Emerald Ash Borer; Additions to Quarantined Areas, 48225-48227 [E7-16695]
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ebenthall on PRODPC61 with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 163 / Thursday, August 23, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
credit card account; the issuer and the
cardholder are negotiating to restructure
the credit card debt; the issuer garnishes
the cardholder’s wages; the cardholder
disputes the terms and conditions of the
account; or the cardholder becomes
involved in any disagreement with the
issuer that may cast doubt on the
covered OTS employee’s ability to
remain impartial with respect to the
savings association or its subsidiaries.
Preliminary inquiries to the issuer
regarding the accuracy of billing
information or billed items are not, but
may become, an adversarial dispute.
(ii) Loans secured primarily by
principal residence. A covered OTS
employee (or a spouse or minor child of
a covered OTS employee) may obtain
and hold a residential real property loan
from an OTS-regulated savings
association (or its subsidiary) subject to
the following conditions:
(A) The loan must be secured
primarily by residential real property
that is the borrower’s principal
residence. The borrower may retain the
loan if the residential real property
ceases to be that borrower’s principal
residence. However, any subsequent
renewal or renegotiation of the original
terms of such a loan must meet the
requirements of this paragraph (c)(3)(ii);
(B) The borrower may not apply for
the loan while the covered OTS
employee participates, or is scheduled
to participate, in any examination, the
review of any application, or any other
supervisory or regulatory matter directly
affecting the savings association or its
subsidiaries;
(C) The borrower must satisfy all
financial requirements for the loan that
are generally applicable to all applicants
for the same type of residential real
property loan;
(D) The terms and conditions
applicable with respect to the loan and
any credit extended to the borrower
under the loan are no more favorable
generally to that borrower than the
terms and conditions that are generally
applicable to residential real property
loans offered by the same savings
association (or same subsidiary) to other
borrowers in comparable circumstances
for residential real property loans;
(E) The covered OTS employee must
inform his or her OTS supervisor and
the OTS ethics officer before the
borrower applies for a residential real
property loan under this paragraph
(c)(3)(ii); and
(F) Immediately after the borrower
enters into the loan agreement, the
covered OTS employee must:
(1) Notify his or her supervisor and
the OTS ethics officer of the loan
agreement;
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14:56 Aug 22, 2007
Jkt 211001
(2) Certify that the loan meets the
requirements of this paragraph (c)(3)(ii);
and
(3) Submit a written disqualification
stating that the covered OTS employee
will not participate in any examination,
the review of any application, or any
other supervisory or regulatory matter
directly affecting the savings association
or its subsidiaries.
(4) Pre-existing loans. (i) Other than a
credit card account, which must comply
with paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section,
a covered OTS employee (or spouse or
minor child of a covered OTS employee)
may retain a loan from an OTSregulated savings association (or its
subsidiary) on its original terms if:
(A) The loan was incurred before
April 30, 1991 or the date that the
individual became a covered OTS
employee, whichever date is later; or
(B) The savings association (or its
subsidiary) acquired the loan in a
purchase or other transfer, or acquired
the loan in a conversion or merger of the
lender.
(ii) A covered OTS employee must
notify the OTS ethics officer, in a timely
manner, of any loan that meets the
requirements of paragraph (c)(4)(i) of
this section, and must submit a written
disqualification stating that the covered
OTS employee will not participate in
any examination, the review of any
application, or any other supervisory or
regulatory matter directly affecting the
savings association or its subsidiaries.
(iii) If a covered OTS employee (or his
or her spouse or minor child) renews or
renegotiates the original terms of a preexisting loan described in this
paragraph (c)(4), the renewed or
renegotiated loan will become subject to
paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(3) of this
section.
(5) Loans from holding companies. An
OTS examiner must submit to OTS a
written disqualification if the OTS
examiner (or a spouse or minor child of
an OTS examiner) obtains or holds a
loan from a savings and loan holding
company or its subsidiary (other than a
subsidiary that is an OTS-regulated
savings association or its subsidiary,
loans from which are covered by
paragraph (c)(3) of this section). The
written disqualification must state that
the examiner will not participate in any
examination, the review of any
application, or any other supervisory or
regulatory matter directly affecting that
lender. A disqualification is not
required for a loan that would have been
permitted and would not have required
a disqualification under this paragraph
(c), if a savings association (or its
subsidiary) had made the loan.
*
*
*
*
*
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48225
Dated: July 9, 2007.
Robert F. Hoyt,
General Counsel, Department of the Treasury.
Approved: August 14, 2007.
Robert I. Cusick,
Director, Office of Government Ethics.
[FR Doc. E7–16711 Filed 8–22–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6720–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
7 CFR Part 301
[Docket No. APHIS–2007–0005]
Emerald Ash Borer; Additions to
Quarantined Areas
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Affirmation of interim rule as
final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We are adopting as a final
rule, without change, an interim rule
that amended the emerald ash borer
regulations by designating the States of
Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, in their
entirety, as quarantined areas. The
interim rule was necessary to prevent
the artificial spread of the emerald ash
borer into noninfested areas of the
United States. As a result of the interim
rule, the interstate movement of
regulated articles from those States is
restricted.
Effective on August 23, 2007, we
are adopting as a final rule the interim
rule published at 72 FR 15597–15598 on
April 2, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Deborah McPartlan, National Emerald
Ash Borer Program Manager, Emergency
and Domestic Programs, PPQ, APHIS,
4700 River Road Unit 137, Riverdale,
MD 20737–1236; (301) 734–5356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
Background
The emerald ash borer (EAB) (Agrilus
planipennis) is a destructive
woodboring insect that attacks ash trees
(Fraxinus spp., including green ash,
white ash, black ash, and several
horticultural varieties of ash). The
insect, which is indigenous to Asia and
known to occur in China, Korea, Japan,
Mongolia, the Russian Far East, Taiwan,
and Canada, eventually kills healthy ash
trees after it bores beneath their bark
and disrupts their vascular tissues.
The EAB regulations in 7 CFR 301.53–
1 through 301.53–9 (referred to below as
the regulations) restrict the interstate
E:\FR\FM\23AUR1.SGM
23AUR1
48226
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 163 / Thursday, August 23, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
movement of regulated articles from
quarantined areas to prevent the
artificial spread of EAB into noninfested
areas of the United States. The
regulations in § 301.53–3(a) provide that
the Administrator of the Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service will list
as a quarantined area each State, or each
portion of a State, where EAB has been
found by an inspector, where the
Administrator has reason to believe that
EAB is present, or where the
Administrator considers regulation
necessary because of its inseparability
for quarantine enforcement purposes
from localities where EAB has been
found.
In an interim rule 1 effective and
published in the Federal Register on
April 2, 2007 (72 FR 15597–15598,
Docket No. 2007–0005), we amended
the regulations in § 301.53–3(c) by
designating the States of Illinois,
Indiana and Ohio, in their entirety, as
quarantined areas. Comments on the
interim rule were required to be
received on or before June 1, 2007. We
did not receive any comments.
Therefore, for the reasons given in the
interim rule, we are adopting the
interim rule as a final rule.
This action also affirms the
information contained in the interim
rule concerning Executive Orders
12866, 12372, and 12988, and the
Paperwork Reduction Act. Further, for
this action, the Office of Management
and Budget has waived its review under
Executive Order 12866.
ebenthall on PRODPC61 with RULES
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rule affirms an interim rule that
amended the EAB regulations by
designating the States of Illinois,
Indiana, and Ohio, in their entirety, as
quarantined areas. The interim rule was
necessary to prevent the artificial spread
of the emerald ash borer into
noninfested areas of the United States.
As a result of the interim rule, the
interstate movement of regulated
articles from those States is restricted.
The following analysis addresses the
economic effects of the interim rule on
small entities, as required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Based on data from the 2002 Census
of Agriculture, there were 4,909
nurseries and 285 sawmills in Illinois,
Indiana, and Ohio in that year. The
interim rule will not have negatively
affected entities in areas of the three
States that were already under
quarantine. Those entities may, in fact,
1 To view the interim rule and the comments we
received, go to https://www.regulations.gov/
fdmspublic/component/
main?main=DocketDetail&d=APHIS–2007–0005.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:56 Aug 22, 2007
Jkt 211001
benefit by not having to have regulated
articles certified prior to movement
within the State, as had been the case
when only a portion of each State was
quarantined. We do not know the
number of these entities. For the newly
quarantined entities in the three States,
the extent to which they will be affected
by the interim rule will depend on the
importance of ash species to their
businesses and the share of ash species
sales that are interstate.
In Indiana, the interim rule may affect
as many as 1,123 nurseries, 114
sawmills, and an unknown number of
firewood dealers, ash lumber producers,
and woodlot owners, based on 2002
data. In Ohio, there are at least 2,678
nurseries and 121 sawmills that may be
affected by the EAB quarantine. There
are also at least 60 ash lumber
operations, 18 firewood dealers, and an
unknown number of woodlot owners
and landscapers.2 In Illinois, the interim
rule may affect at least 1,108 nursery
operations and 50 sawmills. However,
the rule only affects the proportion of
nursery stock in these operations that is
deciduous shade trees of an ash species.
The U.S. Census of Agriculture does
not report sale receipts nor the number
of employees by entity. It is reasonable
to assume that most are small in size
according to the U.S. Small Business
Administration’s standards. The small
business size standard based upon the
North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) code 111421 (nursery
and tree production) is $750,000 or less
in annual receipts. The small business
size standard based upon NAICS code
113210 (forest nursery and gathering of
forest products) is $6 million or less in
annual receipts. The small business size
standard based upon NAICS codes
113310 (logging operations) and 321113
(sawmills) is 500 or fewer persons
employed by the operation.3 It is
estimated that more than 90 percent of
nursery operations located in these
States are small operations with annual
receipts of less than $750,000 (including
nursery operations that sell deciduous
shade trees).4 It is reasonable to assume
that nearly all sawmills and logging
operations have 500 or fewer
employees, since more than 80 percent
of the sawmills located in these States
have fewer than 20 employees and each
State has an average of 14–15 employees
2 Tom Harrison, Ohio Department of Agriculture,
personal communication.
3 Based upon 2002 Census of Agriculture—State
Data and the ‘‘Small Business Size Standards by
NAICS Industry.’’ Code of Federal Regulations,
Title 13, Chapter 1.
4 ‘‘Nursery Crops: 2002 Summary.’’ National
Agricultural Statistics Service, USDA July 2004.
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Fmt 4700
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per operation.5 The percentage of
annual revenue attributable to ash
species alone for affected entities is
unknown.
Under the regulations, regulated
articles may be moved interstate from a
quarantined area into or through an area
that is not quarantined only if they are
accompanied by a certificate or limited
permit. An inspector or a person
operating under a compliance
agreement will issue a certificate for
interstate movement of a regulated
article if certain conditions are met,
including that the regulated article is
determined to be apparently free of
EAB.
Businesses could be affected by the
regulations in two ways. First, if a
business wishes to move regulated
articles interstate from a quarantined
area, that business must either: (1) Enter
into a compliance agreement with
APHIS for the inspection and
certification of regulated articles to be
moved interstate from the quarantined
area; or (2) present its regulated articles
for inspection by an inspector and
obtain a certificate or a limited permit,
issued by the inspector, for the
interstate movement of regulated
articles. The inspections may be
inconvenient, but they should not be
costly in most cases, even for businesses
operating under a compliance
agreement that would perform the
inspections themselves. For those
businesses that elect not to enter into a
compliance agreement, APHIS would
provide the services of the inspector
without cost during normal business
hours. There is also no cost for the
compliance agreement, certificate, or
limited permit for the interstate
movement of regulated articles.
Second, there is a possibility that,
upon inspection, a regulated article
could be determined by the inspector to
be potentially infested with EAB, and,
as a result, the article would be
ineligible for interstate movement under
a certificate. In such a case, the entity’s
ability to move regulated articles
interstate would be restricted. However,
the affected entity could conceivably
obtain a limited permit under the
conditions of § 301.53–5(b).
Our experience with administering
the EAB regulations and the regulations
for other pests, such as the Asian
longhorned beetle, that impose
essentially the same conditions on the
interstate movement of regulated
articles leads us to believe that any
economic effects on affected small
5 ‘‘2002 Economic Census: Manufacturing.’’ U.S.
Census Bureau, July 2005 (Indiana, Illinois, and
Ohio Geographical reports).
E:\FR\FM\23AUR1.SGM
23AUR1
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 163 / Thursday, August 23, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
entities will be small and are
outweighed by the benefits associated
with preventing the spread of EAB into
noninfested areas of the United States.
Under these circumstances, the
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service has
determined that this action will not
have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 301
Agricultural commodities, Plant
diseases and pests, Quarantine,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Transportation.
PART 301—DOMESTIC QUARANTINE
NOTICES
Accordingly, we are adopting as a
final rule, without change, the interim
rule that amended 7 CFR part 301 and
that was published at 72 FR 15597–
15598 on April 2, 2007.
I
Done in Washington, DC, this 15th day of
August 2007.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service
[FR Doc. E7–16695 Filed 8–22–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
7 CFR Part 457
RIN 0563–AC12
Common Crop Insurance Regulations;
Millet Crop Insurance Provisions
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this rule is
non significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, it
has not been reviewed by OMB.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Pursuant to the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. chapter 35), the collections of
information in this rule have been
approved by OMB under control
number 0563–0053 through November
30, 2007.
Government Paperwork Elimination
Act (GPEA) Compliance
FCIC is committed to compliance
with the GPEA, which requires
Government agencies, in general, to
provide the public with the option of
submitting information or transacting
business electronically to the maximum
extent possible. FCIC requires that all
reinsured companies be in compliance
with the Freedom to E-File Act and
section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) establishes
requirements for Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This rule contains no Federal mandates
(under the regulatory provisions of title
II of the UMRA) for State, local, and
tribal governments or the private sector.
Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
SUMMARY: The Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC) finalizes the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations;
Millet Crop Insurance Provisions to
remove the reduction in indemnity for
any unharvested millet acreage to better
meet the needs of insured producers.
DATES: Effective Date: September 24,
2007.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under section
1(a) of Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, that this rule does not have
sufficient implications to warrant
consultation with the States. The
provisions contained in this rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on
States, or on the relationship between
the national government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
Erin
Albright, Risk Management Specialist,
Product Management, Product
Administration and Standards Division,
Risk Management Agency, United States
Department of Agriculture, Beacon
Facility—Mail Stop 0812, PO Box
419205, Kansas City, MO 64141–6205,
telephone (816) 926–7730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulatory Flexibility Act
FCIC certifies that this regulation will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Written agreement
requirements for the Federal crop
insurance program are the same for all
producers regardless of the size of their
operations. For instance, all producers
requesting this type of written
Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
ebenthall on PRODPC61 with RULES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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14:56 Aug 22, 2007
Jkt 211001
PO 00000
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48227
agreement must submit production
history for at least the most recent three
crop years in which the crop was
planted during the base period, if they
produced the crop for three years. If any
producer has not produced the crop for
three years, he or she may submit
evidence of production history for a
similar crop, or for a combination of
production history for the crop and a
similar crop, provided a total of three
years of production history is provided.
Whether a producer has 10 acres or 100
acres there is no difference in the kind
of information required for requesting a
written agreement. To ensure crop
insurance is available to small entities,
the Federal Crop Insurance Act
authorizes FCIC to waive collection of
administrative fees from limited
resource farmers. FCIC believes this
change helps ensure that small entities
are given the same opportunities as
large entities to manage their risks
through the use of crop insurance. A
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis has not
been prepared since this regulation does
not have an impact on small entities,
and, therefore, this regulation is exempt
from the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605).
Federal Assistance Program
This program is listed in the Catalog
of Federal Domestic Assistance under
No. 10.450.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to the
provisions of Executive Order 12372,
which require intergovernmental
consultation with State and local
officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR
part 3015, subpart V, published at 48 FR
29115, June 24, 1983.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12988
on civil justice reform. The provisions
of this rule will not have a retroactive
effect. The provisions of this rule will
preempt State and local laws to the
extent such State and local laws are
inconsistent herewith. With respect to
any direct action taken by FCIC or to
require the insurance provider to take
specific action under the terms of the
crop insurance policy, the
administrative appeal provisions
published at 7 CFR part 11 must be
exhausted before any action against
FCIC for judicial review may be brought.
Environmental Evaluation
This action is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on the
quality of the human environment,
health, or safety. Therefore, neither an
E:\FR\FM\23AUR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 163 (Thursday, August 23, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 48225-48227]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-16695]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
7 CFR Part 301
[Docket No. APHIS-2007-0005]
Emerald Ash Borer; Additions to Quarantined Areas
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Affirmation of interim rule as final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are adopting as a final rule, without change, an interim
rule that amended the emerald ash borer regulations by designating the
States of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, in their entirety, as
quarantined areas. The interim rule was necessary to prevent the
artificial spread of the emerald ash borer into noninfested areas of
the United States. As a result of the interim rule, the interstate
movement of regulated articles from those States is restricted.
DATES: Effective on August 23, 2007, we are adopting as a final rule
the interim rule published at 72 FR 15597-15598 on April 2, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Deborah McPartlan, National
Emerald Ash Borer Program Manager, Emergency and Domestic Programs,
PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 137, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236; (301)
734-5356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The emerald ash borer (EAB) (Agrilus planipennis) is a destructive
woodboring insect that attacks ash trees (Fraxinus spp., including
green ash, white ash, black ash, and several horticultural varieties of
ash). The insect, which is indigenous to Asia and known to occur in
China, Korea, Japan, Mongolia, the Russian Far East, Taiwan, and
Canada, eventually kills healthy ash trees after it bores beneath their
bark and disrupts their vascular tissues.
The EAB regulations in 7 CFR 301.53-1 through 301.53-9 (referred to
below as the regulations) restrict the interstate
[[Page 48226]]
movement of regulated articles from quarantined areas to prevent the
artificial spread of EAB into noninfested areas of the United States.
The regulations in Sec. 301.53-3(a) provide that the Administrator of
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will list as a
quarantined area each State, or each portion of a State, where EAB has
been found by an inspector, where the Administrator has reason to
believe that EAB is present, or where the Administrator considers
regulation necessary because of its inseparability for quarantine
enforcement purposes from localities where EAB has been found.
In an interim rule \1\ effective and published in the Federal
Register on April 2, 2007 (72 FR 15597-15598, Docket No. 2007-0005), we
amended the regulations in Sec. 301.53-3(c) by designating the States
of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, in their entirety, as quarantined areas.
Comments on the interim rule were required to be received on or before
June 1, 2007. We did not receive any comments. Therefore, for the
reasons given in the interim rule, we are adopting the interim rule as
a final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ To view the interim rule and the comments we received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov/fdmspublic/component/
main?main=DocketDetail&d=APHIS-2007-0005.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This action also affirms the information contained in the interim
rule concerning Executive Orders 12866, 12372, and 12988, and the
Paperwork Reduction Act. Further, for this action, the Office of
Management and Budget has waived its review under Executive Order
12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rule affirms an interim rule that amended the EAB regulations
by designating the States of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, in their
entirety, as quarantined areas. The interim rule was necessary to
prevent the artificial spread of the emerald ash borer into noninfested
areas of the United States. As a result of the interim rule, the
interstate movement of regulated articles from those States is
restricted.
The following analysis addresses the economic effects of the
interim rule on small entities, as required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
Based on data from the 2002 Census of Agriculture, there were 4,909
nurseries and 285 sawmills in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio in that year.
The interim rule will not have negatively affected entities in areas of
the three States that were already under quarantine. Those entities
may, in fact, benefit by not having to have regulated articles
certified prior to movement within the State, as had been the case when
only a portion of each State was quarantined. We do not know the number
of these entities. For the newly quarantined entities in the three
States, the extent to which they will be affected by the interim rule
will depend on the importance of ash species to their businesses and
the share of ash species sales that are interstate.
In Indiana, the interim rule may affect as many as 1,123 nurseries,
114 sawmills, and an unknown number of firewood dealers, ash lumber
producers, and woodlot owners, based on 2002 data. In Ohio, there are
at least 2,678 nurseries and 121 sawmills that may be affected by the
EAB quarantine. There are also at least 60 ash lumber operations, 18
firewood dealers, and an unknown number of woodlot owners and
landscapers.\2\ In Illinois, the interim rule may affect at least 1,108
nursery operations and 50 sawmills. However, the rule only affects the
proportion of nursery stock in these operations that is deciduous shade
trees of an ash species.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Tom Harrison, Ohio Department of Agriculture, personal
communication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Census of Agriculture does not report sale receipts nor
the number of employees by entity. It is reasonable to assume that most
are small in size according to the U.S. Small Business Administration's
standards. The small business size standard based upon the North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 111421 (nursery
and tree production) is $750,000 or less in annual receipts. The small
business size standard based upon NAICS code 113210 (forest nursery and
gathering of forest products) is $6 million or less in annual receipts.
The small business size standard based upon NAICS codes 113310 (logging
operations) and 321113 (sawmills) is 500 or fewer persons employed by
the operation.\3\ It is estimated that more than 90 percent of nursery
operations located in these States are small operations with annual
receipts of less than $750,000 (including nursery operations that sell
deciduous shade trees).\4\ It is reasonable to assume that nearly all
sawmills and logging operations have 500 or fewer employees, since more
than 80 percent of the sawmills located in these States have fewer than
20 employees and each State has an average of 14-15 employees per
operation.\5\ The percentage of annual revenue attributable to ash
species alone for affected entities is unknown.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Based upon 2002 Census of Agriculture--State Data and the
``Small Business Size Standards by NAICS Industry.'' Code of Federal
Regulations, Title 13, Chapter 1.
\4\ ``Nursery Crops: 2002 Summary.'' National Agricultural
Statistics Service, USDA July 2004.
\5\ ``2002 Economic Census: Manufacturing.'' U.S. Census Bureau,
July 2005 (Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio Geographical reports).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the regulations, regulated articles may be moved interstate
from a quarantined area into or through an area that is not quarantined
only if they are accompanied by a certificate or limited permit. An
inspector or a person operating under a compliance agreement will issue
a certificate for interstate movement of a regulated article if certain
conditions are met, including that the regulated article is determined
to be apparently free of EAB.
Businesses could be affected by the regulations in two ways. First,
if a business wishes to move regulated articles interstate from a
quarantined area, that business must either: (1) Enter into a
compliance agreement with APHIS for the inspection and certification of
regulated articles to be moved interstate from the quarantined area; or
(2) present its regulated articles for inspection by an inspector and
obtain a certificate or a limited permit, issued by the inspector, for
the interstate movement of regulated articles. The inspections may be
inconvenient, but they should not be costly in most cases, even for
businesses operating under a compliance agreement that would perform
the inspections themselves. For those businesses that elect not to
enter into a compliance agreement, APHIS would provide the services of
the inspector without cost during normal business hours. There is also
no cost for the compliance agreement, certificate, or limited permit
for the interstate movement of regulated articles.
Second, there is a possibility that, upon inspection, a regulated
article could be determined by the inspector to be potentially infested
with EAB, and, as a result, the article would be ineligible for
interstate movement under a certificate. In such a case, the entity's
ability to move regulated articles interstate would be restricted.
However, the affected entity could conceivably obtain a limited permit
under the conditions of Sec. 301.53-5(b).
Our experience with administering the EAB regulations and the
regulations for other pests, such as the Asian longhorned beetle, that
impose essentially the same conditions on the interstate movement of
regulated articles leads us to believe that any economic effects on
affected small
[[Page 48227]]
entities will be small and are outweighed by the benefits associated
with preventing the spread of EAB into noninfested areas of the United
States.
Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action will
not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 301
Agricultural commodities, Plant diseases and pests, Quarantine,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Transportation.
PART 301--DOMESTIC QUARANTINE NOTICES
0
Accordingly, we are adopting as a final rule, without change, the
interim rule that amended 7 CFR part 301 and that was published at 72
FR 15597-15598 on April 2, 2007.
Done in Washington, DC, this 15th day of August 2007.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
[FR Doc. E7-16695 Filed 8-22-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P