Agency Emergency Processing Under Office of Management and Budget Review; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for Reportable Food Registry, 28498-28501 [E9-14048]
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28498
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 16, 2009 / Notices
Acquisition Regulation, Regulatory
Secretariat (VPR) will be submitting to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) a request to reinstate a
previously approved information
collection requirement concerning
Economic Purchase Quantity—Supplies.
Public comments are particularly
invited on: Whether this collection of
information is necessary; whether it will
have practical utility; whether our
estimate of the public burden of this
collection of information is accurate,
and based on valid assumptions and
methodology; ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and ways in
which we can minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
who are to respond, through the use of
appropriate technological collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
August 17, 2009.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments regarding
this burden estimate or any other aspect
of this collection of information,
including suggestions for reducing this
burden, to: General Services
Administration, Regulatory Secretariat
(VPR), 1800 F Street, NW., Room 4041,
Washington, DC 20405. Please cite OMB
Control No. 9000–0082, Economic
Purchase Quantity—Supplies, in all
correspondence.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Lori Sakalos, Procurement Analyst,
Contract Policy Division, GSA, (202)
208–0498.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Purpose
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
The provision at 52.207–4, Economic
Purchase Quantity—Supplies, invites
offerors to state an opinion on whether
the quantity of supplies on which bids,
proposals, or quotes are requested in
solicitations is economically
advantageous to the Government. Each
offeror who believes that acquisitions in
different quantities would be more
advantageous is invited to (1)
recommend an economic purchase
quantity, showing a recommended unit
and total price, and (2) identify the
different quantity points where
significant price breaks occur. This
information is required by Public Law
98–577 and Public Law 98–525.
B. Annual Reporting Burden
Respondents: 1,524.
Responses per Respondent: 25.
Annual Responses: 38,100.
Hours per Response: .83.
Total Burden Hours: 31,623.
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Obtaining Copies of Proposals:
Requesters may obtain a copy of the
information collection documents from
the General Services Administration,
Regulatory Secretariat (VPR), 1800 F
Street, NW., Room 4041, Washington,
DC, 20405, telephone (202) 501–4755.
Please cite OMB Control No. 9000–0082,
Economic Purchase Quantity—Supplies,
in all correspondence.
Dated: June 9, 2009.
Al Matera,
Director, Office of Acquisition Policy.
[FR Doc. E9–14105 Filed 6–15–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2009–N–0261]
Agency Emergency Processing Under
Office of Management and Budget
Review; Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements for Reportable Food
Registry
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a proposed collection of
information has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for emergency processing under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(the PRA). This notice solicits
comments on the proposed collection of
information associated with the draft
guidance document entitled ‘‘Questions
and Answers Regarding the Reportable
Food Registry as Established by the
Food and Drug Administration
Amendments Act of 2007.’’ The draft
guidance, when finalized, will assist the
industry in complying with the
Reportable Food Registry requirements
prescribed by the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of
2007 (FDAAA).
DATES: Fax written comments on the
collection of information by July 16,
2009. FDA is requesting approval of this
emergency processing by August 17,
2009.
To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–6974. All comments should be
identified with the docket number
ADDRESSES:
PO 00000
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found in brackets in the heading of this
document.
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.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: FDA has
requested emergency processing of this
proposed collection of information
under section 3507(j) of the PRA (44
U.S.C. 3507(j)) and 5 CFR 1320.13. On
September 27, 2007, the President
signed FDAAA into law (Public Law
110–85). Section 1005 of FDAAA
amends the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (the act) by creating a new
section 417 (21 U.S.C. 350f), among
other things. Section 417 of the act
requires the Secretary of Health and
Human Services to establish, within
FDA, a Reportable Food Registry (the
Registry); the Registry is to be
established not later than 1 year after
the date of enactment (i.e., by
September 27, 2008).
To further the development of the
Registry, section 417 of the act requires
FDA to establish, also within 1 year
after the date of enactment (i.e., by
September 27, 2008), an electronic
portal (the Reportable Food electronic
portal) by which instances of reportable
food must be submitted to FDA by
responsible parties and may be
submitted by public health officials.
FDA made the decision that the most
efficient and cost effective means to
implement the requirements of section
417 of the act relating to the Registry
was to utilize the business enterprise
system currently under development
within the agency: The MedWatchPlus
Portal. This would permit the agency to
establish an electronic portal through
which instances of reportable food may
be submitted to the agency. However,
FDA recognized that the MedWatchPlus
Portal would not be implemented in
time to meet the September 27, 2008,
deadline for establishing the Reportable
Food electronic portal and therefore
announced that it was delaying its
implementation until spring 2009 (73
FR 30405; May 27, 2008).
The agency now expects the system to
be operational on September 8, 2009.
Section 1005(f) of FDAAA required
FDA to issue guidance to industry about
submitting reports through the
electronic portal of instances of
reportable food and providing
notifications to other persons in the
supply chain of such article of food. In
a notice published in the Federal
Register of June 11, 2009, FDA
announced the availability of the draft
guidance document entitled ‘‘Questions
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mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 16, 2009 / Notices
and Answers Regarding the Reportable
Food Registry as Established by the
Food and Drug Administration
Amendments Act of 2007.’’
Because this guidance involves a
collection of information, the PRA is
implicated. However, the delay
associated with normal PRA clearance
procedures can reasonably be
anticipated to prevent the finalization of
the agency’s guidance document in
advance of the launch of the portal on
September 8, 2009. As a result, given
the need for immediate action, FDA
requests emergency processing of this
collection of information request.
With respect to the following
collection of information, FDA invites
comments on these topics: (1) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of FDA’s functions, including whether
the information will have practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of FDA’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
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques,
when appropriate, and other forms of
information technology.
Title: Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements for Reportable Food
Registry
Description of Respondents:
Mandatory respondents to this
collection of information are the
owners, operators, or agents in charge of
a domestic or foreign facility engaged in
manufacturing, processing, packing, or
holding food for consumption in the
United States (‘‘responsible parties’’)
who have information on a reportable
food. Voluntary respondents to this
collection of information are Federal,
State, and local public health officials
who have information on a reportable
food.
The draft guidance restates the
requirements of section 417 of the act
and presents FDA’s recommendations
for complying with section 417 of the
act. The congressionally-identified
purpose of the Registry is to provide ‘‘a
reliable mechanism to track patterns of
adulteration in food [which] would
support efforts by the Food and Drug
Administration to target limited
inspection resources to protect the
public health’’ (Public Law 110–85,
section 1005(a)(4) of FDAAA). To
further the development of the Registry,
section 417 of the act requires FDA to
establish an electronic portal by which
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instances of reportable food must be
submitted to FDA by responsible parties
and may be submitted by public health
officials.
Responsible parties will be required
to submit reports regarding instances of
reportable food via the Reportable Food
electronic portal established by FDA:
The MedWatchPlus portal. The
MedWatchPlus portal is a new electronic
system for collecting, submitting and
processing adverse event reports and
other safety information for all FDAregulated products and includes the
Reportable Food electronic portal. FDA
is developing and implementing the
MedWatchPlus portal in a phased
fashion. Responsible parties must
comply with section 417 of the act using
the Reportable Food electronic portal on
September 8, 2009. The prohibited act
provisions of the act related to the
Registry will also apply on September 8,
2009.
Reporting
Under section 417(d)(1) of the act, the
‘‘responsible party’’ must submit a
report to FDA through the Reportable
Food electronic portal including certain
information on a reportable food
(‘‘reportable food report’’). The
‘‘responsible party’’ is defined in section
417(a)(1) of the act as a person that
submits the registration under section
415(a) of the act (21 U.S.C. 360d(a)) for
a food facility that is required to register
under section 415(a), at which such
article of food is manufactured,
processed, packed, or held. Persons who
are required to submit a facility
registration under section 415 of the act
are the owner, operator, or agent in
charge of a domestic or foreign facility
engaged in manufacturing, processing,
packing, or holding food for
consumption in the United States. A
‘‘reportable food’’ is defined in section
417(a)(2) of the act as an article of food
(other than infant formula) for which
there is a reasonable probability that the
use of, or exposure to, such article of
food will cause serious adverse health
consequences or death to humans or
animals.
The MedWatchPlus Portal will provide
one central point-of-entry for persons
submitting information to FDA
regarding the safety of FDA-regulated
products. The agency believes that
providing one central point-of-entry will
better enable persons to submit their
information to FDA. In addition,
mandatory reporters will be able to use
the Internet to access the MedWatchPlus
Portal to report safety concerns about
human and animal food, thus fulfilling
the mandatory reporting requirements of
FDAAA that are the subject of the draft
guidance.
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28499
In the Federal Register of October 23,
2008 (73 FR 63153), FDA requested
public comments on a proposed
collection of information entitled
‘‘Electronic Data Collection Using
MedWatchPlus Portal and Rational
Questionnaire.’’ In that document, the
agency calculated the reporting burden
for reportable food reports. Specifically,
the agency estimated the number of
respondents and the total annual
responses for reportable food based on
the mandatory and voluntary reports
recently submitted to FDA that would
be considered reportable food reports in
the future (73 FR 63153 at 63156 and
63157). FDA estimated that it would
receive 200 to 1,200 reportable food
reports annually from 200 to 1,200
mandatory and voluntary users of the
electronic reporting system. The agency
based these estimates on the receipt of
625 voluntary food complaints leading
to adverse events from January 1, 2008,
to June 30, 2008, and also on the 206
and 182 Class 1 Recalls for human food
that took place in fiscal years 2006 and
2007, respectively. FDA utilized the
upper-bound estimate of 1,200 reports
per year for calculating the reportable
food reporting burden. FDA estimated
the reporting burden for a mandatory
reportable food report to be 0.6 hours,
for a total burden of 720 hours annually
(1,200 reports × 0.6 hours = 720 hours).
FDA estimated the reporting burden for
a voluntary reportable food report to be
0.6 hours, for a total burden of 720
hours annually (1,200 reports × 0.6
hours = 720 hours). The estimated total
annual responses are based on initial
reports and amendments to those
reports. These burden estimates have
been submitted to OMB in the proposed
collection of information entitled
‘‘Electronic Data Collection Using
MedWatchPlus Portal and Rational
Questionnaire,’’ which is currently
under review (74 FR 23721; May 20,
2009).
In addition to the burden estimates
submitted to OMB for approval, the
agency has subsequently determined
that there will be additional reporting
burdens associated with the Registry
requirements of FDAAA. Specifically,
FDA may require the responsible party
to notify the immediate previous source
and/or immediate subsequent recipient
of the reportable food (section
417(d)(6)(B)(i) and (d)(6)(B)(ii) of the
act). Similarly, FDA may also require
the responsible party that is notified
(i.e., the immediate previous source
and/or immediate subsequent recipient)
to notify their own immediate previous
source and/or immediate subsequent
recipient of the reportable food (section
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 16, 2009 / Notices
417(d)(7)(C)(i) and (d)(7)(C)(ii) of the
act). We estimate these reporting
burdens in the following paragraphs.
Notification to the immediate
previous source and immediate
subsequent recipient of the article of
food may be accomplished by electronic
communication methods such as e-mail,
fax or text messaging or by telegrams,
mailgrams, or first class letters.
Notification may also be accomplished
by telephone call or other personal
contacts; but, FDA recommends that
such notifications also be confirmed by
one of the previously mentioned
methods and/or documented in an
appropriate manner. FDA may require
that the notification include any or all
of the following data elements: (1) The
date on which the article of food was
determined to be a reportable food; (2)
a description of the article of food,
including the quantity or amount; (3)
the extent and nature of the
adulteration; (4) the results of any
investigation of the cause of the
adulteration if it may have originated
with the responsible party, if known; (5)
the disposition of the article of food,
when known; (6) product information
typically found on packaging including
product codes, use-by dates, and the
names of manufacturers, packers, or
distributors sufficient to identify the
article of food; (7) contact information
for the responsible party; (8) contact
reportable food reports in the future (73
FR 63153 at 63157).
FDA estimates that all mandatory
reports will require that the immediate
previous source and subsequent
recipient be notified. We do not expect
that this notification burden will apply
to voluntary reporters of reportable
foods. Therefore, the total estimated
burden of notifying the immediate
previous source and immediate
subsequent recipient under section
417(d)(6)(B)(i), (d)(6)(B)(ii), (d)(7)(C)(i),
and (d)(7)(C)(ii) of the act for 1,200
reportable foods will be 2,880 hours
annually (1,200 × 0.6 hours) + (1,200 ×
0.6 hours) + (1,200 × 0.6 hours) + (1,200
× 0.6 hours). FDA’s utilization of an
upper-bound estimate of 1,200 reports
and 0.6 hours per report is likely an
overestimate of the number of reports
that may be received and an
overestimate of the time necessary to
notify 1 immediate previous source and
1 immediate subsequent recipient.
However, these overestimates may be
justified because FDA cannot know how
often multiple immediate previous
sources or immediate subsequent
recipients may need to be notified for
each reportable food event. FDA
requests comment on these burden
estimates.
FDA estimates the burden of this
collection of information as follows:
information for parties directly linked in
the supply chain and notified under
section 417(d)(6)(B) or (d)(7)(C) of the
act, as applicable; (9) the information
required by FDA to be included in the
notification provided by the responsible
party involved under section
417(d)(6)(B) or (d)(7)(C) of the act or
required to report under section
417(d)(7)(A) of the act; and (10) the
unique number described in section
417(d)(4) of the act (section
417(d)(6)(B)(iii)(I), (d)(7)(C)(iii)(I), and
(e) of the act). FDA may also require that
the notification provide information
about the actions that the recipient of
the notification shall perform and/or
any other information FDA may require
(section 417(d)(6)(B)(iii)(II),
(d)(6)(B)(iii)(III), (d)(7)(C)(iii)(II), and
(d)(7)(C)(iii)(III) of the act).
FDA estimates that notifying the
immediate previous recipient will take
0.6 hours per reportable food and
notifying the immediate subsequent
recipient will take 0.6 hours per
reportable food. FDA also estimates that
it will take 0.6 hours for the immediate
previous source and/or the immediate
subsequent recipient to also notify their
immediate previous source and/or
immediate subsequent recipient. The
agency bases its estimate on its
experience with mandatory and
voluntary reports recently submitted to
FDA that would be considered
TABLE 1.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN1
No. of
Respondents
Activity
Annual Frequency
per Response
Total Annual
Responses
Hours per
Response
Total Hours
Notifying immediate previous source
of the article of food under section 417(d)(6)(B)(i) of the act
1,200
1
1,200
0.6
720
Notifying immediate subsequent recipient of the article of food under
section 417(d)(6)(B)(ii) of the act
1,200
1
1,200
0.6
720
Notifying immediate previous source
of the article of food under section 417(d)(7)(C)(i) of the act
1,200
1
1,200
0.6
720
Notifying immediate subsequent recipient of the article of food under
section 417(d)(7)(C)(ii) of the act
1,200
1
1,200
0.6
720
Total
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1 There
2,880
are no capital or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Recordkeeping
The agency has determined that there
will be recordkeeping burdens
associated with FDAAA. Section 417(g)
of the act requires that responsible
persons maintain records related to
reportable foods reports and
notifications under section 417 of the
act for a period of 2 years. We estimate
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that each mandatory report and its
associated notifications will require 30
minutes of recordkeeping for the 2-year
period, or 15 minutes per record per
year. FDA bases its estimate on its
experience with a similar ‘‘per event’’
type of recordkeeping for food and
cosmetics derived from cattle materials.
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For that recurring recordkeeping
burden, which involves sending,
verifying, and storing documents
regarding shipments of cattle material
used in human food and cosmetics, we
estimated that the recurring
recordkeeping burden would be about
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28501
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 16, 2009 / Notices
15 minutes per week (71 FR 59653 at
59667; October 11, 2006).
The annual recordkeeping burden for
mandatory reports and their associated
notifications is thus estimated to be 300
hours (1,200 × 0.25 hours).
We do not expect that records will
always be kept in relation to voluntary
reporting, nor is any such recordkeeping
required by section 417 of the act.
Therefore, FDA estimates that records
will be kept for 600 of the 1,200
voluntary reports we expect to receive
annually. The recordkeeping burden
associated with voluntary reports is thus
estimated to be 150 hours annually (600
× 0.25 hours).
The estimated total annual
recordkeeping burden is shown in table
2 of this document.
TABLE 2.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING BURDEN1
No. of
Recordkeepers
Activity
Annual Frequency
per Recordkeeping
Total Annual
Records2
Hours per
Record
Total Hours
Maintenance of reportable food
records under section 417(g) of
the act—
Mandatory reports
1,200
1
1,200
0.25
300
Maintenance of reportable food
records under section 417(g) of
the act—
Voluntary reports
600
1
600
0.25
150
Total
450
1 There
are no capital or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
purposes of estimating number of records and hours per record, a ‘‘record’’ means all records kept for an individual reportable food by
the responsible party or a voluntary reporter.
2 For
The draft guidance also refers to
previously approved collections of
information found in FDA regulations.
The collections of information in
question 28 of the guidance have been
approved under OMB control no. 0910–
0249.
Dated: June 9, 2009.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and
Planning.
[FR Doc. E9–14048 Filed 6–15–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request; NIH Intramural Research
Training Program Applications
SUMMARY: In compliance with the
requirement of section 3506(c)(2)(A) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
for opportunity for public comment on
proposed data collection projects, the
Office of the Director, the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) will publish
periodic summaries of proposed
projects to be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval.
Proposed Collection
Title: NIH Intramural Research
Training Program Applications.
Estimated
number of
respondents
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Type of respondent
Type of Information Collection
Request: Revision/OMB No. 0925–0299;
8/31/2009.
Need and Use of Information
Collection: The proposed information
collection activity is for the purpose of
collecting applicant data for Training
Fellowships in the NIH Intramural
Research Program. This information
must be submitted in order to receive
due consideration for a fellowship and
will be used to determine the eligibility
and quality of potential awardees.
Frequency of Response: On occasion.
Affected Public: Individuals seeking
intramural training opportunities and
references for these individuals.
Type of Respondents: Postdoctoral,
predoctoral, postbaccalaureate,
technical, clinical, and student IRTA
applicants.
There are no capital costs, operating
costs, and/or maintenance costs to
report.
Estimated
number of
responses per
respondent
Average burden
hours per
response
Estimated total
annual burden
hours
requested
Postdoctoral .................................................................................................
Predoctoral ...................................................................................................
Postbaccalaureate .......................................................................................
Technical ......................................................................................................
Clinical .........................................................................................................
Student .........................................................................................................
All categories (Race/Gender/Ethnicity survey) ............................................
References for all categories .......................................................................
3,424
1,458
4,750
233
400
14,334
4,307
38,725
2.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
0.25
1.00
6,848
1,458
4,750
233
400
14,334
1,077
38,725
Total ......................................................................................................
67,631
1.125
0.90625
67,825
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E:\FR\FM\16JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 114 (Tuesday, June 16, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28498-28501]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-14048]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2009-N-0261]
Agency Emergency Processing Under Office of Management and Budget
Review; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for Reportable Food
Registry
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing that a
proposed collection of information has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for emergency processing under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the PRA). This notice solicits
comments on the proposed collection of information associated with the
draft guidance document entitled ``Questions and Answers Regarding the
Reportable Food Registry as Established by the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of 2007.'' The draft guidance, when
finalized, will assist the industry in complying with the Reportable
Food Registry requirements prescribed by the Food and Drug
Administration Amendments Act of 2007 (FDAAA).
DATES: Fax written comments on the collection of information by July
16, 2009. FDA is requesting approval of this emergency processing by
August 17, 2009.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on the information collection are
received, OMB recommends that written comments be faxed to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer,
FAX: 202-395-6974. All comments should be identified with the docket
number found in brackets in the heading of this document.
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.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: FDA has requested emergency processing of
this proposed collection of information under section 3507(j) of the
PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(j)) and 5 CFR 1320.13. On September 27, 2007, the
President signed FDAAA into law (Public Law 110-85). Section 1005 of
FDAAA amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) by
creating a new section 417 (21 U.S.C. 350f), among other things.
Section 417 of the act requires the Secretary of Health and Human
Services to establish, within FDA, a Reportable Food Registry (the
Registry); the Registry is to be established not later than 1 year
after the date of enactment (i.e., by September 27, 2008).
To further the development of the Registry, section 417 of the act
requires FDA to establish, also within 1 year after the date of
enactment (i.e., by September 27, 2008), an electronic portal (the
Reportable Food electronic portal) by which instances of reportable
food must be submitted to FDA by responsible parties and may be
submitted by public health officials.
FDA made the decision that the most efficient and cost effective
means to implement the requirements of section 417 of the act relating
to the Registry was to utilize the business enterprise system currently
under development within the agency: The MedWatch\Plus\ Portal. This
would permit the agency to establish an electronic portal through which
instances of reportable food may be submitted to the agency. However,
FDA recognized that the MedWatch\Plus\ Portal would not be implemented
in time to meet the September 27, 2008, deadline for establishing the
Reportable Food electronic portal and therefore announced that it was
delaying its implementation until spring 2009 (73 FR 30405; May 27,
2008).
The agency now expects the system to be operational on September 8,
2009.
Section 1005(f) of FDAAA required FDA to issue guidance to industry
about submitting reports through the electronic portal of instances of
reportable food and providing notifications to other persons in the
supply chain of such article of food. In a notice published in the
Federal Register of June 11, 2009, FDA announced the availability of
the draft guidance document entitled ``Questions
[[Page 28499]]
and Answers Regarding the Reportable Food Registry as Established by
the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007.''
Because this guidance involves a collection of information, the PRA
is implicated. However, the delay associated with normal PRA clearance
procedures can reasonably be anticipated to prevent the finalization of
the agency's guidance document in advance of the launch of the portal
on September 8, 2009. As a result, given the need for immediate action,
FDA requests emergency processing of this collection of information
request.
With respect to the following collection of information, FDA
invites comments on these topics: (1) Whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the proper performance of FDA's
functions, including whether the information will have practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of FDA'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 respondents,
including through the use of automated collection techniques, when
appropriate, and other forms of information technology.
Title: Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for Reportable Food
Registry
Description of Respondents: Mandatory respondents to this
collection of information are the owners, operators, or agents in
charge of a domestic or foreign facility engaged in manufacturing,
processing, packing, or holding food for consumption in the United
States (``responsible parties'') who have information on a reportable
food. Voluntary respondents to this collection of information are
Federal, State, and local public health officials who have information
on a reportable food.
The draft guidance restates the requirements of section 417 of the
act and presents FDA's recommendations for complying with section 417
of the act. The congressionally-identified purpose of the Registry is
to provide ``a reliable mechanism to track patterns of adulteration in
food [which] would support efforts by the Food and Drug Administration
to target limited inspection resources to protect the public health''
(Public Law 110-85, section 1005(a)(4) of FDAAA). To further the
development of the Registry, section 417 of the act requires FDA to
establish an electronic portal by which instances of reportable food
must be submitted to FDA by responsible parties and may be submitted by
public health officials.
Responsible parties will be required to submit reports regarding
instances of reportable food via the Reportable Food electronic portal
established by FDA: The MedWatch\Plus\ portal. The MedWatch\Plus\
portal is a new electronic system for collecting, submitting and
processing adverse event reports and other safety information for all
FDA-regulated products and includes the Reportable Food electronic
portal. FDA is developing and implementing the MedWatch\Plus\ portal in
a phased fashion. Responsible parties must comply with section 417 of
the act using the Reportable Food electronic portal on September 8,
2009. The prohibited act provisions of the act related to the Registry
will also apply on September 8, 2009.
Reporting
Under section 417(d)(1) of the act, the ``responsible party'' must
submit a report to FDA through the Reportable Food electronic portal
including certain information on a reportable food (``reportable food
report''). The ``responsible party'' is defined in section 417(a)(1) of
the act as a person that submits the registration under section 415(a)
of the act (21 U.S.C. 360d(a)) for a food facility that is required to
register under section 415(a), at which such article of food is
manufactured, processed, packed, or held. Persons who are required to
submit a facility registration under section 415 of the act are the
owner, operator, or agent in charge of a domestic or foreign facility
engaged in manufacturing, processing, packing, or holding food for
consumption in the United States. A ``reportable food'' is defined in
section 417(a)(2) of the act as an article of food (other than infant
formula) for which there is a reasonable probability that the use of,
or exposure to, such article of food will cause serious adverse health
consequences or death to humans or animals.
The MedWatch\Plus\ Portal will provide one central point-of-entry
for persons submitting information to FDA regarding the safety of FDA-
regulated products. The agency believes that providing one central
point-of-entry will better enable persons to submit their information
to FDA. In addition, mandatory reporters will be able to use the
Internet to access the MedWatch\Plus\ Portal to report safety concerns
about human and animal food, thus fulfilling the mandatory reporting
requirements of FDAAA that are the subject of the draft guidance.
In the Federal Register of October 23, 2008 (73 FR 63153), FDA
requested public comments on a proposed collection of information
entitled ``Electronic Data Collection Using MedWatch\Plus\ Portal and
Rational Questionnaire.'' In that document, the agency calculated the
reporting burden for reportable food reports. Specifically, the agency
estimated the number of respondents and the total annual responses for
reportable food based on the mandatory and voluntary reports recently
submitted to FDA that would be considered reportable food reports in
the future (73 FR 63153 at 63156 and 63157). FDA estimated that it
would receive 200 to 1,200 reportable food reports annually from 200 to
1,200 mandatory and voluntary users of the electronic reporting system.
The agency based these estimates on the receipt of 625 voluntary food
complaints leading to adverse events from January 1, 2008, to June 30,
2008, and also on the 206 and 182 Class 1 Recalls for human food that
took place in fiscal years 2006 and 2007, respectively. FDA utilized
the upper-bound estimate of 1,200 reports per year for calculating the
reportable food reporting burden. FDA estimated the reporting burden
for a mandatory reportable food report to be 0.6 hours, for a total
burden of 720 hours annually (1,200 reports x 0.6 hours = 720 hours).
FDA estimated the reporting burden for a voluntary reportable food
report to be 0.6 hours, for a total burden of 720 hours annually (1,200
reports x 0.6 hours = 720 hours). The estimated total annual responses
are based on initial reports and amendments to those reports. These
burden estimates have been submitted to OMB in the proposed collection
of information entitled ``Electronic Data Collection Using
MedWatch\Plus\ Portal and Rational Questionnaire,'' which is currently
under review (74 FR 23721; May 20, 2009).
In addition to the burden estimates submitted to OMB for approval,
the agency has subsequently determined that there will be additional
reporting burdens associated with the Registry requirements of FDAAA.
Specifically, FDA may require the responsible party to notify the
immediate previous source and/or immediate subsequent recipient of the
reportable food (section 417(d)(6)(B)(i) and (d)(6)(B)(ii) of the act).
Similarly, FDA may also require the responsible party that is notified
(i.e., the immediate previous source and/or immediate subsequent
recipient) to notify their own immediate previous source and/or
immediate subsequent recipient of the reportable food (section
[[Page 28500]]
417(d)(7)(C)(i) and (d)(7)(C)(ii) of the act). We estimate these
reporting burdens in the following paragraphs.
Notification to the immediate previous source and immediate
subsequent recipient of the article of food may be accomplished by
electronic communication methods such as e-mail, fax or text messaging
or by telegrams, mailgrams, or first class letters. Notification may
also be accomplished by telephone call or other personal contacts; but,
FDA recommends that such notifications also be confirmed by one of the
previously mentioned methods and/or documented in an appropriate
manner. FDA may require that the notification include any or all of the
following data elements: (1) The date on which the article of food was
determined to be a reportable food; (2) a description of the article of
food, including the quantity or amount; (3) the extent and nature of
the adulteration; (4) the results of any investigation of the cause of
the adulteration if it may have originated with the responsible party,
if known; (5) the disposition of the article of food, when known; (6)
product information typically found on packaging including product
codes, use-by dates, and the names of manufacturers, packers, or
distributors sufficient to identify the article of food; (7) contact
information for the responsible party; (8) contact information for
parties directly linked in the supply chain and notified under section
417(d)(6)(B) or (d)(7)(C) of the act, as applicable; (9) the
information required by FDA to be included in the notification provided
by the responsible party involved under section 417(d)(6)(B) or
(d)(7)(C) of the act or required to report under section 417(d)(7)(A)
of the act; and (10) the unique number described in section 417(d)(4)
of the act (section 417(d)(6)(B)(iii)(I), (d)(7)(C)(iii)(I), and (e) of
the act). FDA may also require that the notification provide
information about the actions that the recipient of the notification
shall perform and/or any other information FDA may require (section
417(d)(6)(B)(iii)(II), (d)(6)(B)(iii)(III), (d)(7)(C)(iii)(II), and
(d)(7)(C)(iii)(III) of the act).
FDA estimates that notifying the immediate previous recipient will
take 0.6 hours per reportable food and notifying the immediate
subsequent recipient will take 0.6 hours per reportable food. FDA also
estimates that it will take 0.6 hours for the immediate previous source
and/or the immediate subsequent recipient to also notify their
immediate previous source and/or immediate subsequent recipient. The
agency bases its estimate on its experience with mandatory and
voluntary reports recently submitted to FDA that would be considered
reportable food reports in the future (73 FR 63153 at 63157).
FDA estimates that all mandatory reports will require that the
immediate previous source and subsequent recipient be notified. We do
not expect that this notification burden will apply to voluntary
reporters of reportable foods. Therefore, the total estimated burden of
notifying the immediate previous source and immediate subsequent
recipient under section 417(d)(6)(B)(i), (d)(6)(B)(ii), (d)(7)(C)(i),
and (d)(7)(C)(ii) of the act for 1,200 reportable foods will be 2,880
hours annually (1,200 x 0.6 hours) + (1,200 x 0.6 hours) + (1,200 x 0.6
hours) + (1,200 x 0.6 hours). FDA's utilization of an upper-bound
estimate of 1,200 reports and 0.6 hours per report is likely an
overestimate of the number of reports that may be received and an
overestimate of the time necessary to notify 1 immediate previous
source and 1 immediate subsequent recipient. However, these
overestimates may be justified because FDA cannot know how often
multiple immediate previous sources or immediate subsequent recipients
may need to be notified for each reportable food event. FDA requests
comment on these burden estimates.
FDA estimates the burden of this collection of information as
follows:
Table 1.--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden\1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. of Annual Frequency Total Annual Hours per
Activity Respondents per Response Responses Response Total Hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notifying 1,200 1 1,200 0.6 720
immediate
previous
source of the
article of
food under
section
417(d)(6)(B)(
i) of the act
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notifying 1,200 1 1,200 0.6 720
immediate
subsequent
recipient of
the article
of food under
section
417(d)(6)(B)(
ii) of the
act
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notifying 1,200 1 1,200 0.6 720
immediate
previous
source of the
article of
food under
section
417(d)(7)(C)(
i) of the act
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notifying 1,200 1 1,200 0.6 720
immediate
subsequent
recipient of
the article
of food under
section
417(d)(7)(C)(
ii) of the
act
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total 2,880
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Recordkeeping
The agency has determined that there will be recordkeeping burdens
associated with FDAAA. Section 417(g) of the act requires that
responsible persons maintain records related to reportable foods
reports and notifications under section 417 of the act for a period of
2 years. We estimate that each mandatory report and its associated
notifications will require 30 minutes of recordkeeping for the 2-year
period, or 15 minutes per record per year. FDA bases its estimate on
its experience with a similar ``per event'' type of recordkeeping for
food and cosmetics derived from cattle materials. For that recurring
recordkeeping burden, which involves sending, verifying, and storing
documents regarding shipments of cattle material used in human food and
cosmetics, we estimated that the recurring recordkeeping burden would
be about
[[Page 28501]]
15 minutes per week (71 FR 59653 at 59667; October 11, 2006).
The annual recordkeeping burden for mandatory reports and their
associated notifications is thus estimated to be 300 hours (1,200 x
0.25 hours).
We do not expect that records will always be kept in relation to
voluntary reporting, nor is any such recordkeeping required by section
417 of the act. Therefore, FDA estimates that records will be kept for
600 of the 1,200 voluntary reports we expect to receive annually. The
recordkeeping burden associated with voluntary reports is thus
estimated to be 150 hours annually (600 x 0.25 hours).
The estimated total annual recordkeeping burden is shown in table 2
of this document.
Table 2.--Estimated Annual Recordkeeping Burden\1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. of Annual Frequency Total Annual
Activity Recordkeepers per Recordkeeping Records\2\ Hours per Record Total Hours
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maintenance of reportable food records under section 1,200 1 1,200 0.25 300
417(g) of the act--
Mandatory reports
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maintenance of reportable food records under section 600 1 600 0.25 150
417(g) of the act--
Voluntary reports
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total 450
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
\2\ For purposes of estimating number of records and hours per record, a ``record'' means all records kept for an individual reportable food by the
responsible party or a voluntary reporter.
The draft guidance also refers to previously approved collections
of information found in FDA regulations. The collections of information
in question 28 of the guidance have been approved under OMB control no.
0910-0249.
Dated: June 9, 2009.
Jeffrey Shuren,
Associate Commissioner for Policy and Planning.
[FR Doc. E9-14048 Filed 6-15-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-S