19- 498 C.M.R. ch. 37, § 7

Current through 2024-50, December 11, 2024
Section 498-37-7 - AMENDMENTS TO THE PROGRAM STATEMENT

The State may amend the 2009 Program Statement from time to time in accordance with the same procedures required for the preparation and submission of the program statement. The State of Maine's Administrative Procedures Act will guide the amendment process.

Click here to view Image

TO: Potential CDBG Applicants

FR: Michael D. Baran, Acting Director, Office of Community Development

DA: September 10, 2008

RE: Community Evaluation Factor

Background: In recent years, for the Housing Assistance, Public Facility and Public Infrastructure programs, a "Community Evaluation Factor" has been used in the scoring process. The 7 factors used totaled 20 points and were calculated for communities within set population ranges. During the rule making process for the Program Statement, some suggestions have been made to use more relevant information, but substantive suggestions as to what might actually be more relevant were not received. Therefore, this year the OCD contracted with Planning Decisions, Inc. to look at this portion of the scoring process.

Planning Decisions identified two major problems with the existing factors. First, the data is complicated to collect and analyze, the process is time-consuming, and unhelpful to potential applicants in predetermining a degree of competitiveness before applying. Second, the data on substandard housing, rental affordability, low and moderate income population, and poverty, are based on the 2000 Census. This is currently six years old, and becomes increasingly out of date each year.

Therefore, Planning Decisions proceeded with their analysis with the following basic assumptions:

1. Scoring factors should be closely related to the program function for which the scoring factors relate (i.e., housing and infrastructure);
2. Some balancing is needed so that there is not a bias towards small communities (with few in need, but a high percentage) and large communities (which may have many in need even with a very low percentage).
3. Data which is updated on an ongoing basis, even if less precise, is preferable to data from the 2000 Census.
4. In order for communities to know in advance where they stand, the points must be predetermined prior to applications, and not depend on application data.

Relevance and weighting of factors: Under the existing system, each of the 7 factors was given an equal weight, so the result is that financial commitment and lower income households were given a "double" weight and the issue becomes whether the factors address the right criteria for the programs in question.

Logically, different criteria might be used to deal with housing needs as opposed to an infrastructure needs. These differences are already part of the scoring system, specifically, the narrative "impact" section (30 points) of the application. The community evaluation factor is meant to come into play when all other factors are basically equal - to determine awards where two communities have similar needs and equally effective solutions.

In this light, the most important factor would appear to be tax burden. For infrastructure, all other things being equal, the State would wish to fund activities in a town that is already making a significant tax effort; while substandard housing is important for rehab programs, and affordable housing is important for all programs and the presence of low-income people is a relevant factor, they are already heavily considered in the low-income benefit aspect of the program design. Financial commitment is relevant, but it does not fit into the Community Evaluation factor, because it is application-specific, and cannot be predetermined.

Given all of this, and putting aside the question of the appropriateness of individual measurements, Planning Decisions recommends a weighting that gives tax burden 50% of the points (10), housing 40% (8 points), and low income population 10% (2 points). The recommended distribution is below.

Type of factor2006 Measurement2006pointsRecommended2007 pointsComment
Financial commitmentBudget Page review 2 0 Doesn't fit into this factor
leveraging 3
Substandard housingwithout plumbing 3 4 relevant for rehabilitation
AffordabilityRenters >25% 3 4 relevant for all housing programs
Tax burdenTax rate 3 10 the single most important factor for infrastructure
Low income populationCommunity LMI 3 2 relevant to all programs
<150% of poverty 3
TOTAL 20 20

Best measures: Given this general weighting of factors, how do we best measure them"

The current substandard housing measure uses data from the 2000 Census and is increasingly irrelevant today as hardly any year-round units in Maine lack complete plumbing and overcrowding continues to be a problem, more indicative of an affordability issue than of poor physical housing conditions. Therefore, the best external indicator for rehabilitation need is simply the age of its housing stock. While the age of housing is measured in the 2000 Census, updating is not important in this case, since the number of older units changes little from year-to-year.

Affordabilityis a problem that changes year to year, as the housing cycle changes. Therefore, the best current measure of affordability is the "affordability index" published annually by Maine Housing which tracks changes in the housing market by community, and matches it against annual changes in median income in that community.

The best measure of tax burden was designed by the Maine Municipal Association a few years ago. Unfortunately, MMA has not continued with this. Therefore, OCD's current approach of calculating the community's tax rate (state-equalized) relative to the state average is better than any of the alternatives.

The best measure of tax burden was designed by the Maine Municipal Association a few years ago. Unfortunately, MMA has not continued with this. Therefore, OCD's current approach of calculating the community's tax rate (state-equalized) relative to the state average is better than any of the alternatives.

The HUD measures of low and moderate income people and poverty are all based on 2000 Census data. Therefore, the best current estimates on a town level for low and moderate income people are from Maine Housing, with data from a private provider called Claritas. For purposes of this factor, the proportion of households under 50% of area median income would provide a good sense of how many really low-income people are residing in an individual community. The measures that will be used are in the table below:

Type of factorBest measureHow to ScoreSourceTimeliness
Substandard housing housing built before 1939 > 35% = 4 30 to 35% = 3 20 to 30% = 2 10 to 20% = 1 <10% = 0 2000 Census 2000 Census (but doesn't change between Censuses)
Affordability Affordability Index (state average 0.7) under 0.7 = 4 0.7 to 0.8 = 3 0.8 to 0.9 = 2 0.9 to 1.0 = 1 1.1+ = 0 Maine Housing Annual
Tax burden Keep the same (state average 12.99) >25 = 10 20 to 24 = 8 15 to 20 = 5 10 to 15 = 3 Under 10 = 0 Maine Revenue Services Annual
Low income population <50% of Area Median Income 20% + = 2 10 to 20% = 1 >10% = 0 Maine Housing (Claritas) Annual

Finally, the question of adjustments for small and large municipalities: The discussion so far has not addressed whether the scoring system should take special measures to account for communities of different sizes - either by scaling all of the proposed measurements by sizes of communities, as is done now, or by including a balance of absolute number and percentage measures, in order to compensate for the effects of size on a measurement.

Planning Decisions does not recommend any special measures for the new method outlined above. There is no particular relationship between old housing and small or large municipalities; or example, Lewiston has a lot of old housing, and so does Osborne, and both would have a high score in this measure. Likewise, tax burden and affordability are unaffected either way by community size. The last measure, low income population, might favor rural communities because it is a percentage measure; but some urban service centers will get the maximum points on this, and therefore is recommended as a low point item.

2009 Community Development Block Grant Program
Community Evaluation Factor
Abbot 9 Belmont 6 Camden 13
Acton 7 Benton 7 Canaan 7
Addison 10 Berwick 10 Canton 10
Albion 8 Bethel 12 Caratunk 6
Alexander 9 Bingham 14 Caribou 13
Alfred 10 Blaine 10 Carmel 9
Allagash 6 Blue Hill 9 Carrabassett Valley 4
Alna 13 Boothbay 8 Carroll plantation 11
Alton 8 Boothbay Harbor 10 Carthage 11
Amherst 8 Bowdoin 9 Cary plantation 8
Amity 10 Bowdoinham 9 Casco 8
Andover 10 Bowerbank 4 Castine 10
Anson 16 Bradford 8 Castle Hill 9
Appleton 10 Bradley 11 Caswell 8
Arrowsic 10 Bremen 8 Chapman 7
Arundel 5 Brewer 13 Charleston 7
Ashland 12 Bridgewater 11 Charlotte 11
Athens 7 Brighton plantation 8 Chelsea 6
Atkinson 10 Bristol 8 Cherryfield 13
Augusta 13 Brooklin 10 Chester 7
Aurora 15 Brooks 9 Chesterville 8
Avon 11 Brooksville 10 China 9
Baileyville 12 Brownfield 8 Clifton 8
Baldwin 10 Brownville 14 Clinton 7
Bancroft 13 Brunswick 11 Columbia 9
Bar Harbor 9 Buckfield 8 Columbia Falls 13
Baring plantation 12 Bucksport 9 Cooper 10
Bath 12 Burlington 11 Coplin plantation 5
Beals 12 Burnham 9 Corinna 7
Beaver Cove 3 Buxton 6 Corinth 4
Beddington 5 Byron 9 Cornish 10
Belfast 15 Calais 17 Cornville 7
Belgrade 8 Cambridge 7 Cranberry Isles 10
Crawford 6 Etna 6 Harmony 7
Crystal 10 Eustis 11 Harrington 11
Cushing 7 Exeter 10 Hartford 8
Cutler 7 Fairfield 11 Hartland 7
Cyr plantation 9 Farmingdale 8 Haynesville 8
Dallas plantation 6 Farmington 12 Hebron 7
Damariscotta 11 Fayette 8 Hermon 7
Danforth 12 Fort Fairfield 14 Hersey 9
Dayton 8 Fort Kent 9 Highland plantation 5
Deblois 9 Frankfort 8 Hiram 11
Dedham 9 Franklin 5 Hodgdon 7
Deer Isle 9 Freedom 10 Holden 6
Denmark 6 Frenchboro 10 Hollis 9
Dennistown plantation 4 Frenchville 9 Hope 9
Dennysville 12 Friendship 9 Houlton 16
Detroit 7 Fryeburg 12 Howland 9
Dexter 11 Gardiner 12 Hudson 2
Dixfield 13 Garfield plantation 4 Industry 9
Dixmont 9 Garland 9 Island Falls 14
Dover-Foxcroft 13 Georgetown 7 Isle au Haut 8
Dresden 8 Gilead 11 Islesboro 8
Drew plantation 9 Glenburn 7 Jackman 11
Durham 8 Gouldsboro 7 Jackson 8
Dyer Brook 7 Grand Isle 11 Jay 9
Eagle Lake 9 Grand Lake Stream Plt 8 Jefferson 4
East Machias 15 Great Pond 6 Jonesboro 10
East Millinocket 12 Greenbush 9 Jonesport 9
Eastbrook 10 Greene 6 Kenduskeag 7
Easton 10 Greenville 11 Kennebunk 11
Eastport 14 Greenwood 9 Kennebunkport 8
Eddington 7 Guilford 10 Kingfield 13
Edgecomb 10 Hallowell 14 Kittery 11
Edinburg 8 Hamlin 8 Knox 8
Eliot 7 Hammond 12 Lagrange 9
Ellsworth 10 Hampden 9 Lake View plantation 4
Embden 3 Hancock 7 Lakeville 8
Enfield 6 Hanover 10 Lamoine 5
Lebanon 8 Maxfield 9 Orland 5
Lee 9 Mechanic Falls 13 Orono 13
Leeds 10 Meddybemps 9 Orrington 8
Levant 7 Medford 10 Osborn 13
Liberty 9 Medway 14 Otis 7
Limerick 10 Mercer 7 Otisfield 5
Limestone 10 Merrill 10 Owls Head 8
Limington 4 Mexico 16 Oxbow plantation 10
Lincoln 9 Milbridge 11 Oxford 7
Lincoln plantation 8 Milford 6 Palermo 8
Lincolnville 9 Millinocket 13 Palmyra 6
Linneus 7 Milo 15 Paris 9
Lisbon 12 Minot 7 Parkman 7
Litchfield 8 Monhegan plantation 10 Parsonsfield 12
Littleton 7 Monmouth 8 Passadumkeag 9
Livermore 8 Monroe 10 Patten 11
Livermore Falls 14 Monson 10 Pembroke 12
Lovell 10 Monticello 11 Penobscot 6
Lowell 9 Montville 12 Perham 11
Lubec 12 Moose River 9 Perry 10
Ludlow 8 Moro plantation 3 Peru 7
Lyman 5 Morrill 9 Phillips 15
Machias 14 Moscow 9 Phippsburg 7
Machiasport 8 Mount Chase 8 Pittsfield 12
Macwahoc plantation 10 Mount Desert 10 Pittston 8
Madawaska 11 Mount Vernon 9 Pleasant Ridge plantation 7
Madison 11 Nashville plantation 4 Plymouth 7
Madrid 5 New Canada 9 Poland 7
Magalloway plantation 4 Northfield 6 Portage Lake 7
Manchester 7 Northport 5 Porter 10
Mapleton 7 Norway 12 Oxbow plantation 10
Mariaville 4 Oakfield 8 Oxford 7
Mars Hill 18 Oakland 10 Palermo 8
Marshfield 9 Ogunquit 8 Palmyra 6
Masardis 11 Old Orchard Beach 10 Paris 9
Matinicus Isle plantation 9 Old Town 14 Parkman 7
Mattawamkeag 11 Orient 2 Parsonsfield 12
Passadumkeag 9 Saco 10 Stonington 10
Passamaquoddy Indianshp Res 5 Sandy River plantation 4 Stow 9
Passamaquoddy Pleasant Point 5 Sanford 11 Strong 10
Patten 11 Sangerville 10 Sullivan 10
Pembroke 12 Searsmont 8 Sumner 10
Penobscot 6 Searsport 12 Surry 8
Penobscot Indian Island Rsrvtion 6 Sebec 8 Swans Island 9
Perham 11 Seboeis plantation 8 Swanville 8
Perry 10 Sedgwick 10 Sweden 9
Peru 7 Shapleigh 6 Talmadge 14
Phillips 15 Sherman 7 Temple 9
Phippsburg 7 Shirley 8 The Forks plantation 6
Pittsfield 12 Sidney 4 Thomaston 15
Pittston 8 Skowhegan 11 Thorndike 9
Pleasant Ridge plantation 7 Smithfield 7 Topsfield 9
Plymouth 7 Smyrna 9 Topsham 8
Poland 7 Solon 8 Tremont 8
Portage Lake 7 Somerville 11 Trenton 7
Porter 10 Sorrento 8 Troy 9
Presque Isle 15 South Berwick 10 Turner 7
Princeton 12 South Bristol 10 Union 11
Prospect 10 South Thomaston 7 Unity 8
Randolph 10 Southport 10 Upton 5
Rangeley 10 Southwest Harbor 8 Van Buren 13
Rangeley plantation 5 Springfield 13 Vanceboro 14
Readfield 8 St. Agatha 10 Vassalboro 6
Reed plantation 11 St. Albans 4 Veazie 9
Richmond 13 St. Francis 8 Verona 8
Ripley 8 St. George 9 Vienna 9
Robbinston 8 St. John plantation 6 Vinalhaven 9
Rockland 15 Stacyville 10 Wade 10
Rockport 10 Starks 9 Waite 10
Rome 7 Stetson 7 Waldo 8
Roque Bluffs 7 Steuben 9 Waldoboro 10
Roxbury 10 Stockholm 11 Wales 9
Rumford 8 Stockton Springs 13 Wallagrass 7
Sabattus 10 Stoneham 7 Waltham 11
Warren 8 Woolwich 10
Washburn 13 York 7
Washington 7
Waterboro 8
Waterford 8
Waterville 18
Wayne 9
Webster plantation 10
Weld 9
Wellington 9
Wells 7
Wesley 10
West Bath 7
West Forks plantation 3
West Gardiner 4
West Paris 10
Westbrook 14
Westfield 9
Westmanland 7
Weston 6
Westport 7
Whitefield 4
Whiting 8
Whitneyville 13
Willimantic 5
Wilton 9
Windsor 8
Winn 13
Winslow 9
Winter Harbor 9
Winterport 8
Winterville plantation 3
Winthrop 9
Wiscasset 10
Woodland 7
Woodstock 6
Woodville 7

19- 498 C.M.R. ch. 37, § 7