Electronic Tariff Filings, 4689-4692 [2010-1538]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 19 / Friday, January 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
letter to permit holders that also serves
as small entity compliance guide (the
guide) was prepared. Copies of this final
rule are available from the Northwest
Regional Office, and the guide, i.e.,
permit holder letter, will be sent to all
holders of permits for the fishery. The
guide and this final rule will be
available upon request.
This final rule contains a collectionof-information requirement subject to
the PRA that has been approved by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under control number 0648–
0599 (expires 12/31/12). The public
reporting burden for the Trawl
Identification of Ownership Interest
Form is estimated to average 30 minutes
per response, including the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
information. This form is estimated to
cost approximately $19.15 per response
(including the respondent’s time
($8.51), mailing, photocopying, and
notary fee). There is no fee for this form.
Send comments regarding these burden
estimates or any other aspect of this data
collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to NMFS,
Northwest Region (see ADDRESSES)
and by e-mail to
DavidlRostker@omb.eop.gov, or fax to
202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
subject to penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
50 CFR Part 660
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Fisheries, Fishing, and Indian
Fisheries.
Dated: January 25, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 15 CFR Chapter IX and 50
CFR Chapter VI are amended as follows:
■
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15 CFR Chapter IX
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
1. The authority citation for part 902
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
2. In § 902.1, paragraph (b), under ‘‘50
CFR’’, the entry ‘‘660.337’’ is added in
numerical order to read as follows:
■
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
*
*
*
(b)* * *
*
*
Current
OMB control number (all
numbers
begin with
0648–)
CFR part or section where the
information collection requirement is located
*
*
*
*
*
50 CFR
*
*
*
*
*
660.337
*
*
*
*
–0599
*
50 CFR Chapter VI
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES
1. The authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. A new § 660.337 is added to read
as follows:
■
§ 660.337 Trawl rationalization program data collection requirements.
(a) Ownership reporting requirements
- (1) In 2010, NMFS will send a Trawl
Identification of Ownership Interest
Form to the current address on record
requesting information from
participants in the trawl fishery. Receipt
of this form does NOT prequalify these
persons for quota share nor does it
guarantee that they will qualify for
quota share under a future trawl
rationalization program. The following
participants in the trawl fishery must
complete and return the form to NMFS:
(i) Owners of each limited entry
permit endorsed for trawl gear;
(ii) Owners of each vessel registered
to a limited entry permit endorsed for
trawl gear (i.e., permit holder) if not
identical to the permit owner covered
by paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section;
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4689
(iii) Owners of each vessel registered
to a Pacific whiting vessel license that
are not covered by paragraphs (a)(1)(i)
and (ii) above; and
(iv) First receivers issued current
Pacific whiting first receiver exempted
fishing permits.
(2) Supporting documentation.
(i) Business entities completing the
Trawl Identification of Ownership
Interest Form are required to submit the
following:
(A) A corporate resolution or any
other credible documentation as proof
that the representative of the entity is
authoirzed to act on behalf of the entity;
and
(B) Proof that the business entity was
established and is currently recognized
as active under the laws of the United
States or any state.
(ii) After review of the Trawl
Identification of Ownership Interest
Form, NMFS may require the following
additional documentation:
(A) Articles of incorporation, a
notarized contract, or any other credible
documentation that identifies each
person who owns an interest in the
entity and their percentage of
ownership;
(B) A certified copy of the current
vessel document (United States Coast
Guard or state) as evidence of vessel
ownership; or
(C) Such other relevant, credible
information as the applicant may
submit, or as the SFD or the Regional
Administrator may request or require.
(3) Deadline. Persons listed in
paragraph (a)(1) will be provided at least
60 calendar days to submit completed
forms. All forms must be completed and
returned to NMFS with a postmark no
later than the deadline date of May 1,
2010.
(b) [Reserved]
[FR Doc. 2010–1877 Filed 1–28–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Parts 35, 131, 154, 157, 250,
281, 284, 300, 341, 344, 346, 347, 348,
375 and 385
[Docket No. RM01–5–000]
Electronic Tariff Filings
Issued January 21, 2010.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Order establishing procedures
relating to tariffs filed electronically.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 19 / Friday, January 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
SUMMARY: The adoption of electronic
tariff filing necessitates changes in the
Commission’s processing of tariff
filings. This order identifies the ways in
which such changes affect aspects of
Commission procedures, particularly
the determination of statutory filings
and statutory action dates, as well as
changes in docketing procedures.
DATES: Effective date: This order is
effective January 29, 2010. Applicability
date: This order becomes applicable
when tariff filings are submitted in
electronic format.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
H. Keith Pierce (Technical Information),
Office of Energy Market Regulation,
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
8525, Keith.Pierce@ferc.gov.
Anthony Barracchini (IT Information),
Office of the Executive Director,
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502–
8940, Anthony.Barracchini@ferc.gov.
Andre Goodson (Legal Information),
Office of the General Counsel, Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, 888
First Street, NE., Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–8560,
Andre.Goodson@ferc.gov.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. In Order No. 714,1 the Commission
adopted regulations requiring that,
starting April 1, 2010, all tariffs and
tariff revisions filed with the
Commission must be filed electronically
according to a format developed through
collaboration between Commission staff
and the wholesale electric and gas
quadrants of the North American Energy
Standards Board, and representatives
from the Association of Oil Pipelines.
The adoption of electronic tariff filing
provides the framework for a more
efficient document processing system as
well as providing a user-friendly
interface from which the Commission,
its staff, and the public may retrieve and
review tariffs.
2. The adoption of electronic tariff
filing necessitates changes in the
business practices used by the
Commission to process tariff filings.
This order identifies ways in which
such changes affect aspects of
Commission procedures, particularly
the determination of whether a filing is
a statutory filing, and the statutory
action date, as well as changes in
docketing procedures.
1 Electronic Tariff Filings, Order No. 714, 73 FR
57515 (Oct. 3, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs ¶ 31,276
(2008).
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14:42 Jan 28, 2010
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Statutory Filings
3. As the Commission explained in
Order No. 714, the electronic format
developed through the collaborative
process relies upon the use of metadata
(or information) about the tariff filing,
including such data elements as the
type of filing that is being made, the
proposed effective date of proposed
tariff changes, and the version number
of the effective tariff.2 As the
Commission explained, these data
elements ‘‘are required to properly
identify the nature of the tariff filing,
organize the tariff database, and
maintain the proper relationship of tariff
provisions in relation to other
provisions.’’ 3
4. The Commission will be using
these data elements to establish
statutory filing and other procedural
dates.4 The Commission will use the
‘‘Type of Filing’’ code (filing_type)
together with the ‘‘Tariff Record
Proposed Effective Date’’
(proposed_effective_date) to establish
whether a filing is statutory and the
applicable statutory timelines.
5. All filers making statutory filings
must choose a statutory filing type and
include a proposed effective date to
have their filings treated as statutory
filings upon which the Commission
must act within statutorily-established
time frames. That is, the filing type
selected by the filer will determine the
type of filing and whether the filing is
to be treated as a statutory filing. Any
discrepancy between the description of
the filing in the transmittal letter (or
other pleading) and the Type of Filing
code chosen will be resolved in favor of
the Type of Filing code.5 Because the
Commission is using the electronic
2 These data elements, or codes, are described in
the Implementation Guide for Electronic Filing of
Parts 35, 154, 284, 300, and 341 Tariff Filing
(Implementation Guide), found on the
Commission’s Web site, https://www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/etariff/implementation-guide.pdf.
3 Order No. 714 at P 23. See The National Center
for State Courts, Standards for Electronic Filing
Processes (Technical and Business Approaches),
Standard 1.1F (2003) (concluding that the
responsibility for data entry needs to be assigned to
the filer, since it has the greatest familiarity with
the data to be entered), https://www.ncsconline.org/
d_tech/standards/Documents/pdfdocs/
Recommended_%20Process_%20
standards_02_26_03.pdf.
4 A statutory filing is a filing made pursuant to
section 4 of the Natural Gas Act (NGA), section 205
of the Federal Power Act (FPA), or section 6 of the
Interstate Commerce Act (ICA) to revise rates or
terms and conditions of service.
5 For example, if the transmittal letter states that
a statutory FPA section 205 filing is contemplated,
but the Type of Filing code selected represents a
compliance filing, the Commission will treat the
filing as a compliance filing, which is not subject
to action within the period prescribed by FPA
section 205.
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metadata to establish statutory action
dates throughout its electronic systems,
the primacy of the Type of Filing code
is necessary to ensure the integrity of
Commission processes and to ensure
Commission action on such filings
within the time period provided under
the appropriate statute.6 While
Commission staff will try, where
possible, to notify a filer of
discrepancies between its transmittal
letter and the Type of Filing code it
selected, the Type of Filing code
selected will govern the appropriate
filing type and thus whether and what
actions dates may be applicable.7
6. Similarly, the Commission will be
using the Tariff Record Proposed
Effective Date code to establish the
proposed effective date for any statutory
filing.8 As is current practice, the date
established by the Tariff Record
Proposed Effective Date, if that date is
after the otherwise statutorilyestablished effective date, will establish
the date on which, by statute, a tariff
filing would go into effect by operation
of law in the absence of Commission
action.9 In a tariff filing that contains
different proposed effective dates for
different proposed tariff changes, the
earliest proposed effective date will
establish the proposed effective date for
determining the date on which the filing
would go into effect in the absence of
Commission action.10 While the
Commission will continue its current
practice of considering requests in
6 The Type of Filing code will be used in all of
the Commission’s electronic systems to establish
the applicable statutory action dates, and so,
notwithstanding a filing party’s wish expressed in
its transmittal letter or in other pleadings, the
Commission may not review a filing that is
incorrectly coded within the time period requested
by a filing party in such pleadings.
7 Commission staff’s efforts in this regard are
intended simply as a voluntary and informal aid to
filers, and any action or failure on the part of
Commission staff will not bind or otherwise affect
how the Commission processes such filings. See 18
CFR 388.104(a) (2009); accord, e.g., 18 CFR 154.8
(2009). It is, and remains, the filer’s responsibility
to ensure that it is selecting the appropriate Type
of Filing code, as well as accurately providing any
other metadata.
8 In order to constitute a statutory tariff filing, the
filer, therefore, must both select a statutory Type of
Filing code and include a Tariff Record with a
Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date.
9 For example, if the Tariff Record Proposed
Effective Date is after the otherwise applicable
statutorily-established effective date, the statutory
period will be extended until the Tariff Record
Proposed Effective Date.
10 As explained in the Implementation Guide, for
statutory filings with indeterminate effective dates,
for example, where the effective date is contingent
on Commission approval, plant construction, or the
closing of a plant sale, filers must still include a
Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date, but should
set that date to 12/31/9998. Implementation Guide,
at 10, https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/etariff/
implementation-guide.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 19 / Friday, January 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
transmittal letters or other pleadings for
issuance of orders on an expedited
basis, statements in transmittal letters or
other pleadings will not establish
statutory action dates for tariff filings.
7. Because of the importance of the
Type of Filing code and the Tariff
Record Proposed Effective Date, these
metadata will be included in the
electronic notices sent to the filers and
posted on eLibrary.11 Filers should
check these sources carefully to verify
that their tariff filings and proposed
effective dates are what they intended.
8. Filers also need to be careful when
making combined filings, i.e., filings
whose different parts would, if filed
individually, have different Type of
Filing codes.12 Each filing can have only
one Type of Filing code, and so the
treatment of any combined filing will
depend on the particular Type of Filing
code chosen.13
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Docketing Procedures
9. The Commission will use the
metadata supplied with the tariff filing
to help speed up its docketing and
notice process. As far as possible, these
data will permit docketing that closely
parallels current practice. However,
some of the docket prefixes previously
used may not be assigned to electronic
tariff filings and these filings will be
assigned only a single docket number
rather than multiple docket numbers as
may have occurred in the past.
10. Procedures for identifying root
and subsequent subdockets 14 will
remain the same for the vast majority of
compliance and other filings. However,
in a few cases, parties will experience
differences, particularly for compliance
filings made in the context of complaint
cases.
11. Subdockets for compliance filings
will be established based on the
11 An example of how eLibrary will display the
metadata for an electronic tariff filing is posted at
https://www.ferc.gov/EventCalendar/Files/
20091119114331Example%20eTariff%20eLibrary%20Rendition.rtf.
12 The Commission’s regulations and policies
already prohibit combined filings in some
situations. See 18 CFR 154.203 (2009) (compliance
filings cannot be combined with any other type of
filing); Calpine Eastern Corporation, 97 FERC
¶ 61,078, at 61,382 (2001) (cannot combine filings
made in compliance with a prior Commission order
with new FPA section 205 filings).
13 Instead of combining filings, filers can make
separate filings for each type of filing
contemplated—each filing containing the portions
relevant to the specific filing type.
14 The Commission typically assigns a root docket
number to an initial filing and then adds
subdockets to later filings in the same proceeding.
As an illustration, for Docket No. ER12–6789–000,
the root docket number is ‘‘ER12–6789’’ and the
subdocket is ‘‘000.’’ When a subsequent compliance
filing is made, the root docket is retained and the
subdocket will be incremented, usually by 1, so that
the new docket number will be ER12–6789–001.
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metadata provided by the pipeline or
utility making the filing. Each pipeline
or utility is required to identify every
filing using a discrete number, ‘‘Filing
Identifier’’ (filing_id). When making
filings related to or associated with a
prior filing (such as a compliance
filing), the pipeline or utility must
include the Filing Identifier of the prior
filing that is associated with its current
filing. (The Filing Identifier of the initial
filing will be included as the
‘‘Associated Filing Identifier’’
(associated_filing_id) in the subsequent
filing). For example, if the pipeline or
utility is making a compliance filing, it
will include as the Associated Filing
Identifier in the compliance filing, the
Filing Identifier it assigned to the initial
tariff filing giving rise to the compliance
filing. That Associated Filing Identifier
will permit the Commission to
determine the relevant root docket
number assigned to the initial tariff
filing, so that a subdocket for the
compliance filing can be assigned.
12. However, in those circumstances
in which the pipeline or utility does not
include (in a subsequent filing) the
Filing Identifier of its initial filing, the
root docket number for the initial
proceeding will not be available.
Accordingly, a new root docket number
will be assigned to the compliance
filing. The practice of assigning a new
root docket parallels the Commission’s
typical practice with respect to
compliance filings in rulemaking
proceedings, in which each pipeline’s or
utility’s individual filing to comply with
the rule typically receives a new root
docket number.
13. However, new root docket
numbers may be assigned in situations
in which subdockets traditionally had
been assigned manually and new
procedures need to be followed in these
circumstances. A common situation in
which this will occur will be during the
implementation phase of electronic
tariff filing. New root docket numbers
will be assigned to compliance filings
when companies have outstanding
compliance obligations at the time they
make their original, baseline tariff
filings. Because the original tariff filing
giving rise to the compliance obligation
will not be part of the pipeline’s or
utility’s electronic database, it will not
have a Filing Identifier and therefore the
pipeline or utility will not be able to
include the Filing Identifier in the
compliance filing, and the compliance
filing will be assigned a new root docket
number.
14. This situation also may occur on
a limited scale on an ongoing basis. For
example, in complaint cases, the filing
initiating the complaint is not filed by
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4691
the pipeline or utility, but rather by a
third-party, typically a customer. In the
process of resolving the complaint, the
Commission may require the pipeline or
utility to file a revision to its tariff. In
such a circumstance, the pipeline or
utility will not have an initial filing in
its database with which to associate the
compliance filing. Therefore, as
described above, the compliance filing
made through the electronic tariff filing
portal will receive a new root docket,
rather than a subdocket from the
original complaint case. In other words,
the compliance filing in a complaint
proceeding will parallel the situation in
which the pipeline or utility is
complying with a rulemaking, and the
compliance filing will receive a new
root docket.15
15. In situations in which new root
dockets are assigned to compliance
filings, the pipeline or utility making
the filing still is required to serve the
compliance filing on all parties in the
original docket.16 For example, in a
complaint case, the pipeline or utility
will need to serve the compliance filing
on all parties in the original complaint
docket giving rise to the compliance
obligation.
16. In order to establish a simple and
uniform method for determining parties
and service lists when a new root docket
is established, the Commission will
follow its existing practice with respect
to the need to intervene. Currently,
parties who have intervened in initial
proceedings do not have to re-intervene
in subdockets.17 However, when the
Commission establishes new root
dockets (such as for compliance with
rulemaking proceedings), intervention is
required to become a party to the new
root docket proceeding and to appear on
the service list for that proceeding.18
The same approach will be taken
whenever a new root docket is assigned
in a compliance proceeding: those
wishing to become parties to a new root
docket will have to intervene in that
docket. A simple-to-apply rule will help
15 The complaint proceeding will determine
whether the pipeline or utility is in violation of its
tariff or whether the tariff is unjust and
unreasonable. The compliance proceeding focuses
on whether the filing by the pipeline or utility
satisfies the Commission’s determination in the
complaint proceeding.
16 If service is made electronically by including a
link to the document in the Commission’s eLibrary
system, parties will be notified of the new root
docket assigned to the compliance filing. 18 CFR
385.2010(f)(3) (2009) (providing for service through
‘‘the transmission of a link to that document in the
Commission’s eLibrary system’’).
17 The Commission maintains one service list for
root dockets and all subdockets, not individual
service lists for each subdocket.
18 18 CFR 385.214 (requiring intervention to
become a party).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 19 / Friday, January 29, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
ensure that the parties to proceedings
are known to each other and to the
Commission and that service of
pleadings and orders is provided to all
parties.
17. Moreover, to permit the easy
identification of related filings for
compliance filings receiving new root
dockets,19 pipelines and utilities are
urged to include as part of their eFiling
description an indication that they are
making a compliance filing and the
docket number to which they are
complying. This filing description will
appear in the Commission’s notice and
will aid in the identification of the
relationship between the compliance
filing and the original proceeding.
The Commission Orders
(A) The procedures described in the
body of this order will apply to tariff
filings that are submitted in electronic
format.
(B) The Secretary shall publish a copy
of this order in the Federal Register.
By the Commission. Commissioner Norris
voting present.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010–1538 Filed 1–28–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 522
[Docket No. FDA–2010–N–0002]
Implantation or Injectable Dosage
Form New Animal Drugs; Ceftiofur
Crystalline Free Acid
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
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ACTION:
Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is amending the
animal drug regulations to reflect
approval of a supplemental new animal
drug application (NADA) filed by
Pharmacia & Upjohn Co., a Division of
Pfizer, Inc. The supplemental NADA
provides for veterinarian prescription
use of ceftiofur crystalline free acid
injectable suspension for the treatment
of lower respiratory tract infections in
horses.
DATES: This rule is effective January 29,
2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Melanie R. Berson, Center for Veterinary
19 These will be filings without the Filing
Identifier of a related filing.
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Jkt 220001
Medicine (HFV–110), Food and Drug
Administration, 7500 Standish Pl.,
Rockville, MD 20855, 240–276–8337, email: melanie.berson@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pharmacia
& Upjohn Co., a Division of Pfizer, Inc.,
235 East 42d St., New York, NY 10017,
filed a supplement to NADA 141–209
for EXCEDE (ceftiofur crystalline free
acid) Sterile Suspension. The
supplemental NADA provides for
veterinarian prescription use of ceftiofur
crystalline free acid injectable
suspension for the treatment of lower
respiratory tract infections in horses
caused by susceptible strains of
Streptococcus equi ssp. zooepidemicus.
The application is approved as of
December 16, 2009, and the regulations
are amended in 21 CFR 522.313a to
reflect the approval.
In accordance with the freedom of
information provisions of 21 CFR part
20 and 21 CFR 514.11(e)(2)(ii),
summaries of the safety and
effectiveness data and information
submitted to support approval of these
applications may be seen in the Division
of Dockets Management (HFA–305),
Food and Drug Administration, 5630
Fishers Lane, rm. 1061, Rockville, MD
20852, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Under section 512(c)(2)(F)(iii) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(21 U.S.C. 360b(c)(2)(F)(iii)), this
supplemental approval qualifies for 3
years of marketing exclusivity beginning
on the date of approval.
The agency has determined under 21
CFR 25.33 that this action is of a type
that does not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on
the human environment. Therefore,
neither an environmental assessment
nor an environmental impact statement
is required.
This rule does not meet the definition
of ‘‘rule’’ in 5 U.S.C. 804(3)(A) because
it is a rule of ‘‘particular applicability.’’
Therefore, it is not subject to the
congressional review requirements in 5
U.S.C. 801–808.
List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 522
Animal drugs.
■ Therefore, under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under
authority delegated to the Commissioner
of Food and Drugs and redelegated to
the Center for Veterinary Medicine, 21
CFR part 522 is amended as follows:
PART 522—IMPLANTATION OR
INJECTABLE DOSAGE FORM NEW
ANIMAL DRUGS
1. The authority citation for 21 CFR
part 522 continues to read as follows:
■
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Authority: 21 U.S.C. 360b.
2. In § 522.313a, add paragraph (e)(3)
to read as follows:
■
§ 522.313a
Ceftiofur crystalline free acid.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) Horses—(i) Amount. Two
intramuscular injections, 4 days apart,
at a dose of 3.0 mg/lb (6.6 mg/kg) body
weight.
(ii) Indications for use. For the
treatment of lower respiratory tract
infections in horses caused by
susceptible strains of Streptococcus equi
ssp. zooepidemicus.
(iii) Limitations. Do not use in horses
intended for human consumption.
Dated: January 22, 2010.
Bernadette Dunham,
Director, Center for Veterinary Medicine.
[FR Doc. 2010–1790 Filed 1–28–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–S
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 524
[Docket No. FDA–2010–N–0002]
Ophthalmic and Topical Dosage Form
New Animal Drugs; Miconazole,
Polymixin B, and Prednisolone
Suspension
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is amending the
animal drug regulations to reflect
approval of a new animal drug
application (NADA) filed by Janssen
Pharmaceutica NV. The NADA provides
for use of miconazole nitrate, polymixin
B sulfate, and prednisolone acetate for
the treatment of otitis externa in dogs.
DATES: This rule is effective January 29,
2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Melanie R. Berson, Center for Veterinary
Medicine (HFV–110), Food and Drug
Administration, 7500 Standish Pl.,
Rockville, MD 20855, 240–276–8337, email: melanie.berson@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Janssen
Pharmaceutica NV, Turnhoutseweg 30,
B–2340 Beerse, Belgium, filed NADA
141–298 that provides for veterinary
prescription use of SUROLAN
(miconazole nitrate, polymixin B
sulfate, and prednisolone acetate) Otic
Suspension in dogs for the treatment of
otitis externa associated with
E:\FR\FM\29JAR1.SGM
29JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 19 (Friday, January 29, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4689-4692]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-1538]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Parts 35, 131, 154, 157, 250, 281, 284, 300, 341, 344, 346,
347, 348, 375 and 385
[Docket No. RM01-5-000]
Electronic Tariff Filings
Issued January 21, 2010.
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Order establishing procedures relating to tariffs filed
electronically.
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[[Page 4690]]
SUMMARY: The adoption of electronic tariff filing necessitates changes
in the Commission's processing of tariff filings. This order identifies
the ways in which such changes affect aspects of Commission procedures,
particularly the determination of statutory filings and statutory
action dates, as well as changes in docketing procedures.
DATES: Effective date: This order is effective January 29, 2010.
Applicability date: This order becomes applicable when tariff filings
are submitted in electronic format.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
H. Keith Pierce (Technical Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8525, Keith.Pierce@ferc.gov.
Anthony Barracchini (IT Information), Office of the Executive Director,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8940, Anthony.Barracchini@ferc.gov.
Andre Goodson (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel,
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 888 First Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8560, Andre.Goodson@ferc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. In Order No. 714,\1\ the Commission adopted regulations
requiring that, starting April 1, 2010, all tariffs and tariff
revisions filed with the Commission must be filed electronically
according to a format developed through collaboration between
Commission staff and the wholesale electric and gas quadrants of the
North American Energy Standards Board, and representatives from the
Association of Oil Pipelines. The adoption of electronic tariff filing
provides the framework for a more efficient document processing system
as well as providing a user-friendly interface from which the
Commission, its staff, and the public may retrieve and review tariffs.
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\1\ Electronic Tariff Filings, Order No. 714, 73 FR 57515 (Oct.
3, 2008), FERC Stats. & Regs ] 31,276 (2008).
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2. The adoption of electronic tariff filing necessitates changes in
the business practices used by the Commission to process tariff
filings. This order identifies ways in which such changes affect
aspects of Commission procedures, particularly the determination of
whether a filing is a statutory filing, and the statutory action date,
as well as changes in docketing procedures.
Statutory Filings
3. As the Commission explained in Order No. 714, the electronic
format developed through the collaborative process relies upon the use
of metadata (or information) about the tariff filing, including such
data elements as the type of filing that is being made, the proposed
effective date of proposed tariff changes, and the version number of
the effective tariff.\2\ As the Commission explained, these data
elements ``are required to properly identify the nature of the tariff
filing, organize the tariff database, and maintain the proper
relationship of tariff provisions in relation to other provisions.''
\3\
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\2\ These data elements, or codes, are described in the
Implementation Guide for Electronic Filing of Parts 35, 154, 284,
300, and 341 Tariff Filing (Implementation Guide), found on the
Commission's Web site, https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/etariff/implementation-guide.pdf.
\3\ Order No. 714 at P 23. See The National Center for State
Courts, Standards for Electronic Filing Processes (Technical and
Business Approaches), Standard 1.1F (2003) (concluding that the
responsibility for data entry needs to be assigned to the filer,
since it has the greatest familiarity with the data to be entered),
https://www.ncsconline.org/d_tech/standards/Documents/pdfdocs/Recommended_%20Process_%20standards_02_26_03.pdf.
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4. The Commission will be using these data elements to establish
statutory filing and other procedural dates.\4\ The Commission will use
the ``Type of Filing'' code (filing--type) together with the ``Tariff
Record Proposed Effective Date'' (proposed--effective--date) to
establish whether a filing is statutory and the applicable statutory
timelines.
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\4\ A statutory filing is a filing made pursuant to section 4 of
the Natural Gas Act (NGA), section 205 of the Federal Power Act
(FPA), or section 6 of the Interstate Commerce Act (ICA) to revise
rates or terms and conditions of service.
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5. All filers making statutory filings must choose a statutory
filing type and include a proposed effective date to have their filings
treated as statutory filings upon which the Commission must act within
statutorily-established time frames. That is, the filing type selected
by the filer will determine the type of filing and whether the filing
is to be treated as a statutory filing. Any discrepancy between the
description of the filing in the transmittal letter (or other pleading)
and the Type of Filing code chosen will be resolved in favor of the
Type of Filing code.\5\ Because the Commission is using the electronic
metadata to establish statutory action dates throughout its electronic
systems, the primacy of the Type of Filing code is necessary to ensure
the integrity of Commission processes and to ensure Commission action
on such filings within the time period provided under the appropriate
statute.\6\ While Commission staff will try, where possible, to notify
a filer of discrepancies between its transmittal letter and the Type of
Filing code it selected, the Type of Filing code selected will govern
the appropriate filing type and thus whether and what actions dates may
be applicable.\7\
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\5\ For example, if the transmittal letter states that a
statutory FPA section 205 filing is contemplated, but the Type of
Filing code selected represents a compliance filing, the Commission
will treat the filing as a compliance filing, which is not subject
to action within the period prescribed by FPA section 205.
\6\ The Type of Filing code will be used in all of the
Commission's electronic systems to establish the applicable
statutory action dates, and so, notwithstanding a filing party's
wish expressed in its transmittal letter or in other pleadings, the
Commission may not review a filing that is incorrectly coded within
the time period requested by a filing party in such pleadings.
\7\ Commission staff's efforts in this regard are intended
simply as a voluntary and informal aid to filers, and any action or
failure on the part of Commission staff will not bind or otherwise
affect how the Commission processes such filings. See 18 CFR
388.104(a) (2009); accord, e.g., 18 CFR 154.8 (2009). It is, and
remains, the filer's responsibility to ensure that it is selecting
the appropriate Type of Filing code, as well as accurately providing
any other metadata.
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6. Similarly, the Commission will be using the Tariff Record
Proposed Effective Date code to establish the proposed effective date
for any statutory filing.\8\ As is current practice, the date
established by the Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date, if that date
is after the otherwise statutorily-established effective date, will
establish the date on which, by statute, a tariff filing would go into
effect by operation of law in the absence of Commission action.\9\ In a
tariff filing that contains different proposed effective dates for
different proposed tariff changes, the earliest proposed effective date
will establish the proposed effective date for determining the date on
which the filing would go into effect in the absence of Commission
action.\10\ While the Commission will continue its current practice of
considering requests in
[[Page 4691]]
transmittal letters or other pleadings for issuance of orders on an
expedited basis, statements in transmittal letters or other pleadings
will not establish statutory action dates for tariff filings.
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\8\ In order to constitute a statutory tariff filing, the filer,
therefore, must both select a statutory Type of Filing code and
include a Tariff Record with a Tariff Record Proposed Effective
Date.
\9\ For example, if the Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date is
after the otherwise applicable statutorily-established effective
date, the statutory period will be extended until the Tariff Record
Proposed Effective Date.
\10\ As explained in the Implementation Guide, for statutory
filings with indeterminate effective dates, for example, where the
effective date is contingent on Commission approval, plant
construction, or the closing of a plant sale, filers must still
include a Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date, but should set that
date to 12/31/9998. Implementation Guide, at 10, https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/etariff/implementation-guide.pdf.
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7. Because of the importance of the Type of Filing code and the
Tariff Record Proposed Effective Date, these metadata will be included
in the electronic notices sent to the filers and posted on
eLibrary.\11\ Filers should check these sources carefully to verify
that their tariff filings and proposed effective dates are what they
intended.
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\11\ An example of how eLibrary will display the metadata for an
electronic tariff filing is posted at https://www.ferc.gov/EventCalendar/Files/20091119114331-Example%20eTariff%20eLibrary%20Rendition.rtf.
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8. Filers also need to be careful when making combined filings,
i.e., filings whose different parts would, if filed individually, have
different Type of Filing codes.\12\ Each filing can have only one Type
of Filing code, and so the treatment of any combined filing will depend
on the particular Type of Filing code chosen.\13\
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\12\ The Commission's regulations and policies already prohibit
combined filings in some situations. See 18 CFR 154.203 (2009)
(compliance filings cannot be combined with any other type of
filing); Calpine Eastern Corporation, 97 FERC ] 61,078, at 61,382
(2001) (cannot combine filings made in compliance with a prior
Commission order with new FPA section 205 filings).
\13\ Instead of combining filings, filers can make separate
filings for each type of filing contemplated--each filing containing
the portions relevant to the specific filing type.
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Docketing Procedures
9. The Commission will use the metadata supplied with the tariff
filing to help speed up its docketing and notice process. As far as
possible, these data will permit docketing that closely parallels
current practice. However, some of the docket prefixes previously used
may not be assigned to electronic tariff filings and these filings will
be assigned only a single docket number rather than multiple docket
numbers as may have occurred in the past.
10. Procedures for identifying root and subsequent subdockets \14\
will remain the same for the vast majority of compliance and other
filings. However, in a few cases, parties will experience differences,
particularly for compliance filings made in the context of complaint
cases.
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\14\ The Commission typically assigns a root docket number to an
initial filing and then adds subdockets to later filings in the same
proceeding. As an illustration, for Docket No. ER12-6789-000, the
root docket number is ``ER12-6789'' and the subdocket is ``000.''
When a subsequent compliance filing is made, the root docket is
retained and the subdocket will be incremented, usually by 1, so
that the new docket number will be ER12-6789-001.
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11. Subdockets for compliance filings will be established based on
the metadata provided by the pipeline or utility making the filing.
Each pipeline or utility is required to identify every filing using a
discrete number, ``Filing Identifier'' (filing--id). When making
filings related to or associated with a prior filing (such as a
compliance filing), the pipeline or utility must include the Filing
Identifier of the prior filing that is associated with its current
filing. (The Filing Identifier of the initial filing will be included
as the ``Associated Filing Identifier'' (associated--filing--id) in the
subsequent filing). For example, if the pipeline or utility is making a
compliance filing, it will include as the Associated Filing Identifier
in the compliance filing, the Filing Identifier it assigned to the
initial tariff filing giving rise to the compliance filing. That
Associated Filing Identifier will permit the Commission to determine
the relevant root docket number assigned to the initial tariff filing,
so that a subdocket for the compliance filing can be assigned.
12. However, in those circumstances in which the pipeline or
utility does not include (in a subsequent filing) the Filing Identifier
of its initial filing, the root docket number for the initial
proceeding will not be available. Accordingly, a new root docket number
will be assigned to the compliance filing. The practice of assigning a
new root docket parallels the Commission's typical practice with
respect to compliance filings in rulemaking proceedings, in which each
pipeline's or utility's individual filing to comply with the rule
typically receives a new root docket number.
13. However, new root docket numbers may be assigned in situations
in which subdockets traditionally had been assigned manually and new
procedures need to be followed in these circumstances. A common
situation in which this will occur will be during the implementation
phase of electronic tariff filing. New root docket numbers will be
assigned to compliance filings when companies have outstanding
compliance obligations at the time they make their original, baseline
tariff filings. Because the original tariff filing giving rise to the
compliance obligation will not be part of the pipeline's or utility's
electronic database, it will not have a Filing Identifier and therefore
the pipeline or utility will not be able to include the Filing
Identifier in the compliance filing, and the compliance filing will be
assigned a new root docket number.
14. This situation also may occur on a limited scale on an ongoing
basis. For example, in complaint cases, the filing initiating the
complaint is not filed by the pipeline or utility, but rather by a
third-party, typically a customer. In the process of resolving the
complaint, the Commission may require the pipeline or utility to file a
revision to its tariff. In such a circumstance, the pipeline or utility
will not have an initial filing in its database with which to associate
the compliance filing. Therefore, as described above, the compliance
filing made through the electronic tariff filing portal will receive a
new root docket, rather than a subdocket from the original complaint
case. In other words, the compliance filing in a complaint proceeding
will parallel the situation in which the pipeline or utility is
complying with a rulemaking, and the compliance filing will receive a
new root docket.\15\
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\15\ The complaint proceeding will determine whether the
pipeline or utility is in violation of its tariff or whether the
tariff is unjust and unreasonable. The compliance proceeding focuses
on whether the filing by the pipeline or utility satisfies the
Commission's determination in the complaint proceeding.
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15. In situations in which new root dockets are assigned to
compliance filings, the pipeline or utility making the filing still is
required to serve the compliance filing on all parties in the original
docket.\16\ For example, in a complaint case, the pipeline or utility
will need to serve the compliance filing on all parties in the original
complaint docket giving rise to the compliance obligation.
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\16\ If service is made electronically by including a link to
the document in the Commission's eLibrary system, parties will be
notified of the new root docket assigned to the compliance filing.
18 CFR 385.2010(f)(3) (2009) (providing for service through ``the
transmission of a link to that document in the Commission's eLibrary
system'').
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16. In order to establish a simple and uniform method for
determining parties and service lists when a new root docket is
established, the Commission will follow its existing practice with
respect to the need to intervene. Currently, parties who have
intervened in initial proceedings do not have to re-intervene in
subdockets.\17\ However, when the Commission establishes new root
dockets (such as for compliance with rulemaking proceedings),
intervention is required to become a party to the new root docket
proceeding and to appear on the service list for that proceeding.\18\
The same approach will be taken whenever a new root docket is assigned
in a compliance proceeding: those wishing to become parties to a new
root docket will have to intervene in that docket. A simple-to-apply
rule will help
[[Page 4692]]
ensure that the parties to proceedings are known to each other and to
the Commission and that service of pleadings and orders is provided to
all parties.
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\17\ The Commission maintains one service list for root dockets
and all subdockets, not individual service lists for each subdocket.
\18\ 18 CFR 385.214 (requiring intervention to become a party).
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17. Moreover, to permit the easy identification of related filings
for compliance filings receiving new root dockets,\19\ pipelines and
utilities are urged to include as part of their eFiling description an
indication that they are making a compliance filing and the docket
number to which they are complying. This filing description will appear
in the Commission's notice and will aid in the identification of the
relationship between the compliance filing and the original proceeding.
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\19\ These will be filings without the Filing Identifier of a
related filing.
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The Commission Orders
(A) The procedures described in the body of this order will apply
to tariff filings that are submitted in electronic format.
(B) The Secretary shall publish a copy of this order in the Federal
Register.
By the Commission. Commissioner Norris voting present.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010-1538 Filed 1-28-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P