FUNDING AVAILABILITY FOR DRUG ELIMINATION GRANTS FOR FEDERALLY ASSISTED LOW-INCOME HOUSING (MULTIFAMILY HOUSING DRUG ELIMINATION) Program Overview Purpose of the Program. The purpose of this Multifamily Housing Drug Elimination Grant Program is to enable owners of federally assisted low-income housing developments to deal effectively with drug- related criminal activity in and around their developments, through a plan of activities including enhanced security measures, support of tenant patrols, and drug-abuse prevention, intervention, referral, and treatment programs. Available Funds. Approximately $16.25 million. Eligible Applicants. Only owners of eligible developments may apply for and become the recipient of grant funds. Property management companies may administer grant programs, but are not eligible applicants. Application Deadline: May 23, 2001. Match. None. Additional Information If you are interested in applying for funding under this program, please review carefully the General Section of this SuperNOFA and the following additional information. I. Application Due Date, Application Kits, Further Information, and Technical Assistance Application Due Date. Your completed application (an original and two copies) is due on or before 6:00 pm, local time, on May 23, 2001 at the address shown below. See the General Section of this SuperNOFA for specific procedures concerning the form of application submission (e.g., mailed applications, express mail, overnight delivery, or hand carried). Address for Submitting Applications. Appendix A to this program section contains a list of HUD Field Offices where you must send your application by the deadline. Please address your application to the Director, Multifamily Housing Hub or Program Center in your local HUD Field Office. For Application Kits. For an application kit, please call the SuperNOFA Information Center at 1-800-HUD-8929. If you have a hearing or speech impairment, please call the Center's TTY number at 1-800-HUD- 2209. When requesting an application kit, please refer to Multifamily Housing Drug Elimination Grants, and provide your name, address (including zip code) and telephone number (including area code). An application kit also will be available on the Internet at http:// www.hud.gov/grants. For Further Information and Technical Assistance. You may contact your local HUD Field Office staff for questions you have regarding this program section of the SuperNOFA and your application kit. Please contact the Resident Initiatives Specialist or Drug Elimination Grants contact person in your local office. If you have a question that the Field staff are unable to answer, please call Carissa Janis, Housing Project Manager, Office of Housing Assistance and Grants Administration, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Room 6146, Washington, DC 20410; (202) 708-2866, extension 2487 (this number is not toll free). If you are hearing or speech impaired, you may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339. Satellite Broadcast. HUD will hold an information broadcast via satellite for potential applicants to learn more about the program and preparation of the application. For more information about the date and time of the broadcast, you should consult the HUD web site at http:// www.hud.gov/grants. II. Amount Allocated (A) Available Funding. HUD is allocating funds under this Multifamily Drug Elimination Grant Program section of the SuperNOFA to the eighteen Multifamily Housing Hub Offices, in accordance with the following schedule: Hub Offices and Field Office Jurisdictions ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Atlanta Hub (Atlanta, Caribbean, Knoxville, Nashville, $1,219,019 Louisville)............................................... Baltimore Hub (Baltimore, Richmond, Washington, DC)........ 801,213 Boston Hub (Boston, Hartford, Manchester, Providence)...... 1,310,033 Buffalo Hub................................................ 329,658 Chicago Hub (Chicago, Indianapolis)........................ 989,691 Columbus Hub (Columbus, Cincinnati, Cleveland)............. 945,259 Denver Hub................................................. 757,497 Detroit Hub (Detroit, Grand Rapids)........................ 619,184 Ft. Worth Hub (Ft. Worth, Albuquerque, Houston, Little 1,161,687 Rock, New Orleans, San Antonio, Shreveport)............... Greensboro Hub (Greensboro, Columbia)..................... 811,246 Jacksonville Hub (Jacksonville, Birmingham, Jackson)....... 1,006,891 Kansas City Hub (Kansas City, Des Moines, Oklahoma City, 1,183,903 Omaha, St. Louis, Tulsa).................................. Los Angeles Hub............................................ 761,080 Minneapolis Hub (Minneapolis, Milwaukee)................... 999,008 New York Hub............................................... 599,118 Philadelphia Hub (Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Charleston, 1,138,754 Newark)................................................... San Francisco Hub (San Francisco, Honolulu, Las Vegas, 909,427 Phoenix, Sacramento)...................................... Seattle Hub (Seattle, Portland, Anchorage)................. 707,332 ------------ Grand Total............................................ 16,250,000 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Multifamily Housing Hub offices will select applicants for award according to the process discussed in Section V of this program section of the SuperNOFA. (B) Maximum Grant Award. The maximum amount of funds you may receive for an application with one development is $125,000 and the maximum for an application for two or more developments is $200,000. (C) Reduction of Requested Grant Amounts. You may be awarded an amount less than requested if: (1) HUD determines that some elements of your proposed action plan are ineligible for funding; (2) Insufficient amounts remain under the allocation to fund the full amount you requested, and HUD determines [[Page 12004]] that partial funding is a viable option; or (3) HUD determines that a reduced grant would prevent duplicative Federal funding. III. Program Description; Eligible Applicants; Eligible Activities (A) Program Description. The Federally Assisted Low-Income Housing Drug Elimination Grant program is designed to assist property owners to reduce or eliminate drug-related criminal activity in and around their developments and to provide programs to prevent or eliminate drug use and abuse among their residents. While this program is centered in and around the premises of one or more HUD assisted multifamily housing sites, you are expected to work closely with other community social service and law enforcement organizations to achieve specific program objectives to reduce or eliminate drug-related criminal activity. The development of these strong working partnerships is an essential part of this program and is seen by the Department as necessary for long- term strategies to fight crime and drug abuse. Thus, while your activities are targeted in and around one or more developments, HUD expects you to link your activities with services available in your community. In particular, HUD is seeking plans that provide successful, proven, and cost-effective deterrents to drug-related crime and drug abuse that are designed to address the realities of federally assisted low-income housing environments. (B) Eligible Applicants (1) To be eligible for funding, you must meet all of the applicable threshold requirements of Section II(B) of the General Section of the SuperNOFA and must be owners of developments assisted under the following programs: (a) Sections 221(d)(3) below market interest rate, or 236 of the National Housing Act; (b) Section 101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965; or (c) Any development receiving project-based assistance under Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937. This includes Section 202, Section 515, State Housing Finance Agency, Moderate Rehabilitation, Section 8 New Construction and Substantial Rehabilitation, 221(d)(3), 221(d)(4), and 236 developments. (2) If you are a management agent, you may prepare applications and sign application documents if you provide written authorization from the owner as part of your application. (3) If your eligibility status changes during the course of the grant term, making you ineligible to receive a grant (e.g. due to prepayment of mortgage, sale of property, or opting out of a Section 8 Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) contract), HUD has the right to terminate your grant. (4) To be eligible, developments must also meet the following criteria: (a) Are current in mortgage payments or are current under a workout agreement; (b) Meet HUD's Uniform Physical Conditions Standards (codified in 24 CFR part 5, subpart G), based on the most recent physical inspection report and responses thereto, as evidenced by a score of 60 or better or an approved plan for developments scoring less than 60, and (c) Are in compliance with your regulatory agreement, HAP Contract, and other outstanding directives. (5) Eligible owners may apply for and receive both Multifamily Housing Drug Elimination Grants and New Approach Anti-Drug grants. (C) Eligible Activities. Your proposed drug elimination program should foster interrelationships among the residents, the housing owner and management, the local law enforcement agencies, and other community groups affecting your development. Resident participation in the determination of programs and activities to be undertaken is critical to the success of all aspects of your program. In addition to working closely with the development's residents, your program must include working with community groups, the neighborhood law enforcement precinct, residents of adjacent developments, and the community as a whole to enhance and magnify the effect of your specific program activities. HUD seeks result-oriented programs that promote stability, positive and lasting changes in and around your development and the surrounding community, and which use proven cost-effective measures to reduce drug use or prevent criminal activity. With the very real need to protect occupants of HUD-assisted housing and the areas around the housing, the civil rights of all citizens must be protected. Your proposed strategies should be developed to ensure that crime-fighting and drug prevention activities are not undertaken in such a manner that civil rights or fair housing statutes are violated. You may not use race, color, sex, religion, national origin, disability, or familial status to profile persons as suspects or otherwise target them in conducting these activities. In addition, all segments of the population should be represented in developing and implementing your crime-fighting strategies. (1) Physical Improvements To Enhance Security. All physical improvements must be accessible to persons with disabilities and must meet the accessibility requirements of 24 CFR part 8, Nondiscrimination Based on Handicap in Federally Assisted Programs and Activities of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. In addition, such physical improvements must support or enhance visitability for people with mobility impairments. Your physical improvements may include systems to limit building access to development residents; installation of barriers, lighting systems, fences, bolts, locks; landscaping or reconfiguration of common areas to discourage drug-related crime; or other physical improvements that enhance security and discourage drug-related activities. Rehabilitation of existing space for use by drug-related intervention and prevention programs is an eligible activity. (2) The provision of training, communications equipment, and other related equipment for use by voluntary tenant patrols acting in cooperation with local law enforcement officials is an eligible activity. (3) Programs to Reduce the Use of Drugs. Programs to reduce the use of drugs in and around your development, including drug-abuse prevention, intervention, referral, and treatment are eligible for funding. Where appropriate, you must establish a confidentiality policy regarding medical and disability-related information. Funding is permitted for reasonable, necessary, and justified leasing of vehicles for resident youth and adult education and training activities directly related to ``programs to reduce the use of drugs'' under this section. All such services and educational and training programs must be fully accessible to people with disabilities. (a) Drug Prevention. Your drug prevention activities should provide a comprehensive drug prevention approach that will address the individual resident and his or her relationship to family, peers, and the community. Prevention activities should identify and change the conditions in federally assisted low-income housing that lead to drug- related problems and lower the risk of drug usage. Many components of a comprehensive approach, such as refusal and restraint skills training or drug-related family counseling, may already be available in your community. Your plan should include bringing [[Page 12005]] program components already available in the community onto the premises. Proposed activities may include the following: (i) Drug Education Opportunities for Residents. Activities should provide both young people and adults with the working knowledge and skills needed to avoid the potential and immediate dangers of illegal drugs. You may contract (in accordance with 24 CFR 85.36) with drug education professionals to provide training or workshops. Contracted drug education services must reflect or be tied to your program plan. (ii) Family and Other Support Services. Prevention programs should be designed to help foster successful family relationships that may inhibit or reduce drug use. Examples of services include parenting skills workshops, short-term family counseling, child care, or family, cultural or educational programs. You may provide these programs directly or refer residents to such services already available in your community. (iii) Youth Services. If you propose drug prevention services in your plan and your development has a substantial number of young residents, HUD strongly encourages you to include youth in your prevention programs. Your proposed prevention activities for youth must involve the active participation of youth in planning programs and service delivery. Such youth-oriented drug prevention programs may include youth leadership skills training; events incorporating dissemination of drug education information; and sports, recreational, cultural, and general education activities. (iv) Economic/Educational Opportunities. Eligible economic or educational programs should have the objectives of assisting residents in improving their educational status, vocational and job readiness skills, and opportunities for obtaining employment. The ultimate goal of services should be to assist residents in obtaining suitable lifelong employment and self-sufficiency to deter drug use, abuse, and related crime. (b) Intervention. The aim of intervention is to provide residents with substance abuse/dependency remission services to assist them in modifying their behavior; obtaining early treatment and structured aftercare; and maintaining remission. Your program should also be designed to prevent drug problems from continuing once detected. If you propose any intervention program that seeks to accomplish the above objectives, you must describe how you expect the activities to assist residents in reducing or ceasing their use of illicit drugs and involvement in drug-related crime. (c) Drug Treatment. If your program provides treatment services, they must be targeted to the development and its residents. Your program should be conducted in and around the premises of the development, or residents must be referred to receive treatment from other available sources within the community. You may include implementing new drug referral treatment or aftercare services, or improve or expand currently available services. Your proposed drug treatment program should aim to reduce illicit drug use among residents by increasing resident accessibility to, and effective participation in, drug treatment activities, and decreasing criminal activity in and around your development. Your proposed plan must demonstrate a working partnership with your Single State Agency (or State license provider or authority with drug program coordination responsibilities in your State) to coordinate, develop, and implement your drug treatment program. In particular, you and the appropriate agency must confirm that your proposed drug treatment provider(s) has provided these services to similar populations for two prior years and your drug treatment program is consistent with the State treatment plan, meeting all State licensing requirements. Services eligible for funding may include: (i) Drug treatment supportive services designed for youth and/or maternal drug abusers. Examples of services are: prenatal/postpartum care; specialized counseling for women; or, parenting classes. You are encouraged to draw upon approaches that have proven effective with similar populations. (ii) Formal referral arrangements to treatment programs not in and around the development when treatment funding from sources other than this program are available. (iii) Transportation for residents to out-patient treatment and/or support programs. (iv) Family/collateral counseling. (v) Linking programs with educational/vocational counseling. (vi) Coordinating services with appropriate local drug agencies, HIV-related service agencies, and mental health and public health programs. (D) Ineligible Activities. The following activities are not eligible for funding: (1) Hiring of or contracting employment security guards to provide security services in and around the development. (2) Any activity or improvement that is normally funded from project operating revenues for routine maintenance or repairs, or those activities or improvements that may be funded through reasonable and affordable rent increases; (3) The acquisition of real property or those physical improvements that involve the demolition of any units in your development or displacement of tenants; (4) Costs incurred prior to the effective date of your grant agreement, including consultant fees for surveys related to your application or its preparation; (5) Reimbursement of local law enforcement agencies for additional security and protective services; (6) Employment of one or more individuals to investigate drug- related crime in and around federally-assisted low-income developments and/or to provide evidence relating to such crime in any administrative or judicial proceeding; (7) Treatment of residents at any in-patient medical treatment programs or facilities; (8) Detoxification procedures designed to reduce or eliminate the presence of toxic substances in body tissues of a patient; (9) Maintenance drug programs; [Maintenance drugs are medications that are prescribed regularly for a long period of supportive therapy (e.g., methadone maintenance), rather than for immediate control of a disorder.] (10) Programs to treat alcoholism; and (11) Funding of police informants who provide information about drug-related activity. IV. Program Requirements In addition to the requirements listed in Section II of the General Section of this SuperNOFA, you must also meet the additional requirements in Section IV of this program section of the SuperNOFA. These requirements apply to all activities, programs, and functions used to plan, budget, and evaluate the work funded under your program. (A) Administrative Costs. Administrative costs cannot exceed 10% of your proposed program's total cost. HUD will look more favorably upon proposals that target grant funds to hard program costs and propose minimal, if any, administrative expenses. (B) Term of Funded Activities. Your grant term cannot exceed twelve months. (C) Multiple Developments. There is no limit to the number of developments that can be included in your [[Page 12006]] application. However, if you include more than one development in your application, all developments must be eligible and located in the same Field Office jurisdiction. In addition, you must demonstrate in your response to Rating Factor 3 ``Soundness of Approach--(Quality of the Plan)'' that your program will be feasible to implement among all proposed developments. (D) Subgrants and Subcontracting. You may directly undertake or subcontract for any of the eligible activities under this Multifamily Drug Elimination Program section of the SuperNOFA. Resident groups that are not incorporated may work with you in the implementation of your program, but may not receive funds as subgrantees. (E) Collection of Crime Data. If you receive a grant, you will be required to collect and report on Parts I and II crime data. Parts I and II crime data are defined by the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) System (see Rating Factor 2, paragraph (1)(d)). (F) Forms, Certifications and Assurances. See the General Section of the SuperNOFA for the applicable forms, certifications, and assurances that you must submit. This includes a certification that you are in compliance with Federal Civil Rights laws, as specified in Section II(G)(7) of the General Section of this SuperNOFA. (G) Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing. You must comply with Section II(D) of the General Section of this SuperNOFA. (H) Federal Labor Standards. In accordance with 24 CFR 761.40, when grant funds are used to undertake physical improvements to assisted multifamily housing, you must comply with Davis-Bacon prevailing wage requirements. V. Application Selection Process (A) Rating and Ranking. All applications will be evaluated competitively and ranked against applications in the same Field Office. The maximum number of points for this program is 102. This includes two Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community (EZ/EC) bonus points, as described in the General Section of the SuperNOFA. For bonus points related to activities located in Empowerment Zones or Enterprise Communities, you must demonstrate that there is a connection between such EZ or EC and tenant, local government, and local community support and participation in the design and implementation of the proposed activities to be funded under this program. (B) Distribution of Funds. This year HUD will distribute funds to each Multifamily Housing Hub Office, in proportion to the number of eligible developments in that area. Each Multifamily Hub Office may recommend a total number of awards up to the dollar amount allocated for the area covered by the Hub Office. Hub Offices will receive the scores from each HUD Field Office which has received, rated, and ranked its applications. The Hub Offices will conduct the selection process as follows: Where a Multifamily Hub covers more than one Field Office jurisdiction, the Hub Office will first select the highest ranked application in each Field Office for funding. After this selection, the Hub will use remaining funds to fully fund as many applications as possible in rank order, regardless of Field Office. Hub Offices representing only one Field Office shall use their distribution of funds to fully fund in rank order as many applications as possible. Any funds still remaining after the Hub Office distribution by rank will be forwarded to Headquarters, which shall make awards to fund as many remaining applications as possible by national rank order. All applications must receive a score equal to or greater than the minimum score of 70 without bonus points to be considered for funding. This process balances a geographic distribution with a process that gives priority to the most highly rated applications. Your application will primarily compete for funding with other applications submitted within that same Hub Office jurisdiction. (C) Procedure to Resolve Tied Scores. If two or more applications have the same score and there are insufficient funds to fund all of them, the application with the highest score for the Soundness of Approach rating factor shall be selected for funding. If a tie still remains, the application with the highest score for the Capacity of the Applicant and Relevant Organizational Experience rating factor shall be selected. Further tied applications will be selected by their scores in the Need/Extent of Problem, Leveraging Resources, and Comprehensiveness and Coordination rating factors, in that order. If the applications received the same score for each of the five factors, the Multifamily Hub Office or Headquarters will break the remaining tie by selecting the application whose developments(s) are in most financial need based on a per unit negative cash flow analysis of the most recent Annual Financial Statement (AFS). (D) Factors for Award Used to Evaluate and Rate Applications. The five factors in this section total 100 points. An application must receive a score of at least 70 points to be eligible for funding under this competition. Each application submitted will be evaluated using the following selection criteria set forth below. Rating Factor 1: Capacity of the Applicant and Relevant Organizational Experience (20 Points) This factor addresses the extent to which you have organizational resources necessary to successfully implement your proposed activities in a timely manner. In rating this factor, HUD will consider the extent to which you demonstrate the capabilities described below. (1) (20 points) Administrative Capacity. (a) The knowledge and experience of your staff and your administrative capacity to manage grants, including administrative support functions, procurement, lines of authority, and fiscal management capacity. Your narrative must include a discussion of financial capacity, staff resources, and prior experience that will enable you to effectively administer a grant and meet reporting requirements. Your narrative should not exceed five pages. (b) HUD's evaluation approach. (i) For Public Housing Authorities (PHAs) and tribally designated housing entities (TDHEs) that had previously applied as IHAs, HUD will also consider such measurements as the uniform crime index, physical inspections, agency monitoring of records, Line of Credit Control System (LOCCS) Reports, audit and such other relevant information available to HUD on the capacity of the owner or manager to administer the grant. (ii) For owners of federally-assisted low income housing, HUD will also consider the most recent Management Review (including Rural Housing Management Review), HUD's Uniform Physical Conditions Standards review, State Agency review, physical inspection, and other relevant information available to HUD on the capacity of the owner and manager to undertake the grant. (2) (Deduct up to 5 points for prior poor performance) Your performance in administering Drug Elimination funding in the previous 5 years. HUD will consider your participation in HUD grant programs within the preceding five years and evaluate the degree of your success in implementing and managing these grant programs. HUD will look at program implementation, timely drawdown of funds, timely submission of required reports with [[Page 12007]] satisfactory outcomes related to the plan and timetable, audit compliance, whether there are any unresolved findings from prior HUD reports (e.g., performance or finance) reviews of audits undertaken by HUD, the Office of Inspector General, the General Accounting Office or independent public accountants). For PHAs, your past experience will be evaluated in terms of your ability to attain demonstrated measurable progress in tracking drug related crime, enforcement of screening and lease procedures in implementation of the ``One Strike and You're Out Initiative'' (as applicable), the extent to which you have formed a collaboration with Tribal, State and local law enforcement agencies and courts to gain access to criminal conviction records of potential tenants to determine their suitability for residence in public housing. Such data will be measured and evaluated based on your public housing assessment score (24 CFR parts 901/902). Rating Factor 2: Need/Extent of the Problem (25 Points) This factor addresses the extent to which there is a need for funding your proposed program activities to address a documented problem in the target area (i.e., the degree of the severity of the drug-related crime problem in the development(s) proposed for funding). In responding to this factor, HUD will evaluate your application based on the extent to which a critical level of need for your proposed activities is explained and you provide a justification for the urgency of meeting the need in your development(s) and the area around your development(s). Your application must include a description of the extent and nature of drug-related crime ``in and around'' the housing units or development(s) you propose for funding. (1) Drug-Related Crime Statistics. (23 Points) You will receive up to 23 points for this factor if your statistics and explanation of need establish critical crime problems and an urgency to address these problems in and around your development(s). To receive the maximum number of points, you must provide statistics for both the premises of your development(s) and the smallest geographic area surrounding your development(s) for which objective statistics are available in your community, town, or city. If you use statistics from institutions (e.g. hospitals or schools), the institutions must directly serve the residents of the targeted development(s). If the statistics you provide do not indicate a critical need, urgency to meet this need, or you do not provide statistics that document the need within your development(s) or the area around your development(s), you will not receive the maximum number of points. If you do not submit the letter or documentation for the ``non-objective'' data, indicated in paragraph 2(a), below, you will also receive fewer points. The statistics and information you provide must include the following: (a) ``Objective Crime Data'' relevant to the target area. Such data should consist of verifiable records and not anecdotal reports. Where appropriate, the statistics should be reported both in real numbers and as an annual percentage of the residents in each development (e.g., 20 arrests in a one-year period for distribution of heroin in a development with 100 residents reflects a 20% occurrence rate). Such data may include: (i) Police records or other verifiable information from records on the types or sources of drug related crime in the targeted development and surrounding area; (ii) The number of lease terminations or evictions for drug-related crime at the targeted development; and (iii) The number of emergency room admissions for drug use or that result from drug-related crime. Such information may be obtained from police Departments and/or fire departments, emergency medical service agencies and hospitals. The number of police calls for service from your development that include resident initiated calls, officer- initiated calls, domestic violence calls, drug distribution complaints, found drug paraphernalia, gang activity, graffiti that reflects drugs or gang-related activity, vandalism, drug arrests, and abandoned vehicles. (iv) To the extent possible, you should obtain statistics on Part I and Part II crimes, as defined by the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) System. Part 1 crimes include: criminal homicide, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault two (including domestic violence through use of a weapon or by means likely to produce death or great bodily harm), burglary-breaking or entering, larceny-theft (except motor vehicle theft), motor vehicle theft, and arson. Part II crimes include: assaults, forgery and counterfeiting, fraud, embezzlement, vandalism, weapons (carrying or possessing), prostitution and commercialized vice, sex offenses (except forcible rape, prostitution, and commercialized vice), drug abuse violations, gambling, offenses against the family and children, driving under the influence, violation of liquor laws, drunkenness, disorderly conduct, vagrancy, all other offenses related to curfew and loitering laws and runaways. For PHAs, such data should include housing authority police records on the types and sources of drug related crime ``in and around'' developments as reflected in crime statistics or other supporting data from Federal, State, Tribal, or local law enforcement agencies. (b) Other Crime Data. If you are unable to attain objective crime statistics as mentioned above, you may submit other supporting, verifiable data on the extent of drug-related crime in the target area. If you submit other relevant information in place of objective data, you must provide the following to receive the maximum number of points: (i) A letter or supporting documentation from your local law enforcement agency or another relevant neighborhood organization explaining why the objective data mentioned above is not available, and (ii) A narrative explanation of the reasons why objective data could not be obtained, what efforts were made to obtain it, and what efforts will be made (if possible) during the grant period to begin obtaining the data. Such data may include the following: --Surveys of residents and staff in the targeted development surveyed on drug-related crime or on-site reviews to determine drug/crime activity; and government or scholarly studies or other research in the past year that analyze drug-related crime activity in your targeted development. --Vandalism cost at your targeted development, to include elevator vandalism (where appropriate) and other vandalism attributable to drug- related crime. --Information from schools, health service providers, residents and Federal, State, local, and Tribal officials, and the verifiable opinions and observations of individuals having direct knowledge of drug-related crime, and the nature and frequency of these problems in your development proposed for assistance. (These individuals may include Federal, State, Tribal, and local government law enforcement officials, resident or community leaders, school officials, community medical officials, substance abuse, treatment (dependency/remission) or counseling professionals, or other social service providers.) --The school dropout rate and level of absenteeism for youth that you can relate to drug-related crime. --To the extent that the community's Consolidated Plan identifies the level of the drug abuse and related crime [[Page 12008]] problems in and around your targeted development, and the urgency in meeting the need, references to these documents should be included in your response. You will receive more points if you use these documents to identify need. (2) Development Need Based on Prior Award. (2 points) If you have not received an award for the development(s) submitted in your FY 2001 application in the FY 1998, 1999, or 2000 competitions, you will receive two points. If you submit an application with multiple developments and one or more developments did not receive an award in FY 1998, 1999, or 2000, you will receive one point. Rating Factor 3: Soundness of Approach--(Quality of the Plan) (35 Points) This factor addresses the quality and effectiveness of your proposed work plan. In rating this factor, HUD will consider the impact of your proposed activities and the tangible benefits that can be attained by the community and by the target population. Your application must include a detailed narrative describing each proposed activity for crime reduction and elimination efforts for each development proposed for assistance, the amount and extent of resources committed to each activity or service proposed, and process used to collect, maintain, analyze and report Part I and II crimes as defined by the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR System, as well as police workload data. In evaluating this factor, HUD will consider the following: (1) (14 points) Your plan's approach to address the drug-related crime problem and associated problems in the development proposed for funding, the resources allocated, and the extent to which your proposed activities are targeted to residents, provide for linkages with existing community resources, and are likely to have long term impacts on reducing drug use and drug-related crime in and around your targeted development. Also, you must include the rationale for the proposed activities and methods to be used in developing your program and approach to reducing drug-related crime and drug abuse. If you propose drug prevention or intervention activities, these services must constitute a continuing and comprehensive approach to deter drug use or abuse among your residents and their neighbors. Your proposal must demonstrate how your activities work together with other on-going activities in the community and how these activities rely upon each other to form a holistic plan. Your plan must include the following items. If these are not included, you will receive fewer points under this subfactor: (a) An explanation of how any proposed physical improvements, services, and training programs will be accessible and visitable to persons with disabilities and a statement that they will meet the accessibility requirements of 24 CFR part 8, Nondiscrimination Based on Handicap in Federally Assisted Programs and Activities of the Department of Housing and Urban Development; (b) A discussion of how any drug education services that you propose to undertake directly or through a subcontract will reflect the objectives of your program plan; (c) A specific explanation of how you plan to incorporate the active participation of youth in planning prevention programs and services targeted to their needs; and (d) If you propose drug treatment activities, you must provide a letter from your Single State Agency (or State license provider or authority with drug program coordination responsibilities in your State) that states that your program is effectively coordinating, developing, and implementing drug treatment programs in partnership with that entity. (2) (10 points) The anticipated effectiveness of your plan and proposed activities in reducing or eliminating drug-related crime problems immediately and over an extended period. This should include the following: (a) A description of established performance goals for the results to be achieved during the period of your grant. The goals must be objective, quantifiable, and measurable, and they must be outcome or result-oriented. Outcomes include accomplishments, results, impact and the ultimate effects of the program on the drug or crime problem in the target/development area. (b) An explanation of how your proposed activities enhance and are coordinated with on going or proposed programs sponsored by HUD, such as Neighborhood Networks, Campus of Learners, Operation Safe Home, ``One Strike and You're Out'', Department of Justice Weed and Seed efforts, or any other prevention/intervention/treatment activities in your community. Explain the specific steps you will take to share and coordinate information on solutions and outcomes with other law- enforcement and governmental agencies, and a description of any written agreements in place or that will be put in place by you with these entities. (3) (3 points) Evidence and explanation of how proposed activities have been effective in similar circumstances in controlling drug- related crime. If you are proposing new methods for which there is limited knowledge of effectiveness, you should provide the basis for modifying past practices and rationale for why you believe the modification will yield more effective results. (4) (3 points) The process you will use to maintain, analyze, and report Part I and II crimes, as well as police workload data. Police workload data may include, but are not limited to: all calls for service by residents of your development, crime pattern over a period of time by type of crime, and plans to improve data collection and reporting. Your proposed analysis of the data collected must include a method for assessing the impact of activities on the collected crime statistics throughout your award period. The results of your activities and the effect on statistics is of much greater importance than the method you will use to collect such data, so you should pay attention to the benchmarks you establish for measuring and evaluating your performance, particularly measuring changes in crime rates by Part I and Part II crime data. (5) (1 point deducted if not addressed) The extent to which your program to eliminate crime in your development or neighborhood will expand fair housing choice and will affirmatively further fair housing. Provide a brief statement outlining the benchmarks you will use to measure your success in affirmatively furthering fair housing through this program. This may include such items as making physical improvements accessible to persons with disabilities, lower vacancy and turnover rates and increased new applications for housing in your development and in other rental properties in your neighborhood, new businesses and other community development initiatives in your area, or increased rates of homeownership in your community. (6) (5 points) Resident Support. The extent to which you have sought the support of residents in planning and implementing the proposed activities. (a) You must provide evidence that you actively sought comments, suggestions, and support from residents for your proposed plan. State the steps you took to obtain this information and support. Demonstrate that you made your proposed plan available and that you requested comments in the language(s) of the tenants residing in your development(s). [[Page 12009]] (b) Describe and provide written documentation of these comments, suggestions, and support. HUD needs clear evidence that the residents agree with, support, and will work with your proposed program. If applicable, you must explain why you do not have written documentation of such support or did not receive any comments or suggestions. (c) Describe how residents will be involved in implementing your program. If involvement would be minimal or not appropriate, please state and explain why. Rating Factor 4: Leveraging Community Resources (10 Points) To receive points under this rating factor, you must provide evidence of the level and type of participation and support by the local government or law enforcement agency for your proposed activities. This should include the level of assistance received from local government, community organizations, and/or law enforcement agencies. If a community organization is providing you with staff or supporting services, you must include a letter from each organization providing staff or support in order to receive maximum points. Each letter must specify what type of participation or contributions the organization will make to your program. Such letters must be from businesses, non-profit or public agencies within your unit of general local government (i.e. county, town, city) or incorporated resident organizations. Letters stating general support or from people or organizations not in and around your development are not relevant and you should not include them in your application. Rating Factor 5: Comprehensiveness and Coordination (10 Points) This factor addresses the extent to which you coordinate your activities with other known organizations, participate or promote participation in your community's Consolidated Planning process, and are working towards addressing a need in a holistic and comprehensive manner through linkages with other activities in the community. In evaluating this factor, HUD will consider your prior efforts and future plans to coordinate with other local agencies and organizations as follows: (1) (3 points) Describe past efforts to coordinate your proposed activities with those of other groups or organizations prior to submission of your application in order to best complement, support, and coordinate all known activities. Explain what specific steps you will take to share information on solutions and outcomes with others. Please describe any written agreements or memoranda of understanding that are or will be in place after award. (2) (6 points) Explain what specific steps you have taken or will take to develop linkages or coordinate comprehensive solutions through meetings, information networks, planning processes, or other mechanisms. Explain your past efforts or planned efforts for involvement with such programs or other HUD-funded projects/activities outside the scope of those covered by the Consolidated Plan; and/or other Federal, State, or locally funded activities, including those proposed or on-going in the community. (3) (1 point) Explain specific steps you have taken or will take to become active in your community's Consolidated Planning process (including the Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice) established to identify and address a need/problem that is related to the activities you propose. VI. Application Submission Requirements (A) There is no limit to the number of developments per application. However, all developments in one application must be eligible and located in the same Field Office jurisdiction. You must demonstrate in Rating Factor 3 ``Soundness of Approach--(Quality of the Plan)'' that your program will be feasible to implement among all proposed developments. In addition, you must provide pertinent information for each Rating Factor for each proposed development. (B) Your application must contain the items listed in this Section VI(B). These items include the standard forms, certifications, and assurances listed in the General Section of the SuperNOFA that are applicable to this funding (collectively, referred to as the ``standard forms''). The standard forms can be found in Appendix B to the General Section of the SuperNOFA. The remaining application items that are forms (i.e., excluding such items as narratives, letters, referred to as the ``non-standard forms'' can be found as Appendix B to this program section of the SuperNOFA: The items are as follows: Standard Forms --Standard Form for Application for Federal Assistance (SF-424) (which includes civil rights/fair housing certification); --Federal Assistance Funding Matrix and Certifications (HUD-424M); --Standard Form for Budget Information--Non-Construction Programs (SF 424A); --Standard Form for Assurances--Non-Construction Programs (SF-424B); --Drug Free Workplace Certification (HUD-50070); --Certification of Payments to Influence Federal Transactions (HUD- 50071) and if engaged in lobbying, the Disclosure Form Regarding Lobbying (SF-LLL): --Applicant/Recipient Disclosure/Update Report Form (HUD-2880); --Acknowledgment of Application Receipt (HUD-2993) Other Application Items (1) Application Cover Letter that outlines and explains the application structure; includes the name of a contact person and a number where he/she can be reached, and provides any other information you feel would assist HUD in reviewing your application. (2) Applicant Data Input Form. (3) Abstract of Proposed Program, consisting of one paragraph which summarizes your proposed program. (4) Rating Factor 1 Narrative. A narrative, not to exceed five pages, which includes a discussion of your organization's financial capacity, staff resources, and prior experience that will enable you to effectively administer a grant and meet reporting requirements. (5) Rating Factor 2 Narrative and Statistics. The narrative and data must describe critical level of need for your proposed activities and a justification for the urgency of meeting the need in your development(s) and the area around your development(s). The description must indicate the extent and nature of drug-related crime. (a) ``Objective Crime Data'' (i.e. statistics and other information) relevant to the target area, or (b) Other supporting, verifiable data on the extent of drug-related crime in the target area. If you submit other relevant information in place of objective data, you must also provide the following: (i) A letter or supporting documentation from your local law enforcement agency or another relevant neighborhood organization explaining why objective data are not available, and (ii) A narrative explanation of the reasons why objective data could not be obtained, what efforts were made to obtain them, and what efforts will be made (if possible) during the grant period to begin obtaining the data. (6) Rating Factor 3 Narrative. A narrative describing your plan's approach to address the drug-related [[Page 12010]] crime problem and associated problems in the development proposed for funding. The narrative must include: (a) An explanation of the anticipated effectiveness of your plan and proposed activities in reducing or eliminating drug-related crime problems immediately and over an extended period. (b) Evidence and explanation of how proposed activities have been effective in similar circumstances in controlling drug-related crime. (c) A description of the process you will use to maintain, analyze, and report Part I and II crimes, as well as police workload data. (d) An explanation of the extent to which your program to eliminate crime in your development or neighborhood will expand fair housing choice and will affirmatively further fair housing. (e) Evidence that you actively sought comments, suggestions, and support from residents for your proposed plan. Provide written documentation of these comments, suggestions, and support. If applicable, you must explain why you do not have written documentation of such support or did not receive any comments or suggestions. Describe how residents will be involved in implementing your program. (f) Drug Treatment Program Certification (if applicable). (7) Rating Factor 4 Narrative and Letters. The narrative and letters must provide evidence of the specific type of participation, assistance, or other support received from local government, community organizations, and/or law enforcement agencies for your proposed activities. If a community organization is providing you with staff or supporting services, you must include a letter from each organization providing staff or support. (8) Rating Factor 5 Narrative. The narrative must describe your past efforts to coordinate your proposed activities with those of other groups or organizations prior to submission of your application. The narrative must include; (a) An explanation of the specific steps you have taken or will take to develop linkages or coordinate comprehensive solutions through meetings, information networks, planning processes, or other mechanisms. Explain your past efforts or planned efforts for involvement with relevant community activities. (b) An explanation of the specific steps you have taken or will take to become active in your community's Consolidated Planning process. VII. Corrections to Deficient Applications The General Section of the SuperNOFA provides the procedures for corrections to deficient applications. VIII. Environmental Requirements It is anticipated that most activities under this program are categorically excluded from NEPA and related environmental authorities under 24 CFR 50.19(b)(3), (4), (12), or (13). If grant funds will be used to cover the cost of any activities which are not exempted from environmental review requirements--such as acquisition, leasing, construction, or building rehabilitation, HUD will perform an environmental review to the extent required by 24 CFR part 50, prior to grant award. IX. Authority This program is authorized under Chapter 2, subtitle C, title V of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 (42 U.S.C. 11901 et. seq.), as amended by section 581 of the National Affordable Housing Act of 1990 (Pub.L. 102-550) and section 161 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992, (Pub.L. 102-550), and further amended by Title V, Subtitle F, section 586 of the Fiscal Year 1999 HUD Appropriations Act (Pub.L. 105- 276, approved October 21, 1998). The regulations for the program are found in 24 CFR part 761, Drug Elimination Programs. Appendix A--HUD Field Office List for Multifamily Housing Alabama Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Birmingham Office, 600 Beacon Parkway West, Rm. 300, Birmingham, AL 35209-3144, OFC Phone: (205) 290-7611, FAX: (205) 290-7632 Alaska Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Seattle Office, 909 First Avenue, Suite 190, MS-0AHM, Seattle, WA 98104-1000, OFC Phone: (206) 220-5228 ext. 3250, FAX: (206) 220-5206 Arizona Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Phoenix Office, 400 North Fifth Street, Suite 1600, Phoenix, AZ 85004-2361, OFC Phone: (602) 379-4434, FAX: (602) 379-3985 Arkansas Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Little Rock Office, 425 West Capitol Avenue #900, Little Rock, AR 72201-3488, OFC Phone: (501) 324-5401, FAX: (501) 324-6142 California Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--San Francisco Office, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, PO Box 36003, San Francisco, CA 94102-3448, OFC Phone: (415) 436-6505, FAX: (415) 436-8996 Los Angeles Multifamily Hub, 611 West Sixth Street, Suite 800, Los Angeles, CA 90017, OFC Phone: (213) 894-8000 x 3634, Fax: (213) 894- 8255 Colorado Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 11th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Connecticut Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Hartford Office, One Corporate Center, 19th floor, Hartford, CT 06103-3220, OFC Phone: (860) 240-4800 Ext. 3068, FAX: (860) 240-4850 Delaware Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Philadelphia Office, The Wanamaker Building, 100 Penn Square, East, Philadelphia, PA 19107-3380, OFC Phone: (215) 656-0609 Ext. 3533, FAX: (215) 656-3427 District of Columbia Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Washington, DC Office, Suite 300, 820 First Street, 0, Washington, DC 20012-4205, OFC Phone: (202) 275-9200, FAX: (202) 275-9212 Florida Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--Jacksonville Office, 301 West Bay Street, Suite 2200, Jacksonville, FL 32202-5121, OFC Phone: (904) 232-1777 x2144, FAX: (904) 232-2731 Georgia Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--Atlanta Office, Five Points Plaza Building, 40 Marietta Street, SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303-2806, OFC Phone: (404) 331-4976, FAX: (404) 331-4028 Hawaii Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Honolulu Office, 7 Waterfront Plaza, 500 Ala Moana Blvd. #500, Honolulu, HI 96813-4918, OFC Phone: (808) 522-8185 Ext. 244, FAX: (808) 522-8194 Idaho Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Seattle Office, 909 First Avenue, Suite 190, MS-0AHM, Seattle, WA 98104-1000, OFC Phone: (206) 220-5228 ext. 3250, FAX: (206) 220-5206 Illinois Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--Chicago Office, Ralph Metcalfe Federal Building, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60604-3507, OFC Phone: (312) 353-6236 Ext. 2202, FAX: (312) 886-2729 Indiana Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Indianapolis Office, 151 North Delaware Street, Suite 1200, Indianapolis, IN 46204-2526, OFC Phone: (317) 226-6303, FAX: (317) 226-7308 Iowa Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Des Moines Office, 210 Walnut Street, [[Page 12011]] Room 239, Des Moines, IA 50309-2155, OFC Phone: (515) 284-4736, FAX: (515) 284-4743 Kansas Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Kansas City Office, 400 State Avenue, Room 200, Kansas City, KS 66101-2406, OFC Phone: (913) 551-6844, FAX: (913) 551-5469 Kentucky Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Louisville Office, 601 West Broadway, PO Box 1044, Louisville, KY 40201-1044, OFC Phone: (502) 582-6124, FAX: (502) 582-6547 Louisiana Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD New Orleans Office, Hale Boggs Bldg.--501 Magazine Street, 9th Floor, New Orleans, LA 70130- 3099, OFC Phone: (504) 589-7236, FAX: (504) 589-6834 Maine Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Manchester Office, Norris Cotton Federal Bldg., 275 Chestnut Street, Manchester, NH 03101- 2487, OFC Phone: (603) 666-7684, FAX: (603) 666-7697 Maryland Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Baltimore Office, 5th Floor, 10 South Howard Street, Baltimore, MD 21201-2505, OFC Phone: (410) 962-2520 Ext. 3474, FAX: (410) 962-1849 Massachusetts Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--Boston Office, O'Neil Federal Building, 10 Causeway Street, Rm. 375, Boston, MA 02222-1092, OFC Phone: (617) 565-5162, FAX: (617) 565-6557 Michigan Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Detroit Office, 477 Michigan Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226-2592, OFC Phone: (313) 226-7900, FAX: (313) 226- 5611 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Grand Rapids, Trade Center Building, 50 Louis Street, NW., Grand Rapids, MI 49503-2648, OFC Phone: (616) 456-2100, FAX: (616) 456-2191 Minnesota Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Minneapolis Office, 220 Second Street, South, Minneapolis, MN 55401-2195, OFC Phone: (612) 370-3051 Ext. 0, FAX: (612) 370-3090 Mississippi Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Jackson Office--McCoy, Federal Building, 100 W. Capitol Street, Room 910, Jackson, MS 39269-1096, OFC Phone: (601) 965-4738, FAX: (601) 965-4773 Missouri Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Kansas City Office, 400 State Avenue, Room 200, Kansas City, KS 66101-2406, OFC Phone: (913) 551-6844, FAX: (913) 551-5469 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD St. Louis Office, Robert A. Young Federal Building, 1222 Spruce Street--Third Floor, St. Louis, MO 63103-2836, OFC Phone: (314) 539-6382, FAX: (314) 539-6356 Montana Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Nebraska Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Omaha Office, 10909 Mill Valley Road, Suite 100, Omaha, NE 68154-3955, OFC Phone: (402) 492- 3113, FAX: (402) 492-3184 Nevada Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Las Vegas Office, 333 N. Rancho Drive--Atrium Bldg. Suite 700, Las Vegas, NV 89106-3714, OFC Phone: (702) 388-6525, FAX: (702) 388-6244 New Hampshire Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Manchester Office, Norris Cotton Federal Bldg., 275 Chestnut Street, Manchester, NH 03101- 2487, OFC Phone: (603) 666-7684, FAX: (603) 666-7697 New Jersey Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Newark Office--13th Floor, One Newark Center, Newark, NJ 07102-5260, OFC Phone: (973) 622-7900 Ext. 3400, FAX: (973) 645-2271. New Mexico Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Ft. Worth Office, 801 Cherry Street, PO Box 2905, Ft. Worth, TX 76102-2905, OFC Phone: (817) 978-5764, FAX: (817) 978-5520 New York Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--New York Office, 26 Federal Plaza-- Room 3214, New York, NY 10278-0068, OFC Phone: (212) 264-0777 Ext. 3713, FAX: (212) 264-1277 Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD--Buffalo Office, Lafayette Court, 5th Floor, 465 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203-1780, OFC Phone: (716) 551-5755 Ext. 5506, FAX: (716) 551-3252 North Carolina Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Greensboro Office--Koger Building, 2306 West Meadowview Road, Greensboro, NC 27407, OFC Phone: (336) 547- 4034, FAX: (336) 547-4121 North Dakota Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Ohio Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Columbus Office, 200 North High Street, Columbus, OH 43215-2499, OFC Phone: (614) 469-5737, Ext. 8111 FAX: (614) 469-2432 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Cincinnati Office, 525 Vine Street, Suite 700, Cincinnati, OH, 45202-3188, OFC Phone: (513) 684- 2350, FAX: (513) 684-6224 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Cleveland Office, 1350 Euclid Avenue, Suite 500, Cleveland, OH 44115-1815, OFC Phone: (216) 522-4058 Ext. 7000, FAX: (216) 522-4067 Oklahoma Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Oklahoma City Office, 500 W. Main Street, Suite 400, Oklahoma City, OK 73102-2233, OFC Phone: (405) 553-7410, FAX: (405) 553-7406 Oregon Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Seattle Office, 909 First Avenue, Suite 190, MS-0AHM, Seattle, WA 98104-1000, OFC Phone: (206) 220-5228 Ext. 3250, FAX: (206) 220-5206 Pennsylvania Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Philadelphia Office, The Wanamaker Building, 100 Penn Square, East, Philadelphia, PA 19107-3380, OFC Phone: (215) 656-0609 Ext. 3533, FAX: (215) 656-3427 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Pittsburgh Office, 339 Sixth Avenue--Sixth Floor, Pittsburgh, PA 15222-2515, OFC Phone: (412) 644-6639, FAX: (412) 644-5872 Puerto Rico Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Caribbean Office, 171 Carlos E. Chardon Avenue, San Juan, PR 00918-0903, OFC Phone: (787) 766- 5401, FAX: (787) 766-5522 Rhode Island Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Providence Office, 10 Weybosset Street, Sixth Floor, Providence, RI 02903-2808, OFC Phone: (401) 528-5230, FAX: (401) 528-5097 South Carolina Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Columbia Office, 1835, Assembly Street, Columbia, SC 29201-2480, OFC Phone: (803) 765-5162, FAX: (803) 253-3043 South Dakota Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Tennessee Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Knoxville Office, 710 Locust Street, SW, Knoxville, TN 37902-2526, OFC Phone: (423) 545- 4411, FAX: (423) 545-4578 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Nashville Office, 251 Cumberland Bend Drive, Suite 200, Nashville, TN 37228-1803, OFC Phone: (615) 736-5748, FAX: (615) 736-2018 Texas Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Ft. Worth Office, 801 Cherry Street, PO Box 2905, Ft. Worth, TX 76102-2905, OFC Phone: (817) 978-5764, FAX: (817) 978-5520 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Houston Office, 2211 Norfolk, #200, Houston, TX 77098-4096, OFC Phone: (713) 313-2274 Ext. 7015, FAX: (713) 313-2319 Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD San Antonio Office, 800 Dolorosa, San Antonio, TX 78207-4563, OFC Phone: (210) 475-6831, FAX: (210) 472-6897 [[Page 12012]] Utah Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Vermont Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Manchester Office, Norris Cotton Federal Bldg. 275 Chestnut Street, Manchester, NH 03101-2487, OFC Phone: (603) 666-7684, FAX: (603) 666-7697 VIrginia Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Richmond Office, 3600 West Broad Street, Richmond, VA 23230-4920, OFC Phone: (804) 278-4500 Ext. 3146, FAX: (804) 278-4613 Washington Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Seattle Office, 909 First Avenue, Suite 190, MS-0AHM, Seattle, WA 98104-1000, OFC Phone: (206) 220-5228 ext. 3250, FAX: (206) 220-5206 West Virginia Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD--Charleston Office, 405 Capitol Street, Suite 708, Charleston, WV 25301-1795, OFC Phone: (304) 347-7000 Ext. 103, FAX: (304) 347-7050 Wisconsin Multifamily Housing Program Center, HUD Milwaukee Office, 310 West Wisconsin Avenue, Room 1380, Milwaukee, WI 53203-2289, OFC Phone: (414) 297-3214 Ext. 8662, FAX: (414) 297-3204 Wyoming Multifamily Housing Hub, HUD Denver Office, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, OFC Phone: (303) 672-5343, FAX: (303) 672-5153 Appendix B The non-standard forms, which follow, are required for your Multifamily Housing Drug Elimination Program application. BILLING CODE 4210-32-P