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Applicant’s Briefing

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Applicant’s Briefing. FEMA-4085-DR-NY. Declaration Date October 30, 2012. Incident Period October 27, 2012 and ongoing. Declared Counties (as of Nov. 3, 2012):. Public and Individual Assistance. Public Assistance. Individual Assistance. Key Personnel. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Applicant’s Briefing

Applicant’s Briefing

Page 2: Applicant’s Briefing

FEMA-4085-DR-NY

Incident PeriodIncident PeriodOctober 27, 2012 and October 27, 2012 and

ongoingongoing

Declaration DateDeclaration Date

October 30, 2012October 30, 2012

Page 3: Applicant’s Briefing

Declared Counties (as of Nov. 3, 2012):

Public and Individual Assistance

Public Assistance

Individual Assistance

Page 4: Applicant’s Briefing

Key Personnel

• Michael Byrne FEMA Federal Coordinating Officer

• Jerome M. Hauer NYSOEM State Coordinating Officer

• FEMA/ State Teams

• County Emergency Managers

• NYSOEM Regional Staff

Page 5: Applicant’s Briefing

Supplemental financial assistance to state, local

governments, and certain non-profit organizations for response and recovery

activities required as a result of a disaster

What is Public Assistance??

Page 6: Applicant’s Briefing

The Public Assistance Process

Page 7: Applicant’s Briefing

Eligibility

Page 8: Applicant’s Briefing

Eligible Applicants

State Agencies County Government

City GovernmentCertain Private Nonprofit Organizations

Native American Tribes or Tribal Organizations

Page 9: Applicant’s Briefing

Private Non-Profit EntitiesCritical

Fire/Emergency – RescueEmergency Medical Care

Utility- Power, Water, Sewer, WWTP, Communications

Educational Institutions

Page 10: Applicant’s Briefing

Private Non-Profit EntitiesNon-Critical

Senior Citizen Day CentersDaycare Centers

Homeless SheltersShelter workshops

LibrariesRehabilitation Facilities

Community Centers

Page 11: Applicant’s Briefing

Private Non-Profit Requirements

Completed RPA PackageDUNS Number

By-LawsTax Exempt Letter, 501(c), (d), or (e) IRS

designation

PNP’s go through an eligibility evaluation. This evaluation can not be conducted until

all of the above is submitted.

Page 12: Applicant’s Briefing

Eligibility

Page 13: Applicant’s Briefing

Facility Eligibility Requirements

Damage- result of the eventLocated within the area declared

Legal responsibility of eligible Applicant In active use at the time of the disasterNot under authority of another federal

agency (ex. US Army Corp. of Engineer Water Treatment Facilties)

Page 14: Applicant’s Briefing

Deadlines for Submission

Project Worksheets – Identified Project Worksheets – Identified WithinWithin

days of Kickoff Meetingdays of Kickoff Meeting

Request for Public AssistanceRequest for Public Assistance

days after declaration for submission

Page 15: Applicant’s Briefing

Eligibility

Page 16: Applicant’s Briefing

Emergency Work• Category A (Debris Removal)– Clearance, removal, storage, disposal

• Category B (Emergency Protective Measures)– Access, protection, emergency services, eliminate

hazards, support, highways and community needs

6 Month Completion 6 Month Completion Deadline: Deadline:

April 30, 2013April 30, 2013

(May 3, 2013 amended)(May 3, 2013 amended)

Page 17: Applicant’s Briefing

Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21)

Debris Removal

• July 6, 2012 – Signed into Law

• In a declared disaster, FEMA will fund 75% for debris removal along FHWA roadways

• FHWA road map: www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/national_highway_system/nhs_maps/new_york/index.cfm

• More information: www.fhwa.dot.gov/map21

Page 18: Applicant’s Briefing

Permanent Work•Category C (Road and Bridge Systems)•Category D (Water Control Facilities)

•Category E (Public Buildings/Equipment)•Category F (Public Utilities)

•Category G (Other-Parks, Recreation)

18 Month Completion 18 Month Completion Deadline: Deadline:

May 4, 2014May 4, 2014

Page 19: Applicant’s Briefing

From the date of the declaration:

October 30, 2012

Emergency work - 6 months (+ 6 months by NYS)

Permanent work - 18 months (+ 30 months by NYS)

Further extensions require approval by FEMA

Page 20: Applicant’s Briefing

Special ConsiderationsEnvironmental

Ensure all practical means are used to protect, restore, and enhance the environment

** Local Regulations Also Apply**

Page 21: Applicant’s Briefing

Special Considerations

Insurance

Proceeds (actual or anticipated) deducted from eligible project costs

FEMA requires applicants to obtain and maintain insurance for future disaster

damage

Page 22: Applicant’s Briefing

Special Considerations

Floodplain Insurance Requirements

If facility does not have NFIP Insurance,

Project Worksheet (PW) will be reduced by amount that would have been covered by NFIP

Page 23: Applicant’s Briefing

Special ConsiderationsSpecial Flood Hazard Areas

Flood Hazard Area- Projects within or affecting floodplain MUST be reviewed to ensure that it meets requirements of

the Executive Orders on Floodplain Management and Protection of Wetlands

Coastal High Hazard Areas – Coastal High Hazard areas and areas covered by the Coastal Barrier Resources

Act require Special Considerations review

Page 24: Applicant’s Briefing

Special ConsiderationsHazard Mitigation

Cost effective measures that reduce the potential for damages to a facility from a future event

Only Permanent Work is eligible for Hazard Mitigation

Page 25: Applicant’s Briefing

Hazard Mitigation Scenario

Disaster damageLarger culvert

withconcrete wing-

walls

New upstream retention pond

Pre-disaster

Page 26: Applicant’s Briefing

Special Considerations

Historic Preservation

Listing on the National/State Register of Historic Places

Buildings, landscapes, archaeological sites, or even bridges and water treatment plants

Not necessarily old but important to local, state, or national history

Requires special consideration under the National Historic Preservation Act

Page 27: Applicant’s Briefing

Eligibility

Page 28: Applicant’s Briefing

COST

Reasonable and Necessary

Complies with federal, state and local laws & regulations

Insurance proceeds and purchase discounts must be deducted

Page 29: Applicant’s Briefing

Federal Cost Share

FEMA may provide 100% for Category B costs for eligible applicants for a 10 day period for provision of either

emergency electrical restoration to protect public life and safety (e.g. Providing alternate power to hospitals, fire

stations, police, etc.) or providing emergency mass transportation support.

Page 30: Applicant’s Briefing

Equipment• Perform eligible work

• Auto/Truck – mileage or hourly rate

• Other equipment- hourly rate

• Stand-by time ineligible

• Intermittent UseHalf day or more = full day

Less than half day = actual hours

Page 31: Applicant’s Briefing

Equipment RatesFEMA rates are used for determining

project costs (estimating & comparing)

Local rates are used if different than FEMA and established prior to the

disaster

Page 32: Applicant’s Briefing

Labor•Force Account Labor plus Fringe

Benefits

–Emergency Work: All OT eligible, temporary employees regular time eligible. All other time ineligible.–Permanent Work: All labor eligible

Also travel and per diem for employees performing eligible activities

Page 33: Applicant’s Briefing

Force Account Labor Costs

Debris Removal

• One period of 30 day eligibility

• May reimburse straight or regular-time salaries and benefits of permanently employed staff

• Hours claimed must be related solely to eligible debris activities resulting from Hurricane Sandy

• May be captured under Category A or Category B

Page 34: Applicant’s Briefing

Donated Resources

Donations credit capped at non-federal share of emergency work

(may apply toward certain portions of community's non-

federal share of recovery costs)

A credit can be applied towards the local cost share for both Volunteer Labor and Donated Equipment

Volunteer Labor: Rate is the same as either paid

employees within an applicant’s organization or, if none, similar work done by a local paid organization.

Value of Volunteer Labor = (Determined Labor Rate) * (Number of Volunteer Hours)

Donated Resources: Rate is determined by local rates (if

established) or FEMA equipment rate.

Value of Donated Resources = (Determined Equipment Rate) * (Number of Equipment Hours)

Page 35: Applicant’s Briefing

Materials

Purchased or stock

Used for eligible work

Need invoices, historical data or area vendor quotes

Page 36: Applicant’s Briefing

Contracts

• All contracts incurred for eligible work are reviewed by FEMA-State teams; includes rental equipment

• Prefer competitively bid with fixed-procurement procedures.

Page 37: Applicant’s Briefing

ContractsTime and material

contracts are acceptable BUT:

•Should only be used for emergency “hot spots” (early debris rights-of-way clearance) •MUST have a cap and MUST be monitored•Generally accepted for first 70 hours of actual work

Lump sum contracts are acceptable:

•Easy to monitor when the scope of work is well defined•Requires minimum labor for monitoring•Quantities do not have to be documented

Page 38: Applicant’s Briefing

Ineligible Contracts• Cost-plus percentage of cost

• “Contingent upon FEMA reimbursement”

• Contract with a debarred contractor

http://www.labor.ny.gov/workerprotection/ publicwork/PDFs/debarred.pdf

Page 39: Applicant’s Briefing

Project WorksheetThe PW Requires:

Damage description and location listwith actual or estimated costs

A comprehensive scope of work necessary to repair disaster damage.

(all considerations should be looked at before finalizing estimate)

A SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS SHEET

Identifying all special consideration issues.

Page 40: Applicant’s Briefing

What info is needed for a PW? List of Damages

Procurement Policies Labor Management Contracts

Maps Photos

List of paid staff, regular and OT hours – dates and times Fringe Benefits info

List of equipment used, hours of operation – dates and times, miles driven, other records

List of materials and supplies used Copies of any contracts used for this event

Applicable codes and standards Hazard Mitigation Proposals

Page 41: Applicant’s Briefing

Small or Large Project???

$67,500 Annually updated, $67,500

is the FY 13 threshold amount

SMALL LARGE

Page 42: Applicant’s Briefing

Small Projects

Based on Estimate written in Project Worksheet

Paid upon Project Worksheet approval

Page 43: Applicant’s Briefing

Large Projects•Paid based on % completed

•Final payment – Based on actual documented approved costs

•Progress Payments – Requested up to 50% of original approved project

estimate

•Quarterly Report Requirement- Update of work completed due to NYSOEM every

quarter for life of project

Page 44: Applicant’s Briefing

Improved ProjectsMUST be identified to State in ADVANCE of start Improvements that increase the size, capacity,

or add additional functionsFunds limited to Federal share of estimated

costs for facility restorationAll portions of project reviewed for Special

Considerations

Page 45: Applicant’s Briefing

Alternate Projects

•Requested within 12 months after Kick-off Meeting•75 – 90% of Approved federal cost share

•Facility abandoned- must be rendered secure•Cannot have 406 (PA) mitigation funding•All parts of project review for Special

Considerations

Page 46: Applicant’s Briefing

Federal Share 75 %

Non-Federal Share 25 %

Funding

Direct Administrative Costs

Costs must be identified on each specific PW

Page 47: Applicant’s Briefing

Payment Process Project Worksheet is written, approved and obligated by FEMA

The Federal and State share of funding for each project is

calculated

Office of the State Comptroller directs funds to applicant via

wire transfer

NYSOEM Finance sends letter to Chief Financial Officer

NYSOEM Public Assistance (PA) section sends Approved Project Notification (“Blue Book”) to the POC on the RPA either by “Blue Book” folder or electronically

Audits – All applicants must meet OMB A-133 circular Audit

requirements or funding may be jeopardized.

Page 48: Applicant’s Briefing

Project Notification Folder

Sent to applicant’s agent when FEMA approves a project

Includes a copy of the obligated Project Worksheet (PW); review carefully

Starts time clock for appeal of any FEMA decision

Includes the Project Completion P-4 form that needs to be signed and returned to NYSOEM DAO

at completion of work

(NYSOEM “Blue Book”)

Page 49: Applicant’s Briefing

Disapproved Project NotificationEMMIE Notification Letter

Sent to applicant’s agent when FEMA disapproves a project

Includes a copy of the Project Worksheet (PW) and the EMMIE notification

Starts time clock for appeal of FEMA decision

Page 50: Applicant’s Briefing

Appeals Any determination related to Federal assistance may be

appealed.

The time limit for appeal submission is 60 days from receipt of written notice of the action which is being appealed.

Page 51: Applicant’s Briefing

Funds are Lost if Applicant’s Don’t: … ask questions

… change scope of work without FEMA pre-approval

… obtain required permits … follow contract procedures

… perform work as described in the approved PW

… ensure administrative continuity… keep complete, clear and accurate records … remain aware of the PA program deadlines

Page 52: Applicant’s Briefing

What’s Next? Submit completed RPA Package, DUNS # etc.

***Not considered an applicant until all documentation is submitted***

PAL-PAC Team available to meet on-site

Applicant meets with team at kickoff meeting - projects are scoped out in preparation for estimating

Projects are identified within 60 days of Kickoff Meeting

Page 53: Applicant’s Briefing

W-9SFS Form

for Vendors* Needed for

Private-Not for Profit, Fire

Departments, etc.

Page 54: Applicant’s Briefing

►Your FEMA/ State Team (1st Point of Contact)

►NYSOEM Applicant Handbook

►NYSOEM’s Website (www.dhses.ny.gov)

►FEMA’s Website (www.fema.gov)

►FEMA Policy Digest No. 321

►FEMA Public Assistance Guide No. 322

►FEMA Applicant Handbook No. 323

►County Emergency Managers

Additional Information

Page 55: Applicant’s Briefing

NYSOEM Contact Info

RECOVERY SECTION

State Campus Bldg. 22, Suite 1011220 Washington Ave, Albany, NY 12226

(518) 292-2293 Fax Number: (518) 322-4984

www.dhses.ny.gov

After the Joint Field Office closes…

DAO – Linda Moreno (518) 292-2388