Review of Nonpostal Services, 2636-2637 [E9-771]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 10 / Thursday, January 15, 2009 / Notices
and industrial and consumer products
containing nanomaterials;
characterizing the health of exposed
populations and environments; and
understanding workplace processes and
factors that determine exposure to
nanomaterials.
The presentations, discussions, and
comments provided at this meeting will
inform the NEHI Working Group’s
continuing adaptive management of the
National Nanotechnology Initiative’s
environmental, health, and safety
research strategy.
The NSET Subcommittee coordinates
planning, budgeting, and program
implementation and review to ensure a
balanced and comprehensive National
Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI). The
NSET Subcommittee is composed of
representatives from Federal agencies
participating in the NNI. In order to
perform work in the area of
environmental, health, and safety, NSET
created a working group, the
Nanotechnology Environmental
Implications (NEHI) Working Group.
The NNCO provides technical and
administrative support to the NSET
Subcommittee and serves as a central
point of contact for the NNI.
For more information on the National
Nanotechnology Initiative and its
various working entities, please visit
https://www.nano.gov.
M. David Hodge,
Operations Manager, OSTP.
[FR Doc. E9–664 Filed 1–14–09; 8:45 am]
Cost of Hospital and Medical Care
Treatment Furnished by the
Department of Defense Military
Treatment Facilities; Certain Rates
Regarding Recovery From Tortiously
Liable Third Persons
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
AGENCY: Office of Management and
Budget, Executive Office of the
President.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: By virtue of the authority
vested in the President by Section 2(a)
of Pub. B. 87–603 (76 Stat. 593; 42
U.S.C. 2652), and delegated to the
Director of the Office of Management
and Budget by the President through
Executive Order No. 11541 of July 1,
1970, the rates referenced below are
hereby established. These rates are for
use in connection with the recovery
from tortiously liable third persons for
the cost of inpatient medical services
Jkt 217001
BILLING CODE 3110–01–P
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket No. MC2008–1 (Phase II); Order No.
168]
Review of Nonpostal Services
ACTION:
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND
BUDGET
18:58 Jan 14, 2009
Jim Nussle,
Director.
[FR Doc. E9–718 Filed 1–14–09; 8:45 am]
Postal Regulatory Commission.
Notice.
AGENCY:
BILLING CODE 3170–W9–P
VerDate Nov<24>2008
furnished by military treatment facilities
through the Department of Defense
(DoD). The rates have been established
in accordance with the requirements of
OMB Circular A–25, requiring
reimbursement of the full cost of all
services provided. The inpatient
medical service rates referenced are
effective upon publication of this notice
in the Federal Register and will remain
in effect until further notice. The
outpatient medical, dental, and
cosmetic surgery rates published on
November 25, 2008 remain in effect
until further notice. Pharmacy rates are
updated periodically. A full disclosure
of the rates is posted at the DoD’s
Uniform Business Office Web Site:
https://www.tricare.mil/ocfo/_docs/
FY09%20Direct%20Care%20
Inpatient%20Billing%20
Rates%20Memo.pdf.
SUMMARY: The Commission is
establishing a docket to develop a
complete record on three matters that
were not resolved in a recent docket.
This will allow the Postal Service and
others an opportunity to present their
views prior to final Commission
decision on the status of the underlying
services.
DATES: January 29, 2009: Deadline for
the Postal Service and other participants
to file supporting evidence. February 10,
2009: Deadline for new interventions.
February 11, 2009: Prehearing
conference will be held on at 10 a.m. in
the Commission’s hearing room.
ADDRESSES: Submit filings electronically
via the Commission’s Filing Online
system at https://www.prc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephen L. Sharfman, General Counsel,
202–789–6820 and
stephen.sharfman@prc.gov.
Regulatory
History, 72 FR 73909 (December 28,
2007).
In Order No. 154, the Commission
authorized 14 nonpostal services to
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Frm 00129
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
continue.1 Finding the record
insufficient in certain respects, the
Commission deferred ruling on three
issues more fully addressed below,
involving licensing, the warranty repair
program, and sales of music compact
discs. This order establishes procedures
to develop a more complete record on
these issues beginning with an
opportunity for the Postal Service to
present its case on these issues and
followed by an opportunity for
interested persons to respond.2
Licensing. In Order No. 154, the
Commission generally authorized the
licensing of the Postal Service’s
intellectual property to continue as a
nonpostal service. Id. at 73. As an
interim measure, however, the
Commission grandfathered the licenses
of the Postal Service’s brands on
products relating to the Postal Service’s
operations, categorized by the Postal
Service as Mailing & Shipping, pending
the outcome of Phase II. This issue was
brought to the forefront late in the first
phase of this proceeding by Pitney
Bowes upon learning that Postal
Service-branded postage meter ink
cartridges were being sold.3 The
Commission found that the record on
licenses related to Postal Service
operations to be insufficiently
developed for it to determine whether
those licenses should be terminated or
authorized to continue.4
Further proceedings in this Phase II
are needed to develop a more complete
record regarding licensing programs for
products related to Postal Service
operations generally, as well as the
1 PRC Order No. 154, Review of Nonpostal
Services Under the Postal Accountability and
Enhancement Act, December 19, 2008 (Order No.
154).
2 The Commission also indicated a separate
docket would be established to develop regulations
applicable to authorized nonpostal services. That
docket will be initiated shortly.
3 Pitney Bowes Inc. Motion to Compel United
States Postal Service to File a Complete List of
Nonpostal Services, October 15, 2008. Pitney
Bowes’ motion, supported by pleadings responsive
to the matter, challenged the appropriateness of the
Postal Service licensing its trademark for products
related to Postal Service operations. See also PRC
Order No. 126, Order Granting, In Part, Pitney
Bowes Inc. Motion to Compel, November 4, 2008.
4 Order No. 154 at 76. Order No. 154 directed the
Postal Service to ‘‘promptly notify the Commission
of any other such licenses [that relate to postal
operations] that may exist.’’ Id., n.146. This order
is not intended to modify that directive. The Postal
Service indicates five vendors are licensed to sell
Mailing & Shipping products bearing the Postal
Service’s intellectual property. Initial Response of
the United States Postal Service to Order No. 74,
June 9, 2008, at 22. See also Response of the United
States Postal Service to Order No. 126 Regarding
Licensing Agreements and Notice of Filing of
Sworn Statement, November 17, 2008; and Errata to
Response of the United States Postal Service to
Order No. 126 Regarding Licensing Agreements,
November 19, 2008.
E:\FR\FM\15JAN1.SGM
15JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 10 / Thursday, January 15, 2009 / Notices
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
specific meter ink cartridge license cited
by Pitney Bowes. Other related issues
may also be explored.5 The Postal
Service shall file a sworn statement(s)
by a knowledgeable individual(s) on or
before January 29, 2009, providing
details of each Mailing & Shipping
services license and any additional
information and evidence deemed
relevant in support of its continuing the
commercial licensing of products
related to Postal Service operations.6
The sworn statement shall also address
the requirements of section 404(e)(3) of
title 39. Interested persons, including
any licensees, who support continuing
Postal Service branding of such
products may also submit relevant
evidence by January 29, 2009. Such
sworn statements shall address the
requirements of section 404(e)(3) of title
39 and may address any other matter
deemed relevant to issues before the
Commission in this Phase II. As
discussed below, interested persons will
be afforded an opportunity to respond to
these submissions.
Warranty repair program. In Order
No. 154, the Commission concluded
that the warranty repair program, under
which the Postal Service is
compensated by the original equipment
manufacturer (OEM) for repairs by the
Postal Service of the OEM’s equipment
still under warranty was, with one
possible exception, not subject to review
under 39 U.S.C. 404(e). Id. at 84–85. The
exception concerns plans (which may
already be implemented) by the Postal
Service to expand the activity to other
customers of the OEM.7 Order No. 154
deferred a determination on this issue to
Phase II.
Assuming it wishes to offer the
expanded warranty repair service, the
Postal Service shall provide details of
this service in the form of a sworn
statement(s) by a knowledgeable
individual(s). The statement(s) shall
also identify the commencement date of
such service, provide annual revenues
for fiscal years 2006 through 2008,
address the requirements of section
404(e) of title 39, and any other matter
the Postal Service believes is relevant to
the issue before the Commission.
Interested persons who support the
Postal Service providing such services
5 See Order No. 154 at 75, n.145. The relevant
market and the Postal Service’s regulatory role in
the production and distribution of postage
evidencing systems may be addressed.
6 Sworn statements submitted in Phase II are
subject to the Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure. 39 CFR 3001.1 et seq.
7 Statement of Patrick R. Donahoe on Behalf of
United States Postal Service (Donahoe Statement),
June 23, 2008, at 15. See also Initial Response of
the United States Postal Service to Order No. 74,
June 9, 2008, at 28–29.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
18:58 Jan 14, 2009
Jkt 217001
may also submit sworn statements by
January 29, 2009, that address any
matter deemed relevant to issues before
the Commission.
Sales of CDs. In Order No. 154, the
Commission addressed the Postal
Service’s proposal to classify greeting
cards and other stationery items as
postal services. Order No. 154 at 34–35.
While the Commission found that
greeting cards and stationery may be
classified as a competitive postal
service, it expressed reservations about
the sale of compact discs (CDs) featuring
various recording artists, specifically
noting that they ‘‘are not authorized as
‘greeting cards’.’’ Id. at 35. Recognizing
the scale of the Postal Service
operations, the Commission observed
that details of certain activities may
have been overlooked in response to
Order No. 74.8 Thus, the Commission
suggested that the Postal Service review
its various retail programs and provide
details of any omissions, including
those related to CD sales, for
consideration in Phase II of this
proceeding.
To the extent it wishes to pursue this
issue, the Postal Service shall file by
January 29, 2009, a sworn statement(s)
by a knowledgeable individual(s) which
provides complete details of each retail
program for which information may
have been inadvertently omitted in
response to Order No. 74 and which the
Postal Service seeks to have classified as
a postal service or, alternatively, to
continue to offer as a nonpostal service.
In either case, the Postal Service should
provide sufficient justification to
support its proposed treatment, i.e., that
it may be appropriately classified as a
postal service or, alternatively, that it
satisfies section 404(e)(3). In addition,
the Postal Service should also provide
the commencement date of each
program (product or service) and the
annual revenues for fiscal years 2006
through 2008. Interested persons who
support the Postal Service providing
such services may also submit sworn
statements by January 29, 2009, that
address any matter deemed relevant to
issues before the Commission.
Prehearing conference and additional
procedures. Phase II is designed to
provide the Postal Service and
interested persons an opportunity to
present evidence and arguments in
support of their respective positions.9
8 PRC Order No. 74, Order Granting Motion to
Compel and Revising the Procedural Schedule,
April 29, 2008 (Order No. 74).
9 The record already compiled in the first part of
this proceeding may be incorporated by reference
or adopted as part of a separate statement. If the
Postal Service continues to rely upon the
information in that record, it shall be subject to
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
2637
Following the submission of the sworn
statements discussed above, the
Commission will convene a prehearing
conference on February 11, 2009, to
discuss the balance of the procedural
schedule. This shall include the need
for hearings, the due dates for responses
to the statements due January 29, 2009,
the opportunity for rebuttal thereto, and
briefing dates.
It is Ordered:
1. Docket No. MC2008–1, Phase II, is
established to develop a more complete
record on the activities discussed in the
body of this order concerning Postal
Service branding of Mailing & Shipping
products, the warranty repair program,
the retail sale of recorded music, and
any other retail activities which, upon
further consideration, may be identified
by the Postal Service for review in this
proceeding.
2. The Commission will sit en banc in
this proceeding.
3. The Postal Service and other
participants that support continuation
of such services shall file supporting
evidence as provided in the body of this
order on or before January 29, 2009.
4. Any interested persons may file a
notice of intervention pursuant to rule
20 or 20a of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure, 39 CFR 3001.20
and 3001.20a, no later than February 10,
2009. The notice shall state whether the
intervenor requests a hearing. Any
person who submitted a filing in the
initial phase of this proceeding will be
deemed to be a participant in Phase II
and need not submit a notice of
intervention.
5. A prehearing conference will be
held in the Commission’s hearing room
on February 11, 2009, at 10 a.m., to
establish dates, as necessary, for the
completion of discovery, need for
hearings, filing of rebuttal evidence, and
other matters related to this proceeding
as set forth in the body of this order.
6. Robert Sidman is designated as
Public Representative to represent the
interests of the general public in this
proceeding.
7. The Secretary shall arrange for
publication of this notice and order in
the Federal Register.
By the Commission.
Steven W. Williams,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–771 Filed 1–14–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–FW–P
written and oral cross-examination in this Phase II
proceeding.
E:\FR\FM\15JAN1.SGM
15JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 10 (Thursday, January 15, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 2636-2637]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-771]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket No. MC2008-1 (Phase II); Order No. 168]
Review of Nonpostal Services
AGENCY: Postal Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission is establishing a docket to develop a complete
record on three matters that were not resolved in a recent docket. This
will allow the Postal Service and others an opportunity to present
their views prior to final Commission decision on the status of the
underlying services.
DATES: January 29, 2009: Deadline for the Postal Service and other
participants to file supporting evidence. February 10, 2009: Deadline
for new interventions. February 11, 2009: Prehearing conference will be
held on at 10 a.m. in the Commission's hearing room.
ADDRESSES: Submit filings electronically via the Commission's Filing
Online system at https://www.prc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen L. Sharfman, General Counsel,
202-789-6820 and stephen.sharfman@prc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Regulatory History, 72 FR 73909 (December
28, 2007).
In Order No. 154, the Commission authorized 14 nonpostal services
to continue.\1\ Finding the record insufficient in certain respects,
the Commission deferred ruling on three issues more fully addressed
below, involving licensing, the warranty repair program, and sales of
music compact discs. This order establishes procedures to develop a
more complete record on these issues beginning with an opportunity for
the Postal Service to present its case on these issues and followed by
an opportunity for interested persons to respond.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ PRC Order No. 154, Review of Nonpostal Services Under the
Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, December 19, 2008 (Order
No. 154).
\2\ The Commission also indicated a separate docket would be
established to develop regulations applicable to authorized
nonpostal services. That docket will be initiated shortly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Licensing. In Order No. 154, the Commission generally authorized
the licensing of the Postal Service's intellectual property to continue
as a nonpostal service. Id. at 73. As an interim measure, however, the
Commission grandfathered the licenses of the Postal Service's brands on
products relating to the Postal Service's operations, categorized by
the Postal Service as Mailing & Shipping, pending the outcome of Phase
II. This issue was brought to the forefront late in the first phase of
this proceeding by Pitney Bowes upon learning that Postal Service-
branded postage meter ink cartridges were being sold.\3\ The Commission
found that the record on licenses related to Postal Service operations
to be insufficiently developed for it to determine whether those
licenses should be terminated or authorized to continue.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Pitney Bowes Inc. Motion to Compel United States Postal
Service to File a Complete List of Nonpostal Services, October 15,
2008. Pitney Bowes' motion, supported by pleadings responsive to the
matter, challenged the appropriateness of the Postal Service
licensing its trademark for products related to Postal Service
operations. See also PRC Order No. 126, Order Granting, In Part,
Pitney Bowes Inc. Motion to Compel, November 4, 2008.
\4\ Order No. 154 at 76. Order No. 154 directed the Postal
Service to ``promptly notify the Commission of any other such
licenses [that relate to postal operations] that may exist.'' Id.,
n.146. This order is not intended to modify that directive. The
Postal Service indicates five vendors are licensed to sell Mailing &
Shipping products bearing the Postal Service's intellectual
property. Initial Response of the United States Postal Service to
Order No. 74, June 9, 2008, at 22. See also Response of the United
States Postal Service to Order No. 126 Regarding Licensing
Agreements and Notice of Filing of Sworn Statement, November 17,
2008; and Errata to Response of the United States Postal Service to
Order No. 126 Regarding Licensing Agreements, November 19, 2008.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further proceedings in this Phase II are needed to develop a more
complete record regarding licensing programs for products related to
Postal Service operations generally, as well as the
[[Page 2637]]
specific meter ink cartridge license cited by Pitney Bowes. Other
related issues may also be explored.\5\ The Postal Service shall file a
sworn statement(s) by a knowledgeable individual(s) on or before
January 29, 2009, providing details of each Mailing & Shipping services
license and any additional information and evidence deemed relevant in
support of its continuing the commercial licensing of products related
to Postal Service operations.\6\ The sworn statement shall also address
the requirements of section 404(e)(3) of title 39. Interested persons,
including any licensees, who support continuing Postal Service branding
of such products may also submit relevant evidence by January 29, 2009.
Such sworn statements shall address the requirements of section
404(e)(3) of title 39 and may address any other matter deemed relevant
to issues before the Commission in this Phase II. As discussed below,
interested persons will be afforded an opportunity to respond to these
submissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Order No. 154 at 75, n.145. The relevant market and the
Postal Service's regulatory role in the production and distribution
of postage evidencing systems may be addressed.
\6\ Sworn statements submitted in Phase II are subject to the
Commission's Rules of Practice and Procedure. 39 CFR 3001.1 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Warranty repair program. In Order No. 154, the Commission concluded
that the warranty repair program, under which the Postal Service is
compensated by the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) for repairs by
the Postal Service of the OEM's equipment still under warranty was,
with one possible exception, not subject to review under 39 U.S.C.
404(e). Id. at 84-85. The exception concerns plans (which may already
be implemented) by the Postal Service to expand the activity to other
customers of the OEM.\7\ Order No. 154 deferred a determination on this
issue to Phase II.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Statement of Patrick R. Donahoe on Behalf of United States
Postal Service (Donahoe Statement), June 23, 2008, at 15. See also
Initial Response of the United States Postal Service to Order No.
74, June 9, 2008, at 28-29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assuming it wishes to offer the expanded warranty repair service,
the Postal Service shall provide details of this service in the form of
a sworn statement(s) by a knowledgeable individual(s). The statement(s)
shall also identify the commencement date of such service, provide
annual revenues for fiscal years 2006 through 2008, address the
requirements of section 404(e) of title 39, and any other matter the
Postal Service believes is relevant to the issue before the Commission.
Interested persons who support the Postal Service providing such
services may also submit sworn statements by January 29, 2009, that
address any matter deemed relevant to issues before the Commission.
Sales of CDs. In Order No. 154, the Commission addressed the Postal
Service's proposal to classify greeting cards and other stationery
items as postal services. Order No. 154 at 34-35. While the Commission
found that greeting cards and stationery may be classified as a
competitive postal service, it expressed reservations about the sale of
compact discs (CDs) featuring various recording artists, specifically
noting that they ``are not authorized as `greeting cards'.'' Id. at 35.
Recognizing the scale of the Postal Service operations, the Commission
observed that details of certain activities may have been overlooked in
response to Order No. 74.\8\ Thus, the Commission suggested that the
Postal Service review its various retail programs and provide details
of any omissions, including those related to CD sales, for
consideration in Phase II of this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ PRC Order No. 74, Order Granting Motion to Compel and
Revising the Procedural Schedule, April 29, 2008 (Order No. 74).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the extent it wishes to pursue this issue, the Postal Service
shall file by January 29, 2009, a sworn statement(s) by a knowledgeable
individual(s) which provides complete details of each retail program
for which information may have been inadvertently omitted in response
to Order No. 74 and which the Postal Service seeks to have classified
as a postal service or, alternatively, to continue to offer as a
nonpostal service. In either case, the Postal Service should provide
sufficient justification to support its proposed treatment, i.e., that
it may be appropriately classified as a postal service or,
alternatively, that it satisfies section 404(e)(3). In addition, the
Postal Service should also provide the commencement date of each
program (product or service) and the annual revenues for fiscal years
2006 through 2008. Interested persons who support the Postal Service
providing such services may also submit sworn statements by January 29,
2009, that address any matter deemed relevant to issues before the
Commission.
Prehearing conference and additional procedures. Phase II is
designed to provide the Postal Service and interested persons an
opportunity to present evidence and arguments in support of their
respective positions.\9\ Following the submission of the sworn
statements discussed above, the Commission will convene a prehearing
conference on February 11, 2009, to discuss the balance of the
procedural schedule. This shall include the need for hearings, the due
dates for responses to the statements due January 29, 2009, the
opportunity for rebuttal thereto, and briefing dates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The record already compiled in the first part of this
proceeding may be incorporated by reference or adopted as part of a
separate statement. If the Postal Service continues to rely upon the
information in that record, it shall be subject to written and oral
cross-examination in this Phase II proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is Ordered:
1. Docket No. MC2008-1, Phase II, is established to develop a more
complete record on the activities discussed in the body of this order
concerning Postal Service branding of Mailing & Shipping products, the
warranty repair program, the retail sale of recorded music, and any
other retail activities which, upon further consideration, may be
identified by the Postal Service for review in this proceeding.
2. The Commission will sit en banc in this proceeding.
3. The Postal Service and other participants that support
continuation of such services shall file supporting evidence as
provided in the body of this order on or before January 29, 2009.
4. Any interested persons may file a notice of intervention
pursuant to rule 20 or 20a of the Commission's Rules of Practice and
Procedure, 39 CFR 3001.20 and 3001.20a, no later than February 10,
2009. The notice shall state whether the intervenor requests a hearing.
Any person who submitted a filing in the initial phase of this
proceeding will be deemed to be a participant in Phase II and need not
submit a notice of intervention.
5. A prehearing conference will be held in the Commission's hearing
room on February 11, 2009, at 10 a.m., to establish dates, as
necessary, for the completion of discovery, need for hearings, filing
of rebuttal evidence, and other matters related to this proceeding as
set forth in the body of this order.
6. Robert Sidman is designated as Public Representative to
represent the interests of the general public in this proceeding.
7. The Secretary shall arrange for publication of this notice and
order in the Federal Register.
By the Commission.
Steven W. Williams,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9-771 Filed 1-14-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710-FW-P