Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, 67174-67175 [E8-26882]
Download as PDF
67174
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 220 / Thursday, November 13, 2008 / Notices
concert with Kristi Erickson
Kampmeyer, Sunfish Lake, Minnesota,
and Marilyn J. Kron, Hudson,
Wisconsin, to gain control of Waseca
Bancshares, Inc., and thereby indirectly
gain control of Roundbank, both of
Waseca, Minnesota.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, November 7, 2008.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8–26926 Filed 11–12–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–S
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
Federal Trade Commission
(‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘FTC’’).
ACTION: Notice.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
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 must be submitted on
or before December 15, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form.
Comments should refer to ‘‘Tobacco
Reports: Paperwork Comment, FTC File
No. P054507’’ to facilitate the
organization of comments. Please note
that comments will be placed on the
public record of this proceeding—
including on the publicly accessible
FTC website, at (https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm) — and therefore
should not include any sensitive or
confidential information. In particular,
comments should not include any
sensitive personal information, such as
an individual’s Social Security Number;
date of birth; driver’s license number or
other state identification number, or
foreign country equivalent; passport
number; financial account number; or
credit or debit card number. Comments
also should not include any sensitive
health information, such as medical
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:13 Nov 12, 2008
Jkt 217001
records or other individually
identifiable health information. In
addition, comments should not include
any ‘‘[t]rade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a
person and privileged or
confidential. . . .,’’ as provided in Section
6(f) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and
Commission Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR
4.10(a)(2). Comments containing
material for which confidential
treatment is requested must be filed in
paper form, must be clearly labeled
‘‘Confidential,’’ and must comply with
FTC Rule 4.9(c).1
Because paper mail addressed to the
FTC is subject to delay due to
heightened security screening, please
consider submitting your comments in
electronic form. Comments filed in
electronic form should be submitted by
using the following weblink: (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 the weblink
(https://secure.commentworks.com/ftcTobaccoReports). If this Notice appears
at (https://www.regulations.gov/search/
index.jsp), you may also file an
electronic comment through that
website. The Commission will consider
all comments that regulations.gov
forwards to it.
A comment filed in paper form
should include the ‘‘Tobacco Reports:
Paperwork Comment, FTC File No.
P054507’’ reference both in the text and
on the envelope, and should be mailed
or delivered to the following address:
Federal Trade Commission, Office of the
Secretary, Room H-135 (Annex J), 600
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20580. The FTC 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 Commission
is subject to delay due to heightened
security precautions.
All comments should additionally be
submitted to: Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs of OMB, Attention:
Desk Officer for the Federal Trade
Commission. Comments should be
submitted via facsimile to (202) 3956974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject
1 FTC 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 FTC Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
to lengthy delays due to heightened
security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will
consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives,
whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be
available to the public on the FTC
website, to the extent practicable, at
(https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm). As a matter of
discretion, the Commission 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
requirements 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
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
E:\FR\FM\13NON1.SGM
13NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 220 / Thursday, November 13, 2008 / Notices
spent in each of several 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.
On August 7, 2008, the FTC sought
public comment on its proposed
information collection requests to the
major cigarette and smokeless tobacco
manufacturers. 73 FR 46006. One
comment was received, which is
discussed below.2 Pursuant to the OMB
regulations that implement the PRA, 5
CFR Part 1320, the FTC is providing this
second opportunity for public comment
while seeking OMB approval to extend
the existing paperwork clearance for the
information collection requests. All
comments should be filed as prescribed
in the ADDRESSES section above, and
must be received on or before December
15, 2008.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Comment Received:
Altria Client Services Inc. filed a
comment on behalf of Philip Morris
USA Inc. (‘‘PM USA’’), in which it
stated that PM USA believes the FTC’s
authority to collect the proposed
information ‘‘should be extended given
the important role that the FTC has
played and should continue to play
relative to these products.’’ The
comment then referenced a separate
Commission matter, noting that if the
FTC were to rescind its guidance that
factual statements of cigarette tar and
nicotine yields based on the Cambridge
Filter Method generally do not violate
the FTC Act,3 PM USA would question
the Commission’s need to continue
collecting such information.
The matter referred to by PM USA is
still being considered by the
Commission. If the 1966 guidance is
rescinded, the Commission will decide
whether to continue collecting tar,
nicotine, and carbon monoxide yield
2 That comment is available at https://
www.ftc.gov/os/comments/tobaccoreportspra/
index.shtm.
3 On July 14, 2008, the Commission published a
Federal Register notice seeking comment on a
proposal to rescind its guidance, issued in 1966,
that it is generally not a violation of the FTC Act
to make factual statements of the tar and nicotine
yields of cigarettes when statements of such yields
are supported by testing conducted pursuant to the
Cambridge Filter Method. 73 FR 40,351.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:37 Nov 12, 2008
Jkt 217001
data to the extent the companies possess
them.
Estimated annual 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 information requests to the six
largest cigarette companies and the five
largest smokeless tobacco companies in
2009,4 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.5 Staff further estimates
that for the eleventh recipient of the
information request to be issued in 2009
and the four possible additional
recipients, all of which would be
smaller companies than the initial ten
recipients, the burden should not
exceed 60 hours per company or 300
hours, cumulatively. Thus, the 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
4 In August 2008, the Commission issued
information requests to six cigarette companies and
five smokeless tobacco companies. The Commission
anticipates that it will issue requests to the same
number of companies in 2009.
5 70 FR 24415 (May 9, 2005); 70 FR 62313 (Oct.
31, 2005).
PO 00000
Frm 00058
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
67175
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. E8–26882 Filed 11–12–08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–S
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
[OMB Control No. 3090–XXXX]
General Services Administration;
Office of Governmentwide Policy;
Information Collection; Standard Form
SF–XXXX, Tangible Personal Property
Report
Office of Governmentwide
Policy, General Services Administration
(GSA).
ACTION: Notice of request for comments
regarding a new OMB clearance.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. Chapter 35), the GSA will be
submitting to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) a request to review
and approve a new information
collection requirement regarding
reporting personal tangible property. A
request for public comments was
published at 72 FR 64648, November 16,
2007. Comments were received.
GSA, on behalf of the Grants Policy
Committee proposes to issue a new
standard form, the Tangible Personal
Property Report (SF–XXXX). We
anticipate this being the final notice
before the form and instructions are
finalized. The general public and
Federal agencies are invited to comment
on the proposed final form. To view the
form, go to OMB’s main Web page at
https://www.OMB.gov and click on the
‘‘Grants Management,’’ then ‘‘Forms’’
then Proposed Government-Wide
Standard Grants Reporting Forms Links.
Public comments are particularly
invited on: Whether this collection of
information is necessary and whether it
will have practical utility; whether our
estimate of the public burden of this
E:\FR\FM\13NON1.SGM
13NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 220 (Thursday, November 13, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67174-67175]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-26882]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission (``Commission'' or ``FTC'').
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 must be submitted on or before December 15, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments
electronically or in paper form. Comments should refer to ``Tobacco
Reports: Paperwork Comment, FTC File No. P054507'' to facilitate the
organization of comments. Please note that comments will be placed on
the public record of this proceeding--including on the publicly
accessible FTC website, at (https://www.ftc.gov/os/publiccomments.shtm)
-- and therefore should not include any sensitive or confidential
information. In particular, comments should not include any sensitive
personal information, such as an individual's Social Security Number;
date of birth; driver's license number or other state identification
number, or foreign country equivalent; passport number; financial
account number; or credit or debit card number. Comments also should
not include any sensitive health information, such as medical records
or other individually identifiable health information. In addition,
comments should not include any ``[t]rade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a person and privileged or
confidential. . . .,'' as provided in Section 6(f) of the FTC Act, 15
U.S.C. 46(f), and Commission Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2).
Comments containing material for which confidential treatment is
requested must be filed in paper form, must be clearly labeled
``Confidential,'' and must comply with FTC Rule 4.9(c).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ FTC 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 FTC Rule 4.9(c), 16 CFR 4.9(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because paper mail addressed to the FTC is subject to delay due to
heightened security screening, please consider submitting your comments
in electronic form. Comments filed in electronic form should be
submitted by using the following weblink: (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 the weblink (https://secure.commentworks.com/ftc-TobaccoReports). If
this Notice appears at (https://www.regulations.gov/search/index.jsp),
you may also file an electronic comment through that website. The
Commission will consider all comments that regulations.gov forwards to
it.
A comment filed in paper form should include the ``Tobacco Reports:
Paperwork Comment, FTC File No. P054507'' reference both in the text
and on the envelope, and should be mailed or delivered to the following
address: Federal Trade Commission, Office of the Secretary, Room H-135
(Annex J), 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580. The FTC
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 Commission is subject to delay due to
heightened security precautions.
All comments should additionally be submitted to: Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for
the Federal Trade Commission. Comments should be submitted via
facsimile to (202) 395-6974 because U.S. Postal Mail is subject to
lengthy delays due to heightened security precautions.
The FTC Act and other laws the Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives, whether filed in paper or electronic
form. Comments received will be available to the public on the FTC
website, to the extent practicable, at (https://www.ftc.gov/os/
publiccomments.shtm). As a matter of discretion, the Commission 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 requirements 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 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
[[Page 67175]]
spent in each of several 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.
On August 7, 2008, the FTC sought public comment on its proposed
information collection requests to the major cigarette and smokeless
tobacco manufacturers. 73 FR 46006. One comment was received, which is
discussed below.\2\ Pursuant to the OMB regulations that implement the
PRA, 5 CFR Part 1320, the FTC is providing this second opportunity for
public comment while seeking OMB approval to extend the existing
paperwork clearance for the information collection requests. All
comments should be filed as prescribed in the ADDRESSES section above,
and must be received on or before December 15, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ That comment is available at https://www.ftc.gov/os/comments/
tobaccoreportspra/index.shtm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment Received:
Altria Client Services Inc. filed a comment on behalf of Philip
Morris USA Inc. (``PM USA''), in which it stated that PM USA believes
the FTC's authority to collect the proposed information ``should be
extended given the important role that the FTC has played and should
continue to play relative to these products.'' The comment then
referenced a separate Commission matter, noting that if the FTC were to
rescind its guidance that factual statements of cigarette tar and
nicotine yields based on the Cambridge Filter Method generally do not
violate the FTC Act,\3\ PM USA would question the Commission's need to
continue collecting such information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ On July 14, 2008, the Commission published a Federal
Register notice seeking comment on a proposal to rescind its
guidance, issued in 1966, that it is generally not a violation of
the FTC Act to make factual statements of the tar and nicotine
yields of cigarettes when statements of such yields are supported by
testing conducted pursuant to the Cambridge Filter Method. 73 FR
40,351.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The matter referred to by PM USA is still being considered by the
Commission. If the 1966 guidance is rescinded, the Commission will
decide whether to continue collecting tar, nicotine, and carbon
monoxide yield data to the extent the companies possess them.
Estimated annual 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 information requests to the six largest
cigarette companies and the five largest smokeless tobacco companies in
2009,\4\ 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.\5\ Staff further estimates that for the eleventh
recipient of the information request to be issued in 2009 and the four
possible additional recipients, all of which would be smaller companies
than the initial ten recipients, the burden should not exceed 60 hours
per company or 300 hours, cumulatively. Thus, the 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In August 2008, the Commission issued information requests
to six cigarette companies and five smokeless tobacco companies. The
Commission anticipates that it will issue requests to the same
number of companies in 2009.
\5\ 70 FR 24415 (May 9, 2005); 70 FR 62313 (Oct. 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. E8-26882 Filed 11-12-08: 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-S