Changes in Hourly Fee Rates for Science and Technology Laboratory Services-Fiscal Years 2010-2012, 17281-17289 [2010-7739]
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17281
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 75, No. 65
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
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are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 91
[Document Number AMS–ST–09–0016]
RIN 0581–AC98
Changes in Hourly Fee Rates for
Science and Technology Laboratory
Services—Fiscal Years 2010–2012
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Agricultural Marketing
Service (AMS) is changing the annual
standard, appeal, overtime, and holiday
hourly fee rates for fiscal years 2010–
2012 for Science and Technology (S&T)
Laboratory Services in order to recover
anticipated laboratory program costs.
The Agency is raising these rates to
reflect, among other factors, national
and locality pay increases for Federal
employees and inflation, operating
costs, instrumentation and training,
equipment maintenance costs, and
program and agency administrative
overhead costs. The regulations are
updated to identify existing S&T facility
addresses. This action also includes
changes to provide greater clarity of
reported test analyses and laboratory
determinations.
DATES:
Effective April 7, 2010.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James V. Falk, Staff Scientist, or Dr.
Robert L. Epstein, Deputy
Administrator, Science and Technology
Programs, Agricultural Marketing
Service, United States Department of
Agriculture, Mail Stop 0270, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0270, telephone
number (202) 720–5231; fax (202) 720–
6496, or Internet: https://
www.regulations.gov or e-mail:
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James.falk@ams.usda.gov or
Robert.epstein@ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Science and Technology (S&T)
Programs has been performing voluntary
laboratory services under the
Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946
(AMA), as amended (7 U.S.C. 1621–
1627), for the AMS commodity
programs (Fruit and Vegetable, Cotton
and Tobacco, Livestock and Seed,
Poultry, and Dairy) and applicable
stakeholders in these industries since its
inception on August 17, 1988. Before
that time, voluntary laboratory testing
was provided for on a separate user fee
basis under the various AMS
commodity programs. The current
standard hourly rate of $67.00, the
appeal or overtime hourly rate of $78.00
and the holiday hourly rate of $89.00
have been in effect since the March 30,
2007 final rule (72 FR 15011) was
published. The standard fee rate for
laboratory services will be $78.00 per
hour for the remainder of fiscal year
2010, and will increase to $81.00 per
hour in fiscal year 2011, and $83.00 per
hour in fiscal year 2012. The appeal and
overtime hourly fee rate for laboratory
services outside the normal business
hours will also be adjusted to $93 for
the remainder of FY 2010, to $96 in FY
2011, and to $99 in FY 2012. The
holiday hourly fee rate for laboratory
services during designated federal
holidays will be increased to $108 for
the rest of FY 2010, to $111 in FY 2011,
and to $115 in FY 2012. An increase in
the premium hourly rates over the three
fiscal years for laboratory services
performed on appeal samples, overtime
basis, and holidays is also needed since
Science and Technology laboratory
personnel may be required to work
extended hours of service at the time
and a half pay or the double hourly pay
on legal holidays to accommodate
clients. This is due to stakeholder
demand for immediate test results.
Generally, the processing of all
laboratory samples is continuous over a
24/7 timeframe due to the recent
introduction of automated devices on
several sample process equipment and
analytical instruments. The AMA
authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture
to provide Federal analytical testing
services that facilitate domestic
marketing and international trade. In
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addition, consumers may be able to
determine the quality and
wholesomeness characteristics of a
commodity or product through
laboratory testing. This allows
agricultural products to be assigned
official AMS grade designations or to
meet specifications. The AMA also
requires that reasonable fees be
collected from the users of the voluntary
services to cover as nearly as possible
the costs of maintaining the laboratory
programs.
The Agency will recover the actual
cost of services for multiple fiscal years
(FY 2010 through FY 2012) with the
new hourly fee rates covered by this
rule. This rule will amend its
regulations to identify the updated and
existing S&T Programs’ facility
addresses. It clarifies that results of
analyses and laboratory determinations
provided by AMS laboratory services
apply only to the submitted samples
and do not represent the quality;
condition or disposition of the lot from
which each sample was taken.
Federal salaries with national and
locality pay adjustments and choices in
benefits are made available on an
annual basis by the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM). Operational costs
include expenses for rents,
communications, utilities, medical
examinations, safety equipment, sample
preparation equipment, training, trash
and hazardous waste disposal, travel
and transportation costs. There have
been certain large capital improvement
expenditures in the laboratories in
recent years due to unfunded legal
mandates. These expenditures include
costs for the counter-terrorism Food
Emergency Response Network (FERN)
and the capital improvements for the
Environmental Management Systems
(EMS) in accordance with the applicable
mandates for Federal laboratories of
Executive Order 13423 of January 24,
2007, Strengthening Federal
Environmental, Energy, and
Transportation Management (72 FR
3919). These capital improvement costs
are included in the normal operations of
the Science and Technology field
service laboratories. In addition,
operational costs include expenses for
office and laboratory supplies,
chemicals, reagents, hazardous waste
removal, and a Laboratory Information
Management System (LIMS).
Infrastructure costs are mainly
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 65 / Tuesday, April 6, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
laboratory instruments and capital
equipment with service and
maintenance contracts and replacement
spare parts. Infrastructure expenses
include consumable supply costs
associated directly with the proper
operation of analytical instruments and
laboratory equipment. Stakeholders
demand that AMS provide cost effective
and timely product testing requiring
modern and sometimes automated
instrumentation. These instruments are
expensive and undergo equipment
capitalization for determining costs.
Equipment capitalization is the
determined cost per year to replace the
equipment after its useful service life
has been established. Agency overhead
is the pro-rated share, attributable to a
particular service, of the agency’s
management and support costs.
Overhead expenditures are allocated
across the Agency for each direct hour
of laboratory service.
With this rulemaking, there will be
essentially three standard hourly fee
rate increases established for the basic
laboratory services—$67 to $78 per hour
or 16.4 percent for the rest of fiscal year
2010, $78 to $81 per hour or 3.8 percent
in fiscal year 2011 and $81 to $83 per
hour or 2.5 percent in fiscal year 2012.
The rate increases for overtime and
appeals will be $78 to $93 per hour or
19.2 percent, $93 to $96 per hour or 3.2
percent, and $96 to $99 per hour or 3.1
percent in fiscal years 2010, 2011, and
2012, respectively. The rate increases
for legal holiday service will be $89 to
$108 per hour or 21.3 percent, $108 to
$111 per hour or 2.8 percent, and $111
to $115 per hour or 3.6 percent in fiscal
years 2010, 2011, and 2012,
respectively. This is a voluntary
program and the costs to each user will
increase proportionally to their use of
laboratory services each fiscal year. The
increased fees will cover inflation and
national and locality pay raises but will
not support any new budgetary
initiative. The revised hourly fee rates
will apply to voluntary laboratory
services that are provided for five types
of analytical testing: microbiological,
physical, residue chemistry, proximate
analysis for composition, and
biomolecular (DNA-based) testing. A
user fee system, using set hourly rates
for three fiscal years, will be established
by this rulemaking to ensure that AMS
properly recovers its full costs for
providing voluntary laboratory services
in a timely manner, and that all
stakeholders have advance notice of
their estimated laboratory fees so that
they can make reasonable cost
assumptions when formulating their
annual budgets.
The largest cost of operations for the
AMS laboratory programs is payroll and
employee benefits. This obligation is
projected to amount to $3,848,000 or
57.6 percent of the total laboratory costs
for FY 2010. Recent cross-training of the
employees in the laboratories has
resulted in the reduction of staff from 67
individuals in FY 2007 to 50 current
individuals in FY 2009 as ongoing
efforts to limit program costs are
implemented. AMS calculated its
projected increases in salaries and
inflation in fiscal years 2010 through
2012. The estimate for increases in
salaries for fiscal year 2009 as the base
year and the succeeding years are from
the Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) ‘‘Federal Pay Raise Assumptions’’
table. The fiscal year pay adjustments
are increased by 3 percent in the
following tables of calculated proposed
new hourly fee rates for laboratory
program services for FY 2010 through
FY 2012. The OMB Federal pay rise
assumptions (including geographical
pay differentials) state that in the
development of civilian government
personnel costs a yearly percentage
(3%) increase shall be used. This
information comes from the table,
‘‘Federal Pay Raise Assumptions’’, of the
Office of Management and Budget’s
Fiscal Year 2007 Budget and beyond
which is available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/memoranda/
fy2007/m07-02.pdf.
Inflation for FY 2010 and subsequent
years is estimated to be 3.5 percent. In
Tables 2 through 10 below a yearly 3.5
percent inflation rate is used in the
calculations for hourly fee rate
determinations for laboratory program
services because the 2007 annual
average for the base Consumer Price
Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI–U):
U.S. city average for service costs is
listed as 246.848 in Table 3A. of the
referenced website and there is a most
recent annual average increase of 3.5%
to 255.498 for the CPI–U provided for
the change in service costs. This
estimate for inflation percent (3.5%) can
be obtained from Table 3A, ‘‘Consumer
Price Index for all Urban Consumers
(CPI–U): U.S. city average, detailed
expenditure categories’’, which is
available at https://www.bls.gov/cpi/
cpid08av.pdf.
The Agency will initiate, when
necessary, another rulemaking to adjust
any fee established, if estimated
increases for pay and inflation do not
adequately cover the Agency’s costs of
providing the services. The cost of
providing laboratory services includes
both direct and not explicit overhead
costs. Direct costs include the cost of
salaries, employee benefits, operation
costs, equipment service and
replacements, security, training needs,
and infrastructure cost. The Agency is
able to estimate the employee benefits
attributable to overtime work and has
included these in the fee rate
calculations.
The current and new fees for
standard, appeal, overtime and legal
holiday voluntary laboratory services
are listed by type of service in Table 1
below. The first increases ranging from
16.4 to 21.3 percent, from the current
rates to the fiscal year 2010 rates, are
larger than the subsequent 2011 and
2012 fiscal year increases (2.5 to 3.8
percent range) because these are the first
amended hourly rate increases since last
set on March 30, 2007. Therefore, it
includes the actual increases in salaries
and inflation that have occurred since
that date. It also reflects changes in
personnel numbers and the promotions
and within-grade pay step increases for
General Schedule (GS) salaries granted
worthy employees, and new employee
position pay costs.
With this action, the AMS will amend
its regulations to provide for three
annual differing fee increases in one
action. Table 1 shows the summary of
the current rates and the revised hourly
fee rates for fiscal years 2010 through
2012 for the four different types of
services (regular laboratory, appeal,
overtime, and legal holiday work) that
Science and Technology Programs
employees perform.
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TABLE 1—CURRENT AND NEW HOURLY FEE RATES (PER HOUR) BY TYPE OF SERVICE
Service
Current rate
Laboratory ........................................................................................................
Appeal ..............................................................................................................
Overtime ..........................................................................................................
Legal Holiday ...................................................................................................
1 2 3 Hourly
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FY 2010 rate 1
FY 2011 rate 2
FY 2012 rate 3
$78.00
93.00
93.00
108.00
$81.00
96.00
96.00
111.00
$83.00
99.00
99.00
115.00
$67.00
78.00
78.00
89.00
values for FY 2010–FY 2012 are rounded off to nearest whole dollar.
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With this action, the AMS will amend
its regulations to provide for three
annual fee increases in one action. In
AMS’s analysis of projected costs set
forth in Tables 2 through 10 below,
AMS has identified the basis for the
increases in the cost of voluntary hourly
fee rates for laboratory services for fiscal
year 2010 through fiscal year 2012.
These fee increases are essential for the
continued sound financial management
of the Agency’s budget. In order to
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enhance the transparency of the hourly
fee rates in the aforementioned Tables 2
through 10 for fiscal year 2010, fiscal
year 2011 and fiscal year 2012, a
description is provided of each fee
charge category.
TABLE 2—CALCULATIONS FOR THE STANDARD HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR THE
REMAINDER OF FY 2010
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Base Time:
Actual FY 2009 Salaries 1 @ $3,029,744 ....................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment 2 = [Actual FY 2009 Salaries ($29.13)] × 0.03(3%) ............................................................................
Benefits 3 .......................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs 4 .......................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost 5 ......................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead 6 .......................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation 7 (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ......................................................
$29.13
0.87
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Base Time .........................................................................................................................................
78.46
cost of FY 2009 salaries ($3,029,744) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $29.13 unit cost.
cost of FY 2010 pay adjustment ($90,892) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $0.87 unit cost.
cost of benefits ($727,364) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $6.99 unit cost.
4 Actual cost of operational costs ($2,328,000) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $22.38 unit cost.
5 Actual cost of infrastructure ($1,360,000) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $13.08 unit cost.
6 Actual cost of Agency overhead ($500,000) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $4.81 unit cost.
7 Cost of FY 2010 Inflation ($125,000) ÷ (2,080 program hours times 50 program employees) = $1.20 unit cost.
1 Actual
2 Actual
3 Actual
In order to project the hourly fee rates
for the laboratory program services for
fiscal years 2010 through 2012, the last
fiscal year 2009 is used as a base. The
total base time hourly fee rate
calculation (Table 2) for fiscal year 2010
begins with the actual salaries for fiscal
year 2009 ($3,029,744) and adds the
fiscal year 2010 projected pay
adjustments (3 percent) and the fiscal
year 2010 cost of employee benefits
($727,364). Table 2 contains footnotes
1–7 that provide the common
mathematical formula used to calculate
the apportioned rate for each fee charge
category for fiscal year 2010. The
formula uses the actual cost or projected
cost in dollars for the applicable fiscal
year for each individual fee charge
category divided by the available
program hours (2,080 hours) and further
divided by the number of laboratory
service program employees (50 people).
The formula derives the apportioned fee
rate for each fee charge category
(salaries with pay adjustment, benefits,
operational costs, infrastructure cost,
agency overhead and inflation factor at
3.5 percent rate). The same formula that
is used in Table 2 and that is indicated
in its footnotes is also applied in the
other tables to derive each category unit
rate with the different actual costs or
variable projected costs to be inserted in
the formula equation for the applicable
fiscal year. See Table 3 through Table 10
below for additional new hourly fee rate
calculations for laboratory program
services for the remainder of fiscal year
2010 and fiscal years 2011 through 2012
to be rounded off to whole number
dollar amounts.
Table 3 through Table 4 shows the
calculations of the total standard hourly
fee rates to be rounded off to $81 and
$83 for fiscal years 2011 through 2012,
respectively.
TABLE 3—CALCULATIONS FOR THE STANDARD HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY 2011
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
$30.00
0.90
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Base Time .........................................................................................................................................
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Base Time:
Projected FY 2010 Salaries = Actual FY 2009 ($29.13) + FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87) ....................................................
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = [FY 2010 Salaries ($30.00)] × 0.03(3%) .........................................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
80.56
TABLE 4—CALCULATIONS FOR THE STANDARD HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY 2012
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Base Time:
Projected FY 2011 Salaries = FY 2010 ($30.00) + FY 2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90) ...............................................................
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TABLE 4—CALCULATIONS FOR THE STANDARD HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY 2012—
Continued
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = [FY 2011 Salaries ($30.90)] × 0.03(3%) .........................................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
0.93
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Base Time .........................................................................................................................................
82.69
Table 5 through Table 7 shows the
calculations of the total appeal and total
overtime hourly fee rates to be rounded
off to whole dollar amounts for the
remainder of fiscal year 2010 and fiscal
years 2011 through 2012. These tables
incorporate the differentials in costs
associated with the necessity of
laboratory personnel to work extended
hours of service at the time and a half
pay carrying out either overtime or
appeal sample testing. Federal employee
rates of premium pay are described in
part 551 of Title 5 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) for the Office of
Personnel Management (OPM). Section
551.512(a) specifies that Federal
employees are entitled to receive
overtime premium pay, when overtime
work is performed, at one and one-half
times the employee’s hourly rate of
basic pay.
TABLE 5—CALCULATIONS FOR THE APPEAL AND OVERTIME HOURLY RATES FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR
THE REMAINDER OF FY 2010
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5 (time and a half)
FY 2009 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Actual 2009 Salaries ($29.13)] × 1.5 ...............................................................................................
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment = FY 2009 Salaries @ 1.5 ($43.70) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
$43.70
1.31
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Appeal and Overtime ........................................................................................................................
93.47
TABLE 6—CALCULATIONS FOR THE APPEAL AND OVERTIME HOURLY RATES FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR
FY 2011
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5 (time and a half)
FY 2010 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Actual FY 2009 Salaries ($29.13) + FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87)] × 1.5 ................................
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = FY 2010 Salaries @ 1.5 ($45.00) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
$45.00
1.35
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Appeal and Overtime ........................................................................................................................
96.01
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TABLE 7—CALCULATIONS FOR THE APPEAL AND OVERTIME HOURLY RATES FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR
FY 2012
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5 (time and a half)
FY 2011 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Projected FY 2010 Salaries ($30.00) + FY 2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90)] × 1.5 ..........................
FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = FY 2011 Salaries @ 1.5 ($46.35) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
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1.39
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TABLE 7—CALCULATIONS FOR THE APPEAL AND OVERTIME HOURLY RATES FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR
FY 2012—Continued
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Appeal and Overtime ........................................................................................................................
98.60
Table 8 through Table 10 shows the
calculations of the total legal holiday
hourly fee rates to be rounded off to
whole dollar amounts for the remainder
of fiscal year 2010 and fiscal years 2011
through 2012. These tables incorporate
the differentials in costs associated with
the necessity of laboratory personnel to
work extended hours of service at the
double hourly pay rate doing sample
testing on a Federal holiday or a
designated day for the Federal holiday.
Accordingly, 5 CFR, part 532, section
532.507(a) specifies that Federal
employees are entitled to receive
holiday premium pay, which is not
overtime work, at double the employee’s
hourly rate of basic pay.
TABLE 8—CALCULATIONS FOR THE FEDERAL HOLIDAY HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR THE
REMAINDER OF FY 2010
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2009 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Actual 2009 Salaries ($29.13)] × 2.0 ...............................................................................................
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment = FY 2009 Salaries @ 2.0 ($58.26) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
$58.26
1.75
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Holidays .............................................................................................................................................
108.47
TABLE 9—CALCULATIONS FOR THE FEDERAL HOLIDAY HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY
2011
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2010 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Actual FY 2009 Salaries ($29.13) + FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87)] × 2.0 ................................
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = FY 2010 Salaries @ 2.0 ($60.00) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
$60.00
1.80
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Holidays .............................................................................................................................................
111.46
TABLE 10—CALCULATIONS FOR THE FEDERAL HOLIDAY HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY
2012
Apportioned
fee rate
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Laboratory services
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2011 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Projected FY 2010 Salaries ($30.00) + FY 2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90)] × 2.0 ..........................
FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = FY 2011 Salaries @ 2.0 ($61.80) × 0.03 (3%) ...............................................................................
Benefits .........................................................................................................................................................................................
Operational Costs .........................................................................................................................................................................
Infrastructure Cost ........................................................................................................................................................................
Agency Overhead .........................................................................................................................................................................
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
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$61.80
1.85
6.99
22.38
13.08
4.81
1.20
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TABLE 10—CALCULATIONS FOR THE FEDERAL HOLIDAY HOURLY RATE FOR LABORATORY PROGRAM SERVICES FOR FY
2012—Continued
Apportioned
fee rate
Laboratory services
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) ..............................................................................................................................................................
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] × 0.035 ........................................................
1.20
1.20
Total Rate Per Hour—Holidays .............................................................................................................................................
114.51
Proposed Rule and Comments
AMS published a proposed rule on
October 26, 2009 (74 FR 54920), stating
that it was proposing changing fees for
laboratory services for fiscal years 2010
through 2012. AMS provided for a 30
day comment period, ending November
25, 2009. The proposed rule included
the required economic analysis for
determining the fee schedule and
regulatory flexibility analysis. AMS
received no comments.
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be
not significant for purposes of Executive
Order 12866; and, therefore, has not
been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
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Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order
12988)
This rule has been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform. It is not intended to have
retroactive effect. There are no
administrative procedures which must
be exhausted prior to any judicial
challenge to this rule or the application
of its provisions.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the requirements set forth
in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) AMS has considered
the economic impact of this action on
small entities and has determined that
its implementation will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small businesses.
The purpose of the RFA is to fit
regulatory actions to the scale of
businesses subject to such actions so
that small businesses will not be
disproportionately burdened. There are
499 current stakeholders who
voluntarily use the AMS laboratory
services annually. Such users of services
include food processors, handlers,
growers, government agencies, and
exporters. The majority of these firms,
organizations, and individuals are small
businesses under the criteria established
by the Small Business Administration
(13 CFR 121.201). The increases in
annual hourly fee rates as stated will not
significantly affect these small
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businesses as defined in the RFA
because this is a voluntary program and
the costs to each user will increase
proportionally to their use of laboratory
services each fiscal year. Any decision
by the current stakeholders to
discontinue the use of the AMS
laboratory services because of the
increased fees will not hinder the food
processors or industry members from
marketing their products, since
stakeholders may contract for services
with other government agencies or
private laboratories. The AMS
laboratory testing programs are
voluntary, user fee services, conducted
under the authority of the AMA.
The AMA authorizes the Secretary of
Agriculture to provide Federal
analytical testing services that facilitate
marketing and trade with the financial
necessity that reasonable fees be
collected from the users of the services
to cover as nearly as possible the costs
of maintaining the programs. AMS
regularly reviews its user-fee-supported
laboratory service programs to
determine if the voluntary fees are
adequate and reasonable to cover
expenses. The most recent review
determined that the existing hourly fee
rates, which have been in place since
March 30, 2007, will not generate
sufficient revenue to recover annual
operating costs of laboratory programs
and will not maintain adequate end-ofyear operating reserve balances in FY
2010, FY 2011, and FY 2012. This
decline in revenues is due to lower
numbers of samples and a reduction in
the number of clients by 312 that is
attributable mainly to a shift in usage
patterns on the part of applicants for
testing services and change to
government programs. For example,
several federal commodity purchasing
programs are now relying heavily on
vendor certification rather than
government laboratory testing; a larger
percentage of aflatoxin analyses and
microbiological testing are performed by
approved or designated private
laboratories; and food and fiber product
testing is decreasing due to changing
importer country requirements. For
analytical purposes, projected
collections are based on calculations
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using an effective date of October 1,
2009 for the new fiscal year 2010 user
fees. Without the fee increase in this
rule, FY 2010 revenues are projected at
$6,421,000; obligations are projected at
$6,676,000, for a fiscal year loss of
$256,000 and a depleted trust fund to an
8.0 month end-of-year reserve balance of
$4,449,000. In fiscal years 2011 and
2012 additional operating losses for the
laboratories are projected. If there are no
hourly rate changes as reflected in this
rule, the FY 2011 and FY 2012 end-ofyear reserve balances will decline from
$4,449,000 to $3,984,000 (6.9 months
operating reserve), and $3,568,000 (6.0
months operating reserve), respectively.
However, a minimum operating reserve
of 11.1 months or an end-of-year trust
fund balance amount of $6,173,000 is
needed for FY 2010 based on the current
shut down analysis and prior
experiences, including the permanent
closing of the S&T Midwestern
Laboratory in Chicago, Illinois on June
30, 2000. The AMS estimates that the
raised hourly fee rates in this rule will
yield $1,228,000 overall in additional
laboratory testing program revenues
during FY 2010. This will increase the
end-of-year available capital assets in
the trust fund from $4,704,000 or 8.8
months of permitted operations in FY
2009 to $5,677,000 or 10.2 months of
permitted operations in FY 2010. By
forgoing the purchase of new models of
analytical equipment and instruments
employing up to date technology to
replace aging ones in the laboratories, a
$500,000 savings in the costs of
operations could take place in FY 2010.
This will enable AMS to replenish
program reserves to an 11 month level,
$6,177,000, for FY 2010 that is called for
by Agency policy and prudent financial
management. With increased revenue
from the hourly rate changes in this
rule, program reserves will be
maintained at this level in subsequent
fiscal years 2011 and 2012.
With this action, the Agency expects
to collect $7,649,000 in FY 2010,
$7,986,000 in FY 2011, and $8,211,000
in FY 2012 attributable to the increased
fee changes, to cover the full cost of
routine laboratory services, appeal
requests, overtime, and legal holiday
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services for Science and Technology
customers and other program
stakeholders. This action will allow
AMS to continue to offer laboratory
testing services under the Agricultural
Marketing Act of 1946 as amended, to
facilitate marketing and allow products
to obtain grade designations or meet
marketing standards. As such, the
program provides a viable option for a
wide variety of stakeholders by
delivering scientific and analytical
support services to the diversified
agricultural and food processing
community and provides a valuable
resource for those businesses and
industries that wish to use a USDA
shield. By establishing a three year fee
increase over FYs 2010, 2011, and 2012
the Agency will help ensure that the fee
increases are effective at the beginning
of each fiscal year from FY 2011 to FY
2012. This increase over three fiscal
years will permit customers and other
program stakeholders an opportunity to
plan for annual changes in costs of
laboratory service and to incorporate
them into their budgetary plans.
Finally, this rule will update and
identify Science and Technology
Programs’ existing facility addresses. It
will also clarify that test results of
analyses and laboratory determinations
provided by AMS laboratory program
only apply to the submitted samples
and do not represent the quality,
condition or disposition of the lot from
which each sample was taken.
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Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule contains no new
information collection or recordkeeping
requirements that are subject to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3520). AMS is committed to
implementation of the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act which
provides for the use of information
resources to improve the efficiency and
effectiveness of governmental
operations, including providing the
public with the option of submitting
information or transacting business
electronically to the extent practicable.
USDA has not identified any relevant
Federal rules that duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with this rule.
Unfunded Mandate Analysis
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under section 202 of UMRA, the
Department generally must prepare a
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written statement, including a cost
benefit analysis, for proposed and final
rules with ‘‘Federal mandates’’ that may
result in expenditures to State, local, or
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
to the private sector, of $100 million or
more in any one year. When such a
statement is needed for a rule, section
205 of UMRA generally requires that the
Department identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives and adopt the least costly,
more cost-effective or least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives
of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) that
impose costs on State, local, or tribal
governments or to the private sector of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Thus, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
Comments and Effective Date
A thirty day comment period was
provided for interested persons to
comment on the proposed rule
published in the Federal Register (74
FR 54920) regarding changes in user
fees for voluntary laboratory testing
services. No comments were received by
the end of the comment period on
November 25, 2009. The existing hourly
fee rates have been in place since March
30, 2007. AMS regularly reviews its
user-fee-supported programs to
determine if the current fees are
adequate to cover expenses. The agency
is unable to recover the full cost of its
present laboratory testing services. With
this regulation, AMS is establishing
three annual hourly fee rate increases
for standard, overtime and appeals, and
holiday services for fiscal years 2010–
2012. Accordingly, for these reasons,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553, and because
of initiation of the Federal fiscal year
2010 already, it is found and
determined that good cause exists for
not postponing the effective date of this
rule until 30 days after publication in
the Federal Register. Therefore, this
final rule is effective one day after the
date of publication in the Federal
Register.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 91
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agricultural commodities,
Laboratories, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
■ For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Agricultural Marketing
Service under the authority of 7 U.S.C.
1622, 1624 amends part 91 of Title 7,
chapter I, subchapter E, of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
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17287
PART 91—SERVICES AND GENERAL
INFORMATION
1. The authority citation for part 91
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1622, 1624.
2. Section 91.5 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 91.5
Where services are offered.
(a) Services are offered to applicants
at the Science and Technology
laboratories and facilities as listed
below.
(1) Science and Technology Programs
National Science Laboratory. A variety
of proximate for composition, chemical,
physical, microbiological and
biomolecular (DNA-based) tests and
laboratory analyses performed on fruits
and vegetables, poultry, dairy and dairy
products, juices, fish, vegetative seed
and oilseed, honey, meat and meat
products, fiber products and processed
foods are performed at the Science and
Technology Programs (S&T) laboratory
located at: USDA, AMS, Science and
Technology Programs, National Science
Laboratory (NSL), 801 Summit Crossing
Place, Suite B, Gastonia, North Carolina
28054–2193.
(2) Science and Technology (S&T)
Programs Science Specialty
Laboratories. The Science specialty
laboratories performing aflatoxin and
other testing on peanuts, peanut
products, dried fruits, grains, edible
seeds, tree nuts, shelled corn products,
oilseed products, olive oil, vegetable
oils, juices, citrus products, and other
commodities are located as follows:
(i) USDA, AMS, Science &
Technology, Citrus Laboratory, 98 Third
Street, SW., Winter Haven, Florida
33880–2905.
(ii) USDA, AMS, Science &
Technology, Science Specialty
Laboratory, 6567 Chancey Mill Road,
Blakely, Georgia 39823–2785.
(3) Program laboratories. Laboratory
services are available in all areas
covered by cooperative agreements
providing for this laboratory work and
entered on behalf of the Department
with cooperating Federal or State
laboratory agencies pursuant to
authority contained in Act(s) of
Congress. Also, services may be
provided in other areas not covered by
a cooperative agreement if the
Administrator determines that it is
possible to provide such laboratory
services.
(4) Other alternative laboratories.
Laboratory analyses may be conducted
at alternative Science and Technology
Programs laboratories and can be
reached from any commodity market in
which a laboratory facility is located to
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the extent laboratory personnel are
available.
(5) The Plant Variety Protection (PVP)
Office. The PVP office and plant
examination facility of the Science and
Technology programs issues certificates
of protection to developers of novel
varieties of plants which reproduce
sexually. The PVP office is located as
follows: USDA, AMS, Science &
Technology Programs, Plant Variety
Protection Office, National Agricultural
Library Building, Room 401, 10301
Baltimore Boulevard, Beltsville, MD
20705–2351.
(6) Science and Technology Programs
headquarters offices. The examination,
licensure, quality assurance reviews,
laboratory approval/certification and
consultation services are provided by
headquarters staff located in
Washington, DC. The main headquarters
office is located as follow: USDA, AMS,
Science and Technology Programs,
Office of the Deputy Administrator,
Room 1092 South Agriculture Bldg.,
Mail Stop 0270, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250–0270.
(7) Statistics Branch Office. The
Statistics Branch office of Science and
Technology Programs (S&T) provides
statistical services to the Agency and
other agencies within the USDA. In
addition, the Statistics Branch office
generates sample plans and performs
consulting services for research studies
in joint efforts with or in a leading role
with other program areas of AMS or of
the USDA. The Statistics Branch office
is located as follows: USDA, AMS, S&T
Statistics Branch, Room 0603 South
Agriculture Bldg., Mail Stop 0223, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington,
DC 20250–0223.
(8) Technical Services Branch Office.
The Technical Services Branch office of
Science and Technology (S&T) provides
technical support services to all Agency
programs and other agencies within the
USDA. In addition, the Technical
Services Branch office provides
certification and approval services of
private and State government
laboratories as well as oversees quality
assurance programs; import and export
certification of laboratory tested
commodities. The Technical Services
Branch mailing address is as follows:
USDA, AMS, S&T Technical Services
Branch, South Agriculture Bldg., Mail
Stop 0272, 1400 Independence Ave.,
SW., Washington, DC 20250–0272. The
Technical Services Branch office is
located as follows: USDA, AMS, Science
and Technology Technical Services
Branch, Room 0604 South Agriculture
Bldg., 1400 Independence Ave., SW.,
Washington, DC 20250.
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(9) Monitoring Programs Office.
Services afforded by the Pesticide Data
Program (PDP) and Microbiological Data
Program (MDP) are provided by USDA,
AMS, Science and Technology
Monitoring Programs Office, 8609
Sudley Road, Suite 206, Manassas, VA
20110–8411.
(10) Pesticide Records Branch Office.
Services afforded by the Federal
Pesticide Record Keeping Program for
restricted-use pesticides by private
certified applicators are provided by
USDA, AMS, Science and Technology,
Pesticide Records Branch, 8609 Sudley
Road, Suite 203, Manassas, VA 20110–
8411.
(b) The addresses of the various
laboratories and offices appear in the
pertinent parts of this subchapter. A
prospective applicant may obtain a
current listing of addresses and
telephone numbers of Science and
Technology Programs laboratories,
offices, and facilities by addressing an
inquiry to the Administrative Officer,
Science and Technology Programs,
Agricultural Marketing Service, United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA), 1400 Independence Ave., SW.,
Room 0725 South Agriculture Building,
Mail Stop 0271, Washington, DC 20250–
0271.
■ 3. Sections 91.24 and 91.25 are
revised to read as follows:
§ 91.24
Reports of test results.
(a) Results of analyses are provided,
in writing, by facsimile, by e-mail or
other electronic means to the applicant.
(b) Results of test analyses and
laboratory determinations provided by
AMS laboratory services only apply to
the submitted samples and do not
represent the quality, condition or
disposition of the lot from which each
sample was taken.
(c) Applicants may call the
appropriate Science and Technology
laboratory for interim or final results
prior to issuance of the formal report.
The advance results may be telegraphed,
e-mailed, telephoned, or sent by
facsimile to the applicant. Any
additional expense for advance
information shall be borne by the
requesting party.
(d) A letter report in lieu of an official
certificate of analysis may be issued by
a laboratory representative when such
action appears to be more suitable than
a certificate: Provided, that, issuance of
such report is approved by the Deputy
Administrator.
§ 91.25
Certificate requirements.
Certificates of analysis and other
memoranda concerning laboratory
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service and the reporting of results
should have the following requirements:
(a) Certificates of analysis shall be on
standard printed forms approved by the
Deputy Administrator;
(b) Shall be printed in English;
(c) Shall have results typewritten,
computer generated, or handwritten in
ink and shall be clearly legible;
(d) Shall show the results of
laboratory tests in a uniform, accurate,
and concise manner with abbreviations
identified on the form;
(e) Shall show the information
required by §§ 91.26 through 91.29; and
(f) Show only such other information
and statements of fact as are provided in
the instructions authorized by the
Deputy Administrator.
■ 4. Sections 91.37 through 91.39 are
revised to read as follows:
§ 91.37 Standard hourly fee rate for
laboratory testing, analysis, and other
services.
(a) The standard hourly fee rate in this
section for the individual laboratory
analyses cover the costs of Science and
Technology laboratory services,
including issuance of certificates and
personnel and overhead costs other than
the commodity inspection fees referred
to in 7 CFR 52.42 through 52.46, 52.48
through 52.51, 55.510 through 55.530,
55.560 through 55.570, 58.38 through
58.43, 58.45 through 58.46, 70.71
through 70.72, and 70.75 through 70.78.
The hourly fee rates in this part 91
apply to all commodity and processed
commodity products. The new fiscal
year for Science and Technology
Programs commences on October 1 of
each calendar year. The rate for
laboratory services is $78.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2010, $81.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2011, and $83.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2012.
(b) Printed updated schedules of the
laboratory testing fees for processed
fruits and vegetables (7 CFR part 93),
poultry and egg products (7 CFR part
94), and meat and meat products (7 CFR
part 98) will be available for distribution
to Science and Technology’s
constituents and stakeholders by the
individual Laboratory Directors of
Science and Technology laboratories
listed in § 91.5. These single test
laboratory fee schedules are based upon
the applicable hourly fee rate stated in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in
this section, charges will be made at the
applicable hourly rate stated in
paragraph (a) of this section for the time
required to perform the service. A
charge will be made for service pursuant
to each request or certificate issued.
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(d) When a laboratory test service is
provided for AMS by a commercial or
State government laboratory, the
applicant will be assessed a fee which
covers the costs to the Science and
Technology program for the service
provided.
(e) When Science and Technology
staff provides applied and
developmental research and training
activities for microbiological, physical,
chemical, and biomolecular analyses on
agricultural commodities the applicant
will be charged a fee on a reimbursable
cost to AMS basis.
(a) The applicant for appeal sample
testing will be charged a fee at the
hourly rate for laboratory service that
appears in this paragraph. The new
fiscal year for Science and Technology
Programs commences on October 1 of
each calendar year. The appeal rate for
laboratory service is $93.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2010, $96.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2011, and $99.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2012.
(b) The appeal fee will not be waived
for any reason if analytical testing was
completed in addition to the original
analysis.
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§ 91.39 Premium hourly fee rates for
overtime and legal holiday service.
(a) When analytical testing in a
Science and Technology facility
requires the services of laboratory
personnel beyond their regularly
assigned tour of duty on any day or on
a day outside the established schedule,
such services are considered as overtime
work. When analytical testing in a
Science and Technology facility
requires the services of laboratory
personnel on a Federal holiday or a day
designated in lieu of such a holiday,
such services are considered holiday
work. Laboratory analyses initiated at
the request of the applicant to be
rendered on Federal holidays, and on an
overtime basis will be charged fees at
hourly rates for laboratory service that
appear in this paragraph. The new fiscal
year for Science and Technology
Programs commences on October 1 of
each calendar year. The laboratory
analysis rate for overtime service is
$93.00 per hour in fiscal year 2010,
$96.00 per hour in fiscal year 2011, and
$99.00 per hour in fiscal year 2012. The
laboratory analysis rate for Federal
holiday or designed holiday service is
$108.00 per hour in fiscal year 2010,
$111.00 per hour in fiscal year 2011,
and $115.00 per hour in fiscal year
2012.
16:13 Apr 05, 2010
Jkt 220001
Dated: April 1, 2010.
Rayne Pegg,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–7739 Filed 4–5–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
§ 91.38 Additional fees for appeal of
analysis.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
(b) Information on legal holidays or
what constitutes overtime service at a
particular Science and Technology
laboratory is available from the
Laboratory Director or facility manager.
7 CFR Part 319
[Docket No. APHIS-2008-0052]
RIN 0579-AD07
Citrus Seed Imports; Citrus Greening
and Citrus Variegated Chlorosis
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Interim rule and request for
comments.
We are amending the
regulations governing the importation of
nursery stock to prohibit the
importation of propagative seed of
several Rutaceae (citrus family) genera
from certain countries where citrus
greening or citrus variegated chlorosis
(CVC) is present. We are also requiring
propagative seed of these genera
imported from all other countries to be
accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate with an additional
declaration that neither citrus greening
nor CVC are known to occur in the
country where the seed was produced.
Scientific evidence indicates that seed
of certain genera of the family Rutaceae
may be a pathway for the introduction
of those diseases. This action is
necessary in order to prevent the
introduction or dissemination of citrus
greening and CVC into or within the
United States.
DATES: This interim rule is effective
April 6, 2010. We will consider all
comments that we receive on or before
June 7, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by either of the following methods:
∑ Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
(https://www.regulations.gov/
fdmspublic/component/main?
main=DocketDetail&d=APHIS-20080052) to submit or view comments and
to view supporting and related materials
available electronically.
∑ Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery:
Please send a copy of your comment to
SUMMARY:
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17289
Docket No. APHIS-2008-0052,
Regulatory Analysis and Development,
PPD, APHIS, Station 3A-03.8, 4700
River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD
20737-1238. Please state that your
comment refers to Docket No. APHIS2008-0052.
Reading Room: You may read any
comments that we receive on this
docket in our reading room. The reading
room is located in room 1141 of the
USDA South Building, 14th Street and
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC. Normal reading room
hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except holidays. To be
sure someone is there to help you,
please call (202) 690-2817 before
coming.
Other Information: Additional
information about APHIS and its
programs is available on the Internet at
(https://www.aphis.usda.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFOMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Arnold Tschanz, Senior Plant
Pathologist, Plant Health Programs,
PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 133,
Riverdale, MD 20737-1231; (301) 7340627.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The regulations in 7 CFR part 319,
‘‘Foreign Quarantine Notices,’’ prohibit
or restrict the importation of certain
plants and plant products to prevent the
introduction or dissemination of plant
pests and noxious weeds into the
United States. The regulations in
‘‘Subpart-Citrus Canker and Other Citrus
Diseases’’ (§ 319.19) prohibit the
importation into the United States of
plants and plant parts, except fruit and
seeds, of all genera, species, and
varieties of the subfamilies
Aurantioideae, Rutoideae, and
Toddalioideae of the botanical family
Rutaceae (citrus) in order to prevent the
introduction of citrus canker
(Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri) into
areas of the United States.
The regulations contained in
‘‘Subpart-Nursery Stock, Plants, Roots,
Bulbs, Seeds, and Other Plant Products,’’
§§ 319.37 through 319.37-14 (referred to
below as the regulations), restrict,
among other things, the importation of
seeds for propagation. In this interim
rule, we are amending the regulations to
prohibit the importation of propagative
seed of several Rutaceae genera from
certain countries where citrus greening
or citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC) is
present. We are also requiring
propagative seed of these genera
imported from all other countries to be
accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate with an additional
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 65 (Tuesday, April 6, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17281-17289]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-7739]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 65 / Tuesday, April 6, 2010 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 17281]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 91
[Document Number AMS-ST-09-0016]
RIN 0581-AC98
Changes in Hourly Fee Rates for Science and Technology Laboratory
Services--Fiscal Years 2010-2012
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) is changing the
annual standard, appeal, overtime, and holiday hourly fee rates for
fiscal years 2010-2012 for Science and Technology (S&T) Laboratory
Services in order to recover anticipated laboratory program costs. The
Agency is raising these rates to reflect, among other factors, national
and locality pay increases for Federal employees and inflation,
operating costs, instrumentation and training, equipment maintenance
costs, and program and agency administrative overhead costs. The
regulations are updated to identify existing S&T facility addresses.
This action also includes changes to provide greater clarity of
reported test analyses and laboratory determinations.
DATES: Effective April 7, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James V. Falk, Staff Scientist, or Dr.
Robert L. Epstein, Deputy Administrator, Science and Technology
Programs, Agricultural Marketing Service, United States Department of
Agriculture, Mail Stop 0270, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington,
DC 20250-0270, telephone number (202) 720-5231; fax (202) 720-6496, or
Internet: https://www.regulations.gov or e-mail: James.falk@ams.usda.gov
or Robert.epstein@ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Science and Technology (S&T) Programs has been performing voluntary
laboratory services under the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946 (AMA),
as amended (7 U.S.C. 1621-1627), for the AMS commodity programs (Fruit
and Vegetable, Cotton and Tobacco, Livestock and Seed, Poultry, and
Dairy) and applicable stakeholders in these industries since its
inception on August 17, 1988. Before that time, voluntary laboratory
testing was provided for on a separate user fee basis under the various
AMS commodity programs. The current standard hourly rate of $67.00, the
appeal or overtime hourly rate of $78.00 and the holiday hourly rate of
$89.00 have been in effect since the March 30, 2007 final rule (72 FR
15011) was published. The standard fee rate for laboratory services
will be $78.00 per hour for the remainder of fiscal year 2010, and will
increase to $81.00 per hour in fiscal year 2011, and $83.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2012. The appeal and overtime hourly fee rate for
laboratory services outside the normal business hours will also be
adjusted to $93 for the remainder of FY 2010, to $96 in FY 2011, and to
$99 in FY 2012. The holiday hourly fee rate for laboratory services
during designated federal holidays will be increased to $108 for the
rest of FY 2010, to $111 in FY 2011, and to $115 in FY 2012. An
increase in the premium hourly rates over the three fiscal years for
laboratory services performed on appeal samples, overtime basis, and
holidays is also needed since Science and Technology laboratory
personnel may be required to work extended hours of service at the time
and a half pay or the double hourly pay on legal holidays to
accommodate clients. This is due to stakeholder demand for immediate
test results. Generally, the processing of all laboratory samples is
continuous over a 24/7 timeframe due to the recent introduction of
automated devices on several sample process equipment and analytical
instruments. The AMA authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to provide
Federal analytical testing services that facilitate domestic marketing
and international trade. In addition, consumers may be able to
determine the quality and wholesomeness characteristics of a commodity
or product through laboratory testing. This allows agricultural
products to be assigned official AMS grade designations or to meet
specifications. The AMA also requires that reasonable fees be collected
from the users of the voluntary services to cover as nearly as possible
the costs of maintaining the laboratory programs.
The Agency will recover the actual cost of services for multiple
fiscal years (FY 2010 through FY 2012) with the new hourly fee rates
covered by this rule. This rule will amend its regulations to identify
the updated and existing S&T Programs' facility addresses. It clarifies
that results of analyses and laboratory determinations provided by AMS
laboratory services apply only to the submitted samples and do not
represent the quality; condition or disposition of the lot from which
each sample was taken.
Federal salaries with national and locality pay adjustments and
choices in benefits are made available on an annual basis by the Office
of Personnel Management (OPM). Operational costs include expenses for
rents, communications, utilities, medical examinations, safety
equipment, sample preparation equipment, training, trash and hazardous
waste disposal, travel and transportation costs. There have been
certain large capital improvement expenditures in the laboratories in
recent years due to unfunded legal mandates. These expenditures include
costs for the counter-terrorism Food Emergency Response Network (FERN)
and the capital improvements for the Environmental Management Systems
(EMS) in accordance with the applicable mandates for Federal
laboratories of Executive Order 13423 of January 24, 2007,
Strengthening Federal Environmental, Energy, and Transportation
Management (72 FR 3919). These capital improvement costs are included
in the normal operations of the Science and Technology field service
laboratories. In addition, operational costs include expenses for
office and laboratory supplies, chemicals, reagents, hazardous waste
removal, and a Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS).
Infrastructure costs are mainly
[[Page 17282]]
laboratory instruments and capital equipment with service and
maintenance contracts and replacement spare parts. Infrastructure
expenses include consumable supply costs associated directly with the
proper operation of analytical instruments and laboratory equipment.
Stakeholders demand that AMS provide cost effective and timely product
testing requiring modern and sometimes automated instrumentation. These
instruments are expensive and undergo equipment capitalization for
determining costs. Equipment capitalization is the determined cost per
year to replace the equipment after its useful service life has been
established. Agency overhead is the pro-rated share, attributable to a
particular service, of the agency's management and support costs.
Overhead expenditures are allocated across the Agency for each direct
hour of laboratory service.
With this rulemaking, there will be essentially three standard
hourly fee rate increases established for the basic laboratory
services--$67 to $78 per hour or 16.4 percent for the rest of fiscal
year 2010, $78 to $81 per hour or 3.8 percent in fiscal year 2011 and
$81 to $83 per hour or 2.5 percent in fiscal year 2012. The rate
increases for overtime and appeals will be $78 to $93 per hour or 19.2
percent, $93 to $96 per hour or 3.2 percent, and $96 to $99 per hour or
3.1 percent in fiscal years 2010, 2011, and 2012, respectively. The
rate increases for legal holiday service will be $89 to $108 per hour
or 21.3 percent, $108 to $111 per hour or 2.8 percent, and $111 to $115
per hour or 3.6 percent in fiscal years 2010, 2011, and 2012,
respectively. This is a voluntary program and the costs to each user
will increase proportionally to their use of laboratory services each
fiscal year. The increased fees will cover inflation and national and
locality pay raises but will not support any new budgetary initiative.
The revised hourly fee rates will apply to voluntary laboratory
services that are provided for five types of analytical testing:
microbiological, physical, residue chemistry, proximate analysis for
composition, and biomolecular (DNA-based) testing. A user fee system,
using set hourly rates for three fiscal years, will be established by
this rulemaking to ensure that AMS properly recovers its full costs for
providing voluntary laboratory services in a timely manner, and that
all stakeholders have advance notice of their estimated laboratory fees
so that they can make reasonable cost assumptions when formulating
their annual budgets.
The largest cost of operations for the AMS laboratory programs is
payroll and employee benefits. This obligation is projected to amount
to $3,848,000 or 57.6 percent of the total laboratory costs for FY
2010. Recent cross-training of the employees in the laboratories has
resulted in the reduction of staff from 67 individuals in FY 2007 to 50
current individuals in FY 2009 as ongoing efforts to limit program
costs are implemented. AMS calculated its projected increases in
salaries and inflation in fiscal years 2010 through 2012. The estimate
for increases in salaries for fiscal year 2009 as the base year and the
succeeding years are from the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB)
``Federal Pay Raise Assumptions'' table. The fiscal year pay
adjustments are increased by 3 percent in the following tables of
calculated proposed new hourly fee rates for laboratory program
services for FY 2010 through FY 2012. The OMB Federal pay rise
assumptions (including geographical pay differentials) state that in
the development of civilian government personnel costs a yearly
percentage (3%) increase shall be used. This information comes from the
table, ``Federal Pay Raise Assumptions'', of the Office of Management
and Budget's Fiscal Year 2007 Budget and beyond which is available at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/memoranda/fy2007/m07-02.pdf.
Inflation for FY 2010 and subsequent years is estimated to be 3.5
percent. In Tables 2 through 10 below a yearly 3.5 percent inflation
rate is used in the calculations for hourly fee rate determinations for
laboratory program services because the 2007 annual average for the
base Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U): U.S. city
average for service costs is listed as 246.848 in Table 3A. of the
referenced website and there is a most recent annual average increase
of 3.5% to 255.498 for the CPI-U provided for the change in service
costs. This estimate for inflation percent (3.5%) can be obtained from
Table 3A, ``Consumer Price Index for all Urban Consumers (CPI-U): U.S.
city average, detailed expenditure categories'', which is available at
https://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpid08av.pdf.
The Agency will initiate, when necessary, another rulemaking to
adjust any fee established, if estimated increases for pay and
inflation do not adequately cover the Agency's costs of providing the
services. The cost of providing laboratory services includes both
direct and not explicit overhead costs. Direct costs include the cost
of salaries, employee benefits, operation costs, equipment service and
replacements, security, training needs, and infrastructure cost. The
Agency is able to estimate the employee benefits attributable to
overtime work and has included these in the fee rate calculations.
The current and new fees for standard, appeal, overtime and legal
holiday voluntary laboratory services are listed by type of service in
Table 1 below. The first increases ranging from 16.4 to 21.3 percent,
from the current rates to the fiscal year 2010 rates, are larger than
the subsequent 2011 and 2012 fiscal year increases (2.5 to 3.8 percent
range) because these are the first amended hourly rate increases since
last set on March 30, 2007. Therefore, it includes the actual increases
in salaries and inflation that have occurred since that date. It also
reflects changes in personnel numbers and the promotions and within-
grade pay step increases for General Schedule (GS) salaries granted
worthy employees, and new employee position pay costs.
With this action, the AMS will amend its regulations to provide for
three annual differing fee increases in one action. Table 1 shows the
summary of the current rates and the revised hourly fee rates for
fiscal years 2010 through 2012 for the four different types of services
(regular laboratory, appeal, overtime, and legal holiday work) that
Science and Technology Programs employees perform.
Table 1--Current and New Hourly Fee Rates (Per Hour) by Type of Service
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2010 rate FY 2011 rate FY 2012 rate
Service Current rate \1\ \2\ \3\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Laboratory...................................... $67.00 $78.00 $81.00 $83.00
Appeal.......................................... 78.00 93.00 96.00 99.00
Overtime........................................ 78.00 93.00 96.00 99.00
Legal Holiday................................... 89.00 108.00 111.00 115.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ \2\ \3\ Hourly values for FY 2010-FY 2012 are rounded off to nearest whole dollar.
[[Page 17283]]
With this action, the AMS will amend its regulations to provide for
three annual fee increases in one action. In AMS's analysis of
projected costs set forth in Tables 2 through 10 below, AMS has
identified the basis for the increases in the cost of voluntary hourly
fee rates for laboratory services for fiscal year 2010 through fiscal
year 2012. These fee increases are essential for the continued sound
financial management of the Agency's budget. In order to enhance the
transparency of the hourly fee rates in the aforementioned Tables 2
through 10 for fiscal year 2010, fiscal year 2011 and fiscal year 2012,
a description is provided of each fee charge category.
Table 2--Calculations for the Standard Hourly Rate for Laboratory
Program Services for the Remainder of FY 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Base Time:
Actual FY 2009 Salaries \1\ @ $3,029,744............ $29.13
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment \2\ = [Actual FY 2009 0.87
Salaries ($29.13)] x 0.03(3%)......................
Benefits \3\........................................ 6.99
Operational Costs \4\............................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost \5\............................. 13.08
Agency Overhead \6\................................. 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation \7\ (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Base Time.................. 78.46
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Actual cost of FY 2009 salaries ($3,029,744) / (2,080 program hours
times 50 program employees) = $29.13 unit cost.
\2\ Actual cost of FY 2010 pay adjustment ($90,892) / (2,080 program
hours times 50 program employees) = $0.87 unit cost.
\3\ Actual cost of benefits ($727,364) / (2,080 program hours times 50
program employees) = $6.99 unit cost.
\4\ Actual cost of operational costs ($2,328,000) / (2,080 program hours
times 50 program employees) = $22.38 unit cost.
\5\ Actual cost of infrastructure ($1,360,000) / (2,080 program hours
times 50 program employees) = $13.08 unit cost.
\6\ Actual cost of Agency overhead ($500,000) / (2,080 program hours
times 50 program employees) = $4.81 unit cost.
\7\ Cost of FY 2010 Inflation ($125,000) / (2,080 program hours times 50
program employees) = $1.20 unit cost.
In order to project the hourly fee rates for the laboratory program
services for fiscal years 2010 through 2012, the last fiscal year 2009
is used as a base. The total base time hourly fee rate calculation
(Table 2) for fiscal year 2010 begins with the actual salaries for
fiscal year 2009 ($3,029,744) and adds the fiscal year 2010 projected
pay adjustments (3 percent) and the fiscal year 2010 cost of employee
benefits ($727,364). Table 2 contains footnotes 1-7 that provide the
common mathematical formula used to calculate the apportioned rate for
each fee charge category for fiscal year 2010. The formula uses the
actual cost or projected cost in dollars for the applicable fiscal year
for each individual fee charge category divided by the available
program hours (2,080 hours) and further divided by the number of
laboratory service program employees (50 people). The formula derives
the apportioned fee rate for each fee charge category (salaries with
pay adjustment, benefits, operational costs, infrastructure cost,
agency overhead and inflation factor at 3.5 percent rate). The same
formula that is used in Table 2 and that is indicated in its footnotes
is also applied in the other tables to derive each category unit rate
with the different actual costs or variable projected costs to be
inserted in the formula equation for the applicable fiscal year. See
Table 3 through Table 10 below for additional new hourly fee rate
calculations for laboratory program services for the remainder of
fiscal year 2010 and fiscal years 2011 through 2012 to be rounded off
to whole number dollar amounts.
Table 3 through Table 4 shows the calculations of the total
standard hourly fee rates to be rounded off to $81 and $83 for fiscal
years 2011 through 2012, respectively.
Table 3--Calculations for the Standard Hourly Rate for Laboratory
Program Services for FY 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Base Time:
Projected FY 2010 Salaries = Actual FY 2009 ($29.13) $30.00
+ FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87)...................
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = [FY 2010 Salaries ($30.00)] 0.90
x 0.03(3%).........................................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Base Time.................. 80.56
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 4--Calculations for the Standard Hourly Rate for Laboratory
Program Services for FY 2012
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Base Time:
Projected FY 2011 Salaries = FY 2010 ($30.00) + FY $30.90
2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90)........................
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FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = [FY 2011 Salaries ($30.90)] 0.93
x 0.03(3%).........................................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Base Time.................. 82.69
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5 through Table 7 shows the calculations of the total appeal
and total overtime hourly fee rates to be rounded off to whole dollar
amounts for the remainder of fiscal year 2010 and fiscal years 2011
through 2012. These tables incorporate the differentials in costs
associated with the necessity of laboratory personnel to work extended
hours of service at the time and a half pay carrying out either
overtime or appeal sample testing. Federal employee rates of premium
pay are described in part 551 of Title 5 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) for the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). Section
551.512(a) specifies that Federal employees are entitled to receive
overtime premium pay, when overtime work is performed, at one and one-
half times the employee's hourly rate of basic pay.
Table 5--Calculations for the Appeal and Overtime Hourly Rates for
Laboratory Program Services for the Remainder of FY 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5
(time and a half)
FY 2009 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Actual 2009 Salaries $43.70
($29.13)] x 1.5....................................
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment = FY 2009 Salaries @ 1.5 1.31
($43.70) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Appeal and Overtime........ 93.47
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 6--Calculations for the Appeal and Overtime Hourly Rates for
Laboratory Program Services for FY 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5
(time and a half)
FY 2010 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Actual FY 2009 Salaries $45.00
($29.13) + FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87)] x 1.5...
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = FY 2010 Salaries @ 1.5 1.35
($45.00) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Appeal and Overtime........ 96.01
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 7--Calculations for the Appeal and Overtime Hourly Rates for
Laboratory Program Services for FY 2012
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appeal and Overtime Rates: Projected Salaries @ 1.5
(time and a half)
FY 2011 Salaries @ 1.5 = [Projected FY 2010 Salaries $46.35
($30.00) + FY 2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90)] x 1.5...
FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = FY 2011 Salaries @ 1.5 1.39
($46.35) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
[[Page 17285]]
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Appeal and Overtime........ 98.60
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 8 through Table 10 shows the calculations of the total legal
holiday hourly fee rates to be rounded off to whole dollar amounts for
the remainder of fiscal year 2010 and fiscal years 2011 through 2012.
These tables incorporate the differentials in costs associated with the
necessity of laboratory personnel to work extended hours of service at
the double hourly pay rate doing sample testing on a Federal holiday or
a designated day for the Federal holiday. Accordingly, 5 CFR, part 532,
section 532.507(a) specifies that Federal employees are entitled to
receive holiday premium pay, which is not overtime work, at double the
employee's hourly rate of basic pay.
Table 8--Calculations for the Federal Holiday Hourly Rate for Laboratory
Program Services for the Remainder of FY 2010
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2009 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Actual 2009 Salaries $58.26
($29.13)] x 2.0....................................
FY 2010 Pay Adjustment = FY 2009 Salaries @ 2.0 1.75
($58.26) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Holidays................... 108.47
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 9--Calculations for the Federal Holiday Hourly Rate for Laboratory
Program Services for FY 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2010 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Actual FY 2009 Salaries $60.00
($29.13) + FY 2010 Pay Adjustment ($0.87)] x 2.0...
FY 2011 Pay Adjustment = FY 2010 Salaries @ 2.0 1.80
($60.00) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Holidays................... 111.46
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 10--Calculations for the Federal Holiday Hourly Rate for
Laboratory Program Services for FY 2012
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apportioned
Laboratory services fee rate
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Holiday Rate: Projected Salaries @ 2.0 (double time)
FY 2011 Salaries @ 2.0 = [Projected FY 2010 Salaries $61.80
($30.00) + FY 2011 Pay Adjustment ($0.90)] x 2.0...
FY 2012 Pay Adjustment = FY 2011 Salaries @ 2.0 1.85
($61.80) x 0.03 (3%)...............................
Benefits............................................ 6.99
Operational Costs................................... 22.38
Infrastructure Cost................................. 13.08
Agency Overhead..................................... 4.81
FY 2010 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
[[Page 17286]]
FY 2011 Inflation (3.5%)............................ 1.20
FY 2012 Inflation (3.5%) = [Costs excluding 1.20
infrastructure and payroll = $34.18] x 0.035.......
---------------
Total Rate Per Hour--Holidays................... 114.51
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule and Comments
AMS published a proposed rule on October 26, 2009 (74 FR 54920),
stating that it was proposing changing fees for laboratory services for
fiscal years 2010 through 2012. AMS provided for a 30 day comment
period, ending November 25, 2009. The proposed rule included the
required economic analysis for determining the fee schedule and
regulatory flexibility analysis. AMS received no comments.
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866; and, therefore, has not been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order 12988)
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. It is not intended to have retroactive effect. There
are no administrative procedures which must be exhausted prior to any
judicial challenge to this rule or the application of its provisions.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the requirements set forth in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601-612) AMS has considered the
economic impact of this action on small entities and has determined
that its implementation will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small businesses. The purpose of the RFA is to
fit regulatory actions to the scale of businesses subject to such
actions so that small businesses will not be disproportionately
burdened. There are 499 current stakeholders who voluntarily use the
AMS laboratory services annually. Such users of services include food
processors, handlers, growers, government agencies, and exporters. The
majority of these firms, organizations, and individuals are small
businesses under the criteria established by the Small Business
Administration (13 CFR 121.201). The increases in annual hourly fee
rates as stated will not significantly affect these small businesses as
defined in the RFA because this is a voluntary program and the costs to
each user will increase proportionally to their use of laboratory
services each fiscal year. Any decision by the current stakeholders to
discontinue the use of the AMS laboratory services because of the
increased fees will not hinder the food processors or industry members
from marketing their products, since stakeholders may contract for
services with other government agencies or private laboratories. The
AMS laboratory testing programs are voluntary, user fee services,
conducted under the authority of the AMA.
The AMA authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to provide Federal
analytical testing services that facilitate marketing and trade with
the financial necessity that reasonable fees be collected from the
users of the services to cover as nearly as possible the costs of
maintaining the programs. AMS regularly reviews its user-fee-supported
laboratory service programs to determine if the voluntary fees are
adequate and reasonable to cover expenses. The most recent review
determined that the existing hourly fee rates, which have been in place
since March 30, 2007, will not generate sufficient revenue to recover
annual operating costs of laboratory programs and will not maintain
adequate end-of-year operating reserve balances in FY 2010, FY 2011,
and FY 2012. This decline in revenues is due to lower numbers of
samples and a reduction in the number of clients by 312 that is
attributable mainly to a shift in usage patterns on the part of
applicants for testing services and change to government programs. For
example, several federal commodity purchasing programs are now relying
heavily on vendor certification rather than government laboratory
testing; a larger percentage of aflatoxin analyses and microbiological
testing are performed by approved or designated private laboratories;
and food and fiber product testing is decreasing due to changing
importer country requirements. For analytical purposes, projected
collections are based on calculations using an effective date of
October 1, 2009 for the new fiscal year 2010 user fees. Without the fee
increase in this rule, FY 2010 revenues are projected at $6,421,000;
obligations are projected at $6,676,000, for a fiscal year loss of
$256,000 and a depleted trust fund to an 8.0 month end-of-year reserve
balance of $4,449,000. In fiscal years 2011 and 2012 additional
operating losses for the laboratories are projected. If there are no
hourly rate changes as reflected in this rule, the FY 2011 and FY 2012
end-of-year reserve balances will decline from $4,449,000 to $3,984,000
(6.9 months operating reserve), and $3,568,000 (6.0 months operating
reserve), respectively. However, a minimum operating reserve of 11.1
months or an end-of-year trust fund balance amount of $6,173,000 is
needed for FY 2010 based on the current shut down analysis and prior
experiences, including the permanent closing of the S&T Midwestern
Laboratory in Chicago, Illinois on June 30, 2000. The AMS estimates
that the raised hourly fee rates in this rule will yield $1,228,000
overall in additional laboratory testing program revenues during FY
2010. This will increase the end-of-year available capital assets in
the trust fund from $4,704,000 or 8.8 months of permitted operations in
FY 2009 to $5,677,000 or 10.2 months of permitted operations in FY
2010. By forgoing the purchase of new models of analytical equipment
and instruments employing up to date technology to replace aging ones
in the laboratories, a $500,000 savings in the costs of operations
could take place in FY 2010. This will enable AMS to replenish program
reserves to an 11 month level, $6,177,000, for FY 2010 that is called
for by Agency policy and prudent financial management. With increased
revenue from the hourly rate changes in this rule, program reserves
will be maintained at this level in subsequent fiscal years 2011 and
2012.
With this action, the Agency expects to collect $7,649,000 in FY
2010, $7,986,000 in FY 2011, and $8,211,000 in FY 2012 attributable to
the increased fee changes, to cover the full cost of routine laboratory
services, appeal requests, overtime, and legal holiday
[[Page 17287]]
services for Science and Technology customers and other program
stakeholders. This action will allow AMS to continue to offer
laboratory testing services under the Agricultural Marketing Act of
1946 as amended, to facilitate marketing and allow products to obtain
grade designations or meet marketing standards. As such, the program
provides a viable option for a wide variety of stakeholders by
delivering scientific and analytical support services to the
diversified agricultural and food processing community and provides a
valuable resource for those businesses and industries that wish to use
a USDA shield. By establishing a three year fee increase over FYs 2010,
2011, and 2012 the Agency will help ensure that the fee increases are
effective at the beginning of each fiscal year from FY 2011 to FY 2012.
This increase over three fiscal years will permit customers and other
program stakeholders an opportunity to plan for annual changes in costs
of laboratory service and to incorporate them into their budgetary
plans.
Finally, this rule will update and identify Science and Technology
Programs' existing facility addresses. It will also clarify that test
results of analyses and laboratory determinations provided by AMS
laboratory program only apply to the submitted samples and do not
represent the quality, condition or disposition of the lot from which
each sample was taken.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule contains no new information collection or recordkeeping
requirements that are subject to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3501-3520). AMS is committed to implementation of the Government
Paperwork Elimination Act which provides for the use of information
resources to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of governmental
operations, including providing the public with the option of
submitting information or transacting business electronically to the
extent practicable. USDA has not identified any relevant Federal rules
that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with this rule.
Unfunded Mandate Analysis
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the
effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of UMRA, the
Department generally must prepare a written statement, including a cost
benefit analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal
mandates'' that may result in expenditures to State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year. When such a statement is needed for a
rule, section 205 of UMRA generally requires that the Department
identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives
and adopt the least costly, more cost-effective or least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) that impose costs on State, local,
or tribal governments or to the private sector of $100 million or more
in any one year. Thus, this rule is not subject to the requirements of
sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
Comments and Effective Date
A thirty day comment period was provided for interested persons to
comment on the proposed rule published in the Federal Register (74 FR
54920) regarding changes in user fees for voluntary laboratory testing
services. No comments were received by the end of the comment period on
November 25, 2009. The existing hourly fee rates have been in place
since March 30, 2007. AMS regularly reviews its user-fee-supported
programs to determine if the current fees are adequate to cover
expenses. The agency is unable to recover the full cost of its present
laboratory testing services. With this regulation, AMS is establishing
three annual hourly fee rate increases for standard, overtime and
appeals, and holiday services for fiscal years 2010-2012. Accordingly,
for these reasons, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553, and because of initiation
of the Federal fiscal year 2010 already, it is found and determined
that good cause exists for not postponing the effective date of this
rule until 30 days after publication in the Federal Register.
Therefore, this final rule is effective one day after the date of
publication in the Federal Register.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 91
Administrative practice and procedure, Agricultural commodities,
Laboratories, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
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For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Agricultural Marketing
Service under the authority of 7 U.S.C. 1622, 1624 amends part 91 of
Title 7, chapter I, subchapter E, of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 91--SERVICES AND GENERAL INFORMATION
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1. The authority citation for part 91 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1622, 1624.
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2. Section 91.5 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 91.5 Where services are offered.
(a) Services are offered to applicants at the Science and
Technology laboratories and facilities as listed below.
(1) Science and Technology Programs National Science Laboratory. A
variety of proximate for composition, chemical, physical,
microbiological and biomolecular (DNA-based) tests and laboratory
analyses performed on fruits and vegetables, poultry, dairy and dairy
products, juices, fish, vegetative seed and oilseed, honey, meat and
meat products, fiber products and processed foods are performed at the
Science and Technology Programs (S&T) laboratory located at: USDA, AMS,
Science and Technology Programs, National Science Laboratory (NSL), 801
Summit Crossing Place, Suite B, Gastonia, North Carolina 28054-2193.
(2) Science and Technology (S&T) Programs Science Specialty
Laboratories. The Science specialty laboratories performing aflatoxin
and other testing on peanuts, peanut products, dried fruits, grains,
edible seeds, tree nuts, shelled corn products, oilseed products, olive
oil, vegetable oils, juices, citrus products, and other commodities are
located as follows:
(i) USDA, AMS, Science & Technology, Citrus Laboratory, 98 Third
Street, SW., Winter Haven, Florida 33880-2905.
(ii) USDA, AMS, Science & Technology, Science Specialty Laboratory,
6567 Chancey Mill Road, Blakely, Georgia 39823-2785.
(3) Program laboratories. Laboratory services are available in all
areas covered by cooperative agreements providing for this laboratory
work and entered on behalf of the Department with cooperating Federal
or State laboratory agencies pursuant to authority contained in Act(s)
of Congress. Also, services may be provided in other areas not covered
by a cooperative agreement if the Administrator determines that it is
possible to provide such laboratory services.
(4) Other alternative laboratories. Laboratory analyses may be
conducted at alternative Science and Technology Programs laboratories
and can be reached from any commodity market in which a laboratory
facility is located to
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the extent laboratory personnel are available.
(5) The Plant Variety Protection (PVP) Office. The PVP office and
plant examination facility of the Science and Technology programs
issues certificates of protection to developers of novel varieties of
plants which reproduce sexually. The PVP office is located as follows:
USDA, AMS, Science & Technology Programs, Plant Variety Protection
Office, National Agricultural Library Building, Room 401, 10301
Baltimore Boulevard, Beltsville, MD 20705-2351.
(6) Science and Technology Programs headquarters offices. The
examination, licensure, quality assurance reviews, laboratory approval/
certification and consultation services are provided by headquarters
staff located in Washington, DC. The main headquarters office is
located as follow: USDA, AMS, Science and Technology Programs, Office
of the Deputy Administrator, Room 1092 South Agriculture Bldg., Mail
Stop 0270, 1400 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250-0270.
(7) Statistics Branch Office. The Statistics Branch office of
Science and Technology Programs (S&T) provides statistical services to
the Agency and other agencies within the USDA. In addition, the
Statistics Branch office generates sample plans and performs consulting
services for research studies in joint efforts with or in a leading
role with other program areas of AMS or of the USDA. The Statistics
Branch office is located as follows: USDA, AMS, S&T Statistics Branch,
Room 0603 South Agriculture Bldg., Mail Stop 0223, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250-0223.
(8) Technical Services Branch Office. The Technical Services Branch
office of Science and Technology (S&T) provides technical support
services to all Agency programs and other agencies within the USDA. In
addition, the Technical Services Branch office provides certification
and approval services of private and State government laboratories as
well as oversees quality assurance programs; import and export
certification of laboratory tested commodities. The Technical Services
Branch mailing address is as follows: USDA, AMS, S&T Technical Services
Branch, South Agriculture Bldg., Mail Stop 0272, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250-0272. The Technical Services Branch
office is located as follows: USDA, AMS, Science and Technology
Technical Services Branch, Room 0604 South Agriculture Bldg., 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250.
(9) Monitoring Programs Office. Services afforded by the Pesticide
Data Program (PDP) and Microbiological Data Program (MDP) are provided
by USDA, AMS, Science and Technology Monitoring Programs Office, 8609
Sudley Road, Suite 206, Manassas, VA 20110-8411.
(10) Pesticide Records Branch Office. Services afforded by the
Federal Pesticide Record Keeping Program for restricted-use pesticides
by private certified applicators are provided by USDA, AMS, Science and
Technology, Pesticide Records Branch, 8609 Sudley Road, Suite 203,
Manassas, VA 20110-8411.
(b) The addresses of the various laboratories and offices appear in
the pertinent parts of this subchapter. A prospective applicant may
obtain a current listing of addresses and telephone numbers of Science
and Technology Programs laboratories, offices, and facilities by
addressing an inquiry to the Administrative Officer, Science and
Technology Programs, Agricultural Marketing Service, United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA), 1400 Independence Ave., SW., Room
0725 South Agriculture Building, Mail Stop 0271, Washington, DC 20250-
0271.
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3. Sections 91.24 and 91.25 are revised to read as follows:
Sec. 91.24 Reports of test results.
(a) Results of analyses are provided, in writing, by facsimile, by
e-mail or other electronic means to the applicant.
(b) Results of test analyses and laboratory determinations provided
by AMS laboratory services only apply to the submitted samples and do
not represent the quality, condition or disposition of the lot from
which each sample was taken.
(c) Applicants may call the appropriate Science and Technology
laboratory for interim or final results prior to issuance of the formal
report. The advance results may be telegraphed, e-mailed, telephoned,
or sent by facsimile to the applicant. Any additional expense for
advance information shall be borne by the requesting party.
(d) A letter report in lieu of an official certificate of analysis
may be issued by a laboratory representative when such action appears
to be more suitable than a certificate: Provided, that, issuance of
such report is approved by the Deputy Administrator.
Sec. 91.25 Certificate requirements.
Certificates of analysis and other memoranda concerning laboratory
service and the reporting of results should have the following
requirements:
(a) Certificates of analysis shall be on standard printed forms
approved by the Deputy Administrator;
(b) Shall be printed in English;
(c) Shall have results typewritten, computer generated, or
handwritten in ink and shall be clearly legible;
(d) Shall show the results of laboratory tests in a uniform,
accurate, and concise manner with abbreviations identified on the form;
(e) Shall show the information required by Sec. Sec. 91.26 through
91.29; and
(f) Show only such other information and statements of fact as are
provided in the instructions authorized by the Deputy Administrator.
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4. Sections 91.37 through 91.39 are revised to read as follows:
Sec. 91.37 Standard hourly fee rate for laboratory testing, analysis,
and other services.
(a) The standard hourly fee rate in this section for the individual
laboratory analyses cover the costs of Science and Technology
laboratory services, including issuance of certificates and personnel
and overhead costs other than the commodity inspection fees referred to
in 7 CFR 52.42 through 52.46, 52.48 through 52.51, 55.510 through
55.530, 55.560 through 55.570, 58.38 through 58.43, 58.45 through
58.46, 70.71 through 70.72, and 70.75 through 70.78. The hourly fee
rates in this part 91 apply to all commodity and processed commodity
products. The new fiscal year for Science and Technology Programs
commences on October 1 of each calendar year. The rate for laboratory
services is $78.00 per hour in fiscal year 2010, $81.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2011, and $83.00 per hour in fiscal year 2012.
(b) Printed updated schedules of the laboratory testing fees for
processed fruits and vegetables (7 CFR part 93), poultry and egg
products (7 CFR part 94), and meat and meat products (7 CFR part 98)
will be available for distribution to Science and Technology's
constituents and stakeholders by the individual Laboratory Directors of
Science and Technology laboratories listed in Sec. 91.5. These single
test laboratory fee schedules are based upon the applicable hourly fee
rate stated in paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in this section, charges will be
made at the applicable hourly rate stated in paragraph (a) of this
section for the time required to perform the service. A charge will be
made for service pursuant to each request or certificate issued.
[[Page 17289]]
(d) When a laboratory test service is provided for AMS by a
commercial or State government laboratory, the applicant will be
assessed a fee which covers the costs to the Science and Technology
program for the service provided.
(e) When Science and Technology staff provides applied and
developmental research and training activities for microbiological,
physical, chemical, and biomolecular analyses on agricultural
commodities the applicant will be charged a fee on a reimbursable cost
to AMS basis.
Sec. 91.38 Additional fees for appeal of analysis.
(a) The applicant for appeal sample testing will be charged a fee
at the hourly rate for laboratory service that appears in this
paragraph. The new fiscal year for Science and Technology Programs
commences on October 1 of each calendar year. The appeal rate for
laboratory service is $93.00 per hour in fiscal year 2010, $96.00 per
hour in fiscal year 2011, and $99.00 per hour in fiscal year 2012.
(b) The appeal fee will not be waived for any reason if analytical
testing was completed in addition to the original analysis.
Sec. 91.39 Premium hourly fee rates for overtime and legal holiday
service.
(a) When analytical testing in a Science and Technology facility
requires the services of laboratory personnel beyond their regularly
assigned tour of duty on any day or on a day outside the established
schedule, such services are considered as overtime work. When
analytical testing in a Science and Technology facility requires the
services of laboratory personnel on a Federal holiday or a day
designated in lieu of such a holiday, such services are considered
holiday work. Laboratory analyses initiated at the request of the
applicant to be rendered on Federal holidays, and on an overtime basis
will be charged fees at hourly rates for laboratory service that appear
in this paragraph. The new fiscal year for Science and Technology
Programs commences on October 1 of each calendar year. The laboratory
analysis rate for overtime service is $93.00 per hour in fiscal year
2010, $96.00 per hour in fiscal year 2011, and $99.00 per hour in
fiscal year 2012. The laboratory analysis rate for Federal holiday or
designed holiday service is $108.00 per hour in fiscal year 2010,
$111.00 per hour in fiscal year 2011, and $115.00 per hour in fiscal
year 2012.
(b) Information on legal holidays or what constitutes overtime
service at a particular Science and Technology laboratory is available
from the Laboratory Director or facility manager.
Dated: April 1, 2010.
Rayne Pegg,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. 2010-7739 Filed 4-5-10; 8:45 am]
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