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Food for Peace Title II Grants

Schedules

TAFS: 012-2278 /X - Food for Peace Title II Grants

Iterations:
Adjustment authority: Yes
Reporting categories: No
Previously Approved (Iteration 1) OMB Action (Iteration 2)
Line #SplitDescriptionAmount FootnotesAmountFootnotes
1000DEDiscretionary Expected - Unob Bal: Brought forward, October 1$200,000,000.00 $122,637,465.00
1100BA: Disc: AppropriationLine added $1,740,000,000.00
1134BA: Disc: Appropriations precluded from obligationLine added -$441,838,000.00
1920Total budgetary resources avail (disc. and mand.)$200,000,000.00 $1,420,799,465.00
6011Food for Peace Title II Grants$200,000,000.00 $1,420,799,465.00
6190Total budgetary resources available$200,000,000.00 See footnotes below $1,420,799,465.00 See footnotes below
Footnotes for line 6190 (Previous):

A1: These funds may be obligated to cover commodity inspection costs upon consultation with OMB. Inspections should generally be covered by funding from other US Department of Agriculture funding, including the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, Section 11.

A2: These funds may be obligated for Food for Peace development program activities upon consultation with OMB.

A3: This line includes Food for Peace Title II Section 202(e) funding for emergency food assistance for local and regional procurement (LRP) and other interventions such as cash vouchers and cash transfer payments. Within 10 business days of committing any of these funds, USAID should provide OMB with an email containing a preliminary assessment of how much funding will be used; the form that the funding is likely to take (e.g., local and regional procurement or cash voucher); preliminary estimates of the cost per beneficiary and, if relevant, cost per ton; which country will receive the food; how this commitment is related to Food for Peace Title II assistance to the recipient country, and how the funding meets USAID Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance criteria for the use of these funds. If the commitment is to be met through regional procurement, the email should indicate the anticipated countries of provenance for the food. USAID should email OMB within 10 business days if the countries of provenance change or any major details of the commitment change. Funds other than for local and regional procurement, cash transfers, or cash vouchers may be obligated upon consultation with OMB.

A4: The attached apportionment includes unobligated balances, estimated receipts and anticipated spending authority from offsetting collections. To the extent authorized by law, these amounts may be increased or decreased for actual unobligated balances, actual recoveries of prior year obligations, actual reimbursements earned, including reimbursements and offsetting collections from non-Federal/Federal sources, contributions from non-Federal/Federal sources, and release of contingency funds without further action by OMB.

Footnotes for line 6190 (Current):

A1: These funds may be obligated to cover commodity inspection costs upon consultation with OMB. Inspections should generally be covered by funding from other US Department of Agriculture funding, including the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, Section 11.

A2: These funds may be obligated for Food for Peace development program activities upon consultation with OMB.

A3: This line includes Food for Peace Title II Section 202(e) funding for emergency food assistance for local and regional procurement (LRP) and other interventions such as cash vouchers and cash transfer payments. Within 10 business days of committing any of these funds, USAID should provide OMB with an email containing a preliminary assessment of how much funding will be used; the form that the funding is likely to take (e.g., local and regional procurement or cash voucher); preliminary estimates of the cost per beneficiary and, if relevant, cost per ton; which country will receive the food; how this commitment is related to Food for Peace Title II assistance to the recipient country, and how the funding meets USAID Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance criteria for the use of these funds. If the commitment is to be met through regional procurement, the email should indicate the anticipated countries of provenance for the food. USAID should email OMB within 10 business days if the countries of provenance change or any major details of the commitment change. Funds other than for local and regional procurement, cash transfers, or cash vouchers may be obligated upon consultation with OMB.

A4: The attached apportionment includes unobligated balances, estimated receipts and anticipated spending authority from offsetting collections. To the extent authorized by law, these amounts may be increased or decreased for actual unobligated balances, actual recoveries of prior year obligations, actual reimbursements earned, including reimbursements and offsetting collections from non-Federal/Federal sources, contributions from non-Federal/Federal sources, and release of contingency funds without further action by OMB.

Footnotes

Footnotes provide further information about, or establish further legal requirements related to the use of, the funds in a given line or set of lines in an apportionment. If footnotes appear on lines 1920 or 6190, they apply to all the lines in the 1xxx and 6xxx sections, respectively. The following are all the footnotes associated with this file.

NumberText
A1
These funds may be obligated to cover commodity inspection costs upon consultation with OMB. Inspections should generally be covered by funding from other US Department of Agriculture funding, including the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, Section 11.
A2
These funds may be obligated for Food for Peace development program activities upon consultation with OMB.
A3
This line includes Food for Peace Title II Section 202(e) funding for emergency food assistance for local and regional procurement (LRP) and other interventions such as cash vouchers and cash transfer payments. Within 10 business days of committing any of these funds, USAID should provide OMB with an email containing a preliminary assessment of how much funding will be used; the form that the funding is likely to take (e.g., local and regional procurement or cash voucher); preliminary estimates of the cost per beneficiary and, if relevant, cost per ton; which country will receive the food; how this commitment is related to Food for Peace Title II assistance to the recipient country, and how the funding meets USAID Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance criteria for the use of these funds. If the commitment is to be met through regional procurement, the email should indicate the anticipated countries of provenance for the food. USAID should email OMB within 10 business days if the countries of provenance change or any major details of the commitment change. Funds other than for local and regional procurement, cash transfers, or cash vouchers may be obligated upon consultation with OMB.
A4
The attached apportionment includes unobligated balances, estimated receipts and anticipated spending authority from offsetting collections. To the extent authorized by law, these amounts may be increased or decreased for actual unobligated balances, actual recoveries of prior year obligations, actual reimbursements earned, including reimbursements and offsetting collections from non-Federal/Federal sources, contributions from non-Federal/Federal sources, and release of contingency funds without further action by OMB.

The following are all of the footnotes associated with the previous iteration of this file. Note that previous iterations of accounts in this file may come from multiple previous files.

NumberText
A1
These funds may be obligated to cover commodity inspection costs upon consultation with OMB. Inspections should generally be covered by funding from other US Department of Agriculture funding, including the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, Section 11.
A2
These funds may be obligated for Food for Peace development program activities upon consultation with OMB.
A3
This line includes Food for Peace Title II Section 202(e) funding for emergency food assistance for local and regional procurement (LRP) and other interventions such as cash vouchers and cash transfer payments. Within 10 business days of committing any of these funds, USAID should provide OMB with an email containing a preliminary assessment of how much funding will be used; the form that the funding is likely to take (e.g., local and regional procurement or cash voucher); preliminary estimates of the cost per beneficiary and, if relevant, cost per ton; which country will receive the food; how this commitment is related to Food for Peace Title II assistance to the recipient country, and how the funding meets USAID Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance criteria for the use of these funds. If the commitment is to be met through regional procurement, the email should indicate the anticipated countries of provenance for the food. USAID should email OMB within 10 business days if the countries of provenance change or any major details of the commitment change. Funds other than for local and regional procurement, cash transfers, or cash vouchers may be obligated upon consultation with OMB.
A4
The attached apportionment includes unobligated balances, estimated receipts and anticipated spending authority from offsetting collections. To the extent authorized by law, these amounts may be increased or decreased for actual unobligated balances, actual recoveries of prior year obligations, actual reimbursements earned, including reimbursements and offsetting collections from non-Federal/Federal sources, contributions from non-Federal/Federal sources, and release of contingency funds without further action by OMB.
A5
Funding authorized by the American Rescue Plan, P.L. 117-02, Sec. 1007.

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