Reporting Directive Regarding Incidents Involving Animals During Air Transport, 9217-9218 [05-3638]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 37 / Friday, February 25, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Aviation Administration, P.O.
Box 20636, Atlanta, Georgia 30320;
telephone (404) 305–5586.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
14 CFR Part 234
History
[Docket No. OST–2005–20331]
Docket No. 16534; Airspace Docket
No. 03–ASO–19, published in the
Federal Register on February 3, 2004
(69 FR 5009), established Class D and E4
airspace at Olive Branch, MS and
amended Class E5 airspace at Memphis,
TN. The construction of a federal
contract tower with a weather reporting
system at Olive Branch Airport made
this action necessary. This action was
originally scheduled to become effective
on April 15, 2004; however, an
unforeseen delay in beginning
construction on the tower required the
effective date of this action to be
delayed. Construction is now nearing
completion.
The FAA has determined that this
regulation only involves an established
body of technical regulations for which
frequent and routine amendments are
necessary to keep them operationally
current. It, therefore, (1) is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866; (2) is not a
‘‘significant rule’’ under DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44
FR 11034; February 26, 1979); and (3) so
minimal. Since this is a routine matter
that will only affect air traffic
procedures and air navigation, it is
certified that this rule, when
promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities under the
criteria of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Reporting Directive Regarding
Incidents Involving Animals During Air
Transport
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
Confirmation of Effective Date
The effective date of Docket No.
16534; Airspace Docket No. 03–ASO–19
is hereby confirmed to be May 12, 2005.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. app. 1348(a), 1354(a),
1510; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR, 1959–
1963 Comp., p.389; 49 U.S.C. 106(g); 14 CFR
11.69.
*
*
*
*
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Issued in College Park, Georgia, on
February 1, 2005.
Mark D. Ward,
Acting Area Director, Eastern EnRoute &
Oceanic Operations, ATO–E.
[FR Doc. 05–3610 Filed 2–24–05; 8:45 am]
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VerDate jul<14>2003
16:17 Feb 24, 2005
Jkt 205001
Office of the Secretary
Office of the Secretary,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Order.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Department is publishing
the following reporting directive
regarding the reporting requirements
that are contained in the OST final rule
on ‘‘Reports by Carriers on Incidents
Involving Animals During Air
Transport.’’
This order shall become effective
after an OMB control number for the
information collection requirements
contained in the rule on ‘‘Reports by
Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals
During Air Transport’’ is assigned and
announced in a separate document in
the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Blane A. Workie, Supervisory Trial
Attorney, Office of the Assistant General
Counsel for Aviation Enforcement and
Proceedings, Office of the General
Counsel, 400 7th Street, SW., Room
10424, Washington DC 20590, 202–366–
9342 (voice), 202–366–7153 (fax), or
blane.workie@ost.dot.gov (e-mail).
DATES:
U.S. Department of Transportation,
Office of the Secretary, Office of the
General Counsel
[OST Docket 2005–20331]
Issued by the Department of
Transportation, on the 15th day of
February 2005.
In the Matter of a Reporting Directive
on Incidents Involving Animals During
Air Transport Issued Pursuant to 14
CFR 234.13; Order
The purpose of this order is to adopt
a reporting directive to provide
guidance to all U.S. air carriers that
provide scheduled passenger air
transportation regarding the new
reporting requirements that are
contained in the final rule on ‘‘Reports
by Carriers on Incidents Involving
Animals During Air Transport’’ and to
answer questions that have been raised
about the requirements in the rule.
Background
On February 14, 2005, the Department
of Transportation (Department)
published a final rule on ‘‘Reports by
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
9217
Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals
During Air Transport.’’ 70 FR 7392. The
rule, which applies to domestic and
international scheduled-service
transportation performed by U.S. air
carriers with any size aircraft, adds a
new § 234.13 to 14 CFR part 234.1
Section 234.13 requires each reporting
air carrier to submit a report on any
incidents involving the loss, injury, or
death of an animal 2 during air
transport 3 to the Department’s Aviation
Consumer Protection Division (ACPD)
within 15 days of the end of each
month. Each report must include the
following information:
(1) Carrier and flight number;
(2) Date and time of the incident;
(3) Description of the animal,
including name, if applicable;
(4) Identification of the owner(s) and/
or guardian of the animal;
(5) Narrative description of the
incident;
(6) Narrative description of the cause
of the incident;
(7) Narrative description of any
corrective action taken in response to
the incident; and
(8) Name, title, address, and
telephone number of the individual
filing the report on behalf of the air
carrier.
Section 234.13 also calls for the report
to be submitted in the form and manner
set forth in reporting directives issued
by the Deputy General Counsel of the
U.S. Department of Transportation. This
reporting directive sets forth the form
and manner in which carriers must
submit the required data on loss, injury,
or death of an animal during air
transport. It is being issued as an order
under the authority specified in 14 CFR
385.15(c).
Form and Manner of Reporting
All submissions must be made via email to animalreports@ost.dot.gov
except for situations where the carrier
can demonstrate that it would suffer
undue hardship if it were not permitted
to submit the data by regular postal mail
and ACPD has approved an exception.
When submitting the information by
postal mail under an exception, carriers
1 The rule was originally published by the
Department through its Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) on August 11, 2003 (68 FR
47798).
2 Animal is defined in the rule as any warm or
cold blooded animal which, at the time of
transportation, is being kept as a pet in a family
household in the United States.
3 Under the rule, the air transport of an animal
includes the entire period during which an animal
is in the custody of an air carrier, from check-in or
delivery of the animal prior to departure until the
animal is returned to the owner or guardian of the
animal at the final destination of the animal.
E:\FR\FM\25FER1.SGM
25FER1
9218
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 37 / Friday, February 25, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
must use the following address:
Aviation Consumer Protection Division/
C–75, Room 4107, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 400 7th Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20590.
The report is to be submitted in
Microsoft Word format. To protect
identifiable personal information,
reporting carriers must submit the
required information in two separate
documents. One document shall contain
all of the required data elements, and
the second shall be redacted and
contain all of these elements with the
exception of information regarding the
identification of the owner(s) and/or
guardian of the animal and the name,
title, address, and telephone number of
the individual filing the report on behalf
of the air carrier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Since the original publication of the
rule, several questions have been raised
concerning the reporting requirements,
answers to which are provided below:
1. Which carriers must file a report on
incidents involving the loss, injury, or
death of an animal during air transport,
and what transportation is subject to the
reporting requirement?
Based on the statute requiring the
reports, a reporting carrier is defined as
any U.S. air carrier that provides
scheduled passenger air transportation.
This definition includes commuter
carriers and air taxis that provide
scheduled service, whether or not they
are classified as a commuter carrier.
Carriers that provide both scheduled
and non-scheduled service are only to
report incidents that occur on (or that
are associated with) a scheduled
passenger flight.
2. Are carriers required to report
incidents involving the loss, injury or
death of an animal transported on an
all-cargo flight?
No. But the loss, injury, or death of a
pet that is shipped as cargo carried on
a passenger flight is subject to this
reporting requirement.
3. Does the requirement to submit a
report on incidents involving the loss,
injury, or death of an animal during air
transport apply to foreign carriers?
No, foreign air carriers are not covered
by the animal reporting requirement.
However, U.S. carriers that provide
scheduled passenger air transportation
must report all incidents involving loss,
injury or death of an animal during air
transport even if the flight is between
two foreign points.
4. If there is an incident involving the
loss, injury or death of an animal on a
code-share flight, which carrier is
required to report it?
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:17 Feb 24, 2005
Jkt 205001
The operating airline is required to
report such incidents, since it provides
services on that flight. An incident that
occurs on a flight that carries the code
of a foreign carrier but that is operated
by a U.S. carrier is subject to this
reporting requirement and is to be
reported by the U.S. carrier. A flight that
carries the code of a U.S. carrier but is
operated by a foreign carrier is not
subject to this rule. Therefore, incidents
that occur on such a flight need not be
reported.
5. What should be reported as the
loss, injury, or death of an animal
during air transport?
Any incident, even if it was
determined that the carrier was not at
fault, resulting in the loss, injury or
death of any warm or cold blooded
animal that is being kept as a pet in a
family household in the United States
and that occurred during the time that
the animal was in the custody of the air
carrier must be reported.
6. If a carrier has not taken corrective
action in response to an incident
involving the loss, injury, or death of an
animal, how should a carrier address
this fact in its report to ACPD?
The carrier must state in its report
that no corrective action was taken. A
carrier may if it wishes explain the
reason that no corrective action was
taken.
7. If a carrier does not know the cause
of the loss, injury or death of an animal
or believes that there were a number of
causes, how should the carrier respond
to the requirement to provide a
narrative description of the cause of the
incident?
If the reason for the loss, injury or
death of an animal is not known, the
carrier can state that the cause is not
known. If there are a number of factors
that contributed to the loss, injury or
death of an animal, the carrier must list
all of the factors.
8. When must carriers begin
submitting reports to ACPD?
Carriers are not required to begin
submitting reports to ACPD until the
Department obtains an Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number for the reporting. OMB
regulations implementing provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
specify that no person is required to
respond to an information collection
unless it displays a valid OMB control
number. Once the Department receives
OMB approval of this information
collection request (ICR), it will
announce this approval in a Federal
Register notice with a specific
compliance date.
9. Where and how will ACPD publish
the reports?
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Frm 00012
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
ACPD will process each report and
publish the information without any
identifiable personal information, in its
electronic version of the Air Travel
Consumer Report. This publication is
issued monthly, usually within the first
week of each month. There is usually a
40-day lag in processing data (e.g., a
report issued in early November will
contain data for September incidents).
The publication can be found on-line at
https://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov.
10. Must carriers file a report in
months when they do not experience a
reportable loss, injury, or death of an
animal?
No. Negative reports should not be
filed; carriers must file a report only for
a month in which they had a reportable
loss, injury, or death of an animal.
Accordingly,
1. We order all U.S. air carriers that
provide scheduled passenger air
transportation to submit a report on any
incidents involving the loss, injury, or
death of an animal during air transport
to the Aviation Consumer Protection
Division within 15 days of the end of
each month in the form and manner set
forth in this reporting directive;
2. This order shall be published in the
Federal Register; and
3. This order shall become effective
after an OMB control number for the
information collection requirements
contained in the rule on ‘‘Reports by
Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals
During Air Transport’’ is assigned and
announced in a separate document in
the Federal Register.
This action is taken under authority
assigned in 14 CFR 385.15(c) of the
Department’s regulations.
Rosalind A. Knapp,
Deputy General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 05–3638 Filed 2–24–05; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 9184]
RIN 1545–BC71
Real Estate Mortgage Investment
Conduits
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulation.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document contains final
regulations relating to the application of
the unified partnership audit
E:\FR\FM\25FER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 37 (Friday, February 25, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 9217-9218]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-3638]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
14 CFR Part 234
[Docket No. OST-2005-20331]
Reporting Directive Regarding Incidents Involving Animals During
Air Transport
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Order.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department is publishing the following reporting directive
regarding the reporting requirements that are contained in the OST
final rule on ``Reports by Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals
During Air Transport.''
DATES: This order shall become effective after an OMB control number
for the information collection requirements contained in the rule on
``Reports by Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals During Air
Transport'' is assigned and announced in a separate document in the
Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Blane A. Workie, Supervisory Trial
Attorney, Office of the Assistant General Counsel for Aviation
Enforcement and Proceedings, Office of the General Counsel, 400 7th
Street, SW., Room 10424, Washington DC 20590, 202-366-9342 (voice),
202-366-7153 (fax), or blane.workie@ost.dot.gov (e-mail).
U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the Secretary, Office of
the General Counsel
[OST Docket 2005-20331]
Issued by the Department of Transportation, on the 15th day of
February 2005.
In the Matter of a Reporting Directive on Incidents Involving Animals
During Air Transport Issued Pursuant to 14 CFR 234.13; Order
The purpose of this order is to adopt a reporting directive to
provide guidance to all U.S. air carriers that provide scheduled
passenger air transportation regarding the new reporting requirements
that are contained in the final rule on ``Reports by Carriers on
Incidents Involving Animals During Air Transport'' and to answer
questions that have been raised about the requirements in the rule.
Background
On February 14, 2005, the Department of Transportation (Department)
published a final rule on ``Reports by Carriers on Incidents Involving
Animals During Air Transport.'' 70 FR 7392. The rule, which applies to
domestic and international scheduled-service transportation performed
by U.S. air carriers with any size aircraft, adds a new Sec. 234.13 to
14 CFR part 234.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The rule was originally published by the Department through
its Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on August 11, 2003 (68 FR
47798).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 234.13 requires each reporting air carrier to submit a
report on any incidents involving the loss, injury, or death of an
animal \2\ during air transport \3\ to the Department's Aviation
Consumer Protection Division (ACPD) within 15 days of the end of each
month. Each report must include the following information:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Animal is defined in the rule as any warm or cold blooded
animal which, at the time of transportation, is being kept as a pet
in a family household in the United States.
\3\ Under the rule, the air transport of an animal includes the
entire period during which an animal is in the custody of an air
carrier, from check-in or delivery of the animal prior to departure
until the animal is returned to the owner or guardian of the animal
at the final destination of the animal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Carrier and flight number;
(2) Date and time of the incident;
(3) Description of the animal, including name, if applicable;
(4) Identification of the owner(s) and/or guardian of the animal;
(5) Narrative description of the incident;
(6) Narrative description of the cause of the incident;
(7) Narrative description of any corrective action taken in
response to the incident; and
(8) Name, title, address, and telephone number of the individual
filing the report on behalf of the air carrier.
Section 234.13 also calls for the report to be submitted in the
form and manner set forth in reporting directives issued by the Deputy
General Counsel of the U.S. Department of Transportation. This
reporting directive sets forth the form and manner in which carriers
must submit the required data on loss, injury, or death of an animal
during air transport. It is being issued as an order under the
authority specified in 14 CFR 385.15(c).
Form and Manner of Reporting
All submissions must be made via e-mail to
animalreports@ost.dot.gov except for situations where the carrier can
demonstrate that it would suffer undue hardship if it were not
permitted to submit the data by regular postal mail and ACPD has
approved an exception. When submitting the information by postal mail
under an exception, carriers
[[Page 9218]]
must use the following address: Aviation Consumer Protection Division/
C-75, Room 4107, U.S. Department of Transportation, 400 7th Street,
SW., Washington, DC 20590.
The report is to be submitted in Microsoft Word format. To protect
identifiable personal information, reporting carriers must submit the
required information in two separate documents. One document shall
contain all of the required data elements, and the second shall be
redacted and contain all of these elements with the exception of
information regarding the identification of the owner(s) and/or
guardian of the animal and the name, title, address, and telephone
number of the individual filing the report on behalf of the air
carrier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Since the original publication of the rule, several questions have
been raised concerning the reporting requirements, answers to which are
provided below:
1. Which carriers must file a report on incidents involving the
loss, injury, or death of an animal during air transport, and what
transportation is subject to the reporting requirement?
Based on the statute requiring the reports, a reporting carrier is
defined as any U.S. air carrier that provides scheduled passenger air
transportation. This definition includes commuter carriers and air
taxis that provide scheduled service, whether or not they are
classified as a commuter carrier. Carriers that provide both scheduled
and non-scheduled service are only to report incidents that occur on
(or that are associated with) a scheduled passenger flight.
2. Are carriers required to report incidents involving the loss,
injury or death of an animal transported on an all-cargo flight?
No. But the loss, injury, or death of a pet that is shipped as
cargo carried on a passenger flight is subject to this reporting
requirement.
3. Does the requirement to submit a report on incidents involving
the loss, injury, or death of an animal during air transport apply to
foreign carriers?
No, foreign air carriers are not covered by the animal reporting
requirement. However, U.S. carriers that provide scheduled passenger
air transportation must report all incidents involving loss, injury or
death of an animal during air transport even if the flight is between
two foreign points.
4. If there is an incident involving the loss, injury or death of
an animal on a code-share flight, which carrier is required to report
it?
The operating airline is required to report such incidents, since
it provides services on that flight. An incident that occurs on a
flight that carries the code of a foreign carrier but that is operated
by a U.S. carrier is subject to this reporting requirement and is to be
reported by the U.S. carrier. A flight that carries the code of a U.S.
carrier but is operated by a foreign carrier is not subject to this
rule. Therefore, incidents that occur on such a flight need not be
reported.
5. What should be reported as the loss, injury, or death of an
animal during air transport?
Any incident, even if it was determined that the carrier was not at
fault, resulting in the loss, injury or death of any warm or cold
blooded animal that is being kept as a pet in a family household in the
United States and that occurred during the time that the animal was in
the custody of the air carrier must be reported.
6. If a carrier has not taken corrective action in response to an
incident involving the loss, injury, or death of an animal, how should
a carrier address this fact in its report to ACPD?
The carrier must state in its report that no corrective action was
taken. A carrier may if it wishes explain the reason that no corrective
action was taken.
7. If a carrier does not know the cause of the loss, injury or
death of an animal or believes that there were a number of causes, how
should the carrier respond to the requirement to provide a narrative
description of the cause of the incident?
If the reason for the loss, injury or death of an animal is not
known, the carrier can state that the cause is not known. If there are
a number of factors that contributed to the loss, injury or death of an
animal, the carrier must list all of the factors.
8. When must carriers begin submitting reports to ACPD?
Carriers are not required to begin submitting reports to ACPD until
the Department obtains an Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control
number for the reporting. OMB regulations implementing provisions of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 specify that no person is required
to respond to an information collection unless it displays a valid OMB
control number. Once the Department receives OMB approval of this
information collection request (ICR), it will announce this approval in
a Federal Register notice with a specific compliance date.
9. Where and how will ACPD publish the reports?
ACPD will process each report and publish the information without
any identifiable personal information, in its electronic version of the
Air Travel Consumer Report. This publication is issued monthly, usually
within the first week of each month. There is usually a 40-day lag in
processing data (e.g., a report issued in early November will contain
data for September incidents). The publication can be found on-line at
https://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov.
10. Must carriers file a report in months when they do not
experience a reportable loss, injury, or death of an animal?
No. Negative reports should not be filed; carriers must file a
report only for a month in which they had a reportable loss, injury, or
death of an animal.
Accordingly,
1. We order all U.S. air carriers that provide scheduled passenger
air transportation to submit a report on any incidents involving the
loss, injury, or death of an animal during air transport to the
Aviation Consumer Protection Division within 15 days of the end of each
month in the form and manner set forth in this reporting directive;
2. This order shall be published in the Federal Register; and
3. This order shall become effective after an OMB control number
for the information collection requirements contained in the rule on
``Reports by Carriers on Incidents Involving Animals During Air
Transport'' is assigned and announced in a separate document in the
Federal Register.
This action is taken under authority assigned in 14 CFR
385.15(c) of the Department's regulations.
Rosalind A. Knapp,
Deputy General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 05-3638 Filed 2-24-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-62-P