Funding-Limited Submission - U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development Sustainable Communities Regional Planning
Grant Program; July 12, 2010
The Sustainable Communities Regional Planning
Grant Program will support metropolitan and multijurisdictional planning
efforts that integrate housing, land use, economic and workforce development,
transportation, and infrastructure investments in a manner that empowers
jurisdictions to consider the interdependent challenges of: (1) economic
competitiveness and revitalization; (2) social equity, inclusion, and access to
opportunity; (3) energy use and climate change; and (4) public health and
environmental impact.
HUD has established two funding categories:
Category 1: Regional
Plans for Sustainable Development
Category 2: Detailed
Execution Plans and Programs
The goals of the Sustainable Communities
Regional Planning Grant Program are the following:
1. Foster the development of sustainable
communities throughout the United States that are consistent with the following
Livability Principles (see June 16, 2009, United States Senate Committee on
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: Greener Communities, Greater
Opportunities: New Ideas for Sustainable Development and Economic Growth):
a. Provide More
Transportation Choices. Develop safe, reliable, and affordable transportation
choices to decrease household transportation costs, reduce energy consumption
and dependence on foreign oil, improve air quality, reduce greenhouse gas
emissions, and promote public health.
b. Promote equitable,
affordable housing. Expand
location- and energy-efficient housing choices for people of all ages, incomes,
races, and ethnicities to increase mobility and lower the combined cost of
housing and transportation.
c. Enhance Economic
Competitiveness. Improve
economic competitiveness through reliable and timely access to employment
centers, educational opportunities, services, and other basic needs by workers,
as well as expanded business access to markets.
d. Support Existing
Communities. Target
federal funding toward existing communities—through strategies like
transit-oriented, mixed-use development, and land recycling—to increase
community revitalization and the efficiency of public works investments and
safeguard rural landscapes.
e. Coordinate Policies
and Leverage Investment. Align federal policies and funding to remove barriers to
collaboration, leverage funding, and increase the accountability and
effectiveness of all levels of government to plan for future growth, including
making smart energy choices such as locally generated renewable energy.
f. Value Communities and
Neighborhoods. Enhance
the unique characteristics of all communities by investing in healthy, safe,
and walkable neighborhoods—rural, urban, or suburban.
2. Support metropolitan areas and
multijurisdictional partnerships that commit to adopt integrated plans,
strategies, and management tools to become more sustainable.
3. Facilitate strong alliances of residents and
regional interest groups that are able to maintain a long-term vision for a
region over time and simultaneously support progress through incremental
sustainable development practices.
4. Build greater transparency and accountability
into planning and implementation efforts.
5. Expedite implementation of the Livability
Principles through changes in local zoning and land use laws and regulations
that remove barriers to sustainable development for housing, economic
development, transportation, and related water, sewer, and other environmental
quality issues.
6. Align local, state, and tribal capital
improvement programs with the Livability Principles.
7. Assist all regions to move toward
sustainability and livability, and, for the regions that have shown a long-term
commitment to sustainability and livability, prepare them for implementation
and to demonstrate on-the-ground results.
The
full announcement can be accessed at: http://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/grants/nofa10/scrpgsec.pdf
No one entity may be lead applicant under
more than one Sustainable Communities Regional Planning Grant proposal.
Further, applicants are required to select only one funding category to
be considered for review. An applicant consortium that submits
applications for both funding categories will be considered ineligible for
funding consideration.
Because HUD allows an entity to be the lead applicant in just one proposal,
the University of Kentucky has established an internal
selection process. Individuals interested in submitting to this program
are to submit the
following material electronically to the Office of the Vice President for
Research at vpr@email.uky.edu
and
a copy to their Associate Dean for Research by Monday, July 12, 2010:
The Vice President for Research will appoint a committee
to review this material and make a recommendation. All applicants will be
notified in time to prepare and submit the application and supporting material
for the August 23, 2010 deadline.
Questions about
the submission process may be sent to Ms. Annette Evans in the Office of the
Vice President for Research (alevan4@email.uky.edu
or 257-1663).