Patent and Trademark Financial Transactions (Formerly Payment of Patent and Trademark Office Fees by Credit Card), 57567-57569 [05-19683]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 190 / Monday, October 3, 2005 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
Patent and Trademark Financial
Transactions (Formerly Payment of
Patent and Trademark Office Fees by
Credit Card)
ACTION:
Proposed collection; comment
request.
SUMMARY: The United States Patent and
Trademark Office (USPTO), 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 continuing information
collection, 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 December 2,
2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• E-mail: Susan.Brown@uspto.gov.
Include ‘‘0651–0043 comment’’ in the
subject line of the message.
• Fax: 571–273–0112, marked to the
attention of Susan Brown.
• Mail: Susan K. Brown, Records
Officer, Office of the Chief Information
Officer, Office of Data Architecture and
Services, Data Administration Division,
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, P.O.
Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313–1450.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information
should be directed to Tamara McClure,
Office of Finance, U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office, P.O. Box 1450,
Alexandria, VA 22313–1450; by
telephone at 571–272–6345; or by e-mail
to Tamara.McClure@uspto.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
I. Abstract
Under 35 U.S.C. 41 and 15 U.S.C.
1113, the USPTO charges fees for
processing and other services related to
patents, trademarks, and information
products. The provisions of 35 U.S.C. 41
and 15 U.S.C. 1113 are implemented in
37 CFR 1.16–1.28, 2.6–2.7, and 2.206–
2.209.
Under 37 CFR 1.23(b) and 2.207(b),
customers may use a credit card to pay
patent or trademark fees or to order
information products from the USPTO.
Payments of fees made by credit card
must specify the amount to be charged
and other information that is necessary
to process the charge, such as a billing
address (and an authorized signature
when submitting a paper Credit Card
Payment Form). The USPTO will not
accept a general authorization to charge
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fees to a credit card. Customers
submitting fee payments must also
provide information concerning the
purpose of the fee so that the USPTO is
able to (1) apply the fee to the particular
application, patent, trademark
registration, or other proceeding,
service, or product; and (2) determine
whether the person has submitted the
appropriate fee(s) required by law or
regulation.
This information collection includes
the Credit Card Payment Form (PTO–
2038), which provides the public with
a convenient way to submit a credit card
payment for fees related to a patent,
trademark, or information product.
Customers may also submit credit card
payments via the Electronic Credit Card
Payment Form (PTO–2231) when using
online systems provided by the USPTO
for paying fees related to patents,
trademarks, or information products.
These systems are accessible through
the USPTO web site at https://
www.uspto.gov. At the top of the site,
click on the ‘‘eBusiness’’ link to access
the online systems. For online credit
card payments, customers must use the
Electronic Credit Card Payment Form
provided on the USPTO web site.
Under 37 CFR 1.25 and 2.208,
customers may establish deposit
accounts at the USPTO for paying
patent and trademark fees or purchasing
information products. Deposit accounts
eliminate the need to submit a check,
credit card information, or other form of
payment for each transaction with the
USPTO. Additionally, in the event that
a fee amount due is miscalculated,
customers may authorize the USPTO to
charge any remaining balance to the
deposit account and therefore avoid the
potential consequences of
underpayment. Customers may establish
a deposit account by completing a
Deposit Account Application Form
(PTO–2232) and sending the required
information, initial deposit, and service
fee to the USPTO.
As customers use their deposit
accounts to make payments, they may
deposit funds to replenish their
accounts by mailing a check to the
USPTO or making a deposit online via
an electronic funds transfer (EFT) using
the Electronic Deposit Account
Replenishment Form (PTO–2233)
available at the USPTO web site. No
official form is provided for mailed
replenishments. Customers may simply
send their checks to the USPTO with
instructions specifying their deposit
account number. Customers may also
close their deposit accounts by
submitting a written request. The
remaining balance in the deposit
account will be refunded after a six-
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57567
week waiting period with no account
activity to ensure that all outstanding
charges have been applied before the
account is closed.
In addition to credit cards and deposit
accounts, customers may also use EFT
to make online fee payments. In order
to make payments to the USPTO via
EFT, customers must first establish a
user profile with their banking
information. Once their profile is
created, customers may use their User
ID and password to perform EFT
transactions. To set up a user profile,
customers must complete and submit
the EFT User Profile Form (PTO–2236)
through the USPTO web site.
Under 37 CFR 1.26 and 2.209, the
USPTO may refund fees paid by mistake
or in excess of the required amount. For
refund amounts of $25 or less,
customers must submit a written request
to the Refund Branch of the USPTO
Office of Finance. No official form is
provided for these refund requests.
The Deposit Account Application
Form (PTO–2232), Deposit Account
Replenishments, Electronic Deposit
Account Replenishment Form (PTO–
2233), Deposit Account Closure Request
Form (PTO–2234), EFT User Profile
Form (PTO–2236), and Refund Requests
are being added to this collection. The
USPTO does not provide an official
form for paper Deposit Account
Replenishments or Refund Requests.
In order to protect confidentiality, the
USPTO will not include the credit card
information submitted using the paper
Credit Card Payment Form (PTO–2038)
or Electronic Credit Card Payment Form
(PTO–2231) among the patent or
trademark records open to public
inspection. The USPTO does not require
customers to use the paper Credit Card
Payment Form when paying fees by
credit card, but using this form for nonelectronic payments is strongly
encouraged. If a customer supplies
credit card information on a form or
document (e.g., in correspondence
related to a patent or trademark) other
than a credit card payment form
provided by the USPTO, the credit card
information may become part of a patent
or trademark file that is open to public
inspection. If credit card information is
submitted on a form or document other
than a credit card payment form
provided by the USPTO, the USPTO
will not be liable if the credit card
information becomes public knowledge.
II. Method of Collection
By mail, facsimile, hand delivery, or
electronically over the Internet to the
USPTO.
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57568
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 190 / Monday, October 3, 2005 / Notices
III. Data
Estimated Time Per Response: The
USPTO estimates that it will take the
public approximately 2 minutes (0.03
hours) to gather the necessary
information, prepare, and submit the
items in this collection related to credit
card payments, deposit accounts, EFT
user profiles, and refund requests.
Estimated Total Annual Respondent
Burden Hours: 57,862 hours per year.
Estimated Total Annual Respondent
Cost Burden: $2,488,066 per year. The
USPTO expects that 75% of the
submissions for this information
collection will be prepared by fee
OMB Number: 0651–0043.
Form Number(s): PTO–2038, PTO–
2231, PTO–2232, PTO–2233, PTO–2234,
PTO–2236.
Type of Review: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households; businesses or other forprofits; not-for-profit institutions; farms;
the Federal Government; and state, local
or tribal governments.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
1,928,705 responses per year.
administrators/coordinators and that
25% of the submissions will be
prepared by paraprofessionals. Using
those proportions and the estimated
rates of $30 per hour for fee
administrators/coordinators and $81 per
hour for paraprofessionals, the USPTO
estimates that the average hourly rate for
all respondents will be approximately
$43 per hour. Using this estimated rate
of $43 per hour, the USPTO estimates
that the respondent cost burden for
submitting the information in this
collection will be approximately
$2,488,066 per year.
Estimated time
for response
(minutes)
Item
Estimated
annual
responses
Estimated
annual burden
hours
Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2038) .........................................................................
Electronic Credit Card Payment Form (PTO–2231) .......................................................
Deposit Account Application Form (PTO–2232) .............................................................
Deposit Account Replenishment .....................................................................................
Electronic Deposit Account Replenishment Form (PTO–2233) ......................................
Deposit Account Closure Request Form (PTO–2234) ....................................................
EFT User Profile Form (PTO–2236) ...............................................................................
Refund Request ...............................................................................................................
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
863,389
1,017,322
298
20,837
17,664
132
2,850
6,213
25,902
30,520
9
625
530
4
86
186
Total ..........................................................................................................................
............................
1,928,705
57,862
Estimated Total Annual Non-hour
Respondent Cost Burden: $235,755.
There are no capital start-up costs or
maintenance costs associated with this
information collection. However, this
collection does have associated service
fees for deposit accounts and returned
payments, postage costs for mailing
submissions to the USPTO, and
recordkeeping costs related to electronic
credit card payments and electronic
deposit account replenishments.
There are service fees for setting up a
deposit account at the USPTO, for not
maintaining the minimum balance
required for the deposit account, and for
returned payments. The service charge
to establish a deposit account is $10,
and the USPTO estimates that it
processes 298 Deposit Account
Application Forms annually, for a total
of $2,980 per year. There is also a $25
service charge for deposit accounts that
are below the minimum balance ($1,000
minimum balance for an unrestricted
deposit account or $300 minimum
balance for a restricted deposit account)
at the end of the month, and the USPTO
estimates that it assesses a total of
$100,000 in low balance service charges
per year. There is a $50 service charge
for processing a payment refused
(including a check returned ‘‘unpaid’’)
or charged back by a financial
institution. The USPTO estimates that it
assesses 456 of these returned payment
charges annually, for a total of $22,800
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17:26 Sep 30, 2005
Jkt 205001
per year. The total estimated service fees
for this collection are $125,780 per year.
Customers may incur postage costs
when submitting the Credit Card
Payment Form and other paper forms or
requests to the USPTO by mail.
Customers generally send the Credit
Card Payment Form to the USPTO along
with other documents related to the fee
or service being paid for by credit card,
but some customers may submit just the
Credit Card Payment Form without
additional supporting documents. The
USPTO estimates that roughly 5 percent
of the 863,389 paper Credit Card
Payment Forms submitted annually may
be mailed in by themselves,
approximately 43,169 per year. The
USPTO estimates that it will receive an
additional 27,480 submissions per year
that may be mailed, including Deposit
Account Application Forms, Deposit
Account Replenishments, Deposit
Account Closure Requests, and Refund
Requests, for a total of 70,649 mailed
submissions per year. The USPTO
estimates that the first-class postage cost
for a mailed submission will be 37
cents, for a total postage cost of
approximately $26,140 per year.
Customers using the Electronic Credit
Card Payment Form or the Electronic
Deposit Account Replenishment Form
may incur recordkeeping costs from
printing a copy of the electronic receipt
confirming their successful online
transaction. The USPTO estimates that
it will take 5 seconds (0.001 hours) to
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Sfmt 4703
print a copy of the confirmation receipt
and that approximately 1,034,986
submissions per year will use the
Electronic Credit Card Payment Form or
the Electronic Deposit Account
Replenishment Form, for a total
recordkeeping burden of 1,035 hours
per year. Using the paraprofessional rate
of $81 per hour, the USPTO estimates
that the recordkeeping cost associated
with this collection will be
approximately $83,835 per year.
The total non-hour respondent cost
burden for this collection in the form of
service fees, postage costs, and
recordkeeping costs is estimated to be
$235,755 per year.
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 to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, e.g., 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 OMB
E:\FR\FM\03OCN1.SGM
03OCN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 190 / Monday, October 3, 2005 / Notices
approval of this information collection;
they also will become a matter of public
record.
Dated: September 26, 2005.
Susan K. Brown,
Records Officer, USPTO, Office of the Chief
Information Officer, Office of Data
Architecture and Services, Data
Administration Division.
[FR Doc. 05–19683 Filed 9–30–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–16–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meetings
FEDERAL REGISTER CITATION OF PREVIOUS
ANNOUNCEMENT: 70 FR 180.
PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED TIME AND DATE OF
THE MEETING: 11 a.m., Monday, October
3, 2005.
The closed
meeting to discuss a Derivatives
Clearing Organization Review has been
canceled.
CHANGES IN THE MEETING:
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Jean A. Webb, 202–418–5100.
Jean A. Webb,
Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 05–19822 Filed 9–29–05; 12:29 pm]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–M
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army; Corps of
Engineers
Intent To Prepare a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement,
Programmatic Sediment Management
Plan, Lower Snake River Reservoirs, in
the States of Washington and Idaho
Department of the Army, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (Corps) intends to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for a Programmatic Sediment
Management Plan that will address
sediment management within the four
lower Snake River reservoirs and that
portion of McNary reservoir contained
within the lower Snake River The plan
will identify and evaluate ways the
Corps can manage sediment within
these reservoirs and examine the
sediment input (sources) on a
programmatic basis in the near-term,
mid-term, and long-term. The reservoirs
extend from the mouth of the Snake
River upstream to the communities of
Lewiston, Idaho, and Clarkston,
SUMMARY:
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17:26 Sep 30, 2005
Jkt 205001
Washington; and include the lower 2
miles of the Clearwater River from its
confluence with the Snake River at
Lewiston upstream to the U.S. Highway
12 Bridge. In the plan the Corps will
also include all tributaries that could
significantly contribute sediment to the
lower Snake River. The Corps is
preparing this plan because sediment
management has been an ongoing
maintenance issue since the completion
of Ice Harbor Dam, the first dam and
reservoir on the lower Snake River, in
1961. Rather than addressing sedimentrelated problems on a case-by-case
basis, the Corps has determined that it
would be more effective to evaluate
sediment management as a whole and
on a watershed basis. The intent of the
plan is to identify ways to reduce the
amount of sediment entering the
reservoirs, identify how to manage the
sediment once it enters the reservoirs,
and identify possible changes to
structures or operations to reduce
maintenance and associated impacts
while still providing for authorized
project purposes, including navigation.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Carl Christianson, Project Manager,
Walla Walla District, Corps of
Engineers, CENWW–PM–PD, 201 North
Third Avenue, Walla Walla, WA 99362,
phone (509) 527–7260, or Ms. Sandra
Simmons, NEPA Coordinator, Walla
Walla District, Corps of Engineers,
CENWW–PD–EC, 201 North Third
Avenue, Walla Walla, WA 99362, phone
(509) 527–7265.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Since
construction of its first dam on the
lower Snake River, the Corps has
recognized that sediment management
would be an ongoing maintenance issue
within the reservoirs. Historically the
Corps has used dredging as the primary
means of managing sediment that
deposited in areas that interfere with
man’s use of the river. Most of these
maintenance dredging actions have been
conducted on a case-by-case basis
without a long-term look at more
effective ways of managing sediment.
The Corps has now determined it would
be more effective to evaluate sediment
management within the lower Snake
River on a watershed scale, and evaluate
the potential for reducing sediment
input, rather than focusing only on the
reservoirs themselves. Although the
Corps does not have the authority to
manage land outside of the reservoir
project boundaries, the Corps can
identify and evaluate management
strategies that could be implemented on
non-Corps property.
The Corps is considering a variety of
sediment management measures that
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57569
could be used individually or in
combination. Measures identified to
date for evaluation include:
Sediment Reduction Measures
Structural Sediment Reduction
Measures
• Aquatic ecosystem restoration
projects under current authorities
(Section 206 Water Resources
Development Act of 1996 and Section
1135 of the Water Resources
Development Act of 1986)
• Shoreline vegetated filter strips
• Streambank erosion control
• Improved logging road placement
and design
Non-Structural Sediment Reduction
Measures
• Natural Resource Conservation
Service conservation programs
• Land use planning
• Public education
• Watershed planning
• Forest management practices
• Timber harvest planning
Sediment Management Measures
In-water systems to control sediment
deposition.
• Agitation to prevent settling
• Bendway weirs
• Dikes and dike fields
• Air curtains to prevent settling of
material at specific locations
Sediment Removal and Management
• Agitation to re-suspend sediment
• Dredging to remove sediment
• Beneficial use of dredged material
• In-water disposal of dredged
material
• Upland disposal of dredged
material
System Management Measures
Modify Navigation System
Infrastructure
• Relocate affected commercial
navigation, recreational boating and
water intake facilities
• Build sediment retention dams
upstream of Lower Granite reservoir
and/or in tributaries
Modify Reservoir Operations
• Raise pool levels to increase water
depth
• Modify flows to flush sediment
• Draw down Lower Granite reservoir
to add flow conveyance capacity
Provide Flow Conveyance at Snake/
Clearwater Rivers Confluence
The Corps has also initially identified
several key resource areas that may be
affected by the sediment management
E:\FR\FM\03OCN1.SGM
03OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 190 (Monday, October 3, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57567-57569]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-19683]
[[Page 57567]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
Patent and Trademark Financial Transactions (Formerly Payment of
Patent and Trademark Office Fees by Credit Card)
ACTION: Proposed collection; comment request.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), 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 continuing information collection, 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 December 2,
2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
E-mail: Susan.Brown@uspto.gov. Include ``0651-0043
comment'' in the subject line of the message.
Fax: 571-273-0112, marked to the attention of Susan Brown.
Mail: Susan K. Brown, Records Officer, Office of the Chief
Information Officer, Office of Data Architecture and Services, Data
Administration Division, U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, P.O. Box
1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information
should be directed to Tamara McClure, Office of Finance, U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office, P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450; by
telephone at 571-272-6345; or by e-mail to Tamara.McClure@uspto.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
I. Abstract
Under 35 U.S.C. 41 and 15 U.S.C. 1113, the USPTO charges fees for
processing and other services related to patents, trademarks, and
information products. The provisions of 35 U.S.C. 41 and 15 U.S.C. 1113
are implemented in 37 CFR 1.16-1.28, 2.6-2.7, and 2.206-2.209.
Under 37 CFR 1.23(b) and 2.207(b), customers may use a credit card
to pay patent or trademark fees or to order information products from
the USPTO. Payments of fees made by credit card must specify the amount
to be charged and other information that is necessary to process the
charge, such as a billing address (and an authorized signature when
submitting a paper Credit Card Payment Form). The USPTO will not accept
a general authorization to charge fees to a credit card. Customers
submitting fee payments must also provide information concerning the
purpose of the fee so that the USPTO is able to (1) apply the fee to
the particular application, patent, trademark registration, or other
proceeding, service, or product; and (2) determine whether the person
has submitted the appropriate fee(s) required by law or regulation.
This information collection includes the Credit Card Payment Form
(PTO-2038), which provides the public with a convenient way to submit a
credit card payment for fees related to a patent, trademark, or
information product. Customers may also submit credit card payments via
the Electronic Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2231) when using online
systems provided by the USPTO for paying fees related to patents,
trademarks, or information products. These systems are accessible
through the USPTO web site at https://www.uspto.gov. At the top of the
site, click on the ``eBusiness'' link to access the online systems. For
online credit card payments, customers must use the Electronic Credit
Card Payment Form provided on the USPTO web site.
Under 37 CFR 1.25 and 2.208, customers may establish deposit
accounts at the USPTO for paying patent and trademark fees or
purchasing information products. Deposit accounts eliminate the need to
submit a check, credit card information, or other form of payment for
each transaction with the USPTO. Additionally, in the event that a fee
amount due is miscalculated, customers may authorize the USPTO to
charge any remaining balance to the deposit account and therefore avoid
the potential consequences of underpayment. Customers may establish a
deposit account by completing a Deposit Account Application Form (PTO-
2232) and sending the required information, initial deposit, and
service fee to the USPTO.
As customers use their deposit accounts to make payments, they may
deposit funds to replenish their accounts by mailing a check to the
USPTO or making a deposit online via an electronic funds transfer (EFT)
using the Electronic Deposit Account Replenishment Form (PTO-2233)
available at the USPTO web site. No official form is provided for
mailed replenishments. Customers may simply send their checks to the
USPTO with instructions specifying their deposit account number.
Customers may also close their deposit accounts by submitting a written
request. The remaining balance in the deposit account will be refunded
after a six-week waiting period with no account activity to ensure that
all outstanding charges have been applied before the account is closed.
In addition to credit cards and deposit accounts, customers may
also use EFT to make online fee payments. In order to make payments to
the USPTO via EFT, customers must first establish a user profile with
their banking information. Once their profile is created, customers may
use their User ID and password to perform EFT transactions. To set up a
user profile, customers must complete and submit the EFT User Profile
Form (PTO-2236) through the USPTO web site.
Under 37 CFR 1.26 and 2.209, the USPTO may refund fees paid by
mistake or in excess of the required amount. For refund amounts of $25
or less, customers must submit a written request to the Refund Branch
of the USPTO Office of Finance. No official form is provided for these
refund requests.
The Deposit Account Application Form (PTO-2232), Deposit Account
Replenishments, Electronic Deposit Account Replenishment Form (PTO-
2233), Deposit Account Closure Request Form (PTO-2234), EFT User
Profile Form (PTO-2236), and Refund Requests are being added to this
collection. The USPTO does not provide an official form for paper
Deposit Account Replenishments or Refund Requests.
In order to protect confidentiality, the USPTO will not include the
credit card information submitted using the paper Credit Card Payment
Form (PTO-2038) or Electronic Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2231) among
the patent or trademark records open to public inspection. The USPTO
does not require customers to use the paper Credit Card Payment Form
when paying fees by credit card, but using this form for non-electronic
payments is strongly encouraged. If a customer supplies credit card
information on a form or document (e.g., in correspondence related to a
patent or trademark) other than a credit card payment form provided by
the USPTO, the credit card information may become part of a patent or
trademark file that is open to public inspection. If credit card
information is submitted on a form or document other than a credit card
payment form provided by the USPTO, the USPTO will not be liable if the
credit card information becomes public knowledge.
II. Method of Collection
By mail, facsimile, hand delivery, or electronically over the
Internet to the USPTO.
[[Page 57568]]
III. Data
OMB Number: 0651-0043.
Form Number(s): PTO-2038, PTO-2231, PTO-2232, PTO-2233, PTO-2234,
PTO-2236.
Type of Review: Revision of a currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Individuals or households; businesses or other
for-profits; not-for-profit institutions; farms; the Federal
Government; and state, local or tribal governments.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 1,928,705 responses per year.
Estimated Time Per Response: The USPTO estimates that it will take
the public approximately 2 minutes (0.03 hours) to gather the necessary
information, prepare, and submit the items in this collection related
to credit card payments, deposit accounts, EFT user profiles, and
refund requests.
Estimated Total Annual Respondent Burden Hours: 57,862 hours per
year.
Estimated Total Annual Respondent Cost Burden: $2,488,066 per year.
The USPTO expects that 75% of the submissions for this information
collection will be prepared by fee administrators/coordinators and that
25% of the submissions will be prepared by paraprofessionals. Using
those proportions and the estimated rates of $30 per hour for fee
administrators/coordinators and $81 per hour for paraprofessionals, the
USPTO estimates that the average hourly rate for all respondents will
be approximately $43 per hour. Using this estimated rate of $43 per
hour, the USPTO estimates that the respondent cost burden for
submitting the information in this collection will be approximately
$2,488,066 per year.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated time Estimated Estimated
Item for response annual annual burden
(minutes) responses hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2038)....................... 2 863,389 25,902
Electronic Credit Card Payment Form (PTO-2231)............ 2 1,017,322 30,520
Deposit Account Application Form (PTO-2232)............... 2 298 9
Deposit Account Replenishment............................. 2 20,837 625
Electronic Deposit Account Replenishment Form (PTO-2233).. 2 17,664 530
Deposit Account Closure Request Form (PTO-2234)........... 2 132 4
EFT User Profile Form (PTO-2236).......................... 2 2,850 86
Refund Request............................................ 2 6,213 186
-------------------
Total................................................. ................ 1,928,705 57,862
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Total Annual Non-hour Respondent Cost Burden: $235,755.
There are no capital start-up costs or maintenance costs associated
with this information collection. However, this collection does have
associated service fees for deposit accounts and returned payments,
postage costs for mailing submissions to the USPTO, and recordkeeping
costs related to electronic credit card payments and electronic deposit
account replenishments.
There are service fees for setting up a deposit account at the
USPTO, for not maintaining the minimum balance required for the deposit
account, and for returned payments. The service charge to establish a
deposit account is $10, and the USPTO estimates that it processes 298
Deposit Account Application Forms annually, for a total of $2,980 per
year. There is also a $25 service charge for deposit accounts that are
below the minimum balance ($1,000 minimum balance for an unrestricted
deposit account or $300 minimum balance for a restricted deposit
account) at the end of the month, and the USPTO estimates that it
assesses a total of $100,000 in low balance service charges per year.
There is a $50 service charge for processing a payment refused
(including a check returned ``unpaid'') or charged back by a financial
institution. The USPTO estimates that it assesses 456 of these returned
payment charges annually, for a total of $22,800 per year. The total
estimated service fees for this collection are $125,780 per year.
Customers may incur postage costs when submitting the Credit Card
Payment Form and other paper forms or requests to the USPTO by mail.
Customers generally send the Credit Card Payment Form to the USPTO
along with other documents related to the fee or service being paid for
by credit card, but some customers may submit just the Credit Card
Payment Form without additional supporting documents. The USPTO
estimates that roughly 5 percent of the 863,389 paper Credit Card
Payment Forms submitted annually may be mailed in by themselves,
approximately 43,169 per year. The USPTO estimates that it will receive
an additional 27,480 submissions per year that may be mailed, including
Deposit Account Application Forms, Deposit Account Replenishments,
Deposit Account Closure Requests, and Refund Requests, for a total of
70,649 mailed submissions per year. The USPTO estimates that the first-
class postage cost for a mailed submission will be 37 cents, for a
total postage cost of approximately $26,140 per year.
Customers using the Electronic Credit Card Payment Form or the
Electronic Deposit Account Replenishment Form may incur recordkeeping
costs from printing a copy of the electronic receipt confirming their
successful online transaction. The USPTO estimates that it will take 5
seconds (0.001 hours) to print a copy of the confirmation receipt and
that approximately 1,034,986 submissions per year will use the
Electronic Credit Card Payment Form or the Electronic Deposit Account
Replenishment Form, for a total recordkeeping burden of 1,035 hours per
year. Using the paraprofessional rate of $81 per hour, the USPTO
estimates that the recordkeeping cost associated with this collection
will be approximately $83,835 per year.
The total non-hour respondent cost burden for this collection in
the form of service fees, postage costs, and recordkeeping costs is
estimated to be $235,755 per year.
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 to be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on respondents, e.g., 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 OMB
[[Page 57569]]
approval of this information collection; they also will become a matter
of public record.
Dated: September 26, 2005.
Susan K. Brown,
Records Officer, USPTO, Office of the Chief Information Officer, Office
of Data Architecture and Services, Data Administration Division.
[FR Doc. 05-19683 Filed 9-30-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-16-P