Advanced Technology Program Notice of Availability of Funds and Announcement of Public Meetings (Proposers' Conferences), 17838-17841 [E7-6650]
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17838
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 68 / Tuesday, April 10, 2007 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Partial Rescission of Review
International Trade Administration
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Department’s regulations at
section 351.213(d)(1) provide that the
Department will rescind an
administrative review if the party that
requested the review withdraws its
request for review within 90 days of the
date of publication of the notice of
initiation of the requested review, or
withdraws its request at a later date if
the Department determines that it is
reasonable to extend the time limit for
withdrawing the request. Jindal
submitted its request within the 90 day
limit set by the regulations. Since no
other parties requested a review of
Jindal, the Department is rescinding, in
part, the administrative review of the
countervailing duty order on PET film
from India for the period January 1,
2005 through December 31, 2005, for
Jindal. Both Garware and MTZ remain
subject to this administrative review.
The preliminary results for this
administrative review for these
companies are currently due July 31,
2007.
Background
Assessment
On July 3, 2006, the Department of
Commerce (the Department) published a
notice of opportunity to request an
administrative review of the
countervailing duty order on
Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) Film,
Sheet, and Strip from India. See
Antidumping or Countervailing Duty
Order, Finding, or Suspended
Investigation; Opportunity To Request
Administrative Review, 71 FR 37890
(July 3, 2006). On July 26, 2006, MTZ
Polyfilms, Ltd. (MTZ) timely requested
that the Department conduct an
administrative review of merchandise it
produced and exported. On July 31,
2006, Polyplex Corporation, Ltd.
(Polyplex), Jindal Poly Films Limited of
India (Jindal), and Garware Polyester,
Ltd. (Garware) also timely requested
that the Department conduct an
administrative review of merchandise
they produced and exported.
Polyplex withdrew its request for an
administrative review on August 22,
2006, before the initiation of this
review. Shortly thereafter, the
Department published a notice of the
initiation of the countervailing duty
administrative review of PET Film from
India for MTZ, Garware, and Jindal for
the period January 1, 2005 through
December 31, 2005. See Initiation of
Antidumping and Countervailing Duty
Administrative Reviews and Requests
for Revocation in Part, 71 FR 51573
(August 30, 2006). On November 28,
2006, Jindal withdrew its request for an
administrative review.
The Department will instruct U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to
assess countervailing duties on all
appropriate entries. Jindal shall be
assessed countervailing duty rates equal
to the cash deposit of the estimated
countervailing duties required at the
time of entry, or withdrawal from
warehouse, for consumption, in
accordance with 19 CFR
351.212(c)(1)(i). The Department will
issue appropriate assessment
instructions directly to CBP within 15
days of publication of this notice.
(C–533–825)
Polyethylene Terephthalate Film,
Sheet, and Strip from India: Notice of
Partial Rescission of Administrative
Review of the Countervailing Duty
Order
Import Administration,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 10, 2007
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elfi
Blum, Nicholas Czajkowski, or Toni
Page, AD/CVD Operations, Office 6,
Import Administration, International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department
of Commerce, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482–0197,
(202) 482–1395, or (202) 482–1398,
respectively.
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AGENCY:
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Cash Deposit Rates
Jindal’s cash deposit rate will be the
rate in effect on the date of entry. This
cash deposit requirement shall remain
in effect until publication of the final
results of this administrative review.
Notification Regarding APOs
This notice also serves as a reminder
to parties subject to administrative
protective orders (APOs) of their
responsibility concerning the return or
destruction of proprietary information
disclosed under APO in accordance
with 19 CFR 351.305, which continues
to govern business proprietary
information in this segment of the
proceeding. Timely written notification
of the return/destruction of APO
materials or conversion to judicial
protective order is hereby requested.
Failure to comply with the regulations
and terms of an APO is a violation that
is subject to sanction.
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This notice is issued and published in
accordance with sections 751(a)(1) and
777(i) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended, and 19 CFR 351.213(d)(4).
Dated: April 4, 2007.
Stephen J. Claeys,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import
Administration.
[FR Doc. E7–6748 Filed 4–9–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
The President’s Export Council:
Meeting of the President’s Export
Council
International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of an Open Meeting via
Teleconference.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The President’s Export
Council will hold a meeting via
teleconference to deliberate a draft
recommendation to the President
regarding Trade Promotion Authority.
Date: April 24, 2007.
Time: 12 p.m. (EDST).
For the Conference Call-In Number
and Further Information, Contact: The
President’s Export Council Executive
Secretariat, Room 4043, Washington, DC
20230 (Phone: 202–482–1124), or visit
the PEC Web site, https://
www.ita.doc.gov/td/pec.
Dated: April 5, 2007.
J. Marc Chittum,
Staff Director and Executive Secretary,
President’s Export Council.
[FR Doc. 07–1800 Filed 4–6–07; 1:39 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–DR–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
[Docket No.: 070320063–7064–01]
Advanced Technology Program Notice
of Availability of Funds and
Announcement of Public Meetings
(Proposers’ Conferences)
National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST), Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NIST’s Advanced Technology
Program (ATP) announces that it will
hold a single fiscal year 2007 ATP
competition and is soliciting proposals
for financial assistance. ATP also
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 68 / Tuesday, April 10, 2007 / Notices
announces that it will hold public
meetings (Proposers’ Conferences) for
all interested parties. ATP is soliciting
proposals in all technology areas
(Competition Number 2007–A) as well
as the following four broad Crosscutting
Areas of National Interest: (1)
Technologies for Advanced and
Complex Systems (Competition Number
2007–B), (2) Challenges in Advanced
Materials and Devices (Competition
Number 2007–C), (3) 21st Century
Manufacturing (Competition Number
2007–D), and (4) Nanotechnology
(Competition Number 2007–E). Details
regarding these four broad Crosscutting
Areas of National Interest are included
in the Federal Funding Opportunity
announcement available at https://
www.grants.gov. ATP provides costshared multi-year funding to single
companies and to industry-led joint
ventures to accelerate the development
and dissemination of challenging, high
risk technologies with the potential for
significant commercial payoffs and
widespread benefits for the nation. This
unique government-industry
partnership aids companies in
accelerating the development of
emerging or enabling technologies that
lead to revolutionary new products and
industrial processes and services that
can compete in rapidly changing world
markets. ATP challenges the research
and development (R&D) community to
take on higher technical risk with
commensurately higher potential
payoffs for the nation than they would
otherwise pursue.
DATES: The due date for submission of
all proposals is 3 p.m. Eastern Time,
Monday, May 21, 2007. This deadline
applies to any mode of proposal
submission, including hand-delivery,
courier, express mailing, and electronic.
Do not wait until the last minute to
submit a proposal. ATP will not make
any allowances for late submissions,
including incomplete Grants.gov
registration.
Proposals must be
submitted to ATP as follows:
Paper submission: Send to National
Institute of Standards and Technology,
Advanced Technology Program, 100
Bureau Drive, Stop 4701, Gaithersburg,
MD 20899–4701.
Electronic submission: https://
www.grants.gov.
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ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara Lambis at 301–975–4447 or by
e-mail at barbara.lambis@nist.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Additional Information: The full
Federal Funding Opportunity (FFO)
announcement for this request for
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proposals is available at https://
www.grants.gov. The full FFO
announcement text can also be accessed
on the ATP Web site at https://
www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm. To
request a copy of the April 2007 ATP
Proposal Preparation Kit submit an
electronic request at https://
www.atp.nist.gov/atp/atpform.htm or
call ATP at 1–800–ATP–FUND (1–800–
287–3863). The Kit is also available at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/
helpful.htm. Note that ATP is mailing
the Kit to all individuals whose names
are currently on the ATP mailing list.
Those individuals need not contact ATP
to request a copy.
Meetings: ATP is holding several
public meetings (Proposers’
Conferences) at several locations around
the country. These public meetings
provide general information regarding
the program, tips on preparing
proposals, and the opportunity for
questions and answers. Proprietary
technical or business discussions about
specific project ideas with NIST staff are
not permitted at these conferences or at
any time before submitting the proposal
to ATP. Therefore, you should not
expect to have proprietary issues
addressed at proposers’ conferences.
NIST/ATP staff will not critique
proprietary project ideas while they are
being developed by a proposer.
However, NIST/ATP staff will, at any
time, answer questions that you may
have about our project selection criteria,
selection process, eligibility
requirements, cost-sharing
requirements, and the general
characteristics of a competitive ATP
proposal.
ATP Proposers’ Conferences are being
held from 9 a.m.–12:30 p.m. local time
on the following dates and locations:
April 13, 2007: NIST Red Auditorium,
100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD
(301–975–2776)
April 16, 2007: Hyatt Regency Dearborn
Fairlane Town Center, Dearborn,
Detroit, MI (313–593–1234)
April 18, 2007: Hyatt Harborside at
Boston’s Logan International Airport,
101 Harborside Drive, Boston, MA
(617–568–1234)
April 18, 2007: Los Angeles Airport
Marriott, 5855 West Century Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA (310–641–5700)
April 20, 2007: Hilton Austin Airport,
9515 Hotel Drive, Austin, TX (512–
385–6767)
No registration fee will be charged.
Presentation materials from proposers’
conferences will be made available on
the ATP Web site.
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17839
Pre-Registration Required By April 9,
2007 for All Proposers’ Conferences as
Follows
NIST Gaithersburg Conference: Due to
increased security at NIST, NO on-site
registrations will be accepted and all
attendees MUST be pre-registered.
Photo identification must be presented
at the NIST main gate to be admitted to
the April 13, 2007 conference.
Attendees must wear their conference
badge at all times while on the NIST
campus. Same day registration will be
allowed at the other locations.
Electronic Registration: At https://
rproxy.nist.gov/CRS/. Please select the
ATP Proposers’ Conference and
appropriate data to register for the
meeting of your choice.
Telephone Registration: Call 301–
975–2776.
Fax Registration: Provide the
following and fax to 301–948–2067: last
name, first name; title; organization;
room or mail code, city, state, zip code,
country; telephone; facsimile; e-mail;
any special needs; and the meeting date
and location.
Funding Availability: Fiscal year 2007
appropriations include funds in the
amount of approximately $60 million
for new ATP awards. Approximately 60
awards are anticipated.
Statutory Authority: 15 U.S.C. 278n.
CFDA: 11.612, Advanced Technology
Program (ATP).
Eligibility: U.S.-owned, single, forprofit companies and industry-led joint
ventures may apply for ATP funding. In
addition, companies incorporated in the
United States that have parent
companies incorporated in another
country may apply. The term company
means a for-profit organization,
including sole proprietorships,
partnerships, limited-liability
companies (LLCs), and corporations (15
CFR 295.2).
Cost Sharing Requirements: Small (as
defined at 15 CFR 295.2) and medium
sized companies applying as singlecompany proposers are not required to
provide cost sharing of direct costs;
however, they may propose to pay a
portion of the direct costs in addition to
all indirect costs throughout the project.
Large companies applying as singlecompany proposers must cost share at
least 60 percent of the yearly total
project costs (direct plus all of the
indirect costs). A large company is
defined as any business, including any
parent company plus related
subsidiaries, having annual revenues in
excess of $3.960 billion. (Note that this
number will likely be updated annually
and will be noted in future annual
announcements of availability of funds
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and revised editions of the ATP
Proposal Preparation Kit.) Joint ventures
must cost share more than 50 percent of
the yearly total project costs (direct plus
indirect costs).
Selection Procedures: All proposals
are selected based on a multi-stage peerreview process, as described in 15 CFR
295.4. All proposals are carefully
reviewed by technical and business
experts against the established ATP
evaluation/selection criteria. A Source
Evaluation Board (SEB) (a committee
made up of nine Federal employees)
reviews proposals and makes
recommendations for funding to a
Selecting Official based on the technical
and business evaluations and the
selection criteria. The SEB ratings shall
provide a rank order to the Selecting
Official for final recommendation to the
NIST Grants Officer. NIST/ATP reserves
the right to negotiate the cost and scope
of the proposed work with the proposers
who have been selected to receive
awards. For example, NIST/ATP may
require that the proposer delete from the
scope of work a particular task that is
deemed by NIST/ATP to be product
development or otherwise inappropriate
for ATP support. All funding decisions
are final and cannot be appealed.
Evaluation Criteria: The evaluation
criteria used to select a proposal for
funding and their respective weights are
found in 15 CFR 295.6.
Selection Factors: The Selecting
Official shall recommend for award in
rank order unless a proposal is justified
to be selected out of rank order based
upon the availability of funds, the
adherence to ATP selection criteria, or
the appropriate distribution of funds
among technologies and their
applications. NIST reserves the right to
deny awards in any case where NIST
determines that a reasonable doubt
exists regarding a proposer’s ability to
comply with ATP requirements or to
handle Federal funds responsibly.
Ineligible Projects
a. Straightforward improvements of
existing products or product
development.
b. Projects that are basic research.
c. Projects that are Phase II, III, or IV
clinical trials. ATP rarely funds Phase I
clinical trials and reserves the right not
to fund a Phase I clinical trial. The
portion of a Phase I trial that may be
funded must be critical to meeting the
scientific and technological merit
selection criterion and the trial must be
essential for completion of the study.
The definitions of all phases of clinical
trials are provided in the ATP
Guidelines and Documentation
Requirements for Research Involving
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Human & Animal Subjects located at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/
helpful.htm.
d. Pre-commercial-scale
demonstration projects where the
emphasis is on demonstrating that some
technology works on a large scale or is
economically sound rather than on R&D
that advances the state of the art.
e. Projects that ATP believes would
likely be completed without ATP funds
in the same time frame or nearly the
same time frame, or with the same scale
or scope.
f. Predominantly straightforward,
routine data gathering (e.g., creation of
voluntary consensus standards, data
gathering/handbook preparation, testing
of materials, or unbounded research
aimed at basic discovery science) or
application of standard engineering
practices.
g. Projects that are simply a follow-on
or a continuation of tasks previously
funded in ATP projects from essentially
the same proposing team.
h. Projects in which the only risk is
market oriented—that is, the risk that
the end product may not be embraced
by the marketplace.
i. Projects with software work, that are
predominantly about final product
details and product development, and
that have significant testing that involve
users outside the research team to
determine if the software meets the
original research objectives, are likely to
be either uncompetitive or possibly
ineligible for funding. However, R&D
projects with limited software testing,
involving users outside of the research
team, may be considered eligible costs
within an ATP award when the testing
is critical to meeting the scientific and
technological merit selection criterion
and the testing is essential for
completion of the proposed research.
These types of projects may also be
considered to involve human subjects in
research.
Unallowable/Ineligible Costs. The
following items, regardless of whether
they are allowable under the federal cost
principles, are unallowable under ATP:
a. Bid and proposal costs unless they
are incorporated into a federally
approved indirect cost rate.
b. Construction costs for new
buildings or extensive renovations of
existing laboratory buildings. However,
costs for the construction of
experimental research and development
facilities to be located within a new or
existing building are allowable provided
that the equipment or facilities are
essential for carrying out the proposed
scientific and technical project and are
approved by the NIST Grants Officer.
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c. For research involving human and/
or animal subjects, any costs used to
secure Institutional Review Board or
Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee approvals before the award
or during the award.
d. General purpose office equipment
and supplies that are not used
exclusively for the research, e.g., office
computers, printers, copiers, paper,
pens, and toner cartridges.
e. Indirect costs for single-company
recipients, which must be absorbed by
the company. (Note that with large
businesses submitting proposals as
single-company proposers, indirect
costs absorbed by the large business
may be used to meet the cost-sharing
requirement.)
f. Marketing, sales, or
commercialization costs, including
marketing surveys, commercialization
studies, and general business planning,
unless they are included in a federally
approved indirect cost rate.
g. Office furniture costs, unless they
are included in a federally approved
indirect cost rate.
h. Patent costs and legal fees, unless
they are included in a federally
approved indirect cost rate.
i. Preaward costs.
j. Profit, management fees, interest on
borrowed funds, or facilities capital cost
of money.
k. Relocation costs, unless they are
included in a federally approved
indirect cost rate.
l. Subcontractor expenses such as
those for office supplies and
conferences/workshops.
m. Subcontracts to another part of the
same company or to another company
with identical or nearly identical
ownership. Work proposed by another
part of the same company or by another
company with identical or nearly
identical ownership should be shown as
funded through interorganizational
transfers that do not contain profit.
Interorganizational transfers should be
broken down in the appropriate budget
categories.
n. Tuition costs. However, a
university participating in an ATP
project as a subcontractor or as a joint
venture partner may charge ATP for
tuition remission or other forms of
compensation in lieu of wages paid to
university students working on ATP
projects but only as provided in OMB
Circular A–21, Section J.41. In such
cases, tuition remission would be
considered a cash contribution rather
than an in-kind contribution.
Intellectual Property Requirements:
Title to any inventions arising from an
ATP-funded project must be held by a
for-profit company, or companies,
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 68 / Tuesday, April 10, 2007 / Notices
incorporated or organized in the United
States. A university, government
laboratory, independent research
organization, or other nonprofit
organization cannot retain title to
patents, although such organizations
can receive mutually agreeable
payments (either one-time or
continuing) from the company or
companies holding title to the patent.
However, a for-profit corporation
organized by a university can be
considered a for-profit company for the
purpose of retaining title to patents
arising from an ATP award. In such a
case, documentation of the for-profit
status must be provided in the proposal.
If your organization is not a for-profit
company but plans to be involved in an
ATP project, you will not be able to
retain title to any patentable inventions
arising from the ATP project. Please
make sure your legal department is
aware that ATP cannot waive this
mandated provision (15 U.S.C.
278n(d)(11)(A) and 15 CFR 295.2 and
295.8). Title to any such invention shall
not be transferred or passed, except to
a for-profit company organized in the
United States, until the expiration of the
first patent obtained in connection with
such invention.
The United States reserves a
nonexclusive, nontransferable,
irrevocable, paid-up license to practice
or have practiced for or on behalf of the
United States any patentable invention
arising from an ATP award. The federal
government shall not, however, in the
exercise of such license, publicly
disclose proprietary information related
to the license. The federal government
also has march-in rights in accordance
with 15 CFR 295.8. Since its inception
in 1990, ATP has not exercised its
march-in rights nor has it used its
nontransferable, irrevocable, paid-up
license.
Projects Involving Human Subjects:
Research involving human subjects
must be in compliance with applicable
Federal regulations and NIST policies
for the protection of human subjects.
Human subjects research involves
interactions with live human subjects or
the use of data, images, tissue, and/or
cells/cell lines (including those used for
control purposes) from human subjects.
Research involving human subjects may
include activities such as the use of
image and/or audio recording of people,
taking surveys or using survey data,
using databases containing personal
information, testing software with
volunteers, and many tasks beyond
those within traditional biomedical
research. A Human Subjects
Determination Checklist is included in
the April 2007 ATP Proposal
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Preparation Kit as Exhibit 2 (https://
www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm) to
assist you in determining whether your
proposal has human subjects
involvement, which would require
additional documents with your
proposal. Detailed information
regarding the use of human subjects in
research projects and required
documentation is available in the ATP
Guidelines and Documentation
Requirements for Research Involving
Human & Animal Subjects located at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm
or by calling 1–800–287–3863.
Projects Involving Animal Subjects:
Research involving animal subjects
must be in compliance with applicable
federal regulations and NIST policies for
the protection of animal subjects.
Vertebrate animal research involves live
animals that are being cared for,
euthanized, or used by the project
participants to accomplish research
goals or for teaching or testing. The
regulations do not apply to animal
tissues purchased from commercial
processors or tissue banks or to uses of
preexisting images of animals (e.g., a
wildlife documentary or pictures of
animals in newscasts). The regulations
do apply to any animals that are housed
and cared for by a project participant
and used for custom collection of
biological samples or observation data
of health and behavior. Detailed
information regarding the use of animal
subjects in research projects and
required documentation is available in
the ATP Guidelines and Documentation
Requirements for Research Involving
Human & Animal Subjects located at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm
or by calling 1–800–287–3863.
Administrative and National Policy
Requirements: The Department of
Commerce Pre-Award Notification
Requirements for Grants and
Cooperative Agreements: The
Department of Commerce Pre-Award
Notification Requirements for Grants
and Cooperative Agreements contained
in the Federal Register notice of
December 30, 2004 (69 FR 78389) is
applicable to this announcement. On
the form SF–424 (R&R), the applicant’s
9-digit Dun and Bradstreet Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number must be entered in the
Organizational DUNS line.
Paperwork Reduction Act: This notice
contains collection of information
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA). The use of Forms
NIST–1262 and NIST–1263, SF–424
(R&R), Research and Related Other
Project Information, SF–424B, SF–LLL,
CD–346, and Budget Narrative form has
been approved by OMB under the
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17841
respective control numbers 0693–0009,
4040–0001, 4040–0001, 4040–0007,
0348–0046, 0605–0001, and 0693–0009.
Notwithstanding any other provision of
the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information, subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB Control Number.
Executive Order 12866: This notice
has been determined to be not
significant for purposes of Executive
Order 12866.
Executive Order 12372
(Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs): ATP does not involve the
mandatory payment of any matching
funds from state or local government
and does not affect directly any state or
local government. Accordingly, the
Department of Commerce has
determined that Executive Order 12372
is not applicable to this program.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism):
It has been determined that this notice
does not contain policies with
Federalism implications as that term is
defined in Executive Order 13132.
Administrative Procedure Act/
Regulatory Flexibility Act: Notice and
comment are not required under the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553) or any other law, for notices
relating to public property, loans,
grants, benefits or contracts (5 U.S.C.
553(a)). Because notice and comment
are not required under the
Administrative Procedure Act, a
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not
required and has not been prepared for
this notice, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
William Jeffrey,
Director, NIST.
[FR Doc. E7–6650 Filed 4–9–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Advisory Committee on Earthquake
Hazards Reduction Meeting
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The National Earthquake
Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP)
Advisory Committee on Earthquake
Hazards Reduction (ACEHR), will meet
at the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) on Thursday,
May 10, 2007 from 9:30 a.m. to 5:45
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 68 (Tuesday, April 10, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17838-17841]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-6650]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and Technology
[Docket No.: 070320063-7064-01]
Advanced Technology Program Notice of Availability of Funds and
Announcement of Public Meetings (Proposers' Conferences)
AGENCY: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST),
Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: NIST's Advanced Technology Program (ATP) announces that it
will hold a single fiscal year 2007 ATP competition and is soliciting
proposals for financial assistance. ATP also
[[Page 17839]]
announces that it will hold public meetings (Proposers' Conferences)
for all interested parties. ATP is soliciting proposals in all
technology areas (Competition Number 2007-A) as well as the following
four broad Crosscutting Areas of National Interest: (1) Technologies
for Advanced and Complex Systems (Competition Number 2007-B), (2)
Challenges in Advanced Materials and Devices (Competition Number 2007-
C), (3) 21st Century Manufacturing (Competition Number 2007-D), and (4)
Nanotechnology (Competition Number 2007-E). Details regarding these
four broad Crosscutting Areas of National Interest are included in the
Federal Funding Opportunity announcement available at https://
www.grants.gov. ATP provides cost-shared multi-year funding to single
companies and to industry-led joint ventures to accelerate the
development and dissemination of challenging, high risk technologies
with the potential for significant commercial payoffs and widespread
benefits for the nation. This unique government-industry partnership
aids companies in accelerating the development of emerging or enabling
technologies that lead to revolutionary new products and industrial
processes and services that can compete in rapidly changing world
markets. ATP challenges the research and development (R&D) community to
take on higher technical risk with commensurately higher potential
payoffs for the nation than they would otherwise pursue.
DATES: The due date for submission of all proposals is 3 p.m. Eastern
Time, Monday, May 21, 2007. This deadline applies to any mode of
proposal submission, including hand-delivery, courier, express mailing,
and electronic. Do not wait until the last minute to submit a proposal.
ATP will not make any allowances for late submissions, including
incomplete Grants.gov registration.
ADDRESSES: Proposals must be submitted to ATP as follows:
Paper submission: Send to National Institute of Standards and
Technology, Advanced Technology Program, 100 Bureau Drive, Stop 4701,
Gaithersburg, MD 20899-4701.
Electronic submission: https://www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara Lambis at 301-975-4447 or by
e-mail at barbara.lambis@nist.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Additional Information: The full Federal Funding Opportunity (FFO)
announcement for this request for proposals is available at https://
www.grants.gov. The full FFO announcement text can also be accessed on
the ATP Web site at https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm. To request
a copy of the April 2007 ATP Proposal Preparation Kit submit an
electronic request at https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/atpform.htm or call
ATP at 1-800-ATP-FUND (1-800-287-3863). The Kit is also available at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm. Note that ATP is mailing the
Kit to all individuals whose names are currently on the ATP mailing
list. Those individuals need not contact ATP to request a copy.
Meetings: ATP is holding several public meetings (Proposers'
Conferences) at several locations around the country. These public
meetings provide general information regarding the program, tips on
preparing proposals, and the opportunity for questions and answers.
Proprietary technical or business discussions about specific project
ideas with NIST staff are not permitted at these conferences or at any
time before submitting the proposal to ATP. Therefore, you should not
expect to have proprietary issues addressed at proposers' conferences.
NIST/ATP staff will not critique proprietary project ideas while they
are being developed by a proposer. However, NIST/ATP staff will, at any
time, answer questions that you may have about our project selection
criteria, selection process, eligibility requirements, cost-sharing
requirements, and the general characteristics of a competitive ATP
proposal.
ATP Proposers' Conferences are being held from 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
local time on the following dates and locations:
April 13, 2007: NIST Red Auditorium, 100 Bureau Drive, Gaithersburg, MD
(301-975-2776)
April 16, 2007: Hyatt Regency Dearborn Fairlane Town Center, Dearborn,
Detroit, MI (313-593-1234)
April 18, 2007: Hyatt Harborside at Boston's Logan International
Airport, 101 Harborside Drive, Boston, MA (617-568-1234)
April 18, 2007: Los Angeles Airport Marriott, 5855 West Century Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA (310-641-5700)
April 20, 2007: Hilton Austin Airport, 9515 Hotel Drive, Austin, TX
(512-385-6767)
No registration fee will be charged. Presentation materials from
proposers' conferences will be made available on the ATP Web site.
Pre-Registration Required By April 9, 2007 for All Proposers'
Conferences as Follows
NIST Gaithersburg Conference: Due to increased security at NIST, NO
on-site registrations will be accepted and all attendees MUST be pre-
registered. Photo identification must be presented at the NIST main
gate to be admitted to the April 13, 2007 conference. Attendees must
wear their conference badge at all times while on the NIST campus. Same
day registration will be allowed at the other locations.
Electronic Registration: At https://rproxy.nist.gov/CRS/. Please
select the ATP Proposers' Conference and appropriate data to register
for the meeting of your choice.
Telephone Registration: Call 301-975-2776.
Fax Registration: Provide the following and fax to 301-948-2067:
last name, first name; title; organization; room or mail code, city,
state, zip code, country; telephone; facsimile; e-mail; any special
needs; and the meeting date and location.
Funding Availability: Fiscal year 2007 appropriations include funds
in the amount of approximately $60 million for new ATP awards.
Approximately 60 awards are anticipated.
Statutory Authority: 15 U.S.C. 278n.
CFDA: 11.612, Advanced Technology Program (ATP).
Eligibility: U.S.-owned, single, for-profit companies and industry-
led joint ventures may apply for ATP funding. In addition, companies
incorporated in the United States that have parent companies
incorporated in another country may apply. The term company means a
for-profit organization, including sole proprietorships, partnerships,
limited-liability companies (LLCs), and corporations (15 CFR 295.2).
Cost Sharing Requirements: Small (as defined at 15 CFR 295.2) and
medium sized companies applying as single-company proposers are not
required to provide cost sharing of direct costs; however, they may
propose to pay a portion of the direct costs in addition to all
indirect costs throughout the project. Large companies applying as
single-company proposers must cost share at least 60 percent of the
yearly total project costs (direct plus all of the indirect costs). A
large company is defined as any business, including any parent company
plus related subsidiaries, having annual revenues in excess of $3.960
billion. (Note that this number will likely be updated annually and
will be noted in future annual announcements of availability of funds
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and revised editions of the ATP Proposal Preparation Kit.) Joint
ventures must cost share more than 50 percent of the yearly total
project costs (direct plus indirect costs).
Selection Procedures: All proposals are selected based on a multi-
stage peer-review process, as described in 15 CFR 295.4. All proposals
are carefully reviewed by technical and business experts against the
established ATP evaluation/selection criteria. A Source Evaluation
Board (SEB) (a committee made up of nine Federal employees) reviews
proposals and makes recommendations for funding to a Selecting Official
based on the technical and business evaluations and the selection
criteria. The SEB ratings shall provide a rank order to the Selecting
Official for final recommendation to the NIST Grants Officer. NIST/ATP
reserves the right to negotiate the cost and scope of the proposed work
with the proposers who have been selected to receive awards. For
example, NIST/ATP may require that the proposer delete from the scope
of work a particular task that is deemed by NIST/ATP to be product
development or otherwise inappropriate for ATP support. All funding
decisions are final and cannot be appealed.
Evaluation Criteria: The evaluation criteria used to select a
proposal for funding and their respective weights are found in 15 CFR
295.6.
Selection Factors: The Selecting Official shall recommend for award
in rank order unless a proposal is justified to be selected out of rank
order based upon the availability of funds, the adherence to ATP
selection criteria, or the appropriate distribution of funds among
technologies and their applications. NIST reserves the right to deny
awards in any case where NIST determines that a reasonable doubt exists
regarding a proposer's ability to comply with ATP requirements or to
handle Federal funds responsibly.
Ineligible Projects
a. Straightforward improvements of existing products or product
development.
b. Projects that are basic research.
c. Projects that are Phase II, III, or IV clinical trials. ATP
rarely funds Phase I clinical trials and reserves the right not to fund
a Phase I clinical trial. The portion of a Phase I trial that may be
funded must be critical to meeting the scientific and technological
merit selection criterion and the trial must be essential for
completion of the study. The definitions of all phases of clinical
trials are provided in the ATP Guidelines and Documentation
Requirements for Research Involving Human & Animal Subjects located at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm.
d. Pre-commercial-scale demonstration projects where the emphasis
is on demonstrating that some technology works on a large scale or is
economically sound rather than on R&D that advances the state of the
art.
e. Projects that ATP believes would likely be completed without ATP
funds in the same time frame or nearly the same time frame, or with the
same scale or scope.
f. Predominantly straightforward, routine data gathering (e.g.,
creation of voluntary consensus standards, data gathering/handbook
preparation, testing of materials, or unbounded research aimed at basic
discovery science) or application of standard engineering practices.
g. Projects that are simply a follow-on or a continuation of tasks
previously funded in ATP projects from essentially the same proposing
team.
h. Projects in which the only risk is market oriented--that is, the
risk that the end product may not be embraced by the marketplace.
i. Projects with software work, that are predominantly about final
product details and product development, and that have significant
testing that involve users outside the research team to determine if
the software meets the original research objectives, are likely to be
either uncompetitive or possibly ineligible for funding. However, R&D
projects with limited software testing, involving users outside of the
research team, may be considered eligible costs within an ATP award
when the testing is critical to meeting the scientific and
technological merit selection criterion and the testing is essential
for completion of the proposed research. These types of projects may
also be considered to involve human subjects in research.
Unallowable/Ineligible Costs. The following items, regardless of
whether they are allowable under the federal cost principles, are
unallowable under ATP:
a. Bid and proposal costs unless they are incorporated into a
federally approved indirect cost rate.
b. Construction costs for new buildings or extensive renovations of
existing laboratory buildings. However, costs for the construction of
experimental research and development facilities to be located within a
new or existing building are allowable provided that the equipment or
facilities are essential for carrying out the proposed scientific and
technical project and are approved by the NIST Grants Officer.
c. For research involving human and/or animal subjects, any costs
used to secure Institutional Review Board or Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee approvals before the award or during the award.
d. General purpose office equipment and supplies that are not used
exclusively for the research, e.g., office computers, printers,
copiers, paper, pens, and toner cartridges.
e. Indirect costs for single-company recipients, which must be
absorbed by the company. (Note that with large businesses submitting
proposals as single-company proposers, indirect costs absorbed by the
large business may be used to meet the cost-sharing requirement.)
f. Marketing, sales, or commercialization costs, including
marketing surveys, commercialization studies, and general business
planning, unless they are included in a federally approved indirect
cost rate.
g. Office furniture costs, unless they are included in a federally
approved indirect cost rate.
h. Patent costs and legal fees, unless they are included in a
federally approved indirect cost rate.
i. Preaward costs.
j. Profit, management fees, interest on borrowed funds, or
facilities capital cost of money.
k. Relocation costs, unless they are included in a federally
approved indirect cost rate.
l. Subcontractor expenses such as those for office supplies and
conferences/workshops.
m. Subcontracts to another part of the same company or to another
company with identical or nearly identical ownership. Work proposed by
another part of the same company or by another company with identical
or nearly identical ownership should be shown as funded through
interorganizational transfers that do not contain profit.
Interorganizational transfers should be broken down in the appropriate
budget categories.
n. Tuition costs. However, a university participating in an ATP
project as a subcontractor or as a joint venture partner may charge ATP
for tuition remission or other forms of compensation in lieu of wages
paid to university students working on ATP projects but only as
provided in OMB Circular A-21, Section J.41. In such cases, tuition
remission would be considered a cash contribution rather than an in-
kind contribution.
Intellectual Property Requirements: Title to any inventions arising
from an ATP-funded project must be held by a for-profit company, or
companies,
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incorporated or organized in the United States. A university,
government laboratory, independent research organization, or other
nonprofit organization cannot retain title to patents, although such
organizations can receive mutually agreeable payments (either one-time
or continuing) from the company or companies holding title to the
patent. However, a for-profit corporation organized by a university can
be considered a for-profit company for the purpose of retaining title
to patents arising from an ATP award. In such a case, documentation of
the for-profit status must be provided in the proposal. If your
organization is not a for-profit company but plans to be involved in an
ATP project, you will not be able to retain title to any patentable
inventions arising from the ATP project. Please make sure your legal
department is aware that ATP cannot waive this mandated provision (15
U.S.C. 278n(d)(11)(A) and 15 CFR 295.2 and 295.8). Title to any such
invention shall not be transferred or passed, except to a for-profit
company organized in the United States, until the expiration of the
first patent obtained in connection with such invention.
The United States reserves a nonexclusive, nontransferable,
irrevocable, paid-up license to practice or have practiced for or on
behalf of the United States any patentable invention arising from an
ATP award. The federal government shall not, however, in the exercise
of such license, publicly disclose proprietary information related to
the license. The federal government also has march-in rights in
accordance with 15 CFR 295.8. Since its inception in 1990, ATP has not
exercised its march-in rights nor has it used its nontransferable,
irrevocable, paid-up license.
Projects Involving Human Subjects: Research involving human
subjects must be in compliance with applicable Federal regulations and
NIST policies for the protection of human subjects. Human subjects
research involves interactions with live human subjects or the use of
data, images, tissue, and/or cells/cell lines (including those used for
control purposes) from human subjects. Research involving human
subjects may include activities such as the use of image and/or audio
recording of people, taking surveys or using survey data, using
databases containing personal information, testing software with
volunteers, and many tasks beyond those within traditional biomedical
research. A Human Subjects Determination Checklist is included in the
April 2007 ATP Proposal Preparation Kit as Exhibit 2 (https://
www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm) to assist you in determining whether
your proposal has human subjects involvement, which would require
additional documents with your proposal. Detailed information regarding
the use of human subjects in research projects and required
documentation is available in the ATP Guidelines and Documentation
Requirements for Research Involving Human & Animal Subjects located at
https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm or by calling 1-800-287-3863.
Projects Involving Animal Subjects: Research involving animal
subjects must be in compliance with applicable federal regulations and
NIST policies for the protection of animal subjects. Vertebrate animal
research involves live animals that are being cared for, euthanized, or
used by the project participants to accomplish research goals or for
teaching or testing. The regulations do not apply to animal tissues
purchased from commercial processors or tissue banks or to uses of
preexisting images of animals (e.g., a wildlife documentary or pictures
of animals in newscasts). The regulations do apply to any animals that
are housed and cared for by a project participant and used for custom
collection of biological samples or observation data of health and
behavior. Detailed information regarding the use of animal subjects in
research projects and required documentation is available in the ATP
Guidelines and Documentation Requirements for Research Involving Human
& Animal Subjects located at https://www.atp.nist.gov/atp/helpful.htm or
by calling 1-800-287-3863.
Administrative and National Policy Requirements: The Department of
Commerce Pre-Award Notification Requirements for Grants and Cooperative
Agreements: The Department of Commerce Pre-Award Notification
Requirements for Grants and Cooperative Agreements contained in the
Federal Register notice of December 30, 2004 (69 FR 78389) is
applicable to this announcement. On the form SF-424 (R&R), the
applicant's 9-digit Dun and Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number must be entered in the Organizational DUNS line.
Paperwork Reduction Act: This notice contains collection of
information requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).
The use of Forms NIST-1262 and NIST-1263, SF-424 (R&R), Research and
Related Other Project Information, SF-424B, SF-LLL, CD-346, and Budget
Narrative form has been approved by OMB under the respective control
numbers 0693-0009, 4040-0001, 4040-0001, 4040-0007, 0348-0046, 0605-
0001, and 0693-0009. Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no
person is required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a
penalty for failure to comply with, a collection of information,
subject to the requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid OMB Control Number.
Executive Order 12866: This notice has been determined to be not
significant for purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Executive Order 12372 (Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs): ATP does not involve the mandatory payment of any matching
funds from state or local government and does not affect directly any
state or local government. Accordingly, the Department of Commerce has
determined that Executive Order 12372 is not applicable to this
program.
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism): It has been determined that
this notice does not contain policies with Federalism implications as
that term is defined in Executive Order 13132.
Administrative Procedure Act/Regulatory Flexibility Act: Notice and
comment are not required under the Administrative Procedure Act (5
U.S.C. 553) or any other law, for notices relating to public property,
loans, grants, benefits or contracts (5 U.S.C. 553(a)). Because notice
and comment are not required under the Administrative Procedure Act, a
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is not required and has not been
prepared for this notice, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
William Jeffrey,
Director, NIST.
[FR Doc. E7-6650 Filed 4-9-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-13-P