Task Force on Childhood Obesity: Request for Information, 12493-12494 [2010-5719]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 50 / Tuesday, March 16, 2010 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
• What entities are best positioned to
help define the possible categories?
• How should the designation of
intermediate ingredients and feedstocks
be organized?
• What categories of intermediate
ingredients/feedstocks currently have
the greatest potential to expand product
eligibility for the BioPreferred program,
and what high-impact categories might
be expected to emerge over the next five
years?
• What should be the minimum
allowable biobased content for
intermediate products and feed stocks?
• What information should be
provided to assist purchasing decision
makers?
• Will federal procurement agencies
ever purchase intermediate ingredients,
or will they be purchasing only end-use
products?
• What are the potential obstacles to
designating intermediate products and
ingredients for preferred procurement
status?
recommendations on public and private
sector actions that can be taken to solve
the problem.
DATES: To be assured of consideration,
written comments must be submitted or
postmarked on or before March 26,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Comments may also be submitted by fax
or by mail to: Director, Office of
Executive Secretariat, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, 1400 Independence
Avenue, SW., Room 116–A Whitten
Building, Washington, DC 20250 (FAX:
202–720–7166); however, respondents
are strongly encouraged to submit
comments through https://
www.regulations.gov, as it will simplify
the review of their input and help to
ensure that it receives full
consideration. All comments submitted
in response to this notice will be
Dated: March 10, 2010.
included in the record and will be made
Pearlie S. Reed,
available to the public. Please be
advised that the substance of the
Assistant Secretary for Administration, U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
comments and the identity of the
individuals or entities submitting the
[FR Doc. 2010–5681 Filed 3–15–10; 8:45 am]
comments will be subject to public
BILLING CODE P
disclosure. All comments will be made
available publicly on the internet at
https://www.regulations.gov.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
Alexia Green, Office of the Executive
HUMAN SERVICES
Secretariat, United States Department of
Agriculture, 202–720–1570.
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Nearly
one-third of children in America are
Task Force on Childhood Obesity:
overweight or obese—a rate that has
Request for Information
tripled in adolescents and more than
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Agriculture, doubled in younger children since 1980.
One-third of all individuals born in the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, U.S. Department of Education. year 2000 or later will eventually suffer
from diabetes over the course of their
ACTION: Joint request for comments.
lifetime, while too many others will face
SUMMARY: Across the country, childhood chronic obesity-related health problems
obesity has reached epidemic rates. On
such as heart disease, high blood
February 9, 2010, President Obama
pressure, cancer, and asthma. Without
signed a Presidential Memo establishing effective intervention, many more
a Task Force on Childhood Obesity that children will endure serious illnesses
directs Federal agencies to create a
that will put a strain on our health-care
comprehensive interagency national
system and reduce their quality of life.
President Obama has set a goal to
action plan to solve the challenge of
solve the problem of childhood obesity
childhood obesity within a generation.
The Presidential Memo directs the Task within a generation so that children
born today will reach adulthood at a
Force to focus on four pillars: Ensuring
healthy weight. To reach that goal,
access to healthy, affordable food;
President Obama signed a Presidential
increasing physical activity in schools
Memorandum on February 9, 2010,
and communities; providing healthier
establishing a Task Force on Childhood
food in schools; and empowering
Obesity that directs Federal agencies to
parents with information and tools to
create a comprehensive interagency
make good choices for themselves and
national action plan to solve the
their families. This notice announces a
challenge of childhood obesity within a
request for public comments to assist
generation. The Task Force is chaired by
the Task Force in making
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:33 Mar 15, 2010
Jkt 220001
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12493
the Assistant to the President for
Domestic Policy and composed of senior
Federal officials representing the White
House, the Office of Management and
Budget, and the Departments of Interior,
Agriculture, Health and Human
Services, and Education, as well as
senior officials of other executive
departments, agencies, or offices
designated by the chair. The
Presidential Memorandum directs the
Task Force to make recommendations
that include, but are not limited to,
meeting four objectives: (1) Ensuring
access to healthy, affordable food; (2)
increasing physical activity in schools
and communities; (3) providing
healthier food in schools; and (4)
empowering parents with information
and tools to make good choices for
themselves and their families.
The specific responsibilities of the
Task Force are to:
1. Detail a coordinated strategy by
executive departments and agencies to
meet the objectives of the Task Force
and identify areas for reform to ensure
complementary efforts and avoid
duplication, both across the Federal
Government and between other public
or nongovernmental actors;
2. Include comprehensive, multisectoral strategies from each member
executive department, agency, or office
and describe the status and scope of its
efforts to achieve this goal;
3. Identify key benchmarks and
provide for regular measurement,
assessment, and reporting of executive
branch efforts to combat childhood
obesity;
4. Describe a coordinated action plan
for identifying relevant evidence gaps
and conducting or facilitating needed
research to fill those gaps;
5. Assist in the assessment and
development of legislative, budgetary,
and policy proposals that can improve
the health and well-being of children,
their families, and communities; and
6. Describe potential areas of
collaboration with other public or
nongovernmental actors, taking into
consideration the types of
implementation or research objectives
the Federal Government, other public
actors, or nongovernmental actors may
be particularly well-situated to
accomplish.
In addition, the Presidential Memo
directs the Task Force to conduct
outreach with representatives of private
and nonprofit organizations, State,
tribal, and local authorities, and other
interested persons who can assist with
the Task Force’s development of a
detailed set of recommendations to
solve the problem of childhood obesity.
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
12494
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 50 / Tuesday, March 16, 2010 / Notices
Consistent with the directives of the
Presidential Memorandum, the
Department of Agriculture, Department
of Education, and Department of Health
and Human Services are publishing this
Request for Information on behalf of the
Task Force to solicit comments and
feedback to assist the Task Force in
making recommendations on public and
private sector actions that can be taken
to solve the problem of childhood
obesity. Through this notice, guidance is
provided as to the matters to be
discussed and the categories of
information with respect to which
interested parties may submit
comments.
The work of the Task Force will
complement the efforts of First Lady
Michelle Obama as she leads a national
public awareness effort to tackle the
epidemic of childhood obesity. Through
the First Lady’s Let’s Move initiative,
she will encourage involvement from
the public, nonprofit, and private
sectors, as well as families to help
support and amplify the work of the
Federal Government in improving the
health of the Nation’s children. The
campaign will give parents the
information, motivation, and support
they need to make sure that their
children are healthy. It will help
children be more physically active and
allow them to make healthy food
choices because healthy, affordable food
will be available in every part of the
country. For more information, please
visit https://www.letsmove.gov/.
Matters To Be Considered:
Information is being sought on the
categories of information that follow.
When submitting comments, interested
parties are asked to restate the question
and to provide any additional
information deemed pertinent to their
comment.
1. For each of the four objectives
described above, what key topics should
be addressed in the report?
2. For each of the four objectives,
what are the most important actions that
Federal, State, and local governments
can take?
3. Which Federal government actions
aimed at combating childhood obesity
are especially in need of cross-agency
coordination?
4. For each of the four objectives,
what are the most important actions that
private, nonprofit, and other
nongovernmental actors can take?
5. For each of the four objectives,
what strategies will ensure that efforts
taken by all of the entities mentioned
above reach across geographic areas and
to diverse racial, ethnic, socioeconomic,
and geographic groups, including
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:33 Mar 15, 2010
Jkt 220001
children who are at highest risk of
obesity and children with disabilities?
6. What goals should we set within
each objective to ensure that we meet
our overall goal of solving the problem
of childhood obesity in this Nation in a
generation?
7. What concrete, specific actionable
recommendations or guidelines would
help parents reduce the risk that their
child will become overweight or obese
and how can their effectiveness be
measured?
8. What are the key benchmarks by
which we should measure progress
toward achieving those goals?
9. What important factors should be
considered that do not easily fit under
one of the four objectives?
10. What are the key unanswered
research questions that need to be
answered with regard to solving
childhood obesity and how should the
Federal Government, academia, and
other research organizations target their
scarce resources on these areas of
research?
11. In areas or communities that
currently have a high incidence of
childhood obesity, what is the best
explanation of why particular children
do not become obese?
12. Specifically with regard to
objective 1 (empowering parents): How
can Federal, State, and local
governments, the private sector, and
community organizations best
communicate information to help
parents make healthy choices about
food and physical activity?
13. Specifically with regard to
objective 2 (healthier food in schools):
What are the most promising steps that
can be pursued by the Federal, State,
and local governments, schools,
communities, the private sector, and
parents to ensure that children are
eating healthy food in schools and child
care settings?
14. Specifically with regard to
objective 3 (access to healthy, affordable
food): What are the biggest challenges to
enhancing access to healthy and
affordable food in communities across
America, and what are the most
promising strategies to overcome these
challenges?
15. Specifically with regard to
objective 4 (physical activity): What
steps can be taken to improve quality
physical education and expand
opportunities for physical activity
during the school day, in local
communities and neighborhoods, and in
outdoor activities and other recreational
settings?
16. What other input should the Task
Force consider in writing the report?
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Dated: March 9, 2010.
Thomas J. Vilsack,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Dated: March 9, 2010,
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
Dated: March 9, 2010,
Arne Duncan,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Education.
[FR Doc. 2010–5719 Filed 3–15–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–30–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
The Department of Commerce will
submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for clearance the
following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35).
Agency: International Trade
Administration (ITA).
Title: Procedures for Considering
Requests from the Public under the
Textile Apparel Safeguard Provision of
the United States-Oman Free Trade
Agreement.
OMB Control Number: None.
Form Number(s): None.
Type of Request: Regular submission.
Burden Hours: 24.
Number of Respondents: 6 (1 for
Request; 5 for Comments).
Average Hours per Response: 4 hours
for a Request; and 4 hours for a
Comment.
Needs and Uses: Title III, Subtitle B,
Section 321 through Section 328 of the
United States-Oman Free Trade
Agreement Implementation Act (the
‘‘Act’’) implements the textile and
apparel safeguard provisions, provided
for in Article 3.1 of the United StatesOman Free Trade Agreement (the
‘‘Agreement’’). This safeguard
mechanism applies when, as a result of
the elimination of a customs duty under
the Agreement, an Omani textile or
apparel article is being imported into
the United States in such increased
quantities, in absolute terms or relative
to the domestic market for that article,
and under such conditions as to cause
serious damage or actual threat thereof
to a U.S. industry producing a like or
directly competitive article. In these
circumstances, Article 3.1 permits the
United States to increase duties on the
imported article from Oman to a level
that does not exceed the lesser of the
prevailing U.S. normal trade relations
(NTR)/most-favored-nation (MFN) duty
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 50 (Tuesday, March 16, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12493-12494]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-5719]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Task Force on Childhood Obesity: Request for Information
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, U.S. Department of Education.
ACTION: Joint request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Across the country, childhood obesity has reached epidemic
rates. On February 9, 2010, President Obama signed a Presidential Memo
establishing a Task Force on Childhood Obesity that directs Federal
agencies to create a comprehensive interagency national action plan to
solve the challenge of childhood obesity within a generation. The
Presidential Memo directs the Task Force to focus on four pillars:
Ensuring access to healthy, affordable food; increasing physical
activity in schools and communities; providing healthier food in
schools; and empowering parents with information and tools to make good
choices for themselves and their families. This notice announces a
request for public comments to assist the Task Force in making
recommendations on public and private sector actions that can be taken
to solve the problem.
DATES: To be assured of consideration, written comments must be
submitted or postmarked on or before March 26, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted through the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions
for submitting comments. Comments may also be submitted by fax or by
mail to: Director, Office of Executive Secretariat, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 116-A Whitten
Building, Washington, DC 20250 (FAX: 202-720-7166); however,
respondents are strongly encouraged to submit comments through https://www.regulations.gov, as it will simplify the review of their input and
help to ensure that it receives full consideration. All comments
submitted in response to this notice will be included in the record and
will be made available to the public. Please be advised that the
substance of the comments and the identity of the individuals or
entities submitting the comments will be subject to public disclosure.
All comments will be made available publicly on the internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alexia Green, Office of the Executive
Secretariat, United States Department of Agriculture, 202-720-1570.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Nearly one-third of children in America are
overweight or obese--a rate that has tripled in adolescents and more
than doubled in younger children since 1980. One-third of all
individuals born in the year 2000 or later will eventually suffer from
diabetes over the course of their lifetime, while too many others will
face chronic obesity-related health problems such as heart disease,
high blood pressure, cancer, and asthma. Without effective
intervention, many more children will endure serious illnesses that
will put a strain on our health-care system and reduce their quality of
life.
President Obama has set a goal to solve the problem of childhood
obesity within a generation so that children born today will reach
adulthood at a healthy weight. To reach that goal, President Obama
signed a Presidential Memorandum on February 9, 2010, establishing a
Task Force on Childhood Obesity that directs Federal agencies to create
a comprehensive interagency national action plan to solve the challenge
of childhood obesity within a generation. The Task Force is chaired by
the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy and composed of
senior Federal officials representing the White House, the Office of
Management and Budget, and the Departments of Interior, Agriculture,
Health and Human Services, and Education, as well as senior officials
of other executive departments, agencies, or offices designated by the
chair. The Presidential Memorandum directs the Task Force to make
recommendations that include, but are not limited to, meeting four
objectives: (1) Ensuring access to healthy, affordable food; (2)
increasing physical activity in schools and communities; (3) providing
healthier food in schools; and (4) empowering parents with information
and tools to make good choices for themselves and their families.
The specific responsibilities of the Task Force are to:
1. Detail a coordinated strategy by executive departments and
agencies to meet the objectives of the Task Force and identify areas
for reform to ensure complementary efforts and avoid duplication, both
across the Federal Government and between other public or
nongovernmental actors;
2. Include comprehensive, multi-sectoral strategies from each
member executive department, agency, or office and describe the status
and scope of its efforts to achieve this goal;
3. Identify key benchmarks and provide for regular measurement,
assessment, and reporting of executive branch efforts to combat
childhood obesity;
4. Describe a coordinated action plan for identifying relevant
evidence gaps and conducting or facilitating needed research to fill
those gaps;
5. Assist in the assessment and development of legislative,
budgetary, and policy proposals that can improve the health and well-
being of children, their families, and communities; and
6. Describe potential areas of collaboration with other public or
nongovernmental actors, taking into consideration the types of
implementation or research objectives the Federal Government, other
public actors, or nongovernmental actors may be particularly well-
situated to accomplish.
In addition, the Presidential Memo directs the Task Force to conduct
outreach with representatives of private and nonprofit organizations,
State, tribal, and local authorities, and other interested persons who
can assist with the Task Force's development of a detailed set of
recommendations to solve the problem of childhood obesity.
[[Page 12494]]
Consistent with the directives of the Presidential Memorandum, the
Department of Agriculture, Department of Education, and Department of
Health and Human Services are publishing this Request for Information
on behalf of the Task Force to solicit comments and feedback to assist
the Task Force in making recommendations on public and private sector
actions that can be taken to solve the problem of childhood obesity.
Through this notice, guidance is provided as to the matters to be
discussed and the categories of information with respect to which
interested parties may submit comments.
The work of the Task Force will complement the efforts of First
Lady Michelle Obama as she leads a national public awareness effort to
tackle the epidemic of childhood obesity. Through the First Lady's
Let's Move initiative, she will encourage involvement from the public,
nonprofit, and private sectors, as well as families to help support and
amplify the work of the Federal Government in improving the health of
the Nation's children. The campaign will give parents the information,
motivation, and support they need to make sure that their children are
healthy. It will help children be more physically active and allow them
to make healthy food choices because healthy, affordable food will be
available in every part of the country. For more information, please
visit https://www.letsmove.gov/.
Matters To Be Considered: Information is being sought on the
categories of information that follow. When submitting comments,
interested parties are asked to restate the question and to provide any
additional information deemed pertinent to their comment.
1. For each of the four objectives described above, what key topics
should be addressed in the report?
2. For each of the four objectives, what are the most important
actions that Federal, State, and local governments can take?
3. Which Federal government actions aimed at combating childhood
obesity are especially in need of cross-agency coordination?
4. For each of the four objectives, what are the most important
actions that private, nonprofit, and other nongovernmental actors can
take?
5. For each of the four objectives, what strategies will ensure
that efforts taken by all of the entities mentioned above reach across
geographic areas and to diverse racial, ethnic, socioeconomic, and
geographic groups, including children who are at highest risk of
obesity and children with disabilities?
6. What goals should we set within each objective to ensure that we
meet our overall goal of solving the problem of childhood obesity in
this Nation in a generation?
7. What concrete, specific actionable recommendations or guidelines
would help parents reduce the risk that their child will become
overweight or obese and how can their effectiveness be measured?
8. What are the key benchmarks by which we should measure progress
toward achieving those goals?
9. What important factors should be considered that do not easily
fit under one of the four objectives?
10. What are the key unanswered research questions that need to be
answered with regard to solving childhood obesity and how should the
Federal Government, academia, and other research organizations target
their scarce resources on these areas of research?
11. In areas or communities that currently have a high incidence of
childhood obesity, what is the best explanation of why particular
children do not become obese?
12. Specifically with regard to objective 1 (empowering parents):
How can Federal, State, and local governments, the private sector, and
community organizations best communicate information to help parents
make healthy choices about food and physical activity?
13. Specifically with regard to objective 2 (healthier food in
schools): What are the most promising steps that can be pursued by the
Federal, State, and local governments, schools, communities, the
private sector, and parents to ensure that children are eating healthy
food in schools and child care settings?
14. Specifically with regard to objective 3 (access to healthy,
affordable food): What are the biggest challenges to enhancing access
to healthy and affordable food in communities across America, and what
are the most promising strategies to overcome these challenges?
15. Specifically with regard to objective 4 (physical activity):
What steps can be taken to improve quality physical education and
expand opportunities for physical activity during the school day, in
local communities and neighborhoods, and in outdoor activities and
other recreational settings?
16. What other input should the Task Force consider in writing the
report?
Dated: March 9, 2010.
Thomas J. Vilsack,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Dated: March 9, 2010,
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Dated: March 9, 2010,
Arne Duncan,
Secretary, U.S. Department of Education.
[FR Doc. 2010-5719 Filed 3-15-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-30-P