally benefit persons of low and moderate income if
(i)
not less than 51 percent of the residents of such area are
persons of low and moderate income;
(ii)
in any metropolitan city or urban county, the area served
by such activity is within the highest quartile of all areas
within the jurisdiction of such city or county in terms of
the degree of concentration of persons of low and moderate
income; or
(iii)
the assistance for such activity is limited to paying assessments
(including any charge made as a condition of obtaining access)
levied against properties owned and occupied by persons of
low and moderate income to recover the capital cost for a
public improvement.
(B)
The requirements of subparagraph (A) do not prevent the use
of assistance under this chapter for the development, establishment,
and operation for not to exceed 2 years after its establishment
of a uniform emergency telephone number system if the Secretary
determines that--
(i)
such system will contribute substantially to the safety of
the residents of the area served by such system;
(ii) not less than 51 percent of the use of the system
will be by persons of low and moderate income; and
(iii) other Federal funds received by the grantee
are not available for the development, establishment, and
operation of such system due to the insufficiency of the amount
of such funds, the restrictions on the use of such funds,
or the prior commitment of such funds for other purposes by
the grantee.
The percentage of the cost of the development, establishment,
and operation of such a system that may be paid from assistance
under this chapter and that is considered to benefit low and
moderate income persons is the percentage of the population
to be served that is made up of persons of low and moderate
income.
(3)
Any assisted activity under this chapter that involves the acquisition
or rehabilitation of property to provide housing shall be considered
to benefit persons of low and moderate income only to the extent
such housing will, upon completion, be occupied by such persons.
(4)
For the purposes of subsection (c)(1)(C) of this section--
(A)
if an employee resides in, or the assisted activity through
which he or she is employed, is located in a census tract that
meets the Federal enterprise zone eligibility criteria, the
employee shall be presumed to be a person of low- or moderate-income;
or
(B)
if an employee resides in a census tract where not less than
70 percent of the residents have incomes at or below 80 percent
of the area median, the employee shall be presumed to be a person
of low or moderate income.
(d)
Training program
The
Secretary shall implement, using funds recaptured pursuant to section
5318(o) of this title, an on-going education
and training program for officers and employees of the Department,
especially officers and employees of area and other field offices
of the Department, who are responsible for monitoring and administering
activities pursuant to paragraphs (14), (15), and (17) of subsection
(a) of this section for the purpose of ensuring that
(A)
such personnel possess a thorough understanding of such activities;
and
(B)
regulations and guidelines are implemented in a consistent fashion.
(e)
Guidelines for evaluating and selecting economic development projects
(1)
Establishment
The Secretary shall establish, by regulation, guidelines to assist
grant recipients under this chapter to evaluate and select activities
described in subsection (a)(14), (15), and (17) of this section
for assistance with grant amounts. The Secretary shall not base
a determination of eligibility of the use of funds under this
chapter for such assistance solely on the basis that the recipient
fails to achieve one or more of the guidelines' objectives as
stated in paragraph (2).
(2)
Project costs and financial requirements
The guidelines established under this subsection shall include
the following objectives:
(A)
The project costs of such activities are reasonable.
(B)
To the extent practicable, reasonable financial support has
been committed for such activities from non-Federal sources
prior to disbursement of Federal funds.
(C) To the extent practicable, any grant amounts to
be provided for such activities do not substantially reduce
the amount of non-Federal financial support for the activity.
(D)
Such activities are financially feasible.
(E)
To the extent practicable, such activities provide not more
than a reasonable return on investment to the owner.
(F)
To the extent practicable, grant amounts used for the costs
of such activities are disbursed on a pro rata basis with amounts
from other sources.
(3)
Public benefit
The guidelines established under this subsection shall provide
that the public benefit provided by the activity is appropriate
relative to the amount of assistance provided with grant amounts
under this chapter.
(f)
Assistance to for-profit entities
In
any case in which an activity described in paragraph (17) of subsection
(a) of this section is provided assistance such assistance shall
not be limited to activities for which no other forms of assistance
are available or could not be accomplished but for that assistance.
(g)
Microenterprise and small business program requirements
In
developing program requirements and providing assistance pursuant
to paragraph (17) of subsection (a) of this section to a microenterprise
or small business, the Secretary shall--
(1)
take into account the special needs and limitations arising from
the size of the entity; and
(2)
not consider training, technical assistance, or other support
services costs provided to small businesses or microenterprises
or to grantees and subgrantees to develop the capacity to provide
such assistance, as a planning cost pursuant to subsection (a)(12)
of this section or an administrative cost pursuant to subsection
(a)(13) of this section.
(h)
Prohibition on use of assistance for employment relocation activities
Notwithstanding
any other provision of law, no amount from a grant under section
5306 made in fiscal year 1999 or any succeeding
fiscal year may be used to assist directly in the relocation of
any industrial or commercial plant, facility, or operation, from
1 area to another area, if the relocation is likely to result in
a significant loss of employment in the labor market area from which
the relocation occurs.
(Pub.
L. 93-383, title I, Sec. 105, Aug. 22, 1974, 88 Stat. 641;
Pub. L. 94-375, Sec. 15(b), Aug. 3, 1976, 90 Stat. 1076;
Pub. L. 95-128, title I, Sec. 105, Oct. 12, 1977, 91 Stat. 1116;
Pub. L. 95-557, title I, Sec. 103(e), Oct. 31, 1978, 92 Stat. 2084;
Pub. L. 96-399, title I, Sec. 104(c)-(e), Oct. 8, 1980, 94 Stat.
1616-1618;
Pub. L. 97-35, title III, Secs. 303(a), 309(e)-(g), Aug. 13, 1981,
95 Stat. 387, 396;
Pub. L. 98-181, title I, Sec. 105(a), (b)(1), (c)-(e), title III,
Sec. 302(a), Nov. 30, 1983, 97 Stat. 1163, 1164, 1206;
Pub. L. 98-479, title I, Sec. 101(a)(8), (9)(A), Oct. 17, 1984,
98 Stat. 2219;
Pub. L. 100-242, title V, Secs. 504, 510, 511, Feb. 5, 1988, 101
Stat. 1925, 1929;
Pub. L. 100-404, title I, Aug. 19, 1988, 102 Stat. 1019;
Pub. L. 101-625, title IX, Secs. 907, 908, Nov. 28, 1990, 104 Stat.
4387, 4389;
Pub. L. 102-550, title VIII, Secs. 805, 806(a), (b), (c), 807(a),
(b)(3), (c)(1), (d)-(f), 809, title X, Sec. 1012(f), Oct. 28, 1992,
106 Stat. 3846, 3847, 3849, 3850, 3905;
Pub. L. 103-195, Sec. 2(a), Dec. 14, 1993, 107 Stat. 2297;
Pub. L. 103-233, title II, Sec. 207, Apr. 11, 1994, 108 Stat. 365;
Pub. L. 104-134, title I, Sec. 101(e) (title II, Sec. 225), Apr.
26, 1996, 110 Stat. 1321-257, 1321-291;
renumbered title I, Pub. L. 104-140, Sec. 1(a), May 2, 1996, 110
Stat. 1327;
Pub. L. 104-204, title II, Sec. 220, Sept. 26, 1996, 110 Stat. 2906;
Pub. L. 105-276, title II, Sec. 218, 232, title V, Sec. 588, 596(a),
Oct. 21, 1998, 112 Stat. 2487, 2492, 2651, 2659.)
Pub.L. 106-377, Sec. (1)(a)(1), Oct. 27, 2000, 114 Stat. 1441
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