HomeMy WebLinkAboutExhibit AATKINS
Atkins North America, Inc.
800 Waterford Way, Suite 700
Miami, Florida 33125
Mrs. Marie "Maggie" Gouin
Director
Office of Management and Budget
Miami Riverside Center
444 SW 2nd Avenue, 5th Floor
Miami, FL 33130
Reference: Project Analysis —City of Miami —ARPA (SLFRF)
Recommendation for application of ARPA (SLFRF) funds
Project Name: CAMACOL Latin Chamber of Commerce
District 1
Proposed ARPA Funds Amount: $1,000,000
Proposed Activity for use of Funds: Subrecipient
Mrs. Gouin,
&,+k.305.592,7275
October 24, 2022
We are sending the recommendation for the use of ARPA (SLFRF) funds for the referenced
project.
The project consists of providing funding to CAMACOL Latin Chamber of Commerce. An
organization dedicated to providing an outreach to a special segment of our community, who
are currently underserved and or which have been affected by the post -pandemic business
climate.
Based on the information and documentation provided by the City's Office of Management
and Budget and the District 1 Office, the project CAMACOL Latin Chamber of Commerce
is eligible for the use of ARPA (SLFRF) funds under the Department of Treasury Final
Rule, Expenditure Category 2.10 — Negative Economic Impacts: Assistance to
Unemployed or Underemployed Workers (e.g. job training, subsidized employment,
employment supports or incentives), contingent upon additional considerations and
requirements being met. Under the SLFRF program, funds must be used for costs incurred
on or after March 3, 2021. Further, funds must be obligated by December 31, 2024, and
expended by December 31, 2026. This time
SLFRF funds, is the "period of performance".
go to the Project Analysis, here attached.
period, during which recipients can expend
For considerations and requirements details
The ARPA (SLFRF) funds, in the amount of $1,000,000, will be allocated to the Subrecipient.
The funds will be used to offer programs to develop employment opportunities for minorities
and disenfranchised to enter into the tech and digital media sectors; training programs to at -
Page 1 of 2
ATKINS
risk youth and minorities; other programs that will develop skills necessary to obtain
employment for the City's minority community in these sectors; and will work with public and
private sector partners in program implementation.
Please review and contact us with any questions you may have.
Jamelyn Austin Trucks, CFM, PMP, CGM
ARPA Consultant, Subject Matter Expert
Project Director, Grants, Resiliency, and Master Planning
Enclosures as noted.
Page 2 of 2
Project Analysis —City of Miami —ARPA (SLFRF)
District 1
Project Title
CAMACOL Latin Chamber of Commerce
Project No. (e-Builder)
N/A
Total Project Cost
$1,000,000
Proposed ARPA Funding
$1,000,000
Project Type
• Program/Service
Project Status
• Not started
Project Estimated Completion
December 31, 2023
Agreement Type
Subrecipient
Eligible Use
Support the COVID-19 public health and economic response
by addressing COVID-19 and its impact on public health as well
as addressing economic harms to households, small businesses,
nonprofits, impacted industries, and the public sector.
Project Expenditure Category
2.10 — Negative Economic Impacts: Assistance to Unemployed
or Underemployed Workers (e.g. job training, subsidized
employment, employment supports or incentives)
NOTE: Project is also eligible under 2.36 — Aid to Other
Impacted Industries
Project Justification (short-
CAMACOL will offer programs to develop employment
SOW)
opportunities for minorities and disenfranchised to enter into
the tech and digital media sectors; training programs to at -risk
youth and minorities; other programs that will develop skills
necessary to obtain employment for the City's minority
community in these sectors; and will work with public and
private sector partners in program implementation.
There is a need to outreach to a special segment of our
community, who are currently underserved and or which have
been affected by the post -pandemic business climate. Either by
a lack of knowledge of technology or a resistance to the
everchanging way of doing business and or securing
employment. Through its various programs and initiatives,
CAMACOL has provided the small and minority business
community with commercial business assistance services which
includes training, and skills development, establishment of
business linkages, employment development. With CAMACOL's
track record, the company is poised to ensure that minorities
and disenfranchised communities are served.
Eligible (Y/N)
Yes, Project is considered eligible under Department of
Treasury Final Rule, contingent upon the below additional
considerations and requirements being met.
Additional Information
• Detailed description of the purpose of the funding and
needed
costs to be covered with ARPA funding.
• Provide any additional information related to use of
contracted services with partners.
• Key Performance Indicators
• Number of individuals that will be served
Next Steps
• Atkins to monitor costs, expenditures and gather data
for quarterly and annual reporting.
• Atkins to review contract agreements when available.
QC Completed (Name/Date)
Jamelyn Austin Trucks 10/22/2022
Additional Considerations/Program Requirements:
• Under the SLFRF program, funds must be used for costs incurred on or after March 3, 2021.
Further, funds must be obligated by December 31, 2024, and expended by December 31, 2026.
This time period, during which recipients can expend SLFRF funds, is the "period of
performance."
• ARPA funds can be used to provide additional funding for projects in progress prior to 3/3/2021,
however only activities initiated AFTER 3/3/2021 are eligible for ARPA funds.
• Ensure that the City of Miami Procurement Process meets Office of Management and Budget
procurement standards set forth in 2 CFR 200.316-320.
• Expenditure Category 2.10 - Assistance to Unemployed or Underemployed Workers (e.g. job
training, subsidized employment, employment supports or incentives) — Requires the following
additional reporting:
o Recipients must identify the amount of the total funds that are allocated to evidence -
based interventions
o Recipients must report on whether projects are primarily serving disproportionately
impacted communities.
• Project Type/EC Use of Evidence (for all ECs indicated) - Collection to begin in April 2022
o The dollar amount of the total project spending that is allocated towards evidence -
based interventions
o Indicate if a program evaluation of the project is being conducted
• Required Programmatic Data For all projects listed under the following Expenditure Categories,
the information listed must be provided in each report. Public Health and Negative Economic
Impact (EC 1.1-3.5) - Collection to begin in April 2022
o Brief description of structure and objectives of assistance program(s), including public
health or negative economic impact experienced
o Brief description of how a recipient's response is related and reasonably and
proportional to a public health or negative economic impact of COVID-19.
• Project Demographic Distribution (applicable to Public Health and Negative Economic Impact
ECs: EC 1.1-2.37)— Collection began April 2022
Recognizing the disproportionate public health and negative economic impacts of the pandemic
on many households, communities, and other entities, recipients must report whether certain
types of projects are targeted to impacted and disproportionately impacted communities.
Recipients will be asked to respond to the following:
o a. What Impacted and/or Disproportionally Impacted population does this project
primarily serve? Please select the population primarily served.
o b. If this project primarily serves more than one Impacted and/or Disproportionately
Impacted population, please select up to two additional populations served.
Recipients will select from the following options:
Assistance to Households
Impacted
• Low- or -moderate income households or populations
• Households that experienced unemployment
• Households that experienced increased food or housing insecurity
• Households that qualify for certain federal programs
• For services to address lost instructional time in K-12 schools: any students that lost
access to in- person instruction for a significant period of time
• Other households or populations that experienced a negative economic impact of the
pandemic other than those listed above (please specify)
Disproportionality
• Low-income households and populations
• Households and populations residing in Qualified Census Tracts
• Households that qualify for certain federal programs
• Households receiving services provided by Tribal governments
• Households residing in the U.S. territories or receiving services from these governments
• For services to address educational disparities, Title I eligible schools
• Other households or populations that experienced a disproportionate negative
economic impact of the pandemic other than those listed above (please specify)
• Additional Required Programmatic Data for States, U.S. territories, and metropolitan cities and
counties with a population that exceeds 250,000 residents only: Assistance to Unemployed or
Underemployed Workers (EC 2.10) and Community Violence Interventions (EC 1.11):
o Number of workers enrolled in sectoral job training programs
o Number of workers completing sectoral job training programs
o Number of people participating in summer youth employment programs.
Responding to Public Health and Economic Impacts of COVID-19
To assess eligible uses of funds in this category, recipients should (1) identify a COVID-19 public health or
economic impact on an individual or class (i.e., a group) and (2) design a program that responds to that
impact. Responses should be related and reasonably proportional to the harm identified and reasonably
designed to benefit those impacted.
The final rule recognizes that the pandemic caused broad -based impacts that affected many
communities, households, and small businesses across the country; for example, many workers faced
unemployment and many small businesses saw declines in revenue. The final rule describes these as
"impacted" households, communities, small businesses, and nonprofits.
At the same time, the pandemic caused disproportionate impacts, or more severe impacts, in certain
communities. For example, low-income and underserved communities have faced more severe health
and economic outcomes like higher rates of COVID-19 mortality and unemployment, often because pre-
existing disparities exacerbated the impact of the pandemic. The final rule describes these as
"disproportionately impacted" households, communities, small businesses, and nonprofits
Job Training
Pg. 116-118: Assistance to Unemployed and Underemployed Workers
The interim final rule included assistance to unemployed workers as an enumerated eligible use,
including "services like job training to accelerate rehiring of unemployed workers." Treasury provided
further guidance, based on recipient questions after the interim final rule, that eligible uses under this
section also include "other efforts to accelerate rehiring and thus reduce unemployment, such as
childcare assistance, assistance with transportation to and from a jobsite or interview, and incentives for
newly employed workers[,]" as well as assistance to unemployed workers seeking to start small
businesses. Finally, further guidance also provided that "public jobs programs, subsidized employment,
combined education and on-the-job training programs, or job training to accelerate rehiring or
address negative economic or public health impacts experienced due to a worker's occupation or level
of training" are all enumerated eligible uses as assistance to unemployed or underemployed workers.
The interim final rule defined eligible beneficiaries of assistance as "individuals who want and are
available for work, including those who have looked for work sometime in the past 12 months or who
are employed part time but who want and are available for full-time work."
This definition is based on definitions used by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to define individuals
currently unemployed, as well as persons marginally attached to the labor force and working part-time
for economic reasons.176 The latter two classifications are types of labor underutilization, or
"underemployed" workers.177 Finally, the interim final rule specified that assistance to unemployed
workers included both workers who lost their job during the pandemic and resulting recession and
workers unemployed when the pandemic began who saw further deterioration of their economic
prospects due to the pandemic.
Treasury confirmed that job fairs or grants to businesses to hire underserved workers are eligible uses
under this section.
Treasury is also enumerating that job and workforce training centers are eligible capital expenditures, so
long as they adhere to the standards and presumptions detailed in the section Capital Expenditures in
General Provisions: Other.
The final rule maintains the definition of eligible beneficiaries, which is aligned with the Bureau of Labor
Statistics' definitions of unemployed workers and other labor underutilization, using a common, widely
known definition that incorporates a broad group of individuals both unemployed, or whose skills are
otherwise underutilized in the labor market. In addition, recognizing that the pandemic has generated
broad workforce disruption, in the final rule, Treasury is making clear that recipients may provide job
training or other enumerated types of assistance to individuals that are currently employed but are
seeking to move to a job that provides better opportunities for economic advancement, such as higher
wages or more opportunities for career advancement.