Announcing Approval of Withdrawal of Seventeen (17) Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) Publications, 6623-6625 [05-2414]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 25 / Tuesday, February 8, 2005 / Notices
Undergraduate Research Fellowships
(SURF) Programs, and the other
announcing the availability of funds for
the Precision Measurement Grants
Program. This document amends the
Supplementary Information for each
notice to update the citation to the
Department of Commerce Pre-Award
Notification Requirements for Grants
and Cooperative Agreements printed in
the notices.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
complete information about these
programs and instructions for applying
by paper or electronically, read the
Federal Funding Opportunity (FFO)
Notices at https://www.grants.gov. A
paper copy of the FFO notices may be
obtained by calling (301) 975–6328.
Grants Administration questions
about these programs should be
addressed to: Grants and Agreements
Management Division, National Institute
of Standards and Technology; 100
Bureau Drive, Stop 3580, Gaithersburg,
MD 20899–3580; Tel: (301) 975–6328.
For assistance with using Grants.gov
contact support@grants.gov.
For the Precision Measurement Grants
Program, technical questions should be
addressed to: Dr. Peter J. Mohr,
Manager, NIST Precision Measurement
Grants Program, National Institute of
Standards and Technology, 100 Bureau
Drive, Stop 8420, Gaithersburg, MD
20899–8420, Tel: (301) 975–3217, email: mohr@nist.gov.
For the SURF Gaithersburg Programs,
program questions should be addressed
to Ms. Anita Sweigert, Administrative
Coordinator, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8400, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8400,
Tel: (301) 975–4200, e-mail:
anita.sweigert@nist.gov.
For the SURF Boulder Programs,
program questions should be addressed
to Ms. Phyllis Wright, Administrative
Coordinator, National Institute of
Standards and Technology, 325
Broadway, Mail Stop 104, Boulder, CO
80305–3328, Tel: (303) 497–3244, email: pkwright@boulder.nist.gov.
For the EEEL Grants Program,
program questions should be addressed
to Sheilda Bryner, Electronics and
Electrical Engineering Laboratory,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8100, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8100,
Tel: (301) 975–2220, Fax: (301) 975–
4091.
For the MEL Grants Program, program
questions should be addressed to Mrs.
Mary Lou Norris, Manufacturing
Engineering Laboratory, National
Institute of Standards and Technology,
100 Bureau Drive, Stop 8200,
Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8200, Tel:
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(301) 975–3400, e-mail:
mnorris@nist.gov.
For the CSTL Grants Program,
program questions should be addressed
to Dr. William F. Koch, Chemical
Science and Technology Laboratory,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8300, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8300,
Tel (301) 975–8301, e-mail:
william.koch@nist.gov.
For the PL Grants Program, program
questions should be addressed to Ms.
Anita Sweigert, Physics Laboratory,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8400, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8400,
Tel (301) 975–4200, e-mail:
anita.sweigert@nist.gov.
For the MSEL Grants Program,
program questions should be addressed
to Dr. Stephen W. Freiman, Materials
Science and Engineering Laboratory,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop
8500, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8500,
Tel: (301) 975–5658, e-mail:
stephen.freiman@nist.gov.
For the Building Research Grants and
Cooperative Agreements Program,
program questions should be addressed
to Karen Perry, Building and Fire
Research Laboratory, National Institute
of Standards and Technology, 100
Bureau Drive, Stop 8602, Gaithersburg,
MD 20899–8602, Tel.: (301) 975–5910,
Fax: (301) 975–4032.
For the Fire Research Grants Program,
program questions should be addressed
to Ms. Wanda Duffin-Ricks, National
Institute of Standards and Technology,
100 Bureau Drive, Stop 8660,
Gaithersburg, MD 20899–8660, Tel:
(301) 975–6863, e-mail:
wanda.duffin@nist.gov.
The
National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) recently published
notices in the Federal Register
announcing the availability of funds for
Small Grants Programs (January 5,
2005), the Summer Undergraduate
Research Fellowships (SURF) Programs
(December 27, 2004), and for the
Precision Measurement Grants Program
(December 27, 2004). This document
amends each of these announcements
by updating the citation to the
Department of Commerce Pre-Award
Notification Requirements for Grants
and Cooperative Agreements printed in
the Supplementary Information section
of each notice. The Department of
Commerce Pre-Award Notification
Requirements for Grants and
Cooperative Agreements contained in
the Federal Register notice of December
30, 2004 (69 FR 78389) is applicable to
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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6623
the three notices mentioned above. On
the form SF–424, the applicant’s 9-digit
Dun and Bradstreet Data Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number
must be entered in the Applicant
Identifier block.
Classification
It has been determined that this rule
is not significant for purposes of E.O.
12866.
Prior notice and an opportunity for
public comment are not required by the
Administrative Procedure Act for rules
concerning public property, loans,
grants, benefits, and contracts (5 U.S.C.
553(a)(2)). Because notice and
opportunity for comment are not
required pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553 or any
other law, the analytical requirements of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601 et seq.) are inapplicable. Therefore,
a regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required and has not been prepared.
Dated: February 3, 2005.
Hratch G. Semerjian,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 05–2412 Filed 2–7–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
[Docket No. 021127288–2288–01]
Announcing Approval of Withdrawal of
Seventeen (17) Federal Information
Processing Standards (FIPS)
Publications
National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is
to announce that the Secretary of
Commerce has approved the withdrawal
of seventeen (17) Federal Information
Processing Standards (FIPS)
Publications.
These FIPS are being withdrawn
because they are obsolete, or have not
been updated to adopt current voluntary
industry standards, current federal data
standards, or current good practices for
information security. This situation
preserves obsolete standards for agency
use.
Some of these FIPS adopt voluntary
industry standards. Federal agencies
and departments are directed by the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (Public Law
104–113) to use technical standards that
are developed in voluntary consensus
standards bodies. Consequently, FIPS
E:\FR\FM\08FEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 25 / Tuesday, February 8, 2005 / Notices
that duplicate voluntary industry
standards are no longer needed.
Some of these FIPS adopt data
standards that are developed and used
by other Federal government agencies.
These FIPS have not been updated to
reflect changes and modifications that
have been made to the data
representations. The remaining FIPS
provide advisory guidance to Federal
agencies on information security issues.
This advisory guidance, which is not
compulsory and binding, has been
updated by NIST and issued in more
recent recommendations and
publications.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This withdrawal is
effective February 8, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Shirley M. Radack, telephone (301) 975–
2833, National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD
20899.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A notice
was published in the Federal Register
(Volume 68, Number 42, pages 10204–
10205), proposing the withdrawal of
seventeen Federal Information
Processing Standards (FIPS)
Publications. The Federal Register
notice solicited comments from the
public, academic and research
communities, manufacturers, voluntary
standards organizations, and Federal,
state, and local government
organizations. In addition to being
published in the Federal Register, the
notice was posted on the NIST Web
pages; information was provided about
the submission of electronic comments.
Comments and questions were
received from two private sector
organizations or individuals, and from
two federal government organizations.
The comments dealt with the data
representations in FIPS 55–3, Codes for
Named Populated Places, Primary
County Divisions, and Other Locational
Entities of the United States, Puerto
Rico, and the Outlying Areas, and in
FIPS 95–2, Codes for the Identification
of Federal and Federally Assisted
Organizations. These data
representations will continue to be
maintained by the responsible agencies
when the FIPS are withdrawn, and NIST
will continue to maintain links from its
Web pages to the appropriate agency
Web pages that provide the data
representations.
NIST recommended that the Secretary
approve the withdrawal of the
seventeen FIPS Publications, and
prepared a detailed justification
document for the Secretary’s review in
support of that recommendation.
Following is an analysis of the
comments received.
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Comment: FIPS 95–2, Codes for the
Identification of Federal and Federally
Assisted Organizations is an extremely
important document that is vital for
government wide and industry wide
information sharing and data
organization. It is true that the
document has not been updated
recently, but the coding standards are
still the best structure available for
organizing and presenting government
information by entity. There is no
commercial equivalent for this data
standard.
It is vital not only for industry, but
also to facilitate information sharing and
collaboration among government
organizations that is essential to support
homeland security. FIPS 95–2 should be
updated and kept current, or an
equivalent system be implemented,
especially in this time of government
restructuring and reorganization.
Response: The data representations
for Federal organizations that are
available on NIST’s web pages have not
been updated since 1999. This database
of data representations for Federal
organizations is maintained by the
Bureau of the Census, and will continue
to be available to government and
private sector organizations that need to
use it. NIST will maintain a link from
the entry to the withdrawn FIPS 95–2 to
the Bureau of the Census Web pages.
Comment: Could you provide a
reference to voluntary industry
standards that have replaced FIPS 55–3,
Codes for Named Populated Places,
Primary County Divisions, and Other
Locational Entities of the United States,
Puerto Rico, and the Outlying Areas,
and FIPS 95–2, Codes for the
Identification of Federal and Federally
Assisted Organizations.
Response: FIPS 55 and FIPS 95
currently provide data representations
that are issued and maintained by
Federal government agencies, but not by
NIST.
FIPS 55 implements the provisions of
ANSI X3.47–1993, and contains codes
for named populated places, primary
county divisions, and other locational
entities of the U.S. and areas under the
jurisdiction of the U.S. It also includes
representations for federal government
information such as postal codes,
General Services Administration codes,
and Bureau of the Census data. The
maintenance of FIPS 55 is the
responsibility of the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS).
FIPS 95 provides data representations
for Federal and Federally assisted
organizations, and is maintained by the
Bureau of the Census with input from
the General Services Administration
and the Department of Defense.
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Sfmt 4703
Both sets of data representations will
continue to be issued and maintained by
the responsible agencies when the FIPS
are withdrawn. NIST plans to have links
from its Web pages to the appropriate
agency Web pages that provide the data
representations. In addition, NIST is
investigating the possibility of a
voluntary industry standards committee
accepting the standard data
representations and assigning
registration authority for the data
representations to the agencies that are
currently issuing and maintaining them.
This notice provides the FIPS
publication number, title, and the
technical specifications number for each
of the seventeen FIPS Publications being
withdrawn:
FIPS 8–6, Metropolitan Areas (Including
MSAs, CMSAs, PMSAs, and
NECMAs).
FIPS 9–1, Congressional Districts of the
U.S.
FIPS 31, Guidelines for Automatic Data
Processing Physical Security and Risk
Management.
FIPS 48, Guidelines on Evaluation of
Techniques for Automated Personal
Identification.
FIPS 55–3, Codes for Named Populated
Places, Primary County Divisions, and
Other Locational Entities of the
United States, Puerto Rico, and the
Outlying Areas.
FIPS 66, Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) Codes.
FIPS 73, Guidelines for Security of
Computer Applications.
FIPS 83, Guideline on User
Authentication Techniques for
Computer Network Access Control.
FIPS 87, Guidelines for ADP
Contingency Planning.
FIPS 92, Guideline for Standard
Occupational Classification (SOC)
Codes.
FIPS 95–2, Codes for the Identification
of Federal and Federally Assisted
Organizations.
FIPS 102, Guideline for Computer
Security Certification and
Accreditation.
FIPS 112, Password Usage.
FIPS 127–2, Database Language SQL
(ANSI X3.135–1992).
FIPS 159, Detail Specification for 62.5um Core Diameter/125-um Cladding
Diameter Class 1A Multimode,
Graded-index Optical Waveguide
Fibers.
FIPS 171, Key Management Using ANSI
X9.17.
FIPS 173–1, Spatial Data Transfer
Standard.
Withdrawal means that the FIPS will
no longer be part of a subscription series
that is provided by the National
E:\FR\FM\08FEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 25 / Tuesday, February 8, 2005 / Notices
Technical Information Service, and that
NIST will no longer be able to support
the standards by answering
implementation questions or updating
the FIPS when the voluntary industry
standards are revised. NIST will
continue to provide relevant
information on standards and guidelines
by means of electronic dissemination
methods, and will keep references to the
withdrawn FIPS on its FIPS Web pages.
Authority: Federal Information Processing
Standards Publications (FIPS PUBS) are
issued by the National Institute of Standards
and Technology after approval by the
Secretary of Commerce pursuant to Section
5131 of the Information Technology
Management Reform Act of 1996 (Pub. L.
104–106), the Federal Information Security
Management Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–347),
and Appendix III to Office of Management
and Budget Circular A–130.
Executive Order 12866: This notice
has been determined to be not
significant under Executive Order
12866.
Dated: February 2, 2005.
Hratch G. Semerjian,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 05–2414 Filed 2–7–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–CN–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
International Code Council: The
Update Process for the International
Codes
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of public hearings on
U.S. Model Codes.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The International Code
Council (ICC), under whose auspices the
International Codes (‘‘I-Codes’’) are
developed, maintains a process for
updating these model codes based on
receipt of proposals from interested
individuals and organizations. The
ICC’s 14 separately published codes are
comprehensively updated and republished every three years with a
Supplement published between each
edition. The most current versions of
the I-Codes are the 2003 Editions and
2004 Supplements.
Each structured 18-month code
development cycle includes two
separate public sessions, both open to
public participation and observation.
The first of the two sessions is the Code
Development Hearing during which
balanced committees initially review,
discuss and vote on an opinion on each
proposal for change to the model codes.
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18:12 Feb 07, 2005
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Attendees to this hearing are eligible to
raise objection to and call for a vote of
the ICC members assembled regarding
the committee’s opinion. The results of
the Code Development Hearing are
made available for public review and
comment prior to the second public
session. Public comments received by
the ICC are published and distributed
for public review. At the second session,
entitled the Final Action Hearing,
public comments are reviewed and
discussed and final voting is conducted
to determine which proposals are
adopted into the I-Codes.
The purpose of this notice is to invite
the public participation in the Code
Development Hearing. The publication
of this notice by the National Institute
of Standards and Technology (NIST) on
behalf of ICC is being undertaken as a
public service; NIST does not
necessarily endorse, approve, or
recommend any of the codes or
standards referenced in the notice.
Session Dates: The Code Development
Hearings of the 2004/2005 Code
Development Cycle will occur on
February 22–March 4, 2005, at the
Millennium Hotel, Cincinnati, Ohio.
This will be followed by the Final
Action Hearings scheduled for
September–October 1, 2005, at the
COBO Center in Detroit, Michigan.
Proposed changes approved during
this cycle, in addition to changes
published in the 2004 Supplement, will
constitute the 2006 Edition of the
International Codes.
The agenda for the hearing as well as
updates to the schedule are also posted
on the ICC Web site at: https://
www.iccsafe.org.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mike Pfeiffer, PE, Vice President, Codes
and Standards Development at ICC’s
Chicago District Office, 4051 West
Flossmoor Road, Country Club Hills,
Illinois 60478; Telephone 708–799–
2300, Extension 4338; e-mail
mpfeiffer@iccsafe.org.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The ICC produces a family of Codes
and Standards that are comprehensive,
coordinated and are widely used across
the country in the regulation of the built
environment. Local, state and federal
agencies use these codes and standards
as the basis for developing regulations
concerning new and existing
construction.
The ICC code development process is
initiated when proposals from
interested persons—supported by
written data, views, or arguments—are
solicited, received and then published
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6625
in the Proposed Changes document.
This document is distributed a
minimum of 30 days in advance of the
Code Development Hearings and serves
as the agenda for that session.
At the Code Development Hearing the
ICC Code Development Committee for
each code or subject area of the code
considers testimony and takes action on
each proposal (Approval, Disapproval,
or Approval as Modified). Following the
Code Development Hearing results are
published in a report entitled the Report
of the Public Hearing, which identifies
the disposition of each proposal and the
reason for the committee’s action. Any
person wishing to comment on the
committee’s action may do so in the
public comment period following the
first hearing. Comments received are
published and distributed in a
document called the Final Action
Agenda which serves as the agenda for
the second hearing. Proposals which are
approved by a vote of the Governmental
Members of ICC at the second hearing
(Final Action Hearing) are incorporated
in either the Supplement or Edition, as
applicable, with the next 18-month
cycle starting with the submittal
deadline for proposals.
Proponents of proposals automatically
receive a copy of all documents
(Proposed Changes, Report of the Public
Hearing and Final Action Agenda).
Interested parties may also request a
copy, free of charge, by downloading the
‘‘return coupon’’ from the ICC Web site
at https://www.iccsafe.org and sending it
in as directed.
The International Codes consist of the
following:
International Building Code;
ICC Electrical Code;
International Energy Conservation Code;
International Existing Building Code;
International Fire Code;
International Fuel Gas Code;
International Mechanical Code;
ICC Performance Code for Buildings and
Facilities;
International Plumbing Code;
International Private Sewage Disposal
Code;
International Property Maintenance
Code;
International Residential Code;
International Urban-Wildland Interface
Code; and
International Zoning Code.
Dated: February 3, 2005.
Hratch G. Semerjian,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 05–2413 Filed 2–7–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 25 (Tuesday, February 8, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6623-6625]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-2414]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and Technology
[Docket No. 021127288-2288-01]
Announcing Approval of Withdrawal of Seventeen (17) Federal
Information Processing Standards (FIPS) Publications
AGENCY: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is to announce that the Secretary
of Commerce has approved the withdrawal of seventeen (17) Federal
Information Processing Standards (FIPS) Publications.
These FIPS are being withdrawn because they are obsolete, or have
not been updated to adopt current voluntary industry standards, current
federal data standards, or current good practices for information
security. This situation preserves obsolete standards for agency use.
Some of these FIPS adopt voluntary industry standards. Federal
agencies and departments are directed by the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (Public Law 104-113) to use
technical standards that are developed in voluntary consensus standards
bodies. Consequently, FIPS
[[Page 6624]]
that duplicate voluntary industry standards are no longer needed.
Some of these FIPS adopt data standards that are developed and used
by other Federal government agencies. These FIPS have not been updated
to reflect changes and modifications that have been made to the data
representations. The remaining FIPS provide advisory guidance to
Federal agencies on information security issues. This advisory
guidance, which is not compulsory and binding, has been updated by NIST
and issued in more recent recommendations and publications.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This withdrawal is effective February 8, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Shirley M. Radack, telephone (301)
975-2833, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg,
MD 20899.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A notice was published in the Federal
Register (Volume 68, Number 42, pages 10204-10205), proposing the
withdrawal of seventeen Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS)
Publications. The Federal Register notice solicited comments from the
public, academic and research communities, manufacturers, voluntary
standards organizations, and Federal, state, and local government
organizations. In addition to being published in the Federal Register,
the notice was posted on the NIST Web pages; information was provided
about the submission of electronic comments.
Comments and questions were received from two private sector
organizations or individuals, and from two federal government
organizations. The comments dealt with the data representations in FIPS
55-3, Codes for Named Populated Places, Primary County Divisions, and
Other Locational Entities of the United States, Puerto Rico, and the
Outlying Areas, and in FIPS 95-2, Codes for the Identification of
Federal and Federally Assisted Organizations. These data
representations will continue to be maintained by the responsible
agencies when the FIPS are withdrawn, and NIST will continue to
maintain links from its Web pages to the appropriate agency Web pages
that provide the data representations.
NIST recommended that the Secretary approve the withdrawal of the
seventeen FIPS Publications, and prepared a detailed justification
document for the Secretary's review in support of that recommendation.
Following is an analysis of the comments received.
Comment: FIPS 95-2, Codes for the Identification of Federal and
Federally Assisted Organizations is an extremely important document
that is vital for government wide and industry wide information sharing
and data organization. It is true that the document has not been
updated recently, but the coding standards are still the best structure
available for organizing and presenting government information by
entity. There is no commercial equivalent for this data standard.
It is vital not only for industry, but also to facilitate
information sharing and collaboration among government organizations
that is essential to support homeland security. FIPS 95-2 should be
updated and kept current, or an equivalent system be implemented,
especially in this time of government restructuring and reorganization.
Response: The data representations for Federal organizations that
are available on NIST's web pages have not been updated since 1999.
This database of data representations for Federal organizations is
maintained by the Bureau of the Census, and will continue to be
available to government and private sector organizations that need to
use it. NIST will maintain a link from the entry to the withdrawn FIPS
95-2 to the Bureau of the Census Web pages.
Comment: Could you provide a reference to voluntary industry
standards that have replaced FIPS 55-3, Codes for Named Populated
Places, Primary County Divisions, and Other Locational Entities of the
United States, Puerto Rico, and the Outlying Areas, and FIPS 95-2,
Codes for the Identification of Federal and Federally Assisted
Organizations.
Response: FIPS 55 and FIPS 95 currently provide data
representations that are issued and maintained by Federal government
agencies, but not by NIST.
FIPS 55 implements the provisions of ANSI X3.47-1993, and contains
codes for named populated places, primary county divisions, and other
locational entities of the U.S. and areas under the jurisdiction of the
U.S. It also includes representations for federal government
information such as postal codes, General Services Administration
codes, and Bureau of the Census data. The maintenance of FIPS 55 is the
responsibility of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).
FIPS 95 provides data representations for Federal and Federally
assisted organizations, and is maintained by the Bureau of the Census
with input from the General Services Administration and the Department
of Defense.
Both sets of data representations will continue to be issued and
maintained by the responsible agencies when the FIPS are withdrawn.
NIST plans to have links from its Web pages to the appropriate agency
Web pages that provide the data representations. In addition, NIST is
investigating the possibility of a voluntary industry standards
committee accepting the standard data representations and assigning
registration authority for the data representations to the agencies
that are currently issuing and maintaining them.
This notice provides the FIPS publication number, title, and the
technical specifications number for each of the seventeen FIPS
Publications being withdrawn:
FIPS 8-6, Metropolitan Areas (Including MSAs, CMSAs, PMSAs, and
NECMAs).
FIPS 9-1, Congressional Districts of the U.S.
FIPS 31, Guidelines for Automatic Data Processing Physical Security and
Risk Management.
FIPS 48, Guidelines on Evaluation of Techniques for Automated Personal
Identification.
FIPS 55-3, Codes for Named Populated Places, Primary County Divisions,
and Other Locational Entities of the United States, Puerto Rico, and
the Outlying Areas.
FIPS 66, Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Codes.
FIPS 73, Guidelines for Security of Computer Applications.
FIPS 83, Guideline on User Authentication Techniques for Computer
Network Access Control.
FIPS 87, Guidelines for ADP Contingency Planning.
FIPS 92, Guideline for Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)
Codes.
FIPS 95-2, Codes for the Identification of Federal and Federally
Assisted Organizations.
FIPS 102, Guideline for Computer Security Certification and
Accreditation.
FIPS 112, Password Usage.
FIPS 127-2, Database Language SQL (ANSI X3.135-1992).
FIPS 159, Detail Specification for 62.5-um Core Diameter/125-um
Cladding Diameter Class 1A Multimode, Graded-index Optical Waveguide
Fibers.
FIPS 171, Key Management Using ANSI X9.17.
FIPS 173-1, Spatial Data Transfer Standard.
Withdrawal means that the FIPS will no longer be part of a
subscription series that is provided by the National
[[Page 6625]]
Technical Information Service, and that NIST will no longer be able to
support the standards by answering implementation questions or updating
the FIPS when the voluntary industry standards are revised. NIST will
continue to provide relevant information on standards and guidelines by
means of electronic dissemination methods, and will keep references to
the withdrawn FIPS on its FIPS Web pages.
Authority: Federal Information Processing Standards Publications
(FIPS PUBS) are issued by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology after approval by the Secretary of Commerce pursuant to
Section 5131 of the Information Technology Management Reform Act of
1996 (Pub. L. 104-106), the Federal Information Security Management
Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107-347), and Appendix III to Office of
Management and Budget Circular A-130.
Executive Order 12866: This notice has been determined to be not
significant under Executive Order 12866.
Dated: February 2, 2005.
Hratch G. Semerjian,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 05-2414 Filed 2-7-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-CN-P