Tobacco Transition Assessments, 7007-7014 [05-2552]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 27 / Thursday, February 10, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
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Dated: February 4, 2005.
Kenneth C. Clayton,
Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 05–2544 Filed 2–9–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
the notice and comment provisions of 5
U.S.C. 553 or the Statement of Policy of
the Secretary of Agriculture effective
July 24, 1971, (36 FR 13804) relating to
notice and comment rulemaking and
public participation in rulemaking.
These regulations are thus issued as
final.
Background
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1463
RIN 0560–AH31
Tobacco Transition Assessments
Commodity Credit Corporation,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule provides regulations
for the manner in which assessments are
to be made on various domestic
manufacturers or importers of tobacco
products to fund the tobacco transition
payment program as required by Title VI
of the America Jobs Creation Act of 2004
(the 2004 Act).
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 9, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Misty Jones, Tobacco Division (TD),
Farm Service Agency, United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA),
STOP 0514, Room 4080–S, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0514. Phone:
(202) 720–7413; e-mail:
Misty.Jones@usda.gov. Persons with
disabilities who require alternative
means for communication (Braille, large
print, audio tape, etc.) should contact
the USDA Target Center at (202) 720–
2600 (voice and TDD).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice and Comment
Section 642(b) of the 2004 Act (Pub.
L. 108–357) requires that the regulations
to implement Title VI of the 2004 Act
are to be promulgated without regard to
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General Overview
Sections 611 through 613 of the 2004
Act repeal the marketing quota and
acreage allotment (marketing quota) and
price support loan programs for tobacco
that are authorized by Title III of the
Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938
(the 1938 Act), and the Agricultural Act
of 1949 (the 1949 Act), effective at the
end of the 2004 marketing year
established for the respective kinds of
tobacco that are subject to such quotas.
The regulations used to administer the
marketing quota program are codified at
7 CFR part 723 and the price support
loan program regulations are codified at
7 CFR part 1464.
Sections 622 and 623 of the 2004 Act
provide that eligible quota holders and
tobacco producers will receive
payments under the Tobacco Transition
Payment Program (TTPP) in 10 equal
installments in each of the 2005 through
2014 fiscal years. The regulations used
to administer payments made under this
program will be set forth in a separate
rule.
Assessment and Trust Fund
Sections 625 through 627 of the 2004
Act provide for the establishment of
assessments on certain domestic
manufacturers and importers of tobacco
products in order to fund the 10-year
TTPP. The funds to be expended under
this program are to be derived from a
trust fund established by the 2004 Act.
The trust fund is also to be used to pay
for losses the Commodity Credit
Corporation (CCC) incurs in disposing
of tobacco it had acquired under the
price support loan program and for costs
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7007
that CCC may incur by using private
financial institutions in carrying out
portions of the program. To fund the
trust, section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act
requires that ‘‘each tobacco product
manufacturer and tobacco product
importer that sells tobacco products in
domestic commerce in the United
States’’ be subject to this assessment.
The manner in which the assessments
are to be levied is specified by the 2004
Act. Notably, assessments are levied on
‘‘each tobacco product manufacturer
and tobacco product importer;’’
accordingly, no assessment is levied on
an entity that imports, or sells
domestically only un-manufactured
tobacco.
Assessments are imposed during each
of the fiscal years (FY) 2005 through
2014. The amount of such annual
assessment is to be sufficient to cover
the payments made to tobacco quota
holders and tobacco producers and to
cover other approved expenses made in
that calendar year. For 2005, the
percentage of these assessments to be
collected from each such sector is as
follows:
1. Cigarette manufacturers and
importers—96.331 percent.
2. Cigar manufacturers and
importers—2.783 percent.
3. Snuff manufacturers and
importers—0.539 percent.
4. Roll-your-own tobacco
manufacturers and importers—0.171
percent.
5. Chewing tobacco manufacturers
and importers—0.111 percent.
6. Pipe tobacco manufacturers and
importers—0.066 percent.
These percentages were established
under section 625 of the 2004 Act by
using calendar year 2003 data. The
allocations by class for fiscal year 2005
were calculated by multiplying net
tobacco products removed (both
domestic and imported) by the
maximum excise tax rate for each class
of tobacco (see table 1 below).
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TABLE 1.—CALCULATION OF INITIAL ASSESSMENTS FOR EACH CLASS OF TOBACCO UNDER SECTION 625(C)
Imports
(# or lbs) 1
Domestic
(# or lbs) 1
2003 Calendar year
Total quantity
(# or lbs) 1
Maximum tax
rate 2
Estimated taxes
(total quantity
times tax rate)
Allocation
by class
(percent)
Cigarettes: small (#) .................
Cigarettes: large (#) ..................
Cigars: small (#) .......................
Cigars: large (#) ........................
Snuff (lbs) .................................
Chewing tobacco (lbs) ..............
Pipe tobacco (lbs) .....................
Roll your own (lbs) ...................
377,241,580,953
0
2,301,972,488
4,018,523,214
74,700,715
45,906,067
4,155,205
11,353,137
23,085,086,000
0
172,369,000
514,566,000
8,369
174,399
698,086
1,254,008
400,326,666,953
0
2,474,341,488
4,533,089,214
74,709,084
46,080,466
4,853,291
12,607,145
$19.50/thou ...
$40.95/thou ...
$1.828/thou ...
$48.75/thou ...
$0.585/lb .......
$.195/lb .........
$1.0969/lb .....
$1.0969/lb .....
$7,806,370,006
0
4,523,096
220,988,099
43,704,814
8,985,691
5,323,575
13,828,777
96.331
0.000
0.056
2.727
0.539
0.111
0.066
0.171
Total ...................................
..............................
..........................
..............................
.......................
8,103,724,058
100.000
1 Source:
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau; National Revenue Center; December 2003 Monthly Statistical Release Re-issued August 19, 2004; Report Symbol TTB S 5200–12–2003 www.ttb.gov/tobacco/stats/index.htm.
2 Source: Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau; Tax and Fee Rate www.ttb.gov/alcohol/info/atftaxes.htm.
Section 625(c)(2) of the 2004 Act
requires the Secretary to periodically
adjust these percentages as changes
occur in the marketplace. Beginning in
FY 2006, it is CCC’s intention to adjust
the class percentages annually by using
this same methodology to ascertain
changes in the volume of sales of each
class.
Market Shares and Base Period
Section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act
provides that in each of the FY’s 2005
through 2014, CCC will impose
assessments ‘‘on each tobacco product
manufacturer and tobacco product
importer that sells tobacco products in
domestic commerce in the United States
during that fiscal year.’’ The 2004 Act
provides that for each such entity,
within each of the six specified sectors,
the Secretary must establish individual
assessments by determining a statutorily
prescribed ‘‘market share’’ for each
manufacturer and importer. This market
share is defined by section 625(a)(3) of
the 2004 Act as the entity’s share of the
‘‘class of tobacco product (expressed as
a decimal to the fourth place) of the
total volume of domestic sales of the
class of tobacco product during the base
period for a fiscal year* * *.’’ The
‘‘base period’’ is defined in section
625(a)(1) as the ‘‘one-year period ending
the June 30 before the beginning of a
fiscal year.’’ For FY 2005 that would be
July 1, 2003 through June 30, 2004 and
an entity’s FY 2005 market share would
be its share of the sale of a class of
tobacco products from July 1, 2003
through June 30, 2004.
Section 625(f) provides that the
determination of the amount of a
quarterly assessment owed by an entity
will be based upon its prior quarterly
period sales. Thus, as payments made
by an entity cover a calendar year
period, the first quarterly payment that
is due on March 31, 2005 will be
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determined by using the October 1, 2004
through December 31, 2004 market
share of the entity within each of the six
product sectors. Accordingly, the use of
the 2004 Act’s ‘‘market share’’ and ‘‘base
period,’’ are effectively limited to being
used to determine the division of the
national assessment among the six
previously listed sectors.
In order to establish these market
shares, section 625(h)(1) provides that
each manufacturer and importer of
tobacco products must submit ‘‘a
certified copy of each of the returns or
forms described by paragraph (2) that
are required to be filed with a Federal
agency on the same date that those
returns or forms are filed, or required to
be filed, with the agency.’’ Section
625(h)(2) provides that these returns
and forms ‘‘are those that relate to, ‘‘(A)
the removal of tobacco products into
domestic commerce (as defined by
section 5702 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986); and (B) the payment of
the taxes imposed under charter [sic] 52
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
including AFT [sic] Form 5000.24 and
United States Customs Form 7501 under
currently applicable regulations.’’ With
respect to the information provided to
the Department of the Treasury, data to
develop a market share would be
obtained from sources such as TTB
Form 5000.24, which is required to be
filed monthly. To the extent amended
forms are filed, CCC would incorporate
those changes to the extent it deemed
practicable, taking into consideration
when the amended form was submitted.
With respect to imports of tobacco
products, CCC intends to use
information provided to the Department
of the Treasury and the Department of
Homeland Security when the product
enters the United States.
At the current time, this information
would be of the type submitted monthly
on TTB Form 5220.6, ATF Form 5210.5,
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TTB Form 5000.24, TTB Form 5620.8
and Customs and Border Protection
Form 7501. Because the name and
identification of these and other forms
may change over time, CCC will provide
actual notice to domestic manufacturers
and importers of tobacco products of
those forms from which information
could be obtained for purposes of
compliance with this subpart. Due to
the need to obtain this information as
soon as possible for use in FY 2005,
CCC will provide actual notice to those
entities who have received a permit, as
identified below, from the Department
of the Treasury since October 1, 2004 in
order to obtain information regarding
their October 1 through December 31,
2004 marketings. To the extent that
future submissions to the Department of
the Treasury and the Department of
Homeland Security may be combined
with that needed for the administration
of the 2004 Act, CCC will attempt to
obtain the information from the two
agencies without the need to obtain the
same information from tobacco
manufacturers and tobacco product
importers.
Quarterly Assessments
Section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act
requires that CCC ‘‘* * * impose
quarterly assessments during each of
fiscal years 2005 through 2014, * * *
on each tobacco product manufacturer
and tobacco product importer that sells
tobacco products in domestic commerce
in the United States during that fiscal
year.’’
Section 625(b)(2) further provides
that: ‘‘Beginning with the calendar
quarter ending on December 31 of each
of fiscal years 2005 through 2014, the
assessment payments over each fourcalendar quarter period shall be
sufficient to cover—
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(A) The contract payments made
under sections 622 and 623 during that
period; and
(B) Other expenditures from the
Tobacco Trust Fund made during the
base quarter periods corresponding to
the four calendar quarters of that
period.’’
Section 625(d)(1) of the 2004 Act
further provides that ‘‘The notice for a
quarterly period shall be provided not
later than 30 days before the date
payment is due under paragraph (3).’’
Section 625(d)(3) provides:
‘‘(A) Collection Date.—Assessments
shall be collected at the end of each
calendar year quarter, except that the
Secretary shall ensure that the final
assessment due under this section is
collected not later than September 30,
2014.
(B) Base Period Quarter.—The
assessment for a calendar year quarter
shall correspond to the base period
quarter that ended at the end of the
preceding calendar year quarter.’’
The 2004 Act contains several
provisions that give contradictory
direction to CCC. For example, while
section 625(b)(1) provides that CCC
‘‘* * * shall impose quarterly
assessments during each of the fiscal
years 2005 through 2014,’’ section
625(b)(2) directs that assessments be
collected ‘‘* * * over each four
calendar quarter period,’’ which CCC
interprets as being each quarter
beginning on January 1, 2005 through
December 31, 2014, except that the final
payment is accelerated to September 30,
2014 by section 625(d)(3)(B). Similarly,
section 625(d)(1) states that notification
of payments owed by an entity is to be
made ‘‘not later than 30 days before the
date payment is due under paragraph
(3).’’ Section 625(d)(3)(A) contains the
special rule for moving December 31,
2014 assessments to September 30,
2014, but subparagraph (B) provides
‘‘The assessment for a calendar year
quarter shall correspond to the base
period quarter that ended at the end of
the preceding calendar year quarter.’’
Thus, this provision of 625(d)(3)(B) to
use a method of collection where a
quarterly payment is to ‘‘correspond’’ to
the prior quarter runs counter to the use
of the ‘‘market share’’ and ‘‘base period’’
provisions of the 2004 Act. Accordingly,
with respect to section 625(d)(3)(B),
CCC interprets this provision to mean
that an entity’s required payment is to
be adjusted quarterly by determining an
entity’s share of a tobacco product
sector based upon the prior 3 month
marketings of the entity. Such an
interpretation also means that an entity
entering the tobacco market for the first
time at any time during a quarterly
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payment period will be treated in the
same manner as all other entities.
After reviewing this provision of the
2004 Act in the context of all of Title VI
of the 2004 Act, CCC has determined the
intent of the statutory scheme
established by section 625 of the 2004
Act is that CCC is to levy assessments
in amounts needed to fund the Tobacco
Trust Fund (TTF) with sufficient
amounts to cover expenses incurred in
each of the 2005 through 2014 calendar
years, with payment due to CCC at the
end of each calendar year quarter.
Thus, the first quarterly payment is
due to CCC on March 31, 2005 and the
40th, and final payment otherwise due
to CCC on December 31, 2014, is
accelerated to September 30, 2014.
While section 625(b)(2) refers to the
collection of assessments at the end of
a calendar year quarter for expenditures
occurred in that quarter, section
625(c)(3) allows CCC to adjust any
assessment to be collected in a fiscal
year to cover expenditures ‘‘* * * as
the Secretary determines to be necessary
to carry out this subtitle during that
fiscal year.’’
Accordingly, in order to allow for a
more uniform and predictable
assessment rate so that entities paying
the assessment can make timely
business decisions, CCC will levy four
quarterly assessments in each of the
2005 through 2014 calendar years with
payment due on March 31, June 30,
September 30, and December 31 of each
calendar year. But, as required by the
2004 Act, the December 31, 2014
payment will be due on September 30,
2014. Accordingly, this 40th quarter
payment will be determined by using
the same adjusted market share data of
an entity that was used to determine the
39th quarter payment. To the extent
practicable, each of the four quarterly
assessments for a calendar year will be
one-fourth of the estimated costs of the
total expenditures for that calendar year,
but CCC may adjust each of the amounts
due each quarter to account for
unanticipated savings or increased
outlays.
Entities Subject to Payment of the
Assessment
In order to collect these assessments,
this rule provides that those domestic
manufacturers and importers of tobacco
products who must pay an assessment
are those that, during the fiscal year, are
required to have a permit from the
Department of the Treasury as provided
in 27 CFR parts 40.61 and 40.62 for
manufacturers and 27 CFR parts 275.190
and 275.191 for importers. Since all
domestic manufacturers and importers
of tobacco products must have such a
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permit, use of this requirement will
provide a readily identifiable process
that imposes no additional burden on
these entities.
Generally, for FY 2005, the
assessment for an individual company
would be determined by:
1. Taking the total calendar year 2005
expenditures CCC estimates it will incur
and dividing that amount among the
various classes of tobacco pursuant to
the percentages specified above.
2. Taking that dollar amount for each
class and dividing it among each entity
in that class based on the entity’s
adjusted market share each quarter.
With respect to the first calendar year
quarterly payment that is due March 31,
2005, CCC would calculate an
individual entity’s required payment
based upon the entity’s adjusted market
share as determined as of the ‘‘* * *
quarter that ended at the end of the
preceding calendar year quarter,’’ which
would be the October 1 through
December 31, 2004 time frame. With
respect to the payment due on June 30,
2005, the market share would be
adjusted to reflect marketings between
January 1, 2005 and March 31, 2005.
Notification of Information
Section 625(d) of the 2004 Act
provides that each domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco
products will be given actual notice, not
later than 30 calendar days prior to the
date payment of each quarterly
assessment is due to CCC, of certain
determinations made under the 2004
Act. These determinations relate to:
1. The total combined assessment for
all domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products, which is
referred to as the ‘‘national assessment’’
in the rule;
2. The total assessment for each class
of tobacco product;
3. Any adjustments that have been
made to the percentage allocation of the
gross volume of tobacco products among
classes of tobacco products;
4. Any adjustment to the national
assessment due to changes of CCC
expenditures during the fiscal year;
5. The volume of gross sales for each
class of tobacco made by the domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco
products that was used in determining
the market share of such entity;
6. The total volume of gross sales of
the applicable class of tobacco products
that was used in determining the market
share of domestic manufacturer and
importers of tobacco products;
7. The domestic manufacturers’ and
importers’ of tobacco products market
share of the applicable class of tobacco
product; and
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8. The market share of each domestic
manufacturer and importers of tobacco
products.
In reviewing the notification of
information provision with officials of
the Department of the Treasury, it has
been determined that the disclosure of
market share information on an entity to
another party, item 8, would be in
violation of 26 U.S.C. 6103. That
provision of the Internal Revenue Code
precludes the disclosure by the United
States Government of information
obtained from a tax return or other form
to a third party. Accordingly, the
notifications provided by this rule will
not include disclosure of an entity’s
market share to any third party.
In addition to the first seven items
noted above, the notification that CCC
will provide to domestic manufacturers
and importers of tobacco products will
also include:
1. The manner in which assessments
are to be remitted to CCC; and
2. Identification of those Department
of the Treasury and Department of
Homeland Security forms filed by the
domestic manufacturer and importer of
tobacco products that must also be filed
with CCC.
Appeals
Notice of appeal rights will be
provided when applicable. Section
625(i) of the 2004 Act sets forth specific
times by which CCC must resolve
certain administrative appeals that arise
with respect to the levy of assessments.
Accordingly, the administrative review
procedure set forth in this rule provides
that for those appeals in which the
appellant disputes the amount of the
assessments CCC will, within 30
business days of receipt of the notice of
the appeal, determine if a revision
should be made. If a decision has not
been made within 30 business days, for
purposes of seeking judicial review, the
appellant will have been deemed to
have exhausted all administrative
remedies. The administrative procedure
established by this rule provides for the
opportunity for a hearing, if requested
by the appellant, and also provides for
the appeal of other determinations
arising under the act that are not subject
to the 30-day appeal process.
Analysis of Benefits and Costs
This rule was determined to be
economically significant by the Office of
Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866. Thus, an
analysis of the benefits and costs of this
rule has been performed by the Agency.
This analysis is available from Misty
Jones at (202) 720–7413 or at https://
www.fsa.usda.gov/tobacco/. A summary
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of the estimated impacts of this rule are
as follows:
Tobacco Market Prices
The price tobacco manufacturers pay
for domestic tobacco is higher than that
for imported tobacco. This is largely due
to the price support program for
domestic tobacco which established a
higher minimum price for U.S. product.
The elimination of the tobacco price
support is expected to move domestic
tobacco market prices toward the lower
market price of imported tobacco.
Academic research suggests that tobacco
market prices may decline 25 percent or
more from their levels under the
previous program. However, over the
longer term, tobacco producers are
expected to benefit from reduced
production costs from elimination of
quota rent, increased production as
domestic leaf will compete more
effectively with imports, more
competitiveness in the export market,
and economy of scale as farms
consolidate into larger and more
efficient units. Also, elimination of
tobacco marketing quotas will result in
a loss of income to quota owners
because owning a tobacco quota allows
a person to market tobacco in the
higher-price domestic market and,
therefore, it has an intrinsic value.
CCC Stocks
Lower domestic market tobacco prices
may cause a reduction in the value of
CCC tobacco stocks which are collateral
for CCC nonrecourse marketing loans. If
tobacco prices fall below the loan value
of tobacco pledged as collateral, CCC
could lose a significant amount of
money. Compensating tobacco
producers, quota holders, and CCC is
viewed as an equitable remedy for the
loss of future tobacco income and the
potentially diminished value of loan
collateral. The assessments collected
from tobacco importers and
manufacturers will fund the payments
for quota holders and tobacco producers
and will also compensate CCC for any
losses associated with tobacco loan
stocks.
Payments to Holders and Producers
CCC will enter into a contract with
each tobacco quota holder or producer
to compensate them for terminating
quotas and price support. Assessments
on manufacturers and importers of
tobacco products will finance the
payments. As provided in this rule the
total payments due an eligible tobacco
quota holder is $7 per pound multiplied
by the pounds of basic quota at the 2002
quota level. Total payments due a
tobacco producer is, in the case of flue-
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cured and burley tobacco, $3 per pound
of effective quota for the 2002 marketing
year and, for other kinds of tobacco, $3
per pound of the allotment for 2002,
times the average annual yield per acre
produced in the 2001, 2002, and 2003
crop years. Total transition payments
are estimated at $9.6 billion based on
known payment rates per pound and
2002 acreage/poundage quotas.
Reimbursable expenses incurred by CCC
and financial institutions related to
assessments and payments are expected
to be about $540 million.
Costs to Manufacturers and Importers
On August 18, 2004, there were 158
product manufacturers and 666 product
importers providing data on tobacco
product sales. Tobacco manufacturer
and importer assessments are based on
their shares of sales volume for 6 major
tobacco product classes: cigarettes,
cigars, pipe tobacco, snuff, chewing
tobacco, and roll-your-own tobacco.
Product classes are measured in number
of units of product or pounds of
product, and each category is assigned
a percentage of the market for that
product class based on its pro rata share
of the total sales of that product. Total
assessments on cigarette manufacturers
and importers during fiscal year 2005
are estimated at about $975 million
based on 2003 taxable removal of
cigarettes of about 400 billion, or about
20 billion packs of 20 each. Thus, the
assessment per pack of cigarettes will be
around 4.8 cents. In order to cover their
share of the product class’s assessment,
cigarette manufacturers and importers
would likely raise the price of cigarettes
by a similar amount.
Cigars’ proportion of the fiscal year
2005 assessment is 2.783 percent, about
$28.2 million. This implies a price
increase of about 0.4 cents per cigar
based on 2003 removals of 7.0 billion
units. Other products’ share of the
assessment in million dollars, and the
implied increase in product price in
cents per pound, in parenthesis, are:
snuff—$5.5 (7.3), chewing tobacco—
$1.1 (2.4), pipe tobacco—$.7 (13.8), and
roll-your-own—$1.7 (13.8).
Manufacturers and importers are
expected to pass most of these costs to
consumers of tobacco products through
small increases in sales prices, since
demand tends to be much more inelastic
than supply. Specific estimates of the
supply elasticity are not available,
however, most studies assume supply to
be perfectly elastic. The additional
burden of providing information on
sales volume to CCC is deemed
negligible inasmuch as these data are
already provided to other government
agencies.
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Impact on Consumers
Consumers are expected to pay
marginally higher prices for tobacco
products than they would in the
absence of the assessments, as
manufacturers pass on most of the cost
of assessments through higher product
sales prices. The recent national average
retail price of cigarettes is calculated to
be $3.8066 per pack. A 4.8-cent-perpack increase in the price would equate
to a 1.3-percent rise in the retail price.
Numerous studies have calculated the
price elasticity of demand for cigarettes
to be quite inelastic, ranging from a low
of ¥0.4 to a high of ¥0.75. The range
of estimates for youth smoking is wider,
ranging from 0 to ¥1.44. Based on these
estimates, a 1-percent rise in the price
of cigarettes would be expected to
reduce overall consumption by 0.4
percent to 0.75 percent. However,
among youth, the expected impact may
range from no decline to as much as a
1.44-percent decline. Nonetheless,
consumers, in aggregate, are not
expected to significantly reduce
consumption of tobacco products due to
the expected increases in tobacco prices
attributable to the assessments alone.
Administrative Burden
CCC will likely incur modest
additional staffing requirements
associated with the ongoing
administration of this assessment,
however, automated processes will limit
staff requirements somewhat. CCC loan
operation net expenses will be paid by
the assessments collected under these
regulations. However, since the tobacco
program has been administered at nonet-cost for years, these assessments are
expected to have no significant impact
on CCC loan operation expenses.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to
be economically significant under
Executive Order 12866 and has been
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). A cost-benefit
assessment was completed and is
summarized after the background
section explaining the rule.
Federal Assistance Programs
The title and number of the Federal
assistance program, as found in the
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance,
to which this final rule applies are:
10.051—Commodity Loans and Loan
Deficiency Programs.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act is not
applicable to this rule because neither
the Secretary of Agriculture nor CCC is
required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or any other
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law to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking for the subject matter of this
rule.
Environmental Review
Due to the brief time-frame FSA had
to promulgate these regulations,
sufficient time was not available to
complete an environmental review prior
to implementing this program.
Therefore, an environmental assessment
is being completed to consider the
potential impacts of this proposed
action on the human environment in
accordance with the provisions of the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.,
the regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), and FSA’s regulations for
compliance with NEPA at 7 CFR part
799. A copy of the draft environmental
assessment will be available after
completion for review upon request.
Executive Order 12778
This final rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12778.
This rule preempts State laws that are
inconsistent with its provisions, but the
rule is not retroactive. Before any
judicial action may be brought
concerning this rule, all administrative
remedies must be exhausted.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to
Executive Order 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with
State and local officials. See the notice
related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V,
published at 48 FR 29115 (June 24,
1983).
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) does not
apply to this rule because neither the
Secretary of Agriculture nor CCC is
required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or any other
law to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking for the subject matter of this
rule. Also, the rule imposes no
mandates as defined in UMRA.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996
Section 642(c) of the 2004 Act
requires that the Secretary use the
authority in section 808 of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104–121
(SBREFA), which allows an agency to
forgo SBREFA’s usual 60-day
Congressional Review delay of the
effective date of a major regulation if the
agency finds that there is a good cause
to do so. Accordingly, this rule is
effective upon the date of filing for
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public inspection by the Office of the
Federal Register.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Section 642(b) of the 2004 Act
requires that these regulations be
promulgated and administered without
regard to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
This means that the information to be
collected from the public to implement
these provisions and the burden, in time
and money, the collection of the
information would have on the public
does not have to be approved by the
Office of Management and Budget or be
subject to the normal requirement for a
60-day public comment period.
Government Paperwork Elimination
Act
CCC is committed to compliance with
the Government Paperwork Elimination
Act and the Freedom to E-File Act,
which require Government agencies in
general, and FSA in particular, to
provide the public the option of
submitting information or transacting
business electronically to the maximum
extent possible. Because of the date that
the regulations for this program are
required to be published, the forms and
other information collection activities
required to be utilized by a person
subject to this rule are not yet fully
implemented in a way that would allow
the public to conduct business with
CCC electronically. Accordingly, at this
time, all forms required to be submitted
under this rule may be submitted to
CCC by mail or FAX.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1463
Agriculture, Acreage allotments,
Marketing quotas, Price support
programs, Tobacco.
Accordingly, title 7 is amended by
adding part 1463, as set forth below:
I
PART 1463—2005–2014 TOBACCO
TRANSITION PROGRAM
Subpart A—Tobacco Transition
Assessments
Sec.
1463.1 General.
1463.2 Administration.
1463.3 Definitions.
1463.4 National assessment.
1463.5 Division of national assessment
among classes of tobacco.
1463.6 Determination of persons liable for
payment of assessments.
1463.7 Division of class assessment to
individual entities.
1463.8 Notification of assessments.
1463.9 Payment of assessments.
1463.10 Civil penalties and criminal
penalties.
1463.11 Appeals and judicial review.
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Subpart B—[Reserved]
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 714b and 714c; and
Title VI of Pub. L. 108–357.
Subpart A—Tobacco Transition
Assessments
§ 1463.1
General.
The Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC) will levy assessments from
January 1, 2005 through September 30,
2014 on certain domestic manufacturers
and importers of tobacco products as
provided for in this subpart in order to
fund the issuance of payments made
under subpart B of this part and to fund
other activities authorized by Title VI of
the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004.
The total amount of assessments that
may be collected under this part shall
not exceed $10.140 billion.
§ 1463.2
Administration.
The provisions of this subpart will be
administered under the general
supervision of the Executive Vice
President, CCC.
§ 1463.3
Definitions.
The definitions in this section shall
apply for all purposes of administering
the provisions of this subpart:
Act means Title VI of the America
Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Public Law
108–357).
Adjusted market share means the
market share of a manufacturer of
tobacco products or an importer of
tobacco products adjusted to reflect
such entity’s share of a class of tobacco
during the immediately preceding
calendar year quarter. With respect to
the 39th and 40th quarterly payments
due on September 30, 2014, the adjusted
market share will be the entity’s share
of a class of tobacco during the April 1–
June 30, 2014 quarter.
Base period means the period July 1
through June 30 immediately preceding
the beginning of a fiscal year.
CCC’s point of contact means, for
items physically sent to CCC, ‘‘Tobacco
Division (TD), Farm Service Agency,
United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), STOP 0514, Room 4080–S,
1400 Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0514’’ unless
otherwise specified by CCC through
actual notice and, for all
correspondence by email,
tob_comments@wdc.usda.gov.
Calendar year means the period
January 1 through December 31.
Class of tobacco means each of the
following types of tobacco and tobacco
products: cigarettes; cigars; snuff; rollyour-own tobacco; chewing tobacco;
and pipe tobacco.
Domestic manufacturer of tobacco
products means an entity that is
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required to obtain a permit from the
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau of the Department of the
Treasury with respect to the production
of tobacco products under title 27 of the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Fiscal year means the period October
1 through September 30.
Gross domestic volume means the
volume of tobacco products removed, as
defined by section 5702 of the Revenue
Code, and not exempt from tax under
chapter 52 of such code at the time of
their removal under that chapter or the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States.
Importer of tobacco products means
an entity that is required to obtain a
permit from the Alcohol and Tobacco
Tax and Trade Bureau of the
Department of the Treasury with respect
to the importation of tobacco products
under title 27 of the Code of Federal
Regulations.
Market share means the share of each
domestic manufacturer and importer of
a class of tobacco product, to the fourth
decimal place, of the total volume of
domestic sales of the class of tobacco
product in a base period.
National assessment means the total
amount of funding that CCC has
determined to be necessary to collect in
a year from domestic manufacturer and
importer of tobacco products in order to
reimburse CCC for expenditures that it
will incur in the year for expenses
incurred under sections 622 and 623 of
the Act in making payments under
subpart B of this part; losses sustained
by CCC in the disposition of tobacco
acquired under price support loan
agreements as provided in section
641(c) of the Act; and costs incurred by
CCC in the utilization of financial
institutions in administering sections
622 and 623 of the Act.
Revenue Code means the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.
Tobacco Trust Fund means an
account established for deposit of
assessments collected under this
subpart, plus interest that accrues on
such assessments, to be used to
implement this subpart.
§ 1463.4
National assessment.
Annually, CCC will make a
determination of a national assessment
in as far in advance of when the first
assessment is due as CCC determines to
be practicable. Based upon the amount
of assessments received and
expenditures incurred in a calendar year
quarter, CCC may adjust the national
assessment for one or more classes of
tobacco established for a particular year
with respect to succeeding calendar year
quarters.
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§ 1463.5 Division of national assessment
among classes of tobacco.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, the national
assessment will be divided by CCC
among each class of tobacco based upon
CCC’s determination of each class’s
share of the excise taxes paid. The value
of the excise taxes paid for each class of
tobacco will be based upon the reports
filed by domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products with the
Department of the Treasury and the
Department of Homeland Security:
(b) For fiscal year 2005, the national
assessment will be divided as follows:
(1) Cigarettes, 96.331 percent;
(2) Cigars, 2.783 percent;
(3) Snuff, 0.539 percent;
(4) Roll-your-own tobacco products,
0.171 percent;
(5) Chewing tobacco, 0.111 percent;
and
(6) Pipe tobacco, 0.066 percent.
(c) For fiscal years 2006 through 2014,
the division of the national assessment
for each class of tobacco will be
adjusted annually.
§ 1463.6 Determination of persons liable
for payment of assessments.
(a) All domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products are
required to pay to CCC their
proportionate share of a calendar year’s
national assessment. Such entities are
those that import or manufacture
tobacco products in a calendar year and
are required to report to the United
States Department of the Treasury or to
the Department of Homeland Security
the removal of tobacco products into
domestic commerce under the Revenue
Code or are required to pay taxes under
chapter 52 of such code.
(b)(1) Such entities must provide to
CCC’s point of contact:
(i) Entity name; mailing address of the
entity’s principal place of business; an
office or individual that CCC may
contact for further information; an email address and postal address at
which they wish to receive notifications
required by the Act to be made to them
by CCC; and
(ii) On a monthly basis for each class
of tobacco, the total amount of tobacco
products, summarized by employer
identification number or such other
method as may be prescribed by CCC,
that are required to be reported to the
United States Department of the
Treasury or to the Department of
Homeland Security in each month
beginning October 1, 2004, and ending
September 30, 2014.
(2) The information required to be
submitted to CCC under paragraph (b)(1)
of this section must be submitted by:
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(i) With respect to fiscal year 2005
activities occurring prior to February 10,
2005, by February 25, 2005; and
(ii) With respect to all other activities,
on the same date the information was
required to be submitted to the United
States Department of the Treasury or to
the Department of Homeland Security.
§ 1463.7 Division of class assessment to
individual entities.
(a) In order to determine the
assessment owed by an entity, that
portion of the national assessment
assigned to each class of tobacco will be
further divided at the entity level. The
amount of the assessment for each class
of tobacco to be paid by each domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco
products will be determined by
multiplying:
(1) With respect to each class of
tobacco, the adjusted market share of
such manufacturer or importer; by
(2) The total amount of the assessment
for that class of tobacco for the calendar
year quarter.
(b) For purposes of determining the
volume of domestic sales of each class
of tobacco and for each entity, such
sales shall be based upon the reports
filed by domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products with the
Department of the Treasury and the
Department of Homeland Security:
(1) For cigarettes and cigars, on the
number of cigarettes and cigars reported
on such reports;
(2) For all other classes of tobacco, on
the number of pounds of those products.
(c) In determining the adjusted market
share of each manufacturer or importer
of a class of tobacco products, CCC will
determine to the fourth decimal place
an entity’s share of excise taxes paid of
that class of tobacco product during the
immediately prior calendar year quarter.
§ 1463.8
Notification of assessments.
(a) Once CCC has determined a
national assessment, CCC will collect
that amount on a quarterly basis from all
domestic manufacturers and importers
of tobacco products subject to § 1463.5.
(b) 30 calendar days prior to the end
of each calendar year quarter domestic
manufacturers and importers of tobacco
products will receive notification of:
(1) The national assessment;
(2) The percentage of the national
assessment that has been allocated to
each class of tobacco product and the
total amount of assessments due from
each such class;
(3) Any adjustments that have been
from the prior fiscal year with respect to
the allocation of the gross domestic
volume determined for use in a fiscal
year among the classes of tobacco
products;
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(4) An adjustment in the national
assessment if CCC determines that the
assessments imposed will result in
insufficient funds due to changes in the
amount of expenditures that CCC has
determined will be made in a calendar
year;
(5) The national volume of gross sales
of each class of tobacco product that
CCC has allocated to the domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco
products for the purpose of determining
such entity’s adjusted market share;
(6) The total volume of gross sales of
each class of tobacco product that CCC
has allocated to a class of tobacco
product, within the gross domestic
volume determined for use in a fiscal
year, that was used for the purpose of
determining a tobacco product
manufacturer’s or tobacco importer’s
adjusted market share;
(7) For that quarter, the adjusted
market share of the domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco
products;
(8) The manner in which assessments
are to be remitted to CCC; and
(9) Identification of those Department
of the Treasury and Department of
Homeland Security forms filed by the
domestic manufacturer or importer of
tobacco products that are used to
calculate assessments.
§ 1463.9
Payment of assessments.
(a) Assessments under this subpart are
imposed for the expenditures CCC has
determined it will incur in the 2005
through 2014 calendar years. Except as
provided in paragraph (c) of this
section, payment of such assessments
are due to CCC no later than the end of
each calendar year quarter. If prior to 30
calendar days before the end of a
calendar year quarter CCC has not
notified an entity of the amount that is
required to be remitted in that quarter,
no interest will be assessed by CCC
under paragraph (d) of this section until
30 calendar days have elapsed from the
date CCC provided notification of the
amount owed.
(b) Payments due under this subpart
must be submitted to CCC by electronic
fund transfer unless prior written
approval has been obtained from CCC.
(c) The final two calendar year
quarterly payments due to CCC under
this part shall be due to CCC on
September 30, 2014.
(d) Notwithstanding any other
provision of this chapter, if CCC has not
received payment of assessments
determined to be owed at the end of a
calendar year quarter, CCC will assess
interest on such unpaid amount
beginning on the first day of the
calendar year quarter immediately
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7013
following the end of such prior quarter.
Such interest will be at the rate CCC
assesses on delinquent debts in
accordance with part 1403 of this title.
(e) With respect to funds placed in
escrow that are refunded to the
domestic manufacturer or importer of
tobacco products due to the resolution
of an appeal, interest will be paid on
such amount from the date of receipt by
CCC until the date of the refund. Such
interest rate will be at the rate charged
by the U.S. Treasury for CCC’s
borrowing that is in effect on the date
of receipt by CCC of such funds.
§ 1463.10 Civil penalties and criminal
penalties.
(a) Any person who knowingly fails to
provide information required to be filed
under this subpart, or provides false
information under this subpart, may be
subject to the penalties prescribed in 15
U.S.C. 714m, 18 U.S.C. 1003, and such
other civil and criminal statutes as the
United States determines to be
appropriate.
(b) In addition to an action that may
be taken under paragraph (a) of this
section, with respect to any person who
knowingly fails to provide information
required to be filed under this subpart,
or that provides false information under
this subpart, a person may be subject to
assessment of a civil penalty by CCC.
Such civil penalty will be imposed by
CCC taking into account the severity of
the action; whether the action is of a
repetitive nature; and the disruption the
action has caused with respect to other
parties subject to this subpart. Any such
civil penalty will not exceed two
percent of the value of the kind of
tobacco products manufactured or
imported by such entity in the fiscal
year in which the violation occurred.
§ 1463.11
Appeals and judicial review.
(a) An entity may appeal any adverse
determination made under this subpart,
including with respect to the amount of
the assessment, by submitting a written
statement that sets forth the basis of the
dispute by submitting such a request to
the Executive Vice President, CCC, at
1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Room
4080–S, Washington DC 20250–0514,
within 30 business days of the date of
receipt of the notification by CCC of its
determination.
(b) The Executive Vice President shall
assign a person to act as the hearing
officer on behalf of CCC. The duty of the
hearing officer will be to develop an
administrative record that will provide
the Executive Vice President, or a
designee, with sufficient information to
render a final determination on the
matter in dispute. The hearing to be
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conducted by the hearing officer will be
an informal hearing at which the
appellant may present oral and written
evidence in support of the appellant’s
position. A copy of the rules of conduct
that will be applicable to the proceeding
will be provided to the appellant upon
receipt of the appeal by CCC.
(c) With respect to any appeal filed
under this section regarding an
assessment imposed on a domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco
products, the rules of conduct will
provide that within 30 calendar days of
receiving the final submission of
material by the appellant, CCC will
render a final administrative decision.
In the event CCC has not rendered a
decision by such date, all administrative
remedies available to the appellant shall
be deemed to be exhausted.
(d) Any domestic manufacturer or
importer of tobacco products aggrieved
by a determination made by CCC under
this subpart may seek review of the
determination upon the exhaustion of
the administrative remedies provided by
this part in the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia, or for
the district in which such importer or
manufacturer has its principal place of
business.
Subpart B—[Reserved]
Signed in Washington, DC on February 3,
2005.
James R. Little,
Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 05–2552 Filed 2–9–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. 2002–NE–37–AD; Amendment
39–13962; AD 2005–03–06]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Rolls-Royce
Deutschland Ltd. & Co KG (formerly
Rolls-Royce plc), Model Tay 611–8,
620–15, 650–15, and 651–54 Turbofan
Engines
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FAA is superseding an
existing airworthiness directive (AD) for
Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd. & Co KG
(RRD) (formerly Rolls-Royce plc) Model
Tay 611–8, 620–15, 650–15, and 651–54
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16:15 Feb 09, 2005
Jkt 205001
turbofan engines, with low pressure (LP)
fuel tube, part number (P/N) JR33021A,
installed. That AD currently requires
initial and repetitive inspections of the
LP fuel tubes. This AD requires the
same inspections and adds a
requirement to replace the fuel tube
with a new design tube, as mandatory
terminating action to the repetitive
inspections. This AD results from the
manufacturer introducing a new design
fuel tube, which eliminates the unsafe
condition. We are issuing this AD to
prevent a dual-engine flameout due to
fuel exhaustion, which could lead to
forced landing and possible damage to
the airplane.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
March 17, 2005. The Director of the
Federal Register approved the
incorporation by reference of certain
publications listed in the regulations as
of March 17, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You can get the service
bulletins identified in this AD from
Rolls-Royce Deutschland Ltd. & Co KG,
Eschenweg 11, D–15827 DAHLEWITZ,
Germany; telephone 49 (0) 33–7086–
1768; fax 49 (0) 33–7086–3356.
You may examine the AD docket at
the FAA, New England Region, Office of
the Regional Counsel, 12 New England
Executive Park, Burlington, MA. You
may examine the service bulletins, at
the FAA, New England Region, Office of
the Regional Counsel, 12 New England
Executive Park, Burlington, MA; or at
the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call (202) 741–6030,
or go to: https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/
code_of_federal_regulations/
ibr_locations.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jason Yang, Aerospace Engineer, Engine
Certification Office, FAA, Engine and
Propeller Directorate, 12 New England
Executive Park, Burlington, MA 01803–
5299; telephone (781) 238–7747; fax
(781) 238–7199.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The FAA
proposed to amend 14 CFR part 39 with
a proposed airworthiness directive (AD).
The proposed AD applies to RRD Model
Tay 611–8, 620–15, 650–15, and 651–54
turbofan engines, with LP fuel tube,
P/N JR33021A, installed. We published
the proposed AD in the Federal Register
on June 9, 2004 (69 FR 32285). That
action proposed to require initial and
repetitive inspections of LP fuel tubes,
and replacement of the fuel tube with a
new design tube as mandatory
terminating action to the repetitive
inspections. That proposed action
results from the manufacturer
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introducing a new design fuel tube,
which eliminates the unsafe condition.
Special Flight Permits Paragraph
Removed
Paragraph (g) of the current AD, AD
2003–05–04, contains a paragraph
pertaining to special flight permits.
Even though this final rule does not
contain a similar paragraph, we have
made no changes with regard to the use
of special flight permits to operate the
airplane to a repair facility to do the
work required by this AD. In July 2002,
we published a new part 39 that
contains a general authority regarding
special flight permits and airworthiness
directives; see Docket No. FAA–2004–
8460, Amendment 39–9474 (69 FR
47998, July 22, 2002). Thus, when we
now supersede ADs we will not include
a specific paragraph on special flight
permits unless we want to limit the use
of that general authority granted in
section 39.23.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD Docket
(including any comments and service
information), by appointment, between
8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays. See
ADDRESSES for the location.
Comments
We provided the public the
opportunity to participate in the
development of this AD. We received no
comments on the proposal or on the
determination of the cost to the public.
Conclusion
We have carefully reviewed the
available data and determined that air
safety and the public interest require
adopting the AD as proposed.
Costs of Compliance
There are about 1,300 RRD Model Tay
611–8, 620–15, 650–15, and 651–54
turbofan engines of the affected design
in the worldwide fleet. We estimate that
1,206 engines installed on airplanes of
U.S. registry would be affected by this
AD. We also estimate that it will take
about two work hours per engine to
perform the tube inspection, and two
work hours per engine to perform the
tube replacement. The average labor rate
is $65 per work hour. Required parts
will cost about $1,300 per engine. Based
on these figures, we estimate the total
cost of the AD to U.S. operators to be
$1,720,000.
Authority for This Rulemaking
Title 49 of the United States Code
specifies the FAA’s authority to issue
rules on aviation safety. Subtitle I,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 27 (Thursday, February 10, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7007-7014]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-2552]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1463
RIN 0560-AH31
Tobacco Transition Assessments
AGENCY: Commodity Credit Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule provides regulations for the manner in which
assessments are to be made on various domestic manufacturers or
importers of tobacco products to fund the tobacco transition payment
program as required by Title VI of the America Jobs Creation Act of
2004 (the 2004 Act).
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 9, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Misty Jones, Tobacco Division (TD),
Farm Service Agency, United States Department of Agriculture (USDA),
STOP 0514, Room 4080-S, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC
20250-0514. Phone: (202) 720-7413; e-mail: Misty.Jones@usda.gov.
Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for
communication (Braille, large print, audio tape, etc.) should contact
the USDA Target Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice and Comment
Section 642(b) of the 2004 Act (Pub. L. 108-357) requires that the
regulations to implement Title VI of the 2004 Act are to be promulgated
without regard to the notice and comment provisions of 5 U.S.C. 553 or
the Statement of Policy of the Secretary of Agriculture effective July
24, 1971, (36 FR 13804) relating to notice and comment rulemaking and
public participation in rulemaking. These regulations are thus issued
as final.
Background
General Overview
Sections 611 through 613 of the 2004 Act repeal the marketing quota
and acreage allotment (marketing quota) and price support loan programs
for tobacco that are authorized by Title III of the Agricultural
Adjustment Act of 1938 (the 1938 Act), and the Agricultural Act of 1949
(the 1949 Act), effective at the end of the 2004 marketing year
established for the respective kinds of tobacco that are subject to
such quotas. The regulations used to administer the marketing quota
program are codified at 7 CFR part 723 and the price support loan
program regulations are codified at 7 CFR part 1464.
Sections 622 and 623 of the 2004 Act provide that eligible quota
holders and tobacco producers will receive payments under the Tobacco
Transition Payment Program (TTPP) in 10 equal installments in each of
the 2005 through 2014 fiscal years. The regulations used to administer
payments made under this program will be set forth in a separate rule.
Assessment and Trust Fund
Sections 625 through 627 of the 2004 Act provide for the
establishment of assessments on certain domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products in order to fund the 10-year TTPP. The
funds to be expended under this program are to be derived from a trust
fund established by the 2004 Act. The trust fund is also to be used to
pay for losses the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) incurs in
disposing of tobacco it had acquired under the price support loan
program and for costs that CCC may incur by using private financial
institutions in carrying out portions of the program. To fund the
trust, section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act requires that ``each tobacco
product manufacturer and tobacco product importer that sells tobacco
products in domestic commerce in the United States'' be subject to this
assessment. The manner in which the assessments are to be levied is
specified by the 2004 Act. Notably, assessments are levied on ``each
tobacco product manufacturer and tobacco product importer;''
accordingly, no assessment is levied on an entity that imports, or
sells domestically only un-manufactured tobacco.
Assessments are imposed during each of the fiscal years (FY) 2005
through 2014. The amount of such annual assessment is to be sufficient
to cover the payments made to tobacco quota holders and tobacco
producers and to cover other approved expenses made in that calendar
year. For 2005, the percentage of these assessments to be collected
from each such sector is as follows:
1. Cigarette manufacturers and importers--96.331 percent.
2. Cigar manufacturers and importers--2.783 percent.
3. Snuff manufacturers and importers--0.539 percent.
4. Roll-your-own tobacco manufacturers and importers--0.171
percent.
5. Chewing tobacco manufacturers and importers--0.111 percent.
6. Pipe tobacco manufacturers and importers--0.066 percent.
These percentages were established under section 625 of the 2004
Act by using calendar year 2003 data. The allocations by class for
fiscal year 2005 were calculated by multiplying net tobacco products
removed (both domestic and imported) by the maximum excise tax rate for
each class of tobacco (see table 1 below).
[[Page 7008]]
Table 1.--Calculation of Initial Assessments for Each Class of Tobacco Under Section 625(c)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domestic ( or lbs) 1 ( or ( or Maximum tax rate 2 (total quantity by class
lbs) 1 lbs) 1 times tax rate) (percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cigarettes: small ()........ 377,241,580,953 23,085,086,000 400,326,666,953 $19.50/thou............... $7,806,370,006 96.331
Cigarettes: large ()........ 0 0 0 $40.95/thou............... 0 0.000
Cigars: small ()............ 2,301,972,488 172,369,000 2,474,341,488 $1.828/thou............... 4,523,096 0.056
Cigars: large ()............ 4,018,523,214 514,566,000 4,533,089,214 $48.75/thou............... 220,988,099 2.727
Snuff (lbs).......................... 74,700,715 8,369 74,709,084 $0.585/lb................. 43,704,814 0.539
Chewing tobacco (lbs)................ 45,906,067 174,399 46,080,466 $.195/lb.................. 8,985,691 0.111
Pipe tobacco (lbs)................... 4,155,205 698,086 4,853,291 $1.0969/lb................ 5,323,575 0.066
Roll your own (lbs).................. 11,353,137 1,254,008 12,607,145 $1.0969/lb................ 13,828,777 0.171
--------------------
Total............................ ................. ............... ................. .......................... 8,103,724,058 100.000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Source: Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau; National Revenue Center; December 2003 Monthly Statistical Release Re-issued August 19, 2004;
Report Symbol TTB S 5200-12-2003 www.ttb.gov/tobacco/stats/index.htm.
\2\ Source: Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau; Tax and Fee Rate www.ttb.gov/alcohol/info/atftaxes.htm.
Section 625(c)(2) of the 2004 Act requires the Secretary to
periodically adjust these percentages as changes occur in the
marketplace. Beginning in FY 2006, it is CCC's intention to adjust the
class percentages annually by using this same methodology to ascertain
changes in the volume of sales of each class.
Market Shares and Base Period
Section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act provides that in each of the FY's
2005 through 2014, CCC will impose assessments ``on each tobacco
product manufacturer and tobacco product importer that sells tobacco
products in domestic commerce in the United States during that fiscal
year.'' The 2004 Act provides that for each such entity, within each of
the six specified sectors, the Secretary must establish individual
assessments by determining a statutorily prescribed ``market share''
for each manufacturer and importer. This market share is defined by
section 625(a)(3) of the 2004 Act as the entity's share of the ``class
of tobacco product (expressed as a decimal to the fourth place) of the
total volume of domestic sales of the class of tobacco product during
the base period for a fiscal year* * *.'' The ``base period'' is
defined in section 625(a)(1) as the ``one-year period ending the June
30 before the beginning of a fiscal year.'' For FY 2005 that would be
July 1, 2003 through June 30, 2004 and an entity's FY 2005 market share
would be its share of the sale of a class of tobacco products from July
1, 2003 through June 30, 2004.
Section 625(f) provides that the determination of the amount of a
quarterly assessment owed by an entity will be based upon its prior
quarterly period sales. Thus, as payments made by an entity cover a
calendar year period, the first quarterly payment that is due on March
31, 2005 will be determined by using the October 1, 2004 through
December 31, 2004 market share of the entity within each of the six
product sectors. Accordingly, the use of the 2004 Act's ``market
share'' and ``base period,'' are effectively limited to being used to
determine the division of the national assessment among the six
previously listed sectors.
In order to establish these market shares, section 625(h)(1)
provides that each manufacturer and importer of tobacco products must
submit ``a certified copy of each of the returns or forms described by
paragraph (2) that are required to be filed with a Federal agency on
the same date that those returns or forms are filed, or required to be
filed, with the agency.'' Section 625(h)(2) provides that these returns
and forms ``are those that relate to, ``(A) the removal of tobacco
products into domestic commerce (as defined by section 5702 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986); and (B) the payment of the taxes
imposed under charter [sic] 52 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
including AFT [sic] Form 5000.24 and United States Customs Form 7501
under currently applicable regulations.'' With respect to the
information provided to the Department of the Treasury, data to develop
a market share would be obtained from sources such as TTB Form 5000.24,
which is required to be filed monthly. To the extent amended forms are
filed, CCC would incorporate those changes to the extent it deemed
practicable, taking into consideration when the amended form was
submitted. With respect to imports of tobacco products, CCC intends to
use information provided to the Department of the Treasury and the
Department of Homeland Security when the product enters the United
States.
At the current time, this information would be of the type
submitted monthly on TTB Form 5220.6, ATF Form 5210.5, TTB Form
5000.24, TTB Form 5620.8 and Customs and Border Protection Form 7501.
Because the name and identification of these and other forms may change
over time, CCC will provide actual notice to domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products of those forms from which information
could be obtained for purposes of compliance with this subpart. Due to
the need to obtain this information as soon as possible for use in FY
2005, CCC will provide actual notice to those entities who have
received a permit, as identified below, from the Department of the
Treasury since October 1, 2004 in order to obtain information regarding
their October 1 through December 31, 2004 marketings. To the extent
that future submissions to the Department of the Treasury and the
Department of Homeland Security may be combined with that needed for
the administration of the 2004 Act, CCC will attempt to obtain the
information from the two agencies without the need to obtain the same
information from tobacco manufacturers and tobacco product importers.
Quarterly Assessments
Section 625(b)(1) of the 2004 Act requires that CCC ``* * * impose
quarterly assessments during each of fiscal years 2005 through 2014, *
* * on each tobacco product manufacturer and tobacco product importer
that sells tobacco products in domestic commerce in the United States
during that fiscal year.''
Section 625(b)(2) further provides that: ``Beginning with the
calendar quarter ending on December 31 of each of fiscal years 2005
through 2014, the assessment payments over each four-calendar quarter
period shall be sufficient to cover--
[[Page 7009]]
(A) The contract payments made under sections 622 and 623 during
that period; and
(B) Other expenditures from the Tobacco Trust Fund made during the
base quarter periods corresponding to the four calendar quarters of
that period.''
Section 625(d)(1) of the 2004 Act further provides that ``The
notice for a quarterly period shall be provided not later than 30 days
before the date payment is due under paragraph (3).''
Section 625(d)(3) provides:
``(A) Collection Date.--Assessments shall be collected at the end
of each calendar year quarter, except that the Secretary shall ensure
that the final assessment due under this section is collected not later
than September 30, 2014.
(B) Base Period Quarter.--The assessment for a calendar year
quarter shall correspond to the base period quarter that ended at the
end of the preceding calendar year quarter.''
The 2004 Act contains several provisions that give contradictory
direction to CCC. For example, while section 625(b)(1) provides that
CCC ``* * * shall impose quarterly assessments during each of the
fiscal years 2005 through 2014,'' section 625(b)(2) directs that
assessments be collected ``* * * over each four calendar quarter
period,'' which CCC interprets as being each quarter beginning on
January 1, 2005 through December 31, 2014, except that the final
payment is accelerated to September 30, 2014 by section 625(d)(3)(B).
Similarly, section 625(d)(1) states that notification of payments owed
by an entity is to be made ``not later than 30 days before the date
payment is due under paragraph (3).'' Section 625(d)(3)(A) contains the
special rule for moving December 31, 2014 assessments to September 30,
2014, but subparagraph (B) provides ``The assessment for a calendar
year quarter shall correspond to the base period quarter that ended at
the end of the preceding calendar year quarter.'' Thus, this provision
of 625(d)(3)(B) to use a method of collection where a quarterly payment
is to ``correspond'' to the prior quarter runs counter to the use of
the ``market share'' and ``base period'' provisions of the 2004 Act.
Accordingly, with respect to section 625(d)(3)(B), CCC interprets this
provision to mean that an entity's required payment is to be adjusted
quarterly by determining an entity's share of a tobacco product sector
based upon the prior 3 month marketings of the entity. Such an
interpretation also means that an entity entering the tobacco market
for the first time at any time during a quarterly payment period will
be treated in the same manner as all other entities.
After reviewing this provision of the 2004 Act in the context of
all of Title VI of the 2004 Act, CCC has determined the intent of the
statutory scheme established by section 625 of the 2004 Act is that CCC
is to levy assessments in amounts needed to fund the Tobacco Trust Fund
(TTF) with sufficient amounts to cover expenses incurred in each of the
2005 through 2014 calendar years, with payment due to CCC at the end of
each calendar year quarter.
Thus, the first quarterly payment is due to CCC on March 31, 2005
and the 40th, and final payment otherwise due to CCC on December 31,
2014, is accelerated to September 30, 2014. While section 625(b)(2)
refers to the collection of assessments at the end of a calendar year
quarter for expenditures occurred in that quarter, section 625(c)(3)
allows CCC to adjust any assessment to be collected in a fiscal year to
cover expenditures ``* * * as the Secretary determines to be necessary
to carry out this subtitle during that fiscal year.''
Accordingly, in order to allow for a more uniform and predictable
assessment rate so that entities paying the assessment can make timely
business decisions, CCC will levy four quarterly assessments in each of
the 2005 through 2014 calendar years with payment due on March 31, June
30, September 30, and December 31 of each calendar year. But, as
required by the 2004 Act, the December 31, 2014 payment will be due on
September 30, 2014. Accordingly, this 40th quarter payment will be
determined by using the same adjusted market share data of an entity
that was used to determine the 39th quarter payment. To the extent
practicable, each of the four quarterly assessments for a calendar year
will be one-fourth of the estimated costs of the total expenditures for
that calendar year, but CCC may adjust each of the amounts due each
quarter to account for unanticipated savings or increased outlays.
Entities Subject to Payment of the Assessment
In order to collect these assessments, this rule provides that
those domestic manufacturers and importers of tobacco products who must
pay an assessment are those that, during the fiscal year, are required
to have a permit from the Department of the Treasury as provided in 27
CFR parts 40.61 and 40.62 for manufacturers and 27 CFR parts 275.190
and 275.191 for importers. Since all domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products must have such a permit, use of this
requirement will provide a readily identifiable process that imposes no
additional burden on these entities.
Generally, for FY 2005, the assessment for an individual company
would be determined by:
1. Taking the total calendar year 2005 expenditures CCC estimates
it will incur and dividing that amount among the various classes of
tobacco pursuant to the percentages specified above.
2. Taking that dollar amount for each class and dividing it among
each entity in that class based on the entity's adjusted market share
each quarter. With respect to the first calendar year quarterly payment
that is due March 31, 2005, CCC would calculate an individual entity's
required payment based upon the entity's adjusted market share as
determined as of the ``* * * quarter that ended at the end of the
preceding calendar year quarter,'' which would be the October 1 through
December 31, 2004 time frame. With respect to the payment due on June
30, 2005, the market share would be adjusted to reflect marketings
between January 1, 2005 and March 31, 2005.
Notification of Information
Section 625(d) of the 2004 Act provides that each domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco products will be given actual
notice, not later than 30 calendar days prior to the date payment of
each quarterly assessment is due to CCC, of certain determinations made
under the 2004 Act. These determinations relate to:
1. The total combined assessment for all domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products, which is referred to as the ``national
assessment'' in the rule;
2. The total assessment for each class of tobacco product;
3. Any adjustments that have been made to the percentage allocation
of the gross volume of tobacco products among classes of tobacco
products;
4. Any adjustment to the national assessment due to changes of CCC
expenditures during the fiscal year;
5. The volume of gross sales for each class of tobacco made by the
domestic manufacturer or importer of tobacco products that was used in
determining the market share of such entity;
6. The total volume of gross sales of the applicable class of
tobacco products that was used in determining the market share of
domestic manufacturer and importers of tobacco products;
7. The domestic manufacturers' and importers' of tobacco products
market share of the applicable class of tobacco product; and
[[Page 7010]]
8. The market share of each domestic manufacturer and importers of
tobacco products.
In reviewing the notification of information provision with
officials of the Department of the Treasury, it has been determined
that the disclosure of market share information on an entity to another
party, item 8, would be in violation of 26 U.S.C. 6103. That provision
of the Internal Revenue Code precludes the disclosure by the United
States Government of information obtained from a tax return or other
form to a third party. Accordingly, the notifications provided by this
rule will not include disclosure of an entity's market share to any
third party.
In addition to the first seven items noted above, the notification
that CCC will provide to domestic manufacturers and importers of
tobacco products will also include:
1. The manner in which assessments are to be remitted to CCC; and
2. Identification of those Department of the Treasury and
Department of Homeland Security forms filed by the domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco products that must also be filed
with CCC.
Appeals
Notice of appeal rights will be provided when applicable. Section
625(i) of the 2004 Act sets forth specific times by which CCC must
resolve certain administrative appeals that arise with respect to the
levy of assessments. Accordingly, the administrative review procedure
set forth in this rule provides that for those appeals in which the
appellant disputes the amount of the assessments CCC will, within 30
business days of receipt of the notice of the appeal, determine if a
revision should be made. If a decision has not been made within 30
business days, for purposes of seeking judicial review, the appellant
will have been deemed to have exhausted all administrative remedies.
The administrative procedure established by this rule provides for the
opportunity for a hearing, if requested by the appellant, and also
provides for the appeal of other determinations arising under the act
that are not subject to the 30-day appeal process.
Analysis of Benefits and Costs
This rule was determined to be economically significant by the
Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order 12866. Thus, an
analysis of the benefits and costs of this rule has been performed by
the Agency. This analysis is available from Misty Jones at (202) 720-
7413 or at https://www.fsa.usda.gov/tobacco/. A summary of the estimated
impacts of this rule are as follows:
Tobacco Market Prices
The price tobacco manufacturers pay for domestic tobacco is higher
than that for imported tobacco. This is largely due to the price
support program for domestic tobacco which established a higher minimum
price for U.S. product. The elimination of the tobacco price support is
expected to move domestic tobacco market prices toward the lower market
price of imported tobacco. Academic research suggests that tobacco
market prices may decline 25 percent or more from their levels under
the previous program. However, over the longer term, tobacco producers
are expected to benefit from reduced production costs from elimination
of quota rent, increased production as domestic leaf will compete more
effectively with imports, more competitiveness in the export market,
and economy of scale as farms consolidate into larger and more
efficient units. Also, elimination of tobacco marketing quotas will
result in a loss of income to quota owners because owning a tobacco
quota allows a person to market tobacco in the higher-price domestic
market and, therefore, it has an intrinsic value.
CCC Stocks
Lower domestic market tobacco prices may cause a reduction in the
value of CCC tobacco stocks which are collateral for CCC nonrecourse
marketing loans. If tobacco prices fall below the loan value of tobacco
pledged as collateral, CCC could lose a significant amount of money.
Compensating tobacco producers, quota holders, and CCC is viewed as an
equitable remedy for the loss of future tobacco income and the
potentially diminished value of loan collateral. The assessments
collected from tobacco importers and manufacturers will fund the
payments for quota holders and tobacco producers and will also
compensate CCC for any losses associated with tobacco loan stocks.
Payments to Holders and Producers
CCC will enter into a contract with each tobacco quota holder or
producer to compensate them for terminating quotas and price support.
Assessments on manufacturers and importers of tobacco products will
finance the payments. As provided in this rule the total payments due
an eligible tobacco quota holder is $7 per pound multiplied by the
pounds of basic quota at the 2002 quota level. Total payments due a
tobacco producer is, in the case of flue-cured and burley tobacco, $3
per pound of effective quota for the 2002 marketing year and, for other
kinds of tobacco, $3 per pound of the allotment for 2002, times the
average annual yield per acre produced in the 2001, 2002, and 2003 crop
years. Total transition payments are estimated at $9.6 billion based on
known payment rates per pound and 2002 acreage/poundage quotas.
Reimbursable expenses incurred by CCC and financial institutions
related to assessments and payments are expected to be about $540
million.
Costs to Manufacturers and Importers
On August 18, 2004, there were 158 product manufacturers and 666
product importers providing data on tobacco product sales. Tobacco
manufacturer and importer assessments are based on their shares of
sales volume for 6 major tobacco product classes: cigarettes, cigars,
pipe tobacco, snuff, chewing tobacco, and roll-your-own tobacco.
Product classes are measured in number of units of product or pounds of
product, and each category is assigned a percentage of the market for
that product class based on its pro rata share of the total sales of
that product. Total assessments on cigarette manufacturers and
importers during fiscal year 2005 are estimated at about $975 million
based on 2003 taxable removal of cigarettes of about 400 billion, or
about 20 billion packs of 20 each. Thus, the assessment per pack of
cigarettes will be around 4.8 cents. In order to cover their share of
the product class's assessment, cigarette manufacturers and importers
would likely raise the price of cigarettes by a similar amount.
Cigars' proportion of the fiscal year 2005 assessment is 2.783
percent, about $28.2 million. This implies a price increase of about
0.4 cents per cigar based on 2003 removals of 7.0 billion units. Other
products' share of the assessment in million dollars, and the implied
increase in product price in cents per pound, in parenthesis, are:
snuff--$5.5 (7.3), chewing tobacco--$1.1 (2.4), pipe tobacco--$.7
(13.8), and roll-your-own--$1.7 (13.8).
Manufacturers and importers are expected to pass most of these
costs to consumers of tobacco products through small increases in sales
prices, since demand tends to be much more inelastic than supply.
Specific estimates of the supply elasticity are not available, however,
most studies assume supply to be perfectly elastic. The additional
burden of providing information on sales volume to CCC is deemed
negligible inasmuch as these data are already provided to other
government agencies.
[[Page 7011]]
Impact on Consumers
Consumers are expected to pay marginally higher prices for tobacco
products than they would in the absence of the assessments, as
manufacturers pass on most of the cost of assessments through higher
product sales prices. The recent national average retail price of
cigarettes is calculated to be $3.8066 per pack. A 4.8-cent-per-pack
increase in the price would equate to a 1.3-percent rise in the retail
price. Numerous studies have calculated the price elasticity of demand
for cigarettes to be quite inelastic, ranging from a low of -0.4 to a
high of -0.75. The range of estimates for youth smoking is wider,
ranging from 0 to -1.44. Based on these estimates, a 1-percent rise in
the price of cigarettes would be expected to reduce overall consumption
by 0.4 percent to 0.75 percent. However, among youth, the expected
impact may range from no decline to as much as a 1.44-percent decline.
Nonetheless, consumers, in aggregate, are not expected to significantly
reduce consumption of tobacco products due to the expected increases in
tobacco prices attributable to the assessments alone.
Administrative Burden
CCC will likely incur modest additional staffing requirements
associated with the ongoing administration of this assessment, however,
automated processes will limit staff requirements somewhat. CCC loan
operation net expenses will be paid by the assessments collected under
these regulations. However, since the tobacco program has been
administered at no-net-cost for years, these assessments are expected
to have no significant impact on CCC loan operation expenses.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to be economically significant
under Executive Order 12866 and has been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). A cost-benefit assessment was completed
and is summarized after the background section explaining the rule.
Federal Assistance Programs
The title and number of the Federal assistance program, as found in
the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, to which this final rule
applies are: 10.051--Commodity Loans and Loan Deficiency Programs.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act is not applicable to this rule
because neither the Secretary of Agriculture nor CCC is required by 5
U.S.C. 553 or any other law to publish a notice of proposed rulemaking
for the subject matter of this rule.
Environmental Review
Due to the brief time-frame FSA had to promulgate these
regulations, sufficient time was not available to complete an
environmental review prior to implementing this program. Therefore, an
environmental assessment is being completed to consider the potential
impacts of this proposed action on the human environment in accordance
with the provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq., the regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and FSA's regulations
for compliance with NEPA at 7 CFR part 799. A copy of the draft
environmental assessment will be available after completion for review
upon request.
Executive Order 12778
This final rule has been reviewed in accordance with Executive
Order 12778. This rule preempts State laws that are inconsistent with
its provisions, but the rule is not retroactive. Before any judicial
action may be brought concerning this rule, all administrative remedies
must be exhausted.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to Executive Order 12372, which
requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials.
See the notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, published at 48
FR 29115 (June 24, 1983).
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) does
not apply to this rule because neither the Secretary of Agriculture nor
CCC is required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or any other law to publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking for the subject matter of this rule. Also, the rule
imposes no mandates as defined in UMRA.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
Section 642(c) of the 2004 Act requires that the Secretary use the
authority in section 808 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-121 (SBREFA), which allows an agency
to forgo SBREFA's usual 60-day Congressional Review delay of the
effective date of a major regulation if the agency finds that there is
a good cause to do so. Accordingly, this rule is effective upon the
date of filing for public inspection by the Office of the Federal
Register.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Section 642(b) of the 2004 Act requires that these regulations be
promulgated and administered without regard to the Paperwork Reduction
Act. This means that the information to be collected from the public to
implement these provisions and the burden, in time and money, the
collection of the information would have on the public does not have to
be approved by the Office of Management and Budget or be subject to the
normal requirement for a 60-day public comment period.
Government Paperwork Elimination Act
CCC is committed to compliance with the Government Paperwork
Elimination Act and the Freedom to E-File Act, which require Government
agencies in general, and FSA in particular, to provide the public the
option of submitting information or transacting business electronically
to the maximum extent possible. Because of the date that the
regulations for this program are required to be published, the forms
and other information collection activities required to be utilized by
a person subject to this rule are not yet fully implemented in a way
that would allow the public to conduct business with CCC
electronically. Accordingly, at this time, all forms required to be
submitted under this rule may be submitted to CCC by mail or FAX.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1463
Agriculture, Acreage allotments, Marketing quotas, Price support
programs, Tobacco.
0
Accordingly, title 7 is amended by adding part 1463, as set forth
below:
PART 1463--2005-2014 TOBACCO TRANSITION PROGRAM
Subpart A--Tobacco Transition Assessments
Sec.
1463.1 General.
1463.2 Administration.
1463.3 Definitions.
1463.4 National assessment.
1463.5 Division of national assessment among classes of tobacco.
1463.6 Determination of persons liable for payment of assessments.
1463.7 Division of class assessment to individual entities.
1463.8 Notification of assessments.
1463.9 Payment of assessments.
1463.10 Civil penalties and criminal penalties.
1463.11 Appeals and judicial review.
[[Page 7012]]
Subpart B--[Reserved]
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 714b and 714c; and Title VI of Pub. L. 108-
357.
Subpart A--Tobacco Transition Assessments
Sec. 1463.1 General.
The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) will levy assessments from
January 1, 2005 through September 30, 2014 on certain domestic
manufacturers and importers of tobacco products as provided for in this
subpart in order to fund the issuance of payments made under subpart B
of this part and to fund other activities authorized by Title VI of the
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004. The total amount of assessments
that may be collected under this part shall not exceed $10.140 billion.
Sec. 1463.2 Administration.
The provisions of this subpart will be administered under the
general supervision of the Executive Vice President, CCC.
Sec. 1463.3 Definitions.
The definitions in this section shall apply for all purposes of
administering the provisions of this subpart:
Act means Title VI of the America Jobs Creation Act of 2004 (Public
Law 108-357).
Adjusted market share means the market share of a manufacturer of
tobacco products or an importer of tobacco products adjusted to reflect
such entity's share of a class of tobacco during the immediately
preceding calendar year quarter. With respect to the 39th and 40th
quarterly payments due on September 30, 2014, the adjusted market share
will be the entity's share of a class of tobacco during the April 1-
June 30, 2014 quarter.
Base period means the period July 1 through June 30 immediately
preceding the beginning of a fiscal year.
CCC's point of contact means, for items physically sent to CCC,
``Tobacco Division (TD), Farm Service Agency, United States Department
of Agriculture (USDA), STOP 0514, Room 4080-S, 1400 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250-0514'' unless otherwise specified by
CCC through actual notice and, for all correspondence by email, tob_
comments@wdc.usda.gov.
Calendar year means the period January 1 through December 31.
Class of tobacco means each of the following types of tobacco and
tobacco products: cigarettes; cigars; snuff; roll-your-own tobacco;
chewing tobacco; and pipe tobacco.
Domestic manufacturer of tobacco products means an entity that is
required to obtain a permit from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau of the Department of the Treasury with respect to the production
of tobacco products under title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Fiscal year means the period October 1 through September 30.
Gross domestic volume means the volume of tobacco products removed,
as defined by section 5702 of the Revenue Code, and not exempt from tax
under chapter 52 of such code at the time of their removal under that
chapter or the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States.
Importer of tobacco products means an entity that is required to
obtain a permit from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau of
the Department of the Treasury with respect to the importation of
tobacco products under title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Market share means the share of each domestic manufacturer and
importer of a class of tobacco product, to the fourth decimal place, of
the total volume of domestic sales of the class of tobacco product in a
base period.
National assessment means the total amount of funding that CCC has
determined to be necessary to collect in a year from domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco products in order to reimburse CCC
for expenditures that it will incur in the year for expenses incurred
under sections 622 and 623 of the Act in making payments under subpart
B of this part; losses sustained by CCC in the disposition of tobacco
acquired under price support loan agreements as provided in section
641(c) of the Act; and costs incurred by CCC in the utilization of
financial institutions in administering sections 622 and 623 of the
Act.
Revenue Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
Tobacco Trust Fund means an account established for deposit of
assessments collected under this subpart, plus interest that accrues on
such assessments, to be used to implement this subpart.
Sec. 1463.4 National assessment.
Annually, CCC will make a determination of a national assessment in
as far in advance of when the first assessment is due as CCC determines
to be practicable. Based upon the amount of assessments received and
expenditures incurred in a calendar year quarter, CCC may adjust the
national assessment for one or more classes of tobacco established for
a particular year with respect to succeeding calendar year quarters.
Sec. 1463.5 Division of national assessment among classes of tobacco.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the
national assessment will be divided by CCC among each class of tobacco
based upon CCC's determination of each class's share of the excise
taxes paid. The value of the excise taxes paid for each class of
tobacco will be based upon the reports filed by domestic manufacturers
and importers of tobacco products with the Department of the Treasury
and the Department of Homeland Security:
(b) For fiscal year 2005, the national assessment will be divided
as follows:
(1) Cigarettes, 96.331 percent;
(2) Cigars, 2.783 percent;
(3) Snuff, 0.539 percent;
(4) Roll-your-own tobacco products, 0.171 percent;
(5) Chewing tobacco, 0.111 percent; and
(6) Pipe tobacco, 0.066 percent.
(c) For fiscal years 2006 through 2014, the division of the
national assessment for each class of tobacco will be adjusted
annually.
Sec. 1463.6 Determination of persons liable for payment of
assessments.
(a) All domestic manufacturers and importers of tobacco products
are required to pay to CCC their proportionate share of a calendar
year's national assessment. Such entities are those that import or
manufacture tobacco products in a calendar year and are required to
report to the United States Department of the Treasury or to the
Department of Homeland Security the removal of tobacco products into
domestic commerce under the Revenue Code or are required to pay taxes
under chapter 52 of such code.
(b)(1) Such entities must provide to CCC's point of contact:
(i) Entity name; mailing address of the entity's principal place of
business; an office or individual that CCC may contact for further
information; an e-mail address and postal address at which they wish to
receive notifications required by the Act to be made to them by CCC;
and
(ii) On a monthly basis for each class of tobacco, the total amount
of tobacco products, summarized by employer identification number or
such other method as may be prescribed by CCC, that are required to be
reported to the United States Department of the Treasury or to the
Department of Homeland Security in each month beginning October 1,
2004, and ending September 30, 2014.
(2) The information required to be submitted to CCC under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section must be submitted by:
[[Page 7013]]
(i) With respect to fiscal year 2005 activities occurring prior to
February 10, 2005, by February 25, 2005; and
(ii) With respect to all other activities, on the same date the
information was required to be submitted to the United States
Department of the Treasury or to the Department of Homeland Security.
Sec. 1463.7 Division of class assessment to individual entities.
(a) In order to determine the assessment owed by an entity, that
portion of the national assessment assigned to each class of tobacco
will be further divided at the entity level. The amount of the
assessment for each class of tobacco to be paid by each domestic
manufacturer and importer of tobacco products will be determined by
multiplying:
(1) With respect to each class of tobacco, the adjusted market
share of such manufacturer or importer; by
(2) The total amount of the assessment for that class of tobacco
for the calendar year quarter.
(b) For purposes of determining the volume of domestic sales of
each class of tobacco and for each entity, such sales shall be based
upon the reports filed by domestic manufacturers and importers of
tobacco products with the Department of the Treasury and the Department
of Homeland Security:
(1) For cigarettes and cigars, on the number of cigarettes and
cigars reported on such reports;
(2) For all other classes of tobacco, on the number of pounds of
those products.
(c) In determining the adjusted market share of each manufacturer
or importer of a class of tobacco products, CCC will determine to the
fourth decimal place an entity's share of excise taxes paid of that
class of tobacco product during the immediately prior calendar year
quarter.
Sec. 1463.8 Notification of assessments.
(a) Once CCC has determined a national assessment, CCC will collect
that amount on a quarterly basis from all domestic manufacturers and
importers of tobacco products subject to Sec. 1463.5.
(b) 30 calendar days prior to the end of each calendar year quarter
domestic manufacturers and importers of tobacco products will receive
notification of:
(1) The national assessment;
(2) The percentage of the national assessment that has been
allocated to each class of tobacco product and the total amount of
assessments due from each such class;
(3) Any adjustments that have been from the prior fiscal year with
respect to the allocation of the gross domestic volume determined for
use in a fiscal year among the classes of tobacco products;
(4) An adjustment in the national assessment if CCC determines that
the assessments imposed will result in insufficient funds due to
changes in the amount of expenditures that CCC has determined will be
made in a calendar year;
(5) The national volume of gross sales of each class of tobacco
product that CCC has allocated to the domestic manufacturer or importer
of tobacco products for the purpose of determining such entity's
adjusted market share;
(6) The total volume of gross sales of each class of tobacco
product that CCC has allocated to a class of tobacco product, within
the gross domestic volume determined for use in a fiscal year, that was
used for the purpose of determining a tobacco product manufacturer's or
tobacco importer's adjusted market share;
(7) For that quarter, the adjusted market share of the domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco products;
(8) The manner in which assessments are to be remitted to CCC; and
(9) Identification of those Department of the Treasury and
Department of Homeland Security forms filed by the domestic
manufacturer or importer of tobacco products that are used to calculate
assessments.
Sec. 1463.9 Payment of assessments.
(a) Assessments under this subpart are imposed for the expenditures
CCC has determined it will incur in the 2005 through 2014 calendar
years. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, payment of
such assessments are due to CCC no later than the end of each calendar
year quarter. If prior to 30 calendar days before the end of a calendar
year quarter CCC has not notified an entity of the amount that is
required to be remitted in that quarter, no interest will be assessed
by CCC under paragraph (d) of this section until 30 calendar days have
elapsed from the date CCC provided notification of the amount owed.
(b) Payments due under this subpart must be submitted to CCC by
electronic fund transfer unless prior written approval has been
obtained from CCC.
(c) The final two calendar year quarterly payments due to CCC under
this part shall be due to CCC on September 30, 2014.
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, if CCC has
not received payment of assessments determined to be owed at the end of
a calendar year quarter, CCC will assess interest on such unpaid amount
beginning on the first day of the calendar year quarter immediately
following the end of such prior quarter. Such interest will be at the
rate CCC assesses on delinquent debts in accordance with part 1403 of
this title.
(e) With respect to funds placed in escrow that are refunded to the
domestic manufacturer or importer of tobacco products due to the
resolution of an appeal, interest will be paid on such amount from the
date of receipt by CCC until the date of the refund. Such interest rate
will be at the rate charged by the U.S. Treasury for CCC's borrowing
that is in effect on the date of receipt by CCC of such funds.
Sec. 1463.10 Civil penalties and criminal penalties.
(a) Any person who knowingly fails to provide information required
to be filed under this subpart, or provides false information under
this subpart, may be subject to the penalties prescribed in 15 U.S.C.
714m, 18 U.S.C. 1003, and such other civil and criminal statutes as the
United States determines to be appropriate.
(b) In addition to an action that may be taken under paragraph (a)
of this section, with respect to any person who knowingly fails to
provide information required to be filed under this subpart, or that
provides false information under this subpart, a person may be subject
to assessment of a civil penalty by CCC. Such civil penalty will be
imposed by CCC taking into account the severity of the action; whether
the action is of a repetitive nature; and the disruption the action has
caused with respect to other parties subject to this subpart. Any such
civil penalty will not exceed two percent of the value of the kind of
tobacco products manufactured or imported by such entity in the fiscal
year in which the violation occurred.
Sec. 1463.11 Appeals and judicial review.
(a) An entity may appeal any adverse determination made under this
subpart, including with respect to the amount of the assessment, by
submitting a written statement that sets forth the basis of the dispute
by submitting such a request to the Executive Vice President, CCC, at
1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 4080-S, Washington DC 20250-0514,
within 30 business days of the date of receipt of the notification by
CCC of its determination.
(b) The Executive Vice President shall assign a person to act as
the hearing officer on behalf of CCC. The duty of the hearing officer
will be to develop an administrative record that will provide the
Executive Vice President, or a designee, with sufficient information to
render a final determination on the matter in dispute. The hearing to
be
[[Page 7014]]
conducted by the hearing officer will be an informal hearing at which
the appellant may present oral and written evidence in support of the
appellant's position. A copy of the rules of conduct that will be
applicable to the proceeding will be provided to the appellant upon
receipt of the appeal by CCC.
(c) With respect to any appeal filed under this section regarding
an assessment imposed on a domestic manufacturer or importer of tobacco
products, the rules of conduct will provide that within 30 calendar
days of receiving the final submission of material by the appellant,
CCC will render a final administrative decision. In the event CCC has
not rendered a decision by such date, all administrative remedies
available to the appellant shall be deemed to be exhausted.
(d) Any domestic manufacturer or importer of tobacco products
aggrieved by a determination made by CCC under this subpart may seek
review of the determination upon the exhaustion of the administrative
remedies provided by this part in the United States District Court for
the District of Columbia, or for the district in which such importer or
manufacturer has its principal place of business.
Subpart B--[Reserved]
Signed in Washington, DC on February 3, 2005.
James R. Little,
Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit Corporation.
[FR Doc. 05-2552 Filed 2-9-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-05-P