FY 2020 CARES Supplemental Funding Guidance: Reporting Requirement for Health Centers

The fiscal year (FY) 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act provides one-time funding to support health centers funded under the Health Center Program 1 to:

Funding Summary

The CARES Act (P.L. 116-136) (PDF - 933 KB) (PDF) , appropriated $1.32 billion for FY 2020 supplemental awards for the detection of coronavirus and/or the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of COVID-19, including maintaining or increasing health center capacity and staffing levels during a coronavirus-related public health emergency. The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) determined your CARES award amount using the following formula:

Your award is aligned with your current Health Center Program funding proportions 2 and may support a wide range of in-scope activities, dating back to January 20, 2020. CARES funding complements the previous FY 2020 Coronavirus Supplemental Funding for Health Centers (COVID-19).

You have flexibility in how you use the funding as the coronavirus and related community, patient, and organizational needs evolve. 3 Ensure that your activities to address COVID-19 are consistent with CDC guidance for health care professionals and federal, state, territorial and local public health recommendations. Among other uses, funding may be used to:

A more extensive list of example uses of funding is available on the CARES technical assistance webpage.

Required Supporting Documents

As stated on your notice of award, you should submit the following information via the HRSA Electronic Handbooks (EHBs) within 30 days of the award release date.

  1. CARES Activity Overview. Provide a brief narrative (1-2 pages) describing how funds have been (dating back to January 20, 2020), are being, or will be used to support activities to maintain and increase capacity to provide comprehensive primary care, and detect, prevent, diagnose, and treat COVID-19, using the categories below. Descriptions of each category provide only general guidance; CARES activities and uses of funds may apply to more than one category.

Note: HRSA acknowledges that your plans to use CARES funding may change over time to respond to changing community, patient, and organizational needs. Rebudgeting is allowable (except as noted below) as long as activities meet the intent of CARES funding (adhere to the CARES Act funding authority), consistent with the terms and conditions of the award. If the amount of the costs to be rebudgeted constitutes a significant rebudgeting (exceeds 25% of the total federal budget), you must submit a prior approval request for review and approval by HRSA.

The selection of equipment should be based on a preference for recycled content, non-hazardous substances, non-ozone depleting substances, energy and water efficiency, and consideration of final disposal (disposed in a manner that is safe, protective of the environment, and compliant with all applicable regulations), unless there are conflicting health, safety, and performance considerations. You are strongly encouraged to employ the standards established by either the Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool (EPEAT) or ENERGY STAR®, where practicable, in the procurement of equipment. Following these standards will mitigate the negative effects on human health and the environment. Additional information for these standards can be found at EPEAT and Energy Star.

Technical Assistance

COVID-19 frequently asked questions and resources are available at Emergency Preparedness and Recovery Resources for Health Centers.

Questions regarding your CARES funding, the 30-day reporting requirement, or COVID-19 should be submitted via the BPHC Contact Form. Select Requestor Type (Applicant), under Health Center or EHBs Question, select Coronavirus Inquiries (COVID-19) and select CARES Supplemental Funding for programmatic questions.

Footnotes

1 Under Section 330 (d)

2 Health Center Program funding streams are Community Health Centers (CHC), Migrant Health Centers (MHC), Health Care for the Homeless (HCH), and Public Housing Primary Care (PHPC).

3 HRSA award recipients may not use grant funds for costs that are reimbursed or compensated by other federal or state programs that provide for such benefits, including but not limited to the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program, the $100 billion in the Public Health and Social Services Emergency Fund, or unemployment compensation.

4 Up to $500,000 may be used for minor A/R projects, with no project totaling more than $499,999

5 The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology have established standards and other criteria for structured data.