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pdfFederal Register / Vol. 88, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2023 / Notices
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases,
Special Emphasis Panel; Chronic Kidney
Disease in Children (CKD) Applications.
Date: March 31, 2023.
Time: 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: NIDDK, Democracy II, 6707
Democracy Boulevard, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Contact Person: Paul A. Rushing, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, Review Branch,
DEA, NIDDK, National Institutes of Health,
Room 7345, 6707 Democracy Boulevard,
Bethesda, MD 20892–5452, (301) 594–8895,
rushingp@extra.niddk.nih.gov.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.847, Diabetes,
Endocrinology and Metabolic Research;
93.848, Digestive Diseases and Nutrition
Research; 93.849, Kidney Diseases, Urology
and Hematology Research, National Institutes
of Health, HHS)
Dated: December 29, 2022.
Miguelina Perez,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2022–28579 Filed 1–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
National Institute on Aging; Notice of
Closed Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended, notice is hereby given of the
following meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Institute on
Aging, Special Emphasis Panel; Biological
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Mediators of Social Determinants of Health
on Healthspan.
Date: February 8, 2023.
Time: 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institute on Aging,
Gateway Building, 7201 Wisconsin Avenue,
Bethesda, MD 20892 (Virtual Meeting).
Contact Person: Bita Nakhai, Ph.D., Chief,
Basic and Translational Sciences Section
(BTSS), Scientific Review Branch, National
Institute on Aging, Gateway Building, 2C212,
7201 Wisconsin Avenue, Bethesda, MD
20814, 301–402–7701, nakhaib@nia.nih.gov.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Nos. 93.866, Aging Research,
National Institutes of Health, HHS)
Dated: December 29, 2022.
Miguelina Perez,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2022–28577 Filed 1–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–7060–N–08]
60-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Evaluation of the
Supportive Services Demonstration;
OMB Control No.: 2528–0321
Office of Policy Development
and Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
HUD is seeking approval from
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for the information collection
described below. In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD is
requesting comment from all interested
parties on the proposed collection of
information. The purpose of this notice
is to allow for 60 days of public
comment.
DATES: Comments Due Date: March 6,
2023.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
Anna P. Guido, Reports Management
Officer, REE, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Room 4176, Washington, DC
20410–5000; telephone 202–402–5534
(this is not a toll-free number) or email
at Anna.P.Guido@hud.gov for a copy of
the proposed forms or other available
information. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech or communication disabilities.
SUMMARY:
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365
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anna P. Guido, Reports Management
Officer, REE, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Washington, DC 20410; email Anna
P. Guido at Anna.P.Guido@hud.gov or
telephone 202–402–5535. This is not a
toll-free number. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech or communication disabilities.
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Copies of available documents
submitted to OMB may be obtained
from Ms. Guido.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice informs the public that HUD is
seeking approval from OMB for the
information collection described in
Section A.
A. Overview of Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Evaluation of the Supportive Services
Demonstration.
OMB Approval Number: 2528–0321.
Type of Request: Revision.
Form Number: NA.
Description of the need for the
information and proposed use: The U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) has contracted with
Abt Associates Inc. and L&M Policy
Research to continue conducting an
evaluation of HUD’s Supportive
Services Demonstration (demonstration,
or SSD), which was extended by
Congress for an additional two years in
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2021. The demonstration tests the
Integrated Wellness in Supportive
Housing (IWISH) model and is designed
to learn whether structured health and
wellness support can help older adults
living in affordable housing successfully
age in place. The demonstration funds
a full-time Resident Wellness Director
and part-time Wellness Nurse to work in
HUD-assisted housing developments
that either predominantly or exclusively
serve households headed by people
aged 62 and over. The demonstration is
testing whether IWISH will affect
unplanned hospitalizations and the use
of other types of acute care with high
healthcare costs, the use of primary and
nonacute care, the length of stay in
housing, transitions to long-term care
facilities, and mortality. Eligible HUDassisted properties applied for the
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2023 / Notices
demonstration and were randomly
assigned to one of three groups:
1. A ‘‘treatment group’’ that received
grant funding to hire a Resident
Wellness Director and Wellness Nurse
and implement the SSD model (40
properties).
2. An ‘‘active control’’ group that did
not receive grant funding but received a
stipend to participate in the evaluation
(40 properties).
3. A ‘‘passive control’’ group that
received neither grant funding nor a
stipend (44 properties).
The random assignment permits an
evaluation that quantifies the impact of
the SSD model by comparing outcomes
at the 40 treatment group properties to
outcomes at the 84 properties in the
active and passive control groups.
Under contract with HUD’s Office of
Policy Development and Research, Abt
Associates Inc. has been conducting a
two-part evaluation: a process study to
describe the implementation of the
demonstration, and an impact study to
measure the effect of the SSD model on
residents’ use of healthcare services and
housing stability. The first phase of the
demonstration ran from October 2017–
October 2020. The Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other
Extensions Act and the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2021 extended the
demonstration for an additional two
years. Abt will continue to evaluate the
demonstration through September 2026.
During the first phase of the
evaluation, Abt Associates Inc. received
OMB approval for the following primary
data collection activities:
• Questionnaires with staff from the
treatment and active control properties.
• Focus groups with residents of
treatment and active control properties
and caregivers of residents of the
treatment properties.
• Interviews with Resident Wellness
Directors and Wellness Nurses at the
treatment group properties.
• Interviews with Service
Coordinators at the active control group
properties.
• Interviews with representatives of
organizations that own or manage the
active control or treatment properties.
This request is for an additional
round of data collection for the
activities listed below:
• Interviews with Resident Wellness
Directors and Wellness Nurses at each
of the 40 treatment properties.
• Interviews with property owners or
managers at the 40 treatment properties
and 40 active control properties.
• Interviews with up to 150 residents
of 10 of the treatment properties.
The purpose of these activities is to
collect data from demonstration staff,
property owners and managers, and
residents about the continued
implementation of the demonstration,
including the model’s strengths and
weakness, and how resident wellness
services and activities compare across
treatment and control properties. The
evaluation will culminate in a
comprehensive report that will be made
publicly available.
Respondents: (i.e., affected public):
Resident Wellness Directors, Wellness
Nurses, Property owners and managers,
and HUD-assisted residents (aged 62
and over).
Estimated Number of Respondents:
Up to 54 Resident Wellness Directors,
44 Wellness Nurses, 40 property owners
and managers of treatment properties,
40 property owners and managers of
active control properties, and 150 HUDassisted residents aged 62 and older
living in treatment properties.
Frequency of Response: Once for all
interviews.
Average Hours per Response:
Interviews with Resident Wellness
Directors and Wellness Nurses will take
an estimated take 3 hours each,
interviews with property owners and
managers will take an estimated 2 hours
each, resident interviews conducted in
the resident’s preferred language an
estimated 1.5 hours each, and resident
interviews conducted via on-demand
interpretation will take an estimated 3
hours each.
Total Estimated Burdens:
ESTIMATED HOUR AND COST BURDEN OF INFORMATION COLLECTION
Information collection
Number of
respondents
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Interviews with Resident Wellness Directors ............................
Interviews with
Wellness Nurses ......
Interviews with Treatment Group Property
Owners and Managers .........................
Interviews with Active
Control Property
Owners and Managers .........................
Resident Interviews
conducted in core
languages .................
Resident Interviews
conducted via on demand interpretation ..
Total ......................
Frequency of
response
Responses
per annum
Burden hour
per response
Annual
burden hour
Hourly cost
per response
Annual cost
54
1
54
3
162
1 $40.00
$6,480.00
44
1
44
3
132
2 63.99
8,446.68
40
1
40
2
80
3 51.23
4,098.40
40
1
40
2
80
3 51.23
4,098.40
120
1
120
1.5
180
4 9.63
1,733.40
30
1
30
3
90
4 9.63
866.70
328
........................
........................
........................
724
........................
25,723.58
1 Estimated
cost burden for Resident Wellness Directors participating in interviews is based on the average hourly wage for private industry
workers by industry sector. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2022, for the healthcare and social assistance industry ($40.00), accessed September 26, 2022 at Table 4. Private industry workers by occupational and industry group—2022 Q02 Results (bls.gov).
2 Estimated cost burden for property Wellness Nurses participating in interview is based on the average hourly wage for private industry workers by industry sector. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2022, for Registered Nurse Occupations ($63.99), accessed September 26, 2022 at
Table 4. Private industry workers by occupational and industry group—2022 Q02 Results (bls.gov).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 2 / Wednesday, January 4, 2023 / Notices
367
3 Estimated cost burden for property owners and managers is a blended rate based on average hourly and weekly earnings of all employees
on private nonfarm payrolls by industry sector, seasonally adjusted. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2022 for all private industry workers
($38.91) and the hourly cost for management, professional, and related workers ($63.55). Accessed September 26, 2022: Table 4. Private industry workers by occupational and industry group—2022 Q02 Results (bls.gov).
4 To estimate hourly cost for the residents, we used average monthly Social Security benefit for retired works in June 2022, (accessed in September 26, 2022: https://www.ssa.gov/news/press/factsheets/basicfact-alt.pdf) which was $1,669 and converted this into an hourly rate of $9.63
per hour (by multiplying $1,669 by 12 months and dividing by 2,080 hours).
B. Solicitation of Public Comment
This notice is soliciting comments
from members of the public and affected
parties concerning the collection of
information described in Section A on
the following:
(1) Whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information;
(3) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected, and
(4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
who are to respond; including through
the use of appropriate automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
HUD encourages interested parties to
submit comment in response to these
questions.
C. Authority
Section 3507 of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
chapter 35 and title 42 U.S.C. 5424 note,
title 13 U.S.C. 8(b), and title 12, U.S.C.,
section 1701z–
Solomon J. Greene,
Principle Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2022–28575 Filed 1–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLNVS01000 L58530000 EU0000 241A;
MO#4500163717; TAS: 22X]
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Notice of Realty Action: Direct Sale of
Public Land for Affordable Housing
Purposes in Henderson, Nevada
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of realty action.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) proposes to sell a 5acre parcel of public land located in the
southern portion of the Las Vegas
Valley, Nevada, under the authorities of
SUMMARY:
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16:55 Jan 03, 2023
Jkt 259001
section 203 of the Federal Land Policy
and Management Act of 1976, as
amended (FLPMA), BLM land sale
regulations, and the Southern Nevada
Public Land Management Act of 1998,
as amended (SNPLMA). The BLM
proposes that the parcel be sold by
direct sale to the Clark County
Department of Social Services (Clark
County), a division of the State of
Nevada, at less than the appraised fair
market value, for affordable housing
purposes pursuant to section 7(b) of
SNPLMA and applicable BLM policy.
DATES: Submit written comments
regarding this direct sale until February
21, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Mail written comments to
the BLM Las Vegas Field Office,
Assistant Field Manager, Division of
Lands, 4701 North Torrey Pines Drive,
Las Vegas, Nevada 89130.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kerri-Anne Thorpe, Supervisory Realty
Specialist, Las Vegas Field Office, by
email: kthorpe@blm.gov, or by
telephone: (702) 515–5176. Individuals
in the United States who are deaf,
deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a
speech disability may dial 711 (TTY,
TDD, or TeleBraille) to access
telecommunications relay services.
Individuals outside the United States
should use the relay services offered
within their country to make
international calls to the point-ofcontact in the United States.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Clark
County submitted a sale nomination
application to the BLM for the proposed
affordable housing project called Pebble
and Eastern Affordable Housing
Development (Pebble and Eastern
Project). The sale parcel is in the City of
Henderson, north of Pebble Road and
west of Eastern Avenue, in the southeast
part of the Las Vegas Valley. The parcel
is further described as:
Mount Diablo Meridian, Nevada
T. 22 S., R. 61 E.,
Sec. 14, W1⁄2SE1⁄4SE1⁄4SE1⁄4.
The area described contains 5 acres,
according to the official plats of the surveys
of said land on file with the BLM.
This direct sale is in conformance
with the BLM Las Vegas Resource
Management Plan Record of Decision
LD–1, approved on October 5, 1998. The
Las Vegas Valley Disposal Boundary
Environmental Impact Statement and
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Record of Decision issued on December
23, 2004, and the Las Vegas In-Valley
Area Multi-Action Analysis
Environmental Assessment (DOI–BLM–
NV–S010–2016–0054–EA) analyzed the
sale of this parcel. A parcel-specific
Determination of NEPA Adequacy
(DOI–BLM–NV–S010–2020–0034–DNA)
was prepared in connection with this
notice. The parcel is not required for
any Federal purpose.
Under SNPLMA section 7(b), the
Secretary of the Interior, in consultation
with the Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD), may make
BLM-administered public lands
available for affordable housing
purposes in the State of Nevada at less
than the appraised fair market value.
Attachment 1 of Instruction
Memorandum NV–2006–067 (Authority
and Provisions for Land Disposal for
Affordable Housing), also referred to as
the Nevada Guidance, provides the
discount percentages that may be
administratively applied to the fair
market value for affordable housing
sales. For the purposes of SNPLMA,
housing is ‘‘affordable housing’’ if it
serves low-income families as defined
in section 104 of the Cranston-Gonzales
National Affordable Housing Act
(Cranston-Gonzales Act). The CranstonGonzales Act defines ‘‘low-income
families’’ as families whose incomes do
not exceed 80 percent of the median
income for the area as determined by
HUD, or as otherwise adjusted by
statute. Clark County’s proposed Pebble
and Eastern Project would use 100
percent of the parcel to serve senior
citizens, including seniors with special
needs, with income at or below 60
percent of the area median income,
which represents extremely low income
based on the Nevada Guidance.
Clark County’s application includes a
comprehensive plan for assessment and
evaluation of the need for and feasibility
of this affordable housing project. As
required by SNPLMA section 7(b), HUD
reviewed the Pebble and Eastern Project
and provided the BLM with a No
Objection letter dated September 9,
2021. HUD’s No Objection letter
confirmed that the Pebble and Eastern
Project, as proposed, will utilize 100
percent of the land to serve low and
very low-income families whose income
is 60 percent or less of the area median
income. HUD further confirmed that the
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File Type | application/pdf |
File Modified | 2023-01-04 |
File Created | 2023-01-04 |