Source: https://www.justice.gov/crt/tab-28-investigation-procedures-manual
Timestamp: 2018-09-23 05:09:18
Document Index: 11208784

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 4', 'art 3', 'art 3', 'art 5', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'arts 1', 'art 5']

Tab 28 Of The Investigation Procedures Manual | CRT | Department of Justice
For additional information and a discussion on each of the parts listed below, please refer to the "Title VI Legal Manual."
Training by a Federal agency
Loan of Federal personnel
Loan or use of Federal property or land at below market value
If you checked any of the above, proceed to Part 4. If you did not select any of the options in Section A, continue with Part 3, Section B.
The alleged discriminating entity:
If you checked any of the examples in Part 3, Section B, this is not Federal financial assistance, and therefore the entity is not subject to Title VI.
If you did not select an option in either Section A or B, further legal research is necessary to determine whether the entity receives "Federal financial assistance."
The entity is a successor to the original entity to which Federal property was donated, and the property continues to be used for its originally intended purpose(s).
If you checked any of the above, proceed to Part 5. If you did not select any of the options in Section A, continue with Part 4, Section B.
If you checked the example in Part 4, Section B, the entity is not a recipient and, therefore, the entity is not subject to Title VI.
By affirmatively completing Parts 1 through 4, you have concluded that Title VI applies; the scope of that application is now the focus of the analysis.
Part 5: "Program or Activity"
Identify the department, agency or office within the State or local government that receives the funding at issue. For example, if the EMT section of the Fire Department receives Federal funds, the Fire Department is the "program or activity" subject to Title VI.
If more than one office within the State/local government receives the funds, (i.e., the funds are channeled from one office to another), both the source office and subrecipient office are subject to Title VI. For example, if the Office of the Mayor directly receives Federal funds and the monies are distributed to the Department of Health, the Office of the Mayor and Department of Health are "programs or activities" subject to Title VI.
If the recipient is part of an educational institution:
Identify the complete system or school at issue.
If the recipient is part of a public school system, elementary through high school, the appropriate county or State system is the "program or activity" subject to Title VI.
If the recipient is a public postsecondary institution, the entire college or the entire State university system is the "program or activity" subject to Title VI.
If the recipient is a private postsecondary institution, the entire college or university is the "program or activity" subject to Title VI.
If the recipient is a private entity:
If the recipient entity is principally engaged in the business of providing education, health care, housing, social services, or parks and recreation, and any part of this entity is extended Federal financial assistance, then the "program or activity" encompasses all of the operations of the entire entity. For example, if one of five nursing homes in a chain receives Federal money, all five are subject to Title VI.
Funds for a specific purpose and/or funds that support one of several functions of the recipient would not be considered assistance "as a whole," and thus only that aspect of the recipient's operations would be subject to Title VI.
If Federal assistance is extended to a plant or any other comparable, geographically separate business facility of a corporation or other private entity, only the operations of the specific plant or facility are a "program or activity" subject to Title VI. For example, Federal aid from a State health agency to a single plant of General Motors for first aid training would subject that one plant, and the State agency, to Title VI.