National Science and Technology Council's Committee on Environmental and Natural Resources (CENR) Interagency Working Group on Earth Observations (IWGEO), 16310-16311 [05-6224]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 30, 2005 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 05–6353 Filed 3–28–05; 10:52 am]
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Office of Personnel Management.
Dan G. Blair,
Acting Director.
[FR Doc. 05–6226 Filed 3–29–05; 8:45 am]
OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND
TRANSPORTATION
National Science and Technology
Council’s Committee on Environmental
and Natural Resources (CENR)
Interagency Working Group on Earth
Observations (IWGEO)
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request for a Revised
Information Collection; RI 25–37
AGENCY:
Notice of public meeting/
workshop and opportunity for public
discussion.
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub.
L. 104–13, May 22, 1995), this notice
announces that the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) has submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) a request for review of a revised
information collection. RI 25–37,
SUMMARY: This notice announces an
Integrated Earth Observation System
Public Engagement Workshop by the
National Science and Technology
Council’s Committee on Environment
and Natural Resources (CENR)
Interagency Working Group on Earth
Observations (IWGEO) to discuss the
nine societal benefit areas and the six
near term opportunities identified in the
ACTION:
Office of Personnel
Management.
ACTION: Notice.
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Stratetic Plan for the U.S. Integrated
Earth Observation System. This plan
was developed to address the effective
use of Earth observation systems to
enable a healthy public, economy and
planet.
The Interagency Working Group
on Earth Observations will hold a twoday workshop on Monday, May 9, 2005,
8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (e.d.t.); Tuesday,
May 10, 2005, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to
identify Earth observation system
components and solutions to contribute
to the implementation of the Integrated
Earth Observation System. All sessions
of the workshop will be held at the
Ronald Reagan Builing and
International Trade Center, Washington,
DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information regarding this notice, please
contact Carla Sullivan, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration.
Telephone: (202) 482–5921. E-mail:
carla.sullivan@noaa.gov.
DATES:
The
Strategic Plan for the U.S. Integrated
Earth Observation System was
developed by the Interagency Working
Group on Earth Observations of the
NSTC Committee on Environment and
Natural Resources.
Purpose of the Workshop: The
purpose of this workshop is to bring
ideas and information from the broader
community into the IWGEO planning
process as it further develops the U.S.
10-Year Plan for Developing an
Integrated Earth Observing System. The
nine strategic social/economic benefit
areas identified in the Strategic Plan
include:
1. Improve Weather forecasting;
2. Reducing Loss of Life and Property
From Disasters;
3. Protecting and Monitoring Ocean
Resources;
4. Understanding Climate, and
Assessing, Mitigating, and Adapting to
Climate Change Impacts;
5. Supporting Sustainable Agriculture
and Forestry, and Combating Land
Degradation;
6. Understanding the Effect on
Environmental Factors on Human
Health and Well-Being;
7. Developing the Capacity To Make
Ecological Forecasts;
8. Protecting and Monitoring Water
Resources; and
9. Monitoring and Managing Energy
Reserves.
The six near term opportunities
identified in the Strategic Plan are:
1. Data Management
2. Improved Observations for Disaster
Warnings
3. Global Land Observing System
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 30, 2005 / Notices
4. Sea Level Observing System
5. National Integrated Drought
Information System, and
6. Air Quality Assessment and
Forecast System.
Public Participation: Due to space
constraints, interested parties will need
to pre-register for this meeting, Deadline
for registration is April 29, 2005, or
when capacity of facility is met. See
IWEGEO Web page for registration
materials and additional information:
https://iwgeo.ssc.nasa.gov, or contact the
IWGEO Secretariat office: Carla
Sullivan, Interagency Working Group on
Earth Observations (IWGEO), National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), 1401
Constitution avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20230. Telephone: (202) 482–5921,
telefax: (202) 482–5181. E-mail:
carla.sullivan@noaa.gov. Subject:
IWGEO Integrated Earth Observation
System Public Engagement Workshop.
Authority
The National Science and Technology
Council (NSTC) was established under
Executive Order 12881. The CENR is
chartered under the NSTC. The purpose
of the CENR is to advise and assist the
NSTC, with emphasis on those federally
supported efforts that develop new
knowledge related to improving our
understanding of the environment and
natural resources.
M. David Hodge,
Acting Assistant Director for Budget and
Administration.
[FR Doc. 05–6224 Filed 3–29–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3170–WS–M
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Upon written request, copies available
from: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of Filings and
Information Services, Washington, DC
20549.
Extension: Rule 10f–3, SEC File No.
270–237, OMB Control No. 3235–0226.
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520), the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) is soliciting comments
on the collections of information
discussed below. The Commission plans
to submit these existing collections of
information to the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for
extension and approval.
Section 10(f) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the ‘‘Act’’)
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prohibits a registered investment
company (‘‘fund’’) from purchasing any
security during an underwriting or
selling syndicate if the fund has certain
relationships with a principal
underwriter for the security. Congress
enacted this provision in 1940 to protect
funds and their shareholders by
preventing underwriters from
‘‘dumping’’ unmarketable securities on
affiliated funds.
Rule 10f–3 permits a fund to engage
in a securities transaction that otherwise
would violate section 10(f) if, among
other things, (i) each transaction
effected under the rule is reported on
Form N–SAR; (ii) the fund’s directors
have approved procedures for purchases
made in reliance on the rule, regularly
review fund purchases to determine
whether they comply with these
procedures, and approve necessary
changes to the procedures; and (iii) a
written record of each transaction
effected under the rule is maintained for
six years, the first two of which in an
easily accessible place. The written
record must state (i) from whom the
securities were acquired, (ii) the identity
of the underwriting syndicate’s
members, (iii) the terms of the
transactions, and (iv) the information or
materials on which the fund’s board of
directors has determined that the
purchases were made in compliance
with procedures established by the
board.
The rule also conditionally allows
managed portions of fund portfolios to
purchase securities offered in otherwise
off-limits primary offerings. To qualify
for this exemption, rule 10f–3 requires
that the subadviser that is advising the
purchaser be contractually prohibited
from providing investment advice to
any other portion of the fund’s portfolio
and consulting with any other of the
fund’s advisers that is a principal
underwriter or affiliated person of a
principal underwriter concerning the
fund’s securities transactions.
These requirements provide a
mechanism for fund boards to oversee
compliance with the rule. The required
recordkeeping facilitates the
Commission staff’s review of rule 10f–
3 transactions during routine fund
inspections and, when necessary, in
connection with enforcement actions.
The staff estimates that approximately
200 funds engage in a total of
approximately 1,000 rule 10f–3
transactions each year.1 Rule 10f–3
requires that the purchasing fund create
a written record of each transaction that
includes, among other things, from
1 These estimates are based on staff extrapolations
from earlier data.
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16311
whom the securities were purchased
and the terms of the transaction. The
staff estimates 2 that it takes an average
fund approximately 30 minutes per
transaction and approximately 500
hours 3 in the aggregate to comply with
this portion of the rule.
The funds also must maintain and
preserve these transactional records in
accordance with the rule’s
recordkeeping requirement, and the staff
estimates that it takes a fund
approximately 20 minutes per
transaction and that annually, in the
aggregate, funds spend approximately
333 hours 4 to comply with this portion
of the rule.
In addition, fund boards must, no less
than quarterly, examine each of these
transactions to ensure that they comply
with the fund’s policies and procedures.
The information or materials upon
which the board relied to come to this
determination also must be maintained
and the staff estimates that it takes a
fund 1 hour per quarter and, in the
aggregate, approximately 800 hours 5
annually to comply with this rule
requirement.
The staff estimates that approximately
half of the boards of funds that engage
in rule 10f–3 transactions that deem it
necessary to revise the fund’s written
policies and procedures for rule 10f–3
and that complying with this
requirement takes each of these funds
on average, 25 hours of a compliance
attorney’s time and, in the aggregate,
approximately 2,500 hours 6 annually.
The Commission staff estimates that
3,028 portfolios of approximately 2,126
investment companies use the services
of one or more subadvisers. Based on
discussions with industry
representatives, the staff estimates that
it will require approximately 6 hours to
draft and execute revised subadvisory
contracts (5 staff attorney hours, 1
supervisory attorney hour), in order for
funds and subadvisers to be able to rely
on the exemption in rule 10f–3. The
staff assumes that all of these funds
amended their advisory contracts when
rule 10f–3 was amended in 2002 by
2 Unless stated otherwise, the information
collection burden estimates contained in this
Supporting Statement are based on conversations
between the staff and representatives of funds.
3 This estimate is based on the following
calculation: (30 minutes × 1,000 = 500 hours).
4 This estimate is based on the following
calculations: (20 minutes × 1,000 transactions =
20,000 minutes; 20,000 minutes / 60 = 333 hours).
5 This estimate is based on the following
calculation: (1 hour per quarter × 4 quarters × 200
funds = 800 hours).
6 This estimate is based on the following
calculation: (100 funds × 25 hours = 2,500 hours).
E:\FR\FM\30MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 60 (Wednesday, March 30, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16310-16311]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-6224]
=======================================================================
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OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TRANSPORTATION
National Science and Technology Council's Committee on
Environmental and Natural Resources (CENR) Interagency Working Group on
Earth Observations (IWGEO)
ACTION: Notice of public meeting/workshop and opportunity for public
discussion.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces an Integrated Earth Observation System
Public Engagement Workshop by the National Science and Technology
Council's Committee on Environment and Natural Resources (CENR)
Interagency Working Group on Earth Observations (IWGEO) to discuss the
nine societal benefit areas and the six near term opportunities
identified in the Stratetic Plan for the U.S. Integrated Earth
Observation System. This plan was developed to address the effective
use of Earth observation systems to enable a healthy public, economy
and planet.
DATES: The Interagency Working Group on Earth Observations will hold a
two-day workshop on Monday, May 9, 2005, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
(e.d.t.); Tuesday, May 10, 2005, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to identify
Earth observation system components and solutions to contribute to the
implementation of the Integrated Earth Observation System. All sessions
of the workshop will be held at the Ronald Reagan Builing and
International Trade Center, Washington, DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information regarding this notice,
please contact Carla Sullivan, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration. Telephone: (202) 482-5921. E-mail:
carla.sullivan@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Strategic Plan for the U.S. Integrated
Earth Observation System was developed by the Interagency Working Group
on Earth Observations of the NSTC Committee on Environment and Natural
Resources.
Purpose of the Workshop: The purpose of this workshop is to bring
ideas and information from the broader community into the IWGEO
planning process as it further develops the U.S. 10-Year Plan for
Developing an Integrated Earth Observing System. The nine strategic
social/economic benefit areas identified in the Strategic Plan include:
1. Improve Weather forecasting;
2. Reducing Loss of Life and Property From Disasters;
3. Protecting and Monitoring Ocean Resources;
4. Understanding Climate, and Assessing, Mitigating, and Adapting
to Climate Change Impacts;
5. Supporting Sustainable Agriculture and Forestry, and Combating
Land Degradation;
6. Understanding the Effect on Environmental Factors on Human
Health and Well-Being;
7. Developing the Capacity To Make Ecological Forecasts;
8. Protecting and Monitoring Water Resources; and
9. Monitoring and Managing Energy Reserves.
The six near term opportunities identified in the Strategic Plan
are:
1. Data Management
2. Improved Observations for Disaster Warnings
3. Global Land Observing System
[[Page 16311]]
4. Sea Level Observing System
5. National Integrated Drought Information System, and
6. Air Quality Assessment and Forecast System.
Public Participation: Due to space constraints, interested parties
will need to pre-register for this meeting, Deadline for registration
is April 29, 2005, or when capacity of facility is met. See IWEGEO Web
page for registration materials and additional information: https://
iwgeo.ssc.nasa.gov, or contact the IWGEO Secretariat office: Carla
Sullivan, Interagency Working Group on Earth Observations (IWGEO),
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 1401
Constitution avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230. Telephone: (202) 482-
5921, telefax: (202) 482-5181. E-mail: carla.sullivan@noaa.gov.
Subject: IWGEO Integrated Earth Observation System Public Engagement
Workshop.
Authority
The National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) was established
under Executive Order 12881. The CENR is chartered under the NSTC. The
purpose of the CENR is to advise and assist the NSTC, with emphasis on
those federally supported efforts that develop new knowledge related to
improving our understanding of the environment and natural resources.
M. David Hodge,
Acting Assistant Director for Budget and Administration.
[FR Doc. 05-6224 Filed 3-29-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3170-WS-M