Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request, 46006-46007 [E8-18098]
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46006
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 153 / Thursday, August 7, 2008 / Notices
1. The Schifferdecker Limited
Partnership, to acquire control of G.N.
Bankshares, Inc., and thereby indirectly
acquire control of The Girard National
Bank, all of Girard, Kansas.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, August 4, 2008.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc.E8–18187 Filed 8–6–08; 8:45 am]
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, August 1, 2008.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–18107 Filed 8–6–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–S
BILLING CODE 6210–01–S
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Federal Trade Commission
(‘‘FTC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Notice.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
The companies listed in this notice
have applied to the Board for approval,
pursuant to the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.)
(BHC Act), Regulation Y (12 CFR Part
225), and all other applicable statutes
and regulations to become a bank
holding company and/or to acquire the
assets or the ownership of, control of, or
the power to vote shares of a bank or
bank holding company and all of the
banks and nonbanking companies
owned by the bank holding company,
including the companies listed below.
The applications listed below, as well
as other related filings required by the
Board, are available for immediate
inspection at the Federal Reserve Bank
indicated. The applications also will be
available for inspection at the offices of
the Board of Governors. Interested
persons may express their views in
writing on the standards enumerated in
the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(c)). If the
proposal also involves the acquisition of
a nonbanking company, the review also
includes whether the acquisition of the
nonbanking company complies with the
standards in section 4 of the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1843). Unless otherwise
noted, nonbanking activities will be
conducted throughout the United States.
Additional information on all bank
holding companies may be obtained
from the National Information Center
website at www.ffiec.gov/nic/.
Unless otherwise noted, comments
regarding each of these applications
must be received at the Reserve Bank
indicated or the offices of the Board of
Governors not later than September 2,
2008.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
(Burl Thornton, Assistant Vice
President) 230 South LaSalle Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60690–1414:
1. First Community Financial
Partners, Inc., Joliet, Illinois, to acquire
at least 57.8 percent of the voting shares
of First Community Bank of Plainfield
(in organization), Plainfield, Illinois.
16:49 Aug 06, 2008
Jkt 214001
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
AGENCY:
Formations of, Acquisitions by, and
Mergers of Bank Holding Companies
VerDate Aug<31>2005
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
SUMMARY: The information collection
requirements described below will be
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (‘‘OMB’’) for review, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act (‘‘PRA’’). The FTC is seeking public
comments on its proposal to extend
through January 31, 2012, the current
PRA clearance for information sought
through compulsory process orders to a
combined ten or more of the largest
cigarette manufacturers and smokeless
tobacco manufacturers in order to obtain
from them information including,
among other things, their sales and
marketing expenditures. The current
clearance expires on January 31, 2009.
DATES: Comments on the proposed
information requests must be received
on or before October 6, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ‘‘Tobacco
Reports: Paperwork Comment, FTC File
No. P054507’’ to facilitate the
organization of comments. The
Commission is requesting that any
comment filed in paper form be sent by
courier or overnight service, if possible
because U.S. postal mail in the
Washington area and at the FTC is
subject to delay due to heightened
security precautions. Moreover, because
paper mail in the Washington area and
at the FTC is subject to delay, please
consider submitting your comments in
electronic form, as prescribed below. If,
however, the comment contains any
material for which confidential
treatment is requested, it must be filed
in paper form, and the first page of the
document must be clearly labeled
‘‘Confidential.’’1
1 Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The
comment must be accompanied by an explicit
request for confidential treatment, including the
factual and legal basis for the request, and must
identify the specific portions of the comment to be
withheld from the public record. The request will
be granted or denied by the Commission’s General
Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the
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Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Comments filed in electronic form
should be submitted by following the
instructions on the web-based form at
(https://secure.commentworks.com/ftcTobaccoReports) and following the
instructions on the web-based form. To
ensure that the Commission considers
an electronic comment, you must file it
on the web-based form at: (https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftcTobaccoReports). If this notice appears
at www.regulations.gov, you may also
file an electronic comment through that
website. The Commission will consider
all comments that www.regulations.gov
forwards to it.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive
public comments will be considered by
the Commission and will be available to
the public on the FTC website, to the
extent practicable, at www.ftc.gov. As a
matter of discretion, the FTC makes
every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the
public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC
website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy
Act, may be found in the FTC’s privacy
policy at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/
privacy.shtm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the proposed collection of
information should be addressed to
Shira Modell, Attorney, Division of
Advertising Practices, Bureau of
Consumer Protection, Federal Trade
Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580.
Telephone: (202) 326-3116.
For forty
years, the Federal Trade Commission
has published periodic reports
containing data on domestic cigarette
sales and marketing expenditures by the
major U.S. cigarette manufacturers. The
Commission has published comparable
reports on smokeless tobacco sales and
marketing expenditures since 1987.
Both reports originally were issued
pursuant to statutory mandates. After
those statutory mandates were
terminated, the Commission continued
to collect and publish information
obtained from the cigarette and
smokeless tobacco industries pursuant
to Section 6(b) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C.
46(b). The current PRA clearance to
collect this information is valid through
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR
4.9(c).
E:\FR\FM\07AUN1.SGM
07AUN1
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 153 / Thursday, August 7, 2008 / Notices
January 31, 2009, under OMB Control
No. 3084-0134.
The FTC plans to continue sending
information requests annually to the
ultimate parent company of several of
the largest cigarette companies and
smokeless tobacco companies in the
United States (‘‘industry members’’).
The information requests will seek data
regarding, inter alia: (1) the tobacco
sales of industry members; (2) how
much industry members spend
advertising and promoting their tobacco
products, and the specific amounts
spent in each of a number of specified
expenditure categories; (3) whether
industry members are involved in the
appearance of their tobacco products in
television shows or movies; (4) how
much industry members spend on
advertising intended to reduce youth
tobacco usage; (5) the events, if any,
during which industry members’
tobacco brands are televised; and (6) for
the cigarette industry, the tar, nicotine,
and carbon monoxide ratings of their
cigarettes, to the extent they possess
such data. The information will again be
sought using compulsory process under
Section 6(b) of the FTC Act.
Under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521,
federal agencies must obtain approval
from OMB for each collection of
information they conduct or sponsor.
‘‘Collection of information’’ means
agency requests or requirements that
members of the public submit reports,
keep records, or provide information to
a third party. 44 U.S.C. 3502(3), 5 CFR
1320.3(c). As required by section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA, the FTC is
providing this opportunity for public
comment before requesting that OMB
extend the existing paperwork clearance
for the instant collection of information.
The FTC invites comments on: (1)
whether the proposed collection of
information required by the Rule is
necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (3)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on those who are to respond, including
through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology, e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
Estimated hours burden: The FTC
staff’s estimate of the hours burden is
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:49 Aug 06, 2008
Jkt 214001
based on the time required to respond
to each information request. Although
the FTC currently anticipates sending in
2009 information requests to the six
largest cigarette companies and the five
largest smokeless tobacco companies,2
the burden estimate is based on up to 15
information requests being issued per
year to take into account any future
changes in these industries. These
companies vary greatly in size, in the
number of products that they sell, and
in the extent and variety of their
advertising and promotion. Prior input
received from the industries, combined
with staff’s knowledge of them, suggests
that the time most companies would
require to gather, organize, format, and
produce their responses would range
from 30 to 80 hours per information
request for the smaller companies, to as
much as hundreds of hours for the very
largest companies. As an
approximation, staff continues to
assume a per company average of 180
hours for the ten largest recipients of the
Commission’s information request to
comply with it; cumulatively, 1,800
hours per year.3 Staff further estimates
that for the eleventh anticipated
recipient of the information request to
be issued in 2009 and the four possible
additional recipients, all of which
would be smaller companies, the
burden should not exceed 60 hours per
company or 300 hours, cumulatively.
Thus, overall estimated burden for a
maximum of 15 recipients of the
information request is 2,100 hours.
These estimates include any time spent
by separately incorporated subsidiaries
and other entities affiliated with the
ultimate parent company that has
received the information request.
Estimated cost burden: It is not
possible to calculate with precision the
labor costs associated with this data
production, as they entail varying
compensation levels of management
and/or support staff among companies
of different sizes. Financial, legal,
marketing, and clerical personnel may
be involved in the information
collection process. Commission staff
assumes that professional personnel
will handle most of the tasks involved
in gathering and producing responsive
information, and have applied an
average hourly wage of $150/hour for
their combined labor. Staff’s best
estimate for the total labor costs for up
2 In 2007, the Commission issued information
requests to five cigarette companies and five
smokeless tobacco companies. Given changing
growth conditions in the industry since then, the
Commission anticipates that it will issue requests
to six cigarette companies in 2009.
3 70 FR 24415 (May 9, 2005); 70 FR 62313
(October 31, 2005).
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
46007
to 15 information requests is $315,000.
Staff believes that the capital or other
non-labor costs associated with the
information requests are minimal.
Although the information requests may
necessitate that industry members
maintain the requested information
provided to the Commission, they
should already have in place the means
to compile and maintain business
records.
William Blumenthal
General Counsel
[FR Doc. E8–18098 Filed 8–6–08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2008–N–0063] (formerly
Docket No. 2008N–0016)
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Announcement of Office of
Management and Budget Approval;
Exports: Notification and
Recordkeeping Requirements
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a collection of information entitled
‘‘Exports: Notification and
Recordkeeping Requirements’’ has been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jonna Capezzuto, Office of Information
Management (HFA–710), Food and Drug
Administration, 5600 Fishers
Lane,Rockville, MD 20857, 301–796–
3794.
In the
Federal Register of May 8, 2008 (73 FR
26119), the agency announced that the
proposed information collection had
been submitted to OMB for review and
clearance under 44 U.S.C. 3507. An
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and
a person is not required to respond to,
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. OMB has now approved the
information collection and has assigned
OMB control number 0910–0482. The
approval expires on July 31, 2011. A
copy of the supporting statement for this
information collection is available on
the Internet at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\07AUN1.SGM
07AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 153 (Thursday, August 7, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46006-46007]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-18098]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission (``FTC'' or ``Commission'').
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The information collection requirements described below will
be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') for
review, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA''). The FTC
is seeking public comments on its proposal to extend through January
31, 2012, the current PRA clearance for information sought through
compulsory process orders to a combined ten or more of the largest
cigarette manufacturers and smokeless tobacco manufacturers in order to
obtain from them information including, among other things, their sales
and marketing expenditures. The current clearance expires on January
31, 2009.
DATES: Comments on the proposed information requests must be received
on or before October 6, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments.
Comments should refer to ``Tobacco Reports: Paperwork Comment, FTC File
No. P054507'' to facilitate the organization of comments. The
Commission is requesting that any comment filed in paper form be sent
by courier or overnight service, if possible because U.S. postal mail
in the Washington area and at the FTC is subject to delay due to
heightened security precautions. Moreover, because paper mail in the
Washington area and at the FTC is subject to delay, please consider
submitting your comments in electronic form, as prescribed below. If,
however, the comment contains any material for which confidential
treatment is requested, it must be filed in paper form, and the first
page of the document must be clearly labeled ``Confidential.''\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Commission Rule 4.2(d), 16 CFR 4.2(d). The comment must be
accompanied by an explicit request for confidential treatment,
including the factual and legal basis for the request, and must
identify the specific portions of the comment to be withheld from
the public record. The request will be granted or denied by the
Commission's General Counsel, consistent with applicable law and the
public interest. See Commission Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comments filed in electronic form should be submitted by following
the instructions on the web-based form at (https://
secure.commentworks.com/ftc-TobaccoReports) and following the
instructions on the web-based form. To ensure that the Commission
considers an electronic comment, you must file it on the web-based form
at: (https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-TobaccoReports). If this
notice appears at www.regulations.gov, you may also file an electronic
comment through that website. The Commission will consider all comments
that www.regulations.gov forwards to it.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. All timely and responsive public comments will be
considered by the Commission and will be available to the public on the
FTC website, to the extent practicable, at www.ftc.gov. As a matter of
discretion, the FTC makes every effort to remove home contact
information for individuals from the public comments it receives before
placing those comments on the FTC website. More information, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, may be found in the FTC's
privacy policy at (https://www.ftc.gov/ftc/privacy.shtm).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of the proposed collection of information should be addressed to
Shira Modell, Attorney, Division of Advertising Practices, Bureau of
Consumer Protection, Federal Trade Commission, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. Telephone: (202) 326-3116.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: For forty years, the Federal Trade
Commission has published periodic reports containing data on domestic
cigarette sales and marketing expenditures by the major U.S. cigarette
manufacturers. The Commission has published comparable reports on
smokeless tobacco sales and marketing expenditures since 1987. Both
reports originally were issued pursuant to statutory mandates. After
those statutory mandates were terminated, the Commission continued to
collect and publish information obtained from the cigarette and
smokeless tobacco industries pursuant to Section 6(b) of the FTC Act,
15 U.S.C. 46(b). The current PRA clearance to collect this information
is valid through
[[Page 46007]]
January 31, 2009, under OMB Control No. 3084-0134.
The FTC plans to continue sending information requests annually to
the ultimate parent company of several of the largest cigarette
companies and smokeless tobacco companies in the United States
(``industry members''). The information requests will seek data
regarding, inter alia: (1) the tobacco sales of industry members; (2)
how much industry members spend advertising and promoting their tobacco
products, and the specific amounts spent in each of a number of
specified expenditure categories; (3) whether industry members are
involved in the appearance of their tobacco products in television
shows or movies; (4) how much industry members spend on advertising
intended to reduce youth tobacco usage; (5) the events, if any, during
which industry members' tobacco brands are televised; and (6) for the
cigarette industry, the tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide ratings of
their cigarettes, to the extent they possess such data. The information
will again be sought using compulsory process under Section 6(b) of the
FTC Act.
Under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521, federal agencies must obtain
approval from OMB for each collection of information they conduct or
sponsor. ``Collection of information'' means agency requests or
requirements that members of the public submit reports, keep records,
or provide information to a third party. 44 U.S.C. 3502(3), 5 CFR
1320.3(c). As required by section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA, the FTC is
providing this opportunity for public comment before requesting that
OMB extend the existing paperwork clearance for the instant collection
of information.
The FTC invites comments on: (1) whether the proposed collection of
information required by the Rule is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the
agency's estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of
information, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions
used; (3) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4) ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who are to respond, including
through the use of appropriate automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection techniques or other forms of information
technology, e.g., permitting electronic submission of responses.
Estimated hours burden: The FTC staff's estimate of the hours
burden is based on the time required to respond to each information
request. Although the FTC currently anticipates sending in 2009
information requests to the six largest cigarette companies and the
five largest smokeless tobacco companies,\2\ the burden estimate is
based on up to 15 information requests being issued per year to take
into account any future changes in these industries. These companies
vary greatly in size, in the number of products that they sell, and in
the extent and variety of their advertising and promotion. Prior input
received from the industries, combined with staff's knowledge of them,
suggests that the time most companies would require to gather,
organize, format, and produce their responses would range from 30 to 80
hours per information request for the smaller companies, to as much as
hundreds of hours for the very largest companies. As an approximation,
staff continues to assume a per company average of 180 hours for the
ten largest recipients of the Commission's information request to
comply with it; cumulatively, 1,800 hours per year.\3\ Staff further
estimates that for the eleventh anticipated recipient of the
information request to be issued in 2009 and the four possible
additional recipients, all of which would be smaller companies, the
burden should not exceed 60 hours per company or 300 hours,
cumulatively. Thus, overall estimated burden for a maximum of 15
recipients of the information request is 2,100 hours. These estimates
include any time spent by separately incorporated subsidiaries and
other entities affiliated with the ultimate parent company that has
received the information request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In 2007, the Commission issued information requests to five
cigarette companies and five smokeless tobacco companies. Given
changing growth conditions in the industry since then, the
Commission anticipates that it will issue requests to six cigarette
companies in 2009.
\3\ 70 FR 24415 (May 9, 2005); 70 FR 62313 (October 31, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated cost burden: It is not possible to calculate with
precision the labor costs associated with this data production, as they
entail varying compensation levels of management and/or support staff
among companies of different sizes. Financial, legal, marketing, and
clerical personnel may be involved in the information collection
process. Commission staff assumes that professional personnel will
handle most of the tasks involved in gathering and producing responsive
information, and have applied an average hourly wage of $150/hour for
their combined labor. Staff's best estimate for the total labor costs
for up to 15 information requests is $315,000. Staff believes that the
capital or other non-labor costs associated with the information
requests are minimal. Although the information requests may necessitate
that industry members maintain the requested information provided to
the Commission, they should already have in place the means to compile
and maintain business records.
William Blumenthal
General Counsel
[FR Doc. E8-18098 Filed 8-6-08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-S