Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, 35120-35121 [E8-13909]
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35120
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 120 / Friday, June 20, 2008 / Notices
Budget (OMB) for clearance the
following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35).
Agency: National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Title: Southeast Region Vessel
Identification Requirements.
Form Number(s): None.
OMB Approval Number: 0648–0358.
Type of Request: Regular submission.
Burden Hours: 7,331.
Number of Respondents: 9,774.
Average Hours per Response: 45
minutes.
Needs and Uses: The participants in
the Federally-regulated Sargassum
fishery in the Southeast Region of the
United States are required to mark their
fishing vessels (port and starboard sides
of the deckhouse or hull, and weather
deck) with the official identification
number or some other form of
identification. This identification is
necessary to aid fishery enforcement
activities and for purposes of gear
identification concerning damage, loss,
and civil proceedings.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit organizations.
Frequency: Annually.
Respondent’s Obligation: Mandatory.
OMB Desk Officer: David Rostker,
(202) 395–3897.
Copies of the above information
collection proposal can be obtained by
calling or writing Diana Hynek,
Departmental Paperwork Clearance
Officer, (202) 482–0266, Department of
Commerce, Room 6625, 14th and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20230 (or via the Internet at
dHynek@doc.gov).
Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to David Rostker, OMB Desk
Officer, FAX number (202) 395–7285, or
David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov.
Dated: June 16, 2008.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. E8–13908 Filed 6–19–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
The Department of Commerce will
submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for clearance the
following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:53 Jun 19, 2008
Jkt 214001
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
chapter 35).
Agency: U.S. Census Bureau.
Title: National Youth Volunteering
and Civic Engagement Survey.
OMB Control Number: 0607–0913.
Form Number(s): None.
Type of Request: Reinstatement, with
change, of an expired collection.
Burden Hours: 2,000.
Number of Respondents: 8,000.
Average Hours Per Response: 15
minutes.
Needs and Uses: The purpose of this
request for review is for the
reinstatement of clearance for the
National Youth Volunteering and Civic
Engagement Survey (NYVCES).
Although most questions remain the
same from the initial submission,
questions from the Civic Engagement
Supplement to the Current Population
Survey have been added at the request
of the Corporation for National and
Community Service (the Corporation).
Throughout the history of the United
States, Americans have valued an ethic
of service. Today, Americans of all ages,
backgrounds, and abilities are donating
their time and talents to schools,
churches, hospitals, and local
nonprofits in an effort to improve their
communities and serve a purpose
greater than themselves. According to
data collected over the past 30 years by
the U.S. Census Bureau and the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, Americans ages 16
and older are volunteering at
historically high rates, giving their time
to help others by mentoring students,
beautifying neighborhoods, restoring
homes after disasters, and much, much
more.
To deepen our understanding of
volunteering among youth in America
and to promote its growth, the
Corporation has proposed conducting
the 2008 NYVCES. This survey will be
a continuation of the youth volunteering
study conducted in 2005. At that time,
Census collected information on
volunteering and civic engagement from
over 3,100 of the nation’s youth ranging
in age from 12 to 18 years old. As with
the annual collection of adult
volunteering activities, a recurring
survey of this population will allow
Census to track changes in the attitudes
and behaviors of America’s young
people toward volunteering and civic
engagement. Measuring the level of
youth volunteering activities is critically
important because volunteering is no
longer just nice to do. It is a necessary
aspect of meeting the most pressing
needs facing our nation: crime, gangs,
poverty, disasters, illiteracy, and
homelessness.
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Frm 00005
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Data collection activities for the 2008
NYVCES are scheduled to begin in the
fall of 2008. Respondents will provide
information on their participation in
volunteering and civic engagement
activities for the twelve-month period
that includes the 2007–2008 academic
year and the 2008 summer break. This
reference period will be similar to the
reference period used in the September
Current Population Survey (CPS)
Volunteer Supplement and the reference
period used in the upcoming 2008 CPS
Voting and Civic Engagement
Supplement. The design of the survey,
which includes questions also asked in
the Volunteer and Voting and Civic
Engagement Supplements, will allow for
our evaluation of youth volunteering to
be informed by the overall context of
volunteering and civic engagement
activities taking place across America by
all age groups. All interviews will be
conducted at the Census Bureau’s
Telephone Centers using Computer
Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI)
technology.
The chief purpose of the 2008 survey
is to collect information on the
motivations, attitudes, experiences, and
demographics of youth in relation to
volunteering, participation in schoolbased service and other forms of civic
engagement, which will be utilized in
promoting, managing, and evaluating
volunteer participation at the national
level for youth ranging in age from 12
to 18. A study of this rarely-evaluated
segment of the volunteering population
will provide important information to
the Corporation, the federal agency
responsible for providing national and
community service opportunities for
millions of Americans. For example, the
Corporation’s Learn and Serve America
program encourages civic participation
and volunteerism throughout the
country by supporting service-learning
programs that help more than one
million young people, from
kindergarten through college, meet
community needs while improving their
academic skills and learning the habits
of good citizenship each year. Through
the survey, Learn and Serve America
will gain valuable information on teens’
experience with and their attitudes
towards service-learning, civic
engagement, and volunteerism.
Not only can teens make positive
contributions toward meeting
community needs through their
volunteer activities, the behaviors and
attitudes toward volunteering and civic
engagement during childhood are
reliable predictors of their behaviors
and attitudes in adulthood. Through the
survey, the AmeriCorps program, which
provides service opportunities for
E:\FR\FM\20JNN1.SGM
20JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 120 / Friday, June 20, 2008 / Notices
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Americans seventeen and older, will
gain valuable information on the
attitudes of this population toward
national and community service. By
understanding the unique needs and
motivations of the teen population, we
can better work to engage them in
service both now and in the long term.
Federal, state, and local agencies,
nonprofit organizations and
associations, schools, volunteer centers,
and community and corporate
foundations, among others, will use the
data from this survey to promote the
growth of active teen participation and
engagement in the community.
Participation patterns and trend
information will assist in identifying
effective strategies for attracting teens to
community service and encouraging
them to become actively involved in
public and community service.
This survey will collect priority data
on educational attainment and school
activities, participation in school-based
service and volunteer activities,
attitudes toward national and
community service, and civic attitudes
and behaviors. The survey will also
collect information on types of
organizations with which teens serve,
the work teens perform at these
organizations, the attitudes and
motivations of teens that volunteer, and
the reasons why some teens stop
volunteering.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households.
Frequency: On occasion.
Respondent’s Obligation: Voluntary.
Legal Authority: Title 13, United
States Code, Section 8.
OMB Desk Officer: Brian HarrisKojetin, (202) 395–7314.
Copies of the above information
collection proposal can be obtained by
calling or writing Diana Hynek,
Departmental Paperwork Clearance
Officer, (202) 482–0266, Department of
Commerce, Room 6625, 14th and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20230 (or via the Internet at
dhynek@doc.gov).
Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to Brian Harris-Kojetin, OMB
Desk Officer either by fax (202–395–
7245) or e-mail (bharrisk@omb.eop.gov).
Dated: June 16, 2008.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. E8–13909 Filed 6–19–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:53 Jun 19, 2008
Jkt 214001
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request; 2010 Decennial
Census-American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, Guam, and the U.S.
Virgin Islands
U.S. Census Bureau.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Department of
Commerce, 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
proposed and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)).
To ensure consideration, written
comments must be submitted on or
before August 19, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Diana Hynek, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Department of Commerce, Room 6625,
14th and Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20230 (or via the
Internet at dHynek@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of questionnaires and
instructions should be directed to Frank
Vitrano, U.S. Census Bureau, Room
3H174, Washington, DC 20233–9200,
301–763–3961 (or via Internet at:
frank.a.vitrano@census.gov).
DATES:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Abstract
The Census Bureau will conduct the
2010 Census operations in American
Samoa, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and
the U.S. Virgin Islands (collectively
referred to as the Island Areas) in
partnership with the Government of
each Island Area.
The United States Constitution
mandates that a census of the Nation’s
population be taken every ten years. In
Title 13, U.S. Code, the Congress gave
the Secretary of Commerce (delegated to
the Director of the Census Bureau)
authority to undertake the decennial
census. The geographic scope of the
decennial census is specified in Title 13
U.S.C., Section 191 as covering the 50
states, the District of Columbia, Puerto
Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands of the
United States, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, and
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
35121
any other areas as may be determined by
the Department of State. In the 2010
Census, Census also will enumerate the
Pacific Island Area of American Samoa.
The Census Bureau’s goal in the 2010
Census is to take the most accurate and
cost-effective census possible. The goal
in selecting the 2010 Census
questionnaire content for the Island
Areas is to fulfill the many statutory
data requirements of Federal agencies,
as well as the needs of the Island Areas
to administer governmental programs.
Census data are the definitive
benchmark for virtually all demographic
information used by the Island Areas
and local governments, policy makers,
educators, journalists, and community
and nonprofit organizations.
Each Island Area government was
asked to form an Interagency
Committee, composed of data users
from the public, and private sectors, to
review the Census 2000 questionnaire
and make recommendations for the
2010 Census. Based on the Census
Bureau’s review of the subject
recommendations submitted by the
Island Areas Interagency Committees,
there will be one questionnaire for the
Pacific Island Areas and a separate one
for the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The Census Bureau will collect
demographic, social, economic, and
housing characteristics from the Island
Areas population. Many of the questions
included on the questionnaires are the
same as those on the stateside decennial
census short form and the American
Community Survey long-form
questionnaires. Other questions, as
recommended by the Island Areas
Interagency Committees, are
modifications of stateside questions, or
questions that reflect the unique social,
economic, and climatic characteristics
of these areas. There will be no
sampling for content in the Island
Areas; all forms distributed will be longforms.
In the process of developing the data
collection forms, the Census Bureau has
tried to reduce respondent burden by
including only those questions that are
required in Federal or local law, or
implied in the data requirements for the
participation in Federal or local
government programs.
II. Method of Collection
The Census Bureau will develop and
sign a Memorandum of Agreement with
the Governor of each of the Island Areas
that outlines the mutual roles and
responsibilities of each party in the
conduct of the 2010 Census for each
Island Area.
E:\FR\FM\20JNN1.SGM
20JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 120 (Friday, June 20, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35120-35121]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-13909]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request
The Department of Commerce will submit to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for clearance the following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. chapter 35).
Agency: U.S. Census Bureau.
Title: National Youth Volunteering and Civic Engagement Survey.
OMB Control Number: 0607-0913.
Form Number(s): None.
Type of Request: Reinstatement, with change, of an expired
collection.
Burden Hours: 2,000.
Number of Respondents: 8,000.
Average Hours Per Response: 15 minutes.
Needs and Uses: The purpose of this request for review is for the
reinstatement of clearance for the National Youth Volunteering and
Civic Engagement Survey (NYVCES). Although most questions remain the
same from the initial submission, questions from the Civic Engagement
Supplement to the Current Population Survey have been added at the
request of the Corporation for National and Community Service (the
Corporation).
Throughout the history of the United States, Americans have valued
an ethic of service. Today, Americans of all ages, backgrounds, and
abilities are donating their time and talents to schools, churches,
hospitals, and local nonprofits in an effort to improve their
communities and serve a purpose greater than themselves. According to
data collected over the past 30 years by the U.S. Census Bureau and the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Americans ages 16 and older are
volunteering at historically high rates, giving their time to help
others by mentoring students, beautifying neighborhoods, restoring
homes after disasters, and much, much more.
To deepen our understanding of volunteering among youth in America
and to promote its growth, the Corporation has proposed conducting the
2008 NYVCES. This survey will be a continuation of the youth
volunteering study conducted in 2005. At that time, Census collected
information on volunteering and civic engagement from over 3,100 of the
nation's youth ranging in age from 12 to 18 years old. As with the
annual collection of adult volunteering activities, a recurring survey
of this population will allow Census to track changes in the attitudes
and behaviors of America's young people toward volunteering and civic
engagement. Measuring the level of youth volunteering activities is
critically important because volunteering is no longer just nice to do.
It is a necessary aspect of meeting the most pressing needs facing our
nation: crime, gangs, poverty, disasters, illiteracy, and homelessness.
Data collection activities for the 2008 NYVCES are scheduled to
begin in the fall of 2008. Respondents will provide information on
their participation in volunteering and civic engagement activities for
the twelve-month period that includes the 2007-2008 academic year and
the 2008 summer break. This reference period will be similar to the
reference period used in the September Current Population Survey (CPS)
Volunteer Supplement and the reference period used in the upcoming 2008
CPS Voting and Civic Engagement Supplement. The design of the survey,
which includes questions also asked in the Volunteer and Voting and
Civic Engagement Supplements, will allow for our evaluation of youth
volunteering to be informed by the overall context of volunteering and
civic engagement activities taking place across America by all age
groups. All interviews will be conducted at the Census Bureau's
Telephone Centers using Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI)
technology.
The chief purpose of the 2008 survey is to collect information on
the motivations, attitudes, experiences, and demographics of youth in
relation to volunteering, participation in school-based service and
other forms of civic engagement, which will be utilized in promoting,
managing, and evaluating volunteer participation at the national level
for youth ranging in age from 12 to 18. A study of this rarely-
evaluated segment of the volunteering population will provide important
information to the Corporation, the federal agency responsible for
providing national and community service opportunities for millions of
Americans. For example, the Corporation's Learn and Serve America
program encourages civic participation and volunteerism throughout the
country by supporting service-learning programs that help more than one
million young people, from kindergarten through college, meet community
needs while improving their academic skills and learning the habits of
good citizenship each year. Through the survey, Learn and Serve America
will gain valuable information on teens' experience with and their
attitudes towards service-learning, civic engagement, and volunteerism.
Not only can teens make positive contributions toward meeting
community needs through their volunteer activities, the behaviors and
attitudes toward volunteering and civic engagement during childhood are
reliable predictors of their behaviors and attitudes in adulthood.
Through the survey, the AmeriCorps program, which provides service
opportunities for
[[Page 35121]]
Americans seventeen and older, will gain valuable information on the
attitudes of this population toward national and community service. By
understanding the unique needs and motivations of the teen population,
we can better work to engage them in service both now and in the long
term.
Federal, state, and local agencies, nonprofit organizations and
associations, schools, volunteer centers, and community and corporate
foundations, among others, will use the data from this survey to
promote the growth of active teen participation and engagement in the
community. Participation patterns and trend information will assist in
identifying effective strategies for attracting teens to community
service and encouraging them to become actively involved in public and
community service.
This survey will collect priority data on educational attainment
and school activities, participation in school-based service and
volunteer activities, attitudes toward national and community service,
and civic attitudes and behaviors. The survey will also collect
information on types of organizations with which teens serve, the work
teens perform at these organizations, the attitudes and motivations of
teens that volunteer, and the reasons why some teens stop volunteering.
Affected Public: Individuals or households.
Frequency: On occasion.
Respondent's Obligation: Voluntary.
Legal Authority: Title 13, United States Code, Section 8.
OMB Desk Officer: Brian Harris-Kojetin, (202) 395-7314.
Copies of the above information collection proposal can be obtained
by calling or writing Diana Hynek, Departmental Paperwork Clearance
Officer, (202) 482-0266, Department of Commerce, Room 6625, 14th and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20230 (or via the Internet at
dhynek@doc.gov).
Written comments and recommendations for the proposed information
collection should be sent within 30 days of publication of this notice
to Brian Harris-Kojetin, OMB Desk Officer either by fax (202-395-7245)
or e-mail (bharrisk@omb.eop.gov).
Dated: June 16, 2008.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. E8-13909 Filed 6-19-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-07-P