Fee Rate, 9436-9437 [E9-4410]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 41 / Wednesday, March 4, 2009 / Notices
requests, interpretations, appeals, and
background files.
4. Department of Agriculture, Risk
Management Agency (N1–258–08–5, 6
items, 5 temporary items). Records
relating to the development and
management of crop insurance plans for
specific crops. Proposed for permanent
retention are final policy dockets
reviewed and approved by the Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation Board.
5. Department of Agriculture, Risk
Management Agency (N1–258–08–7, 3
items, 3 temporary items). Proposals,
project files, and other records
supporting risk management
partnerships, grants, and cooperative
agreements.
6. Department of Agriculture, Risk
Management Agency (N1–258–08–8, 4
items, 4 temporary items). Records
relating to maximum yields used to
monitor production, files that pertain to
non-reinsured supplemental insurance
products, division-level weekly reports,
and general correspondence with
industry associations.
7. Department of the Army, Agencywide (N1–AU–09–2, 1 item, 1 temporary
item). Master files of an electronic
information system that contains
records management information, such
as records retention schedules, file
plans, user lists, and unit profile data.
8. Department of Education, Office of
Communications and Outreach (N1–
441–08–12, 7 items, 1 temporary item).
Routine communications records,
including such records as photographs
of award and retirement ceremonies,
inquiries received from the media,
reference copies of publications, radio
news feeds on education issues, and
artwork created in connection with the
production of publications. Proposed for
permanent retention are publications,
posters, photographs, video recordings,
and testimony by senior officials that
relate to the agency’s mission and
substantive policies and activities.
9. Department of Health and Human
Services, Food and Drug Administration
(N1–88–08–1, 22 items, 22 temporary
items). Records relating to medical
device pre-marketing applications and
post-marketing surveillance,
radiological product monitoring, and xray trend surveys.
10. Department of Health and Human
Services, Food and Drug Administration
(N1–88–08–3, 5 items, 5 temporary
items). Records relating to training,
including such records as course
descriptions and materials, course
rosters, training reports, and employee
training and certification records.
11. Department of Homeland Security,
Headquarters Offices (N1–563–08–3, 11
items, 8 temporary items). Distribution
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:08 Mar 03, 2009
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lists, copies of grant project files,
interagency agreements, responses to
requests for information, presentations
and speeches by non-executive level
staff, and situation awareness reports
maintained by non-executive level staff
and staff outside of the National
Operations Center. Proposed for
permanent retention are biographies of
senior level staff, brochures,
publications, and posters.
12. Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division (N1–60–08–27, 5
items, 4 temporary items). Records of
the Audit Liaison Group, including such
records as audit and investigation files,
background materials, and
correspondence. Final Inspector General
and Attorney General semi-annual
reports to Congress are proposed for
permanent retention.
13. Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division (N1–60–09–4, 6
items, 6 temporary items). Records of
the Justice Command Center, including
such records as watch logs, message
logs, contact lists, and travel logs. Also
included are master files of the Justice
Automated Command Center System,
which tracks incoming calls and
messages and also includes information
on key agency personnel, such as
contact information, travel status, and
committee appointments.
14. Department of Justice, Bureau of
Prisons (N1–129–09–4, 1 item, 1
temporary item). Master files for an
electronic information system used to
track and maintain control over tools
and shop equipment.
15. Department of Justice, Federal
Bureau of Investigation (N1–65–06–9, 3
items, 3 temporary items). Outputs,
usage agreements, memorandums of
understanding, and security audit logs
associated with the National DNA
Indexing System.
16. Department of Justice, Federal
Bureau of Investigation (N1–65–09–3,
10 items, 10 temporary items). Records
relating to agency health care activities.
Records relate to such matters as
emergency medicine programs, fitness
for duty programs, alcohol and
controlled substance abuse programs,
and regional health care.
17. Environmental Protection Agency,
Agency-wide (N1–412–07–61, 3 items, 2
temporary items). Records relating to
disaster response, other than records
relating to disasters that are designated
as major disasters by the President.
Included are such records as damage
surveys, damage assessments,
environmental samplings, and
inspection reports. Paper copies of these
records were previously approved for
disposal. Proposed for permanent
retention are records relating to
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disasters designated as major disasters
by the President.
18. Federal Communications
Commission, Media Bureau (N1–173–
08–9, 7 items, 7 temporary items).
Master files of an electronic information
system used for such purposes as
submitting cable community
registrations, making operator
information changes, and filing annual
signal leakage reports and aeronautical
frequency notifications.
Dated: February 27, 2009.
Michael J. Kurtz,
Assistant Archivist for Records Services—
Washington, DC.
[FR Doc. E9–4729 Filed 3–3–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7515–01–P
NATIONAL INDIAN GAMING
COMMISSION
Fee Rate
AGENCY: National Indian Gaming
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given,
pursuant to 25 CFR 514.1(a)(3), that the
National Indian Gaming Commission
has adopted preliminary annual fee
rates of 0.00% for tier 1 and 0.058%
(.00058) for tier 2 for calendar year
2009. These rates shall apply to all
assessable gross revenues from each
gaming operation under the jurisdiction
of the Commission. If a tribe has a
certificate of self regulation under 25
CFR part 518, the preliminary fee rate
on class II revenues for calendar year
2009 shall be one-half of the annual fee
rate, which is 0.0290% (.000290).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kwame Mainoo, National Indian
Gaming Commission, 1441 L Street,
NW., Suite 9100, Washington, DC
20005; telephone (202) 632–7003; fax
(202) 632–7066 (these are not toll-free
numbers).
The
Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA)
established the National Indian Gaming
Commission which is charged with,
among other things, regulating gaming
on Indian lands.
The regulations of the Commission
(25 CFR part 514), as amended, provide
for a system of fee assessment and
payment that is self-administered by
gaming operations. Pursuant to those
regulations, the Commission is required
to adopt and communicate assessment
rates; the gaming operations are
required to apply those rates to their
revenues, compute the fees to be paid,
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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04MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 41 / Wednesday, March 4, 2009 / Notices
report the revenues, and remit the fees
to the Commission on a quarterly basis.
The regulations of the Commission
and the preliminary rate being adopted
today are effective for calendar year
2009. Therefore, all gaming operations
within the jurisdiction of the
Commission are required to self
administer the provisions of these
regulations, and report and pay any fees
that are due to the Commission by
March 31, 2009.
Dated: February 24, 2009.
Philip N. Hogen,
Chairman, National Indian Gaming
Commission.
[FR Doc. E9–4410 Filed 3–3–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7565–01–M
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. NRC–2009–0040]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Correction
SUMMARY: This document corrects a
notice appearing in the Federal Register
on February 9, 2009 (74 FR 6421) that
informs the public of a notice of
pending NRC action to submit an
information collection request to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) and solicitation of public
comment on the collection ‘‘Billing
Instructions for NRC Cost Type
Contracts (3150–0109).’’
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gregory Trussell, NRC Clearance
Officer, Office of Information Services;
telephone (301) 415–6445 or
infocollects.resource@nrc.gov.
On page
6421, first column, the subject heading
is corrected to read ‘‘Docket No. NRC–
2009–0040’’ instead of ‘‘Docket No.
NRC–2008–0040.’’ The same change
should be made in the second column,
last paragraph, where the docket
number appears twice.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 19th day
of February 2009.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Gregory Trussell,
NRC Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–4566 Filed 3–3–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
15:08 Mar 03, 2009
Exelon Generation Company, LLC
Three Mile Island Nuclear Station, Unit
1 Environmental Assessment and
Finding of No Significant Impact
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is considering
issuance of exemptions from Title 10 of
the Code of Federal Regulations (10
CFR) Part 50, Appendix R, Section III.G,
‘‘Fire Protection of Safe Shutdown
Capability,’’ for the use of operator
manual actions in lieu of the
requirements specified in Section III.G.2
as requested by Exelon Generation
Company, LLC (the licensee, formerly
AmerGen Energy Company, LLC), for
operation of Three Mile Island Nuclear
Station, Unit 1 (TMI–1), located in
Dauphin County, Pennsylvania.
Therefore, as required by 10 CFR 51.21,
the NRC is issuing this environmental
assessment and finding of no significant
impact.
Identification of the Proposed Action
Correction.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
[Docket No. 50–289; NRC–2009–0097]
Environmental Assessment
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION:
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
Jkt 217001
The proposed action would grant
exemptions to 10 CFR part 50,
Appendix R, Section III.G.2 based on
two operator manual actions contained
in the licensee’s Fire Protection Program
(FPP). The licensee’s FPP requires that
the identified operator manual actions
be performed outside of the control
room to achieve shutdown following
fires in certain fire areas. The licensee
states that each of the manual actions
were subjected to a manual action
feasibility review for TMI–1 that
determined that the manual actions are
feasible and can be reliably performed.
The proposed action is in accordance
with the licensee’s application dated
February 4, 2008, as supplemented on
January 28, 2009, Agencywide
Documents Access and Management
System (ADAMS) accession numbers
ML080350369 and ML090280577,
respectively. In the January 28, 2009,
supplement, the licensee withdrew one
of the three originally proposed manual
actions from the exemption request,
since they have determined that action
is no longer required.
The Need for the Proposed Action
The proposed exemption from 10 CFR
part 50, Appendix R, was submitted in
response to the need for an exemption
as identified by NRC Regulatory
Information Summary (RIS) 2006–10,
‘‘Regulatory Expectations with
Appendix R Paragraph III.G.2 Operator
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
9437
Manual Actions.’’ The RIS noted that
NRC inspections identified that some
licensees had relied upon operator
manual actions, instead of the options
specified in Paragraph 10 CFR part 50,
Appendix R, III.G.2, as a permanent
solution to resolve issues related to
Thermo-Lag 330–1 fire barriers. The
licensee indicates that the operator
manual actions, referenced in the
February 4, 2008 application, were
previously included in correspondence
with the NRC and found acceptable in
a fire protection-related Safety
Evaluation (SE) dated September 7,
1988, ADAMS accession number
8809150224. However, RIS 2006–10
identifies that an exemption under 10
CFR 50.12 is necessary for use of the
manual actions in lieu of the
requirements of 10 CFR part 50,
Appendix R, III.G.2, even if the NRC
previously issued an SE that found the
manual actions acceptable. The
proposed exemption provides the
formal vehicle for NRC approval for the
use of the specified operator manual
actions instead of the options specified
in 10 CFR part 50, Appendix R, III.G.2.
Environmental Impacts of the Proposed
Action
The NRC staff evaluated the manual
operator actions presented in the
proposed exemption in an NRC SE
dated September 7, 1988, (ADAMS
accession number 8809150224) and
found that they maintained a safe
shutdown capability that satisfies the
requirements of 10 CFR 50, Appendix R,
III.G. In addition, the licensee
supplemented the February 4, 2008
request for exemption on January 28,
2009, with additional information to
confirm that the operator manual
actions addressed in the 1988 SE for
which the exemptions are sought, are
feasible and that the safety basis for
these actions remains valid. Therefore,
the proposed action will not
significantly increase the probability or
consequences of accidents. No changes
are being made in the types of effluents
that may be released off site. There is no
significant increase in the amount of
any effluent released off site. There is no
significant increase in occupational or
public radiation exposure. Therefore,
there are no significant radiological
environmental impacts associated with
the proposed action. The NRC staff,
thus, concludes that granting the
proposed exemption would result in no
significant radiological environmental
impact.
With regard to potential nonradiological impacts, the proposed
action does not have a potential to affect
any historic sites. It does not affect non-
E:\FR\FM\04MRN1.SGM
04MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 41 (Wednesday, March 4, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9436-9437]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-4410]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL INDIAN GAMING COMMISSION
Fee Rate
AGENCY: National Indian Gaming Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given, pursuant to 25 CFR 514.1(a)(3), that
the National Indian Gaming Commission has adopted preliminary annual
fee rates of 0.00% for tier 1 and 0.058% (.00058) for tier 2 for
calendar year 2009. These rates shall apply to all assessable gross
revenues from each gaming operation under the jurisdiction of the
Commission. If a tribe has a certificate of self regulation under 25
CFR part 518, the preliminary fee rate on class II revenues for
calendar year 2009 shall be one-half of the annual fee rate, which is
0.0290% (.000290).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kwame Mainoo, National Indian Gaming
Commission, 1441 L Street, NW., Suite 9100, Washington, DC 20005;
telephone (202) 632-7003; fax (202) 632-7066 (these are not toll-free
numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA)
established the National Indian Gaming Commission which is charged
with, among other things, regulating gaming on Indian lands.
The regulations of the Commission (25 CFR part 514), as amended,
provide for a system of fee assessment and payment that is self-
administered by gaming operations. Pursuant to those regulations, the
Commission is required to adopt and communicate assessment rates; the
gaming operations are required to apply those rates to their revenues,
compute the fees to be paid,
[[Page 9437]]
report the revenues, and remit the fees to the Commission on a
quarterly basis.
The regulations of the Commission and the preliminary rate being
adopted today are effective for calendar year 2009. Therefore, all
gaming operations within the jurisdiction of the Commission are
required to self administer the provisions of these regulations, and
report and pay any fees that are due to the Commission by March 31,
2009.
Dated: February 24, 2009.
Philip N. Hogen,
Chairman, National Indian Gaming Commission.
[FR Doc. E9-4410 Filed 3-3-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7565-01-M