2006 American Community Survey Content Test, 11609-11610 [05-4578]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 45 / Wednesday, March 9, 2005 / Notices
will occur in the 2004 SIPP Panel
during FY 2006. The total annual
burden for 2004 Panel SIPP interviews
will be 146,475 hours in FY 2006.
The topical modules for the 2004
Panel Wave 6 collect information about:
• Medical Expenses and Utilization of
Health Care (Adults and Children).
• Work Related Expenses and Child
Support Paid.
• Assets, Liabilities, and Eligibility.
Wave 6 interviews will be conducted
from October 2005 through January
2006.
A 10-minute reinterview of 3,100
people is conducted at each wave to
ensure accuracy of responses.
Reinterviews will require an additional
1,553 burden hours in FY 2006.
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized or
included in the request for the Office of
Management and Budget approval of
this information collection. They also
will become a matter of public record.
II. Method of Collection
Dated: March 4, 2005.
Madeleine Clayton,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–4577 Filed 3–8–05; 8:45 am]
The SIPP is designed as a continuing
series of national panels of interviewed
households that are introduced every
few years with each panel having
durations of 1 to 4 years. All household
members 15 years old or over are
interviewed using regular proxyrespondent rules. During the 2004
Panel, respondents are interviewed a
total of 12 times (12 waves) at 4-month
intervals making the SIPP a longitudinal
survey. Sample people (all household
members present at the time of the first
interview) who move within the country
and reasonably close to a SIPP primary
sampling unit will be followed and
interviewed at their new address.
Individuals 15 years old or over who
enter the household after Wave 1 will be
interviewed; however, if these
individuals move, they are not followed
unless they happen to move along with
a Wave 1 sample individual.
III. Data
OMB Number: 0607–0905.
Form Number: SIPP/CAPI Automated
Instrument.
Type of Review: Regular.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
97,650 people per wave.
Estimated Time Per Response: 30
minutes per person on average.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 148,028.
Estimated Total Annual Cost: The
only cost to respondents is their time.
Respondent’s Obligation: Voluntary.
Legal Authority: Title 13, United
States Code, Section 182.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
VerDate jul<14>2003
20:21 Mar 08, 2005
Jkt 205001
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
2006 American Community Survey
Content Test
ACTION:
Proposed collection; comment
request.
SUMMARY: The Department of
Commerce, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to
take this opportunity to comment on the
proposed an/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C. 3506
(c)(2)(A)).
Written comments must be
submitted on or before May 9, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Diana Hynek, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Department of Commerce, Room 6625,
14th and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20230 (or via the
Internet at dhynek@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument(s) and instructions should
be directed to Wendy D. Hicks, U.S.
Census Bureau, Room 2027, SFC 2,
Washington, DC 20233, (301) 763–2431
(or via the Internet at
wendy.davis.hicks@census.gov).
DATES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11609
I. Abstract
Given the rapid demographic changes
experienced in recent years and the
strong expectation that such changes
will continue and accelerate, the oncea-decade data collection approach of a
decennial census is no longer acceptable
for the mandated or required data
traditionally collected on the census
long-form. To meet the needs and
expectations of the country, the Census
Bureau developed the American
Community Survey (ACS). This survey
collects long-form data every month and
provides tabulations of these data on a
yearly basis. In the past, the long-form
data were collected only at the time of
each decennial census. The ACS allows
the Census Bureau to remove the long
form from the 2010 Census, thus
reducing operational risks, improving
accuracy, and providing more relevant
data.
Full implementation of the ACS in
2005 includes an annual sample of
approximately three million residential
addresses in the 50 states and District of
Columbia and another 36,000
residential addresses in Puerto Rico
each year. While this large sample of
addresses permits production of single
year estimates for areas with a
population of 65,000 or more, estimates
at lower levels of geography require
aggregates of three and five years worth
of data. The year 2008 is the first year
for significant changes to the ACS
content since the 2001. From 2008
through 2012, it is important that the
content of the ACS questions remain
consistent for the three- and five-year
aggregated data estimates that the ACS
data will produce. 2008 will mark the
beginning of a period during which both
three- and five-year aggregated data
estimates will be based on new or
revised ACS content, and will also
include data collection in the year that
coincides with the next decennial
census (2010). Given the significance of
the year 2008, the ACS has committed
to a research program during 2006 that
will result in final content
determination in time for the 2008 ACS.
This research is the 2006 ACS Content
Test.
The 2006 ACS Content Test includes
four stages: (1) Identification of content
eligible for testing, (2) content
determination, (3) content test
implementation, and (4)
recommendations for final content in
2008. The first stage involves the joint
efforts of multiple Federal agencies that
either sponsor or use data from the ACS,
as well as subject matter experts from
within the Census Bureau. Together,
they have demonstrated problems with
E:\FR\FM\09MRN1.SGM
09MRN1
11610
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 45 / Wednesday, March 9, 2005 / Notices
existing questions or content on the
ACS, such as out-of-date response
categories, or more consequential
problems such as questions resulting in
estimates that seem systematically lower
or higher than expected, based on
comparisons to other sources.
Additionally, recent or anticipated
legislative action may result in
identification of new content, not
currently included on the ACS, for
testing. In this phase, 11 of 25 existing
housing questions, 15 of 43 existing
socio-economic questions, and three
new socio-economic questions were
identified for inclusion in the second
stage of the content test.
The second stage of the content test,
content determination, includes
cognitive laboratory pretesting, expert
reviews and other pretesting methods
for the purpose of developing alternate
versions of question content identified
as eligible for testing. As with the
previous stage, representatives from
numerous federal agencies, as well as
other data users, have contributed to
these early pretesting efforts by
providing their subject matter expertise
in the development of alternatives.
Content test implementation, the third
stage, will include a national sample
field test with approximately 50,000
residential addresses. About half of the
sample will serve as the test panel for
the content, and the other half will serve
as the control panel, receiving the
current content of the 2005 ACS. The
ACS Content Test will reflect almost all
of the same data collection methodology
as used with the current ACS, starting
with mailing a prenotice letter and then
an initial mailing package with an ACS
questionnaire to residential addresses
selected for participation. As with the
current ACS, Census Bureau will mail a
second questionnaire to the sampled
address if no response is received after
three weeks. Census Bureau staff will
then follow-up households that do not
respond by using computer-assisted
telephone interviewing (CATI) and
computer-assisted personal interviewing
(CAPI).
Operations for the 2006 ACS Content
Test and the current ACS will differ in
that the content test will not provide
Telephone Questionnaire Assistance
(TQA), nor will it include a Telephone
Edit Follow-Up (TEFU) operation for
mail respondents. The TQA operation
provides direct assistance to
respondents while answering the mail
form, potentially influencing how they
interpret and respond to questions. The
TEFU operation follows-up with
households that return a mail form to
collect more complete data. The 2006
ACS Content Test excludes these two
VerDate jul<14>2003
18:06 Mar 08, 2005
Jkt 205001
operations so that we can analyze data
that most directly reflects the
household’s response to the questions.
Additionally, the 2006 ACS Content
Test will differ from the current ACS in
that the content test will include a CATI
Content Follow-up as a method to
measure simple response variance and
response bias. Both response variance
and response bias will serve as critical
indicators of the quality of the test
questions relative to the current
versions of the ACS questions. Both
English and Spanish languages will be
available in the automated instruments
used for this content test.
In the fourth and final stage, final
content recommendations, an analysis
of the data collected, including content
follow-up data, will guide the selection
of the versions of the questions that
yield the highest quality data. Census
Bureau analysts, subject matter experts,
and experts from the other participating
federal agencies will work together to
determine the final question content
based on the results of the test. The end
product will reflect final content
recommendation based on input from
all participants. These
recommendations are expected in the
early part of January 2007, so that the
Census Bureau can implement all the
necessary changes to the existing ACS
data collection materials (e.g.,
questionnaires, CATI/CAPI instruments,
questionnaire instruction booklet,
interviewer training materials, etc.) to
reflect the final recommended
questions/content in time for
implementation of the 2008 ACS.
II. Method of Collection
The Census Bureau will mail
prenotice letters and then paper
questionnaires to households selected
for the 2006 ACS Content Test. A
reminder card is delivered to all
sampled households that have not
responded to the survey two weeks after
the initial questionnaire was mailed. For
households that do not return a
questionnaire after three weeks, a
second questionnaire is mailed to the
non-responding household. After four
weeks, Census Bureau staff will attempt
to conduct interviews via CATI.
Census Bureau staff will conduct a
CAPI for remaining non-response
households after eight weeks. All
responding households that include a
telephone number on their returned
questionnaire will be eligible for
Content Follow-Up. The Content
Follow-up reinterviews will start
approximately two weeks after receipt
of the first mail returns and continue for
approximately two weeks after the
closeout of CAPI operations.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
III. Data
OMB Number: Not available.
Form Number(s): ACS–1(2006), ACS–
1(2006)T, and a subset of questions from
ACS–1(2006)T for Content Follow-up.
Type of Review: Regular.
Affected Public: Individuals and
households.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
During the period of January 2–March
31, 2006, we plan to contact a maximum
of 50,000 residential addresses and
approximately 30,000 responding
households will be contacted for
Content Follow-up.
Estimated Time Per Response: 38
minutes per residential address, 30
minutes per residential address for
Content Follow-up.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 46,667.
Estimated Total Annual Cost: Except
for their time, there is no cost to
respondents.
Respondent Obligation: Mandatory.
Authority: Title 13, United States
Code, Sections 141 and 193.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on (a) whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collections techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for the OMB
approval of this information collection;
they also will become a matter of public
record.
Dated: March 4, 2005.
Madeleine Clayton,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–4578 Filed 3–8–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[Docket 11–2005]
Foreign-Trade Zone 40—Cleveland,
OH, Area; Application for Expansion
An application has been submitted to
the Foreign-Trade Zones (FTZ) Board
(the Board), by the Cleveland-Cuyahoga
E:\FR\FM\09MRN1.SGM
09MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 45 (Wednesday, March 9, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11609-11610]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-4578]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
2006 American Community Survey Content Test
ACTION: Proposed collection; comment request.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Commerce, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent burden, invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment on the
proposed an/or continuing information collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13 (44 U.S.C. 3506
(c)(2)(A)).
DATES: Written comments must be submitted on or before May 9, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments to Diana Hynek, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer, Department of Commerce, Room 6625, 14th
and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230 (or via the Internet
at dhynek@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection instrument(s) and instructions
should be directed to Wendy D. Hicks, U.S. Census Bureau, Room 2027,
SFC 2, Washington, DC 20233, (301) 763-2431 (or via the Internet at
wendy.davis.hicks@census.gov).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Abstract
Given the rapid demographic changes experienced in recent years and
the strong expectation that such changes will continue and accelerate,
the once-a-decade data collection approach of a decennial census is no
longer acceptable for the mandated or required data traditionally
collected on the census long-form. To meet the needs and expectations
of the country, the Census Bureau developed the American Community
Survey (ACS). This survey collects long-form data every month and
provides tabulations of these data on a yearly basis. In the past, the
long-form data were collected only at the time of each decennial
census. The ACS allows the Census Bureau to remove the long form from
the 2010 Census, thus reducing operational risks, improving accuracy,
and providing more relevant data.
Full implementation of the ACS in 2005 includes an annual sample of
approximately three million residential addresses in the 50 states and
District of Columbia and another 36,000 residential addresses in Puerto
Rico each year. While this large sample of addresses permits production
of single year estimates for areas with a population of 65,000 or more,
estimates at lower levels of geography require aggregates of three and
five years worth of data. The year 2008 is the first year for
significant changes to the ACS content since the 2001. From 2008
through 2012, it is important that the content of the ACS questions
remain consistent for the three- and five-year aggregated data
estimates that the ACS data will produce. 2008 will mark the beginning
of a period during which both three- and five-year aggregated data
estimates will be based on new or revised ACS content, and will also
include data collection in the year that coincides with the next
decennial census (2010). Given the significance of the year 2008, the
ACS has committed to a research program during 2006 that will result in
final content determination in time for the 2008 ACS. This research is
the 2006 ACS Content Test.
The 2006 ACS Content Test includes four stages: (1) Identification
of content eligible for testing, (2) content determination, (3) content
test implementation, and (4) recommendations for final content in 2008.
The first stage involves the joint efforts of multiple Federal agencies
that either sponsor or use data from the ACS, as well as subject matter
experts from within the Census Bureau. Together, they have demonstrated
problems with
[[Page 11610]]
existing questions or content on the ACS, such as out-of-date response
categories, or more consequential problems such as questions resulting
in estimates that seem systematically lower or higher than expected,
based on comparisons to other sources. Additionally, recent or
anticipated legislative action may result in identification of new
content, not currently included on the ACS, for testing. In this phase,
11 of 25 existing housing questions, 15 of 43 existing socio-economic
questions, and three new socio-economic questions were identified for
inclusion in the second stage of the content test.
The second stage of the content test, content determination,
includes cognitive laboratory pretesting, expert reviews and other
pretesting methods for the purpose of developing alternate versions of
question content identified as eligible for testing. As with the
previous stage, representatives from numerous federal agencies, as well
as other data users, have contributed to these early pretesting efforts
by providing their subject matter expertise in the development of
alternatives.
Content test implementation, the third stage, will include a
national sample field test with approximately 50,000 residential
addresses. About half of the sample will serve as the test panel for
the content, and the other half will serve as the control panel,
receiving the current content of the 2005 ACS. The ACS Content Test
will reflect almost all of the same data collection methodology as used
with the current ACS, starting with mailing a prenotice letter and then
an initial mailing package with an ACS questionnaire to residential
addresses selected for participation. As with the current ACS, Census
Bureau will mail a second questionnaire to the sampled address if no
response is received after three weeks. Census Bureau staff will then
follow-up households that do not respond by using computer-assisted
telephone interviewing (CATI) and computer-assisted personal
interviewing (CAPI).
Operations for the 2006 ACS Content Test and the current ACS will
differ in that the content test will not provide Telephone
Questionnaire Assistance (TQA), nor will it include a Telephone Edit
Follow-Up (TEFU) operation for mail respondents. The TQA operation
provides direct assistance to respondents while answering the mail
form, potentially influencing how they interpret and respond to
questions. The TEFU operation follows-up with households that return a
mail form to collect more complete data. The 2006 ACS Content Test
excludes these two operations so that we can analyze data that most
directly reflects the household's response to the questions.
Additionally, the 2006 ACS Content Test will differ from the
current ACS in that the content test will include a CATI Content
Follow-up as a method to measure simple response variance and response
bias. Both response variance and response bias will serve as critical
indicators of the quality of the test questions relative to the current
versions of the ACS questions. Both English and Spanish languages will
be available in the automated instruments used for this content test.
In the fourth and final stage, final content recommendations, an
analysis of the data collected, including content follow-up data, will
guide the selection of the versions of the questions that yield the
highest quality data. Census Bureau analysts, subject matter experts,
and experts from the other participating federal agencies will work
together to determine the final question content based on the results
of the test. The end product will reflect final content recommendation
based on input from all participants. These recommendations are
expected in the early part of January 2007, so that the Census Bureau
can implement all the necessary changes to the existing ACS data
collection materials (e.g., questionnaires, CATI/CAPI instruments,
questionnaire instruction booklet, interviewer training materials,
etc.) to reflect the final recommended questions/content in time for
implementation of the 2008 ACS.
II. Method of Collection
The Census Bureau will mail prenotice letters and then paper
questionnaires to households selected for the 2006 ACS Content Test. A
reminder card is delivered to all sampled households that have not
responded to the survey two weeks after the initial questionnaire was
mailed. For households that do not return a questionnaire after three
weeks, a second questionnaire is mailed to the non-responding
household. After four weeks, Census Bureau staff will attempt to
conduct interviews via CATI.
Census Bureau staff will conduct a CAPI for remaining non-response
households after eight weeks. All responding households that include a
telephone number on their returned questionnaire will be eligible for
Content Follow-Up. The Content Follow-up reinterviews will start
approximately two weeks after receipt of the first mail returns and
continue for approximately two weeks after the closeout of CAPI
operations.
III. Data
OMB Number: Not available.
Form Number(s): ACS-1(2006), ACS-1(2006)T, and a subset of
questions from ACS-1(2006)T for Content Follow-up.
Type of Review: Regular.
Affected Public: Individuals and households.
Estimated Number of Respondents: During the period of January 2-
March 31, 2006, we plan to contact a maximum of 50,000 residential
addresses and approximately 30,000 responding households will be
contacted for Content Follow-up.
Estimated Time Per Response: 38 minutes per residential address, 30
minutes per residential address for Content Follow-up.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 46,667.
Estimated Total Annual Cost: Except for their time, there is no
cost to respondents.
Respondent Obligation: Mandatory.
Authority: Title 13, United States Code, Sections 141 and 193.
IV. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on (a) whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the information shall have practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden
(including hours and cost) of the proposed collection of information;
(c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information on respondents, including through the use of automated
collections techniques or other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and/or included in the request for the OMB approval of this information
collection; they also will become a matter of public record.
Dated: March 4, 2005.
Madeleine Clayton,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 05-4578 Filed 3-8-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-07-P