Notice of Availability of Draft Document Concerning the Identification of EU Administrative Units, 20733-20734 [E5-1881]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 76 / Thursday, April 21, 2005 / Notices
million per ml, the plant license shall be
suspended. A temporary status may be
assigned to the plant by the appropriate
regulatory agency when an additional
sample of commingled milk is tested
and found satisfactory. The plant shall
be assigned a full reinstatement status
when three out of four consecutive
commingled bacterial estimates do not
exceed 1 million per ml. The samples
shall be taken at a rate of not more than
two per week on separate days within
a 3-week period.
Heat-Treated Cream Definition
The definition of heat-treated cream
will be added to include:
E 1.9(i) Heat-treated cream—Heattreated cream is cream in which the
product may be heated to less than 160
degrees Fahrenheit in a continuing
heating process and immediately cooled
to 45 degrees Fahrenheit or less for a
functional reason.
(Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1621–1627)
Dated: April 15, 2005.
Kenneth C. Clayton,
Acting Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 05–8029 Filed 4–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal And Plant Health Inspection
Service
[Docket No. 04–081–1]
Notice of Availability of Draft
Document Concerning the
Identification of EU Administrative
Units
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of availability and
request for comments.
AGENCY:
We are advising the public
that a draft document has been prepared
by the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service that identifies the
smallest administrative jurisdictions
within 11 Member States of the
European Union that we would consider
‘‘regions’’ in the event of future animal
disease outbreaks. The draft document
refers to these jurisdictions as
‘‘administrative units’’ and also
reevaluates the administrative units
already identified for Italy. We are
making this draft document available to
the public for review and comment.
DATES: We will consider all comments
that we receive on or before June 20,
2005.
SUMMARY:
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:55 Apr 20, 2005
Jkt 205001
You may submit comments
by either of the following methods:
EDOCKET: Go to https://www.epa.gov/
feddocket to submit or view public
comments, access the index listing of
the contents of the official public
docket, and to access those documents
in the public docket that are available
electronically. Once you have entered
EDOCKET, click on the ‘‘View Open
APHIS Dockets’’ link to locate this
document.
Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery:
Please send four copies of your
comment (an original and three copies)
to Docket No. 04–081–1, Regulatory
Analysis and Development, PPD,
APHIS, Station 3C71, 4700 River Road
Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737–1238.
Please state that your comment refers to
Docket No. 04–081–1.
Reading Room: You may read the
draft document and any comments we
receive on the draft document in the
reading room. The reading room is
located in room 1141 of the USDA
South Building, 14th Street and
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC. Normal reading room
hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except holidays. To be
sure someone is there to help you,
please call (202) 690–2817 before
coming.
You may request a copy of the draft
document by calling or writing to the
person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT. The draft
document is also available on the
Internet. Instructions for accessing the
draft document on the Internet are
provided below under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
Other Information: You may view
APHIS documents published in the
Federal Register and related
information on the Internet at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/ppd/rad/
webrepor.html.
ADDRESSES:
Dr.
Chip Wells, Senior Staff Veterinarian,
Regionalization Evaluation Services
Staff, National Center for Import and
Export, VS, APHIS, 4700 River Road
Unit 38, Riverdale, MD 20737–1231;
(301) 734–4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Background
The Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) of the
United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) regulates the importation of
animals and animal products into the
United States to guard against the
introduction of animal diseases not
currently present or prevalent in this
country. The regulations pertaining to
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
20733
the importation of animals and animal
products are set forth in the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), title 9,
chapter I, subchapter D (9 CFR parts 91
through 99).
On June 25, 1999, we published in the
Federal Register (64 FR 34155–34168,
Docket No. 98–090–1) a proposal to,
among other things, amend the
regulations regarding the importation of
swine and swine products from a
specifically defined region in the
European Union (EU) consisting of
Austria, Belgium, France, Greece,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal,
Spain, and parts of Germany and Italy.
Consistent with EU terminology, we
refer to individual EU countries as
‘‘Member States.’’ In proposing to
recognize smaller ‘‘regions’’ within the
countries of Germany and Italy as free
of classical swine fever (CSF, which we
referred to in the proposed rule as hog
cholera), we chose to use the German
‘‘kreis’’ and the Italian ‘‘Region’’
because we considered them to be the
smallest administrative jurisdictions
that have ‘‘effective oversight of normal
animal movements into, out of, and
within that jurisdiction, and that, in
association with national authorities, if
necessary, have the responsibility for
controlling animal disease locally.’’
On April 7, 2003, we published in the
Federal Register (68 FR 16922–16941,
Docket No. 98–090–5) a final rule that,
among other things, amended the
regulations to recognize a region in the
EU consisting of Austria, Belgium,
Greece, the Netherlands, Portugal, and
parts of Germany and Italy as free of
CSF. In the final rule, APHIS did not
recognize France, Spain, or Luxembourg
as free of CSF, as we had proposed to
do in our June 1999 proposed rule. This
was because CSF outbreaks had
occurred in domestic swine in each of
those Member States after the
publication of the proposed rule and we
had not identified the smallest
administrative jurisdictions within
those Member States that we could use
as ‘‘regions’’ in restricting the
importation of swine and swine
products from less than the whole
Member State.
Following the elimination of CSF in
domestic swine in France and Spain
(April 26, 2002, and April 30, 2002,
respectively), on November 24, 2003, we
published in the Federal Register (68
FR 65869–65871, Docket No. 98–090–6)
a supplemental risk analysis which
examined the risk of introducing CSF
from the importation of swine and
swine products from those two Member
States. The supplemental risk analysis
also identified the smallest
administrative jurisdictions in France
E:\FR\FM\21APN1.SGM
21APN1
20734
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 76 / Thursday, April 21, 2005 / Notices
and Spain that could be considered
‘‘regions’’ in each of those Member
States.
On April 20, 2004, we published in
the Federal Register (69 FR 21042–
21047, Docket No. 98–090–7) a final
rule that recognized France and Spain
as regions in which CSF does not exist
and affirmed the designation of the
Commune in France and the Comarca in
Spain as the smallest administrative
jurisdictions within those Member
States that we will use for
regionalization purposes.
We are giving notice that a draft
document entitled ‘‘APHIS
Considerations on the Identification of
Administrative Units for Certain
Member States of the European Union’’
is available for public review and are
requesting comments on the draft
document for 60 days. In the draft
document we identify the smallest
administrative jurisdictions in 11
Member States that we would use to
regionalize those Member States in the
event of future animal disease
outbreaks. As discussed in the draft
document, we believe that each of those
jurisdictions is the smallest that can be
demonstrated to have effective oversight
of normal animal movements into, out
of, and within that Member State, and
that, in association with national
authorities, if necessary, has effective
control over animal movements and
animal diseases locally. For the sake of
convenience, the draft document and
any future rulemakings will refer to
these jurisdictions as ‘‘administrative
units’’ (AUs).
The draft document designates AUs
for 11 Member States within the EU
region. These Member States are:
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland,
Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, and the
United Kingdom. Because APHIS
considers the entire territory of
Luxembourg to be the smallest possible
administrative jurisdiction with
effective control over animal movement
and control of animal disease locally,
the entire country of Luxembourg will
be considered one AU. The draft
document also reidentifies the AU for
Italy as the Aziende Sanitarie Locali
(Local Health Unit). In the event of an
animal disease outbreak, APHIS could
regionalize a Member State to the AU
level specified in our draft document.
Although addressed in the document in
the context of the specific disease, CSF,
the concept of regionalization to the AU
level is not disease specific.
VerDate jul<14>2003
14:55 Apr 20, 2005
Jkt 205001
proposed requests for public comment
and public hearings. Materials relating
to the meeting will be made available on
The draft document may be viewed
on the may be viewed on the EDOCKET the Commission’s Web site (https://
www.amc.gov) in advance of the
Web site (see ADDRESSES above for
meeting.
instructions for accessing EDOCKET).
The AMC has called this meeting
You may request paper copies of the
pursuant to its authorizing statute and
draft document by calling or writing to
the person listed under FOR FOR FURTHER the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
Antitrust Modernization Commission
INFORMATION CONTACT. Please refer to the
Act of 2002, Public Law No. 107–273,
title of the draft document when
section 11058(f), 116 Stat. 1758, 1857;
requesting copies. The draft document
Federal Advisory Committee Act, 5
is also available for review in our
U.S.C. App., section 10(a)(2); 41 CFR
reading room (information on the
§ 102–3.150 (2004).
location and hours of the reading room
Dated: April 18, 2005.
is listed under the heading ADDRESSES at
By direction of Deborah A. Garza, Chair of
the beginning of this notice).
Accessing the Draft Document on the
Internet
Done in Washington, DC, this 18th day of
April 2005.
W. Ron DeHaven,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. E5–1881 Filed 4–20–05; 8:45 am]
the Antitrust Modernization Commission.
Approved by Designated Federal Officer.
Andrew J. Heimert,
Executive Director & General Counsel,
Antitrust Modernization Commission.
[FR Doc. 05–8026 Filed 4–20–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
BILLING CODE 6820–YM–P
ANTITRUST MODERNIZATION
COMMISSION
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Public Meeting
Fish and Wildlife Service
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Antitrust Modernization
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Antitrust Modernization
Commission will hold a public meeting
on May 9, 2005. The purpose of the
meeting is for the Antitrust
Modernization Commission to approve
plans (including proposed requests for
public comment and public hearings)
for studying issues selected by the
Commission in its January 13 and
March 24, 2005, meetings.
DATES: May 9, 2005, 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Interested members of the public may
attend. Registration is not required.
ADDRESSES: Federal Trade Commission,
Conference Center Rooms A & B, 601
New Jersey Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew J. Heimert, Executive Director &
General Counsel, Antitrust
Modernization Commission: telephone:
(202) 233–0701; e-mail: info@amc.gov.
Mr. Heimert is also the Designated
Federal Officer (DFO) for the Antitrust
Modernization Commission.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
purpose of this meeting is for the
Antitrust Modernization Commission to
approve plans prepared by its study
groups for studying issues selected by
the Commission in its January 13 and
March 24, 2005, meetings, including
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[I.D. 020705D]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Initiation of a 5–Year
Review of Listed Sea Turtles
Fish and Wildlife Service
(FWS), Interior, and National Marine
Fisheries Service (NMFS), National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of 5–year status review of
sea turtles.
AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: We, the FWS and NMFS
(collectively the Services), announce a
5–year review of the green turtle
(Chelonia mydas), hawksbill turtle
(Eretmochelys imbricata), Kemp’s ridley
turtle (Lepidochelys kempii),
leatherback turtle (Dermochelys
coriacea), loggerhead turtle (Caretta
caretta), and olive ridley turtle
(Lepidochelys olivacea) under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (ESA). A 5–year review is a
periodic process conducted to ensure
that the listing classification of a species
is accurate. It is based on the best
scientific and commercial data available
at the time of the review. New data are
available since the last reviews were
completed in 1985 for the green turtle
and in 1995 for the hawksbill, Kemp’s
E:\FR\FM\21APN1.SGM
21APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 76 (Thursday, April 21, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 20733-20734]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-1881]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal And Plant Health Inspection Service
[Docket No. 04-081-1]
Notice of Availability of Draft Document Concerning the
Identification of EU Administrative Units
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of availability and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are advising the public that a draft document has been
prepared by the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service that
identifies the smallest administrative jurisdictions within 11 Member
States of the European Union that we would consider ``regions'' in the
event of future animal disease outbreaks. The draft document refers to
these jurisdictions as ``administrative units'' and also reevaluates
the administrative units already identified for Italy. We are making
this draft document available to the public for review and comment.
DATES: We will consider all comments that we receive on or before June
20, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by either of the following methods:
EDOCKET: Go to https://www.epa.gov/feddocket to submit or view
public comments, access the index listing of the contents of the
official public docket, and to access those documents in the public
docket that are available electronically. Once you have entered
EDOCKET, click on the ``View Open APHIS Dockets'' link to locate this
document.
Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery: Please send four copies of your
comment (an original and three copies) to Docket No. 04-081-1,
Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS, Station 3C71, 4700
River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737-1238. Please state that your
comment refers to Docket No. 04-081-1.
Reading Room: You may read the draft document and any comments we
receive on the draft document in the reading room. The reading room is
located in room 1141 of the USDA South Building, 14th Street and
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC. Normal reading room hours are
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except holidays. To be sure
someone is there to help you, please call (202) 690-2817 before coming.
You may request a copy of the draft document by calling or writing
to the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. The draft
document is also available on the Internet. Instructions for accessing
the draft document on the Internet are provided below under
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
Other Information: You may view APHIS documents published in the
Federal Register and related information on the Internet at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/ppd/rad/webrepor.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Chip Wells, Senior Staff
Veterinarian, Regionalization Evaluation Services Staff, National
Center for Import and Export, VS, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 38,
Riverdale, MD 20737-1231; (301) 734-4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) of the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) regulates the
importation of animals and animal products into the United States to
guard against the introduction of animal diseases not currently present
or prevalent in this country. The regulations pertaining to the
importation of animals and animal products are set forth in the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), title 9, chapter I, subchapter D (9 CFR
parts 91 through 99).
On June 25, 1999, we published in the Federal Register (64 FR
34155-34168, Docket No. 98-090-1) a proposal to, among other things,
amend the regulations regarding the importation of swine and swine
products from a specifically defined region in the European Union (EU)
consisting of Austria, Belgium, France, Greece, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, and parts of Germany and Italy.
Consistent with EU terminology, we refer to individual EU countries as
``Member States.'' In proposing to recognize smaller ``regions'' within
the countries of Germany and Italy as free of classical swine fever
(CSF, which we referred to in the proposed rule as hog cholera), we
chose to use the German ``kreis'' and the Italian ``Region'' because we
considered them to be the smallest administrative jurisdictions that
have ``effective oversight of normal animal movements into, out of, and
within that jurisdiction, and that, in association with national
authorities, if necessary, have the responsibility for controlling
animal disease locally.''
On April 7, 2003, we published in the Federal Register (68 FR
16922-16941, Docket No. 98-090-5) a final rule that, among other
things, amended the regulations to recognize a region in the EU
consisting of Austria, Belgium, Greece, the Netherlands, Portugal, and
parts of Germany and Italy as free of CSF. In the final rule, APHIS did
not recognize France, Spain, or Luxembourg as free of CSF, as we had
proposed to do in our June 1999 proposed rule. This was because CSF
outbreaks had occurred in domestic swine in each of those Member States
after the publication of the proposed rule and we had not identified
the smallest administrative jurisdictions within those Member States
that we could use as ``regions'' in restricting the importation of
swine and swine products from less than the whole Member State.
Following the elimination of CSF in domestic swine in France and
Spain (April 26, 2002, and April 30, 2002, respectively), on November
24, 2003, we published in the Federal Register (68 FR 65869-65871,
Docket No. 98-090-6) a supplemental risk analysis which examined the
risk of introducing CSF from the importation of swine and swine
products from those two Member States. The supplemental risk analysis
also identified the smallest administrative jurisdictions in France
[[Page 20734]]
and Spain that could be considered ``regions'' in each of those Member
States.
On April 20, 2004, we published in the Federal Register (69 FR
21042-21047, Docket No. 98-090-7) a final rule that recognized France
and Spain as regions in which CSF does not exist and affirmed the
designation of the Commune in France and the Comarca in Spain as the
smallest administrative jurisdictions within those Member States that
we will use for regionalization purposes.
We are giving notice that a draft document entitled ``APHIS
Considerations on the Identification of Administrative Units for
Certain Member States of the European Union'' is available for public
review and are requesting comments on the draft document for 60 days.
In the draft document we identify the smallest administrative
jurisdictions in 11 Member States that we would use to regionalize
those Member States in the event of future animal disease outbreaks. As
discussed in the draft document, we believe that each of those
jurisdictions is the smallest that can be demonstrated to have
effective oversight of normal animal movements into, out of, and within
that Member State, and that, in association with national authorities,
if necessary, has effective control over animal movements and animal
diseases locally. For the sake of convenience, the draft document and
any future rulemakings will refer to these jurisdictions as
``administrative units'' (AUs).
The draft document designates AUs for 11 Member States within the
EU region. These Member States are: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland,
Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, and the
United Kingdom. Because APHIS considers the entire territory of
Luxembourg to be the smallest possible administrative jurisdiction with
effective control over animal movement and control of animal disease
locally, the entire country of Luxembourg will be considered one AU.
The draft document also reidentifies the AU for Italy as the Aziende
Sanitarie Locali (Local Health Unit). In the event of an animal disease
outbreak, APHIS could regionalize a Member State to the AU level
specified in our draft document. Although addressed in the document in
the context of the specific disease, CSF, the concept of
regionalization to the AU level is not disease specific.
Accessing the Draft Document on the Internet
The draft document may be viewed on the may be viewed on the
EDOCKET Web site (see ADDRESSES above for instructions for accessing
EDOCKET). You may request paper copies of the draft document by calling
or writing to the person listed under FOR FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. Please refer to the title of the draft document when
requesting copies. The draft document is also available for review in
our reading room (information on the location and hours of the reading
room is listed under the heading ADDRESSES at the beginning of this
notice).
Done in Washington, DC, this 18th day of April 2005.
W. Ron DeHaven,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. E5-1881 Filed 4-20-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P