Reducing Regulatory Burden; Retrospective Review Under Executive Order 13563, 13532-13534 [2011-5839]
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13532
§ 1206.31
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 49 / Monday, March 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
[Amended]
5. Amend § 1206.31 by removing
paragraph (h), and redesignating
paragraph (i) as paragraph (h).
6. Revise § 1206.32 to read as follows:
§ 1206.32
Term of office.
The term of office for first handler,
importer, domestic producer, and
foreign producer members of the Board
will be three years, and these members
may serve a maximum of two
consecutive three-year terms. When the
Board is first established, the first
handler, two importers, one domestic
producer, and two foreign producers
will be assigned initial terms of four
years; three importers, one domestic
producer, and two foreign producers
will be assigned initial terms of three
years; and three importers and three
foreign producers will be assigned
initial terms of two years. Thereafter,
each of these positions will carry a full
three-year term. Members serving initial
terms of two or four years will be
eligible to serve a second term of three
years. Each term of office will end on
December 31, with new terms of office
beginning on January 1.
Dated: March 4, 2011.
Rayne Pegg,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–5715 Filed 3–11–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
13 CFR Chapter 1
[Docket No.: SBA–2011–0012]
Reducing Regulatory Burden;
Retrospective Review Under Executive
Order 13563
U.S. Small Business
Administration
ACTION: Request for information.
AGENCY:
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SBA will post comments on https://
www.regulations.gov. If you wish to
submit confidential business
information (CBI) as defined in the User
Notice at https://www.regulations.gov,
please submit the information to Martin
S. Conrey, Assistant General Counsel for
Legislation and Appropriations, Office
of General Counsel, 409 Third Street,
SW., Washington, DC 20416. Highlight
the information that you consider to be
CBI, and explain why you believe this
information should be held confidential.
SBA will review the information and
make the final determination of whether
it will publish the information or not.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Martin S. Conrey, Assistant General
Counsel for Legislation and
Appropriations, Office of the General
Counsel, 409 Third Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20416; telephone
number: 202–619–0638; fax number:
202–205–6846; e-mail address:
martin.conrey@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
As part of its implementation
of Executive Order 13563, ‘‘Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review,’’ the
Small Business Administration (SBA) is
seeking comments and information from
interested parties to assist the agency in
reviewing its existing regulations to
determine whether they should be
streamlined, expanded, or withdrawn.
The primary objectives of this review
are to make SBA’s regulatory program
more cost effective and less burdensome
on participants in the Agency’s
programs while continuing to promote
economic growth, innovation, and job
creation. SBA seeks public input on the
design of a plan to use for periodic
SUMMARY:
retrospective review of its regulations
and an initial list of the rules to be
reviewed under the plan.
DATES: Comments are requested on or
before April 13, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket Number SBA–
2011–0012 using any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Identify
comments by ‘‘Docket Number SBA–
2011–0012, Regulatory Burden RFI,’’
and follow the instructions for
submitting comments.
Mail: U.S. Small Business
Administration, Office of the General
Counsel, 409 Third Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20416.
The mission of the Small Business
Administration is to maintain and
strengthen the Nation’s economy by
enabling the establishment and viability
of small businesses, and by assisting in
economic recovery of communities after
disasters. In carrying out this mission,
SBA has developed a regulatory policy
that is implemented primarily through
several core program offices: Office of
Capital Access, Office of Disaster
Assistance, Office of Entrepreneurial
Development, Office of Government
Contracting and Business Development,
Office of International Trade, and Office
of Investment and Innovation. SBA’s
regulations are codified at Title 13 Code
of Federal Regulations, Chapter I, and
consist of Parts 100 through 147.
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II. Executive Order 13563
On January 18, 2011, the President
issued Executive Order 13563,
‘‘Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review,’’ that requires Federal agencies
to seek more affordable, less intrusive
means to achieve policy goals, and to
give careful consideration to the benefits
and costs of their regulations. The
Executive Order also requires agencies
to review existing rules to remove
outdated regulations that stifle job
creation and make the U.S. economy
less competitive. Agencies are directed
to develop a preliminary plan under
which they will periodically review
existing regulations to determine which
should be maintained, modified,
strengthened, or withdrawn in order to
increase their effectiveness and decrease
the burdens of the agency’s regulatory
program.
III. Retrospective Review Plan
In compliance with the executive
order, SBA seeks help in designing the
plan it will use for the periodic review
of its existing regulations and an initial
list of candidate rules for review. The
Agency’s goal is to create a systematic
method for identifying those significant
rules that are obsolete, unnecessary,
unjustified, or counterproductive. The
public is first asked to comment on how
SBA should devise its preliminary plan,
with a defined method and schedule, for
identifying certain significant rules that
may be obsolete, unnecessary,
unjustified, excessively burdensome, or
counterproductive. It would be helpful
for comments to address how SBA
could best evaluate and analyze
regulations in order to expand on those
that work and to modify, improve, or
rescind those that do not. Comments
might address how SBA can best obtain
and consider accurate, objective
information and data about the costs,
burdens, and benefits of existing
regulations and whether there are
existing sources of data that SBA can
use to evaluate the post-promulgation
effects of regulations over time. SBA is
particularly interested in the public’s
views about how well its current
processes for reviewing regulations
function and how those processes might
be expanded or otherwise adapted to
meet the objectives of Executive Order
13563. SBA is also interested in
comments about factors that we should
consider in setting priorities and
selecting rules for review.
SBA intends for its preliminary plan
to include an initial list of candidate
rules to review. SBA solicits suggestions
for specific rules that should be on the
list. In suggesting rules for review,
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 49 / Monday, March 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
commenters might usefully address,
among other things, how SBA can use
the retrospective review process to
achieve the following objectives: (1)
Promote economic growth, innovation,
competitiveness, and job creation; (2)
eliminate outdated regulations; (3)
lessen the burdens imposed on those
directly or indirectly affected by our
regulations, particularly small entities;
(4) increase the benefits provided to the
public by our regulations, and improve
the cost-benefit balance of our
regulations; (5) eliminate duplicative or
overlapping regulations; (6) reduce
paperwork by eliminating duplication,
lessening frequency, allowing electronic
submission, standardizing forms,
exempting small entities, or other
means; (7) eliminate conflicts and
inconsistencies in SBA’s regulations; (8)
simplify or clarify language in
regulations; (9) revise regulations to
address changes in technology,
economic conditions, or other factors;
(10) determine if matters in an existing
regulation could be better handled fully
by trade organizations or participants
without Federal regulations; (11) reduce
burdens by incorporating industry
consensus standards into regulations;
(12) reconsider regulations that were
based on scientific or other information
that has been discredited or superseded;
and (13) expand regulations that are
insufficient to address their intended
objective or obtain additional benefits.
Comments should focus on
regulations that have demonstrated
deficiencies. Comments that rehash
debates over recently issued rules will
be less useful. The public should focus
on rule changes that will achieve a
broad public impact, rather than an
individual, personal or corporate
benefit. Where feasible, comments
should reference a specific regulation,
by Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
citation, and provide SBA information
on what needs fixing and why.
Comments do not necessarily have to
address how to fix the perceived
problem, though such comments are
welcome. Lastly, we also want to stress
that this review is for existing rules; the
public should not use this process to
submit comments on proposed rules.
With these factors in mind, SBA is
contemplating focusing its retrospective
review on the rules that govern the
following programs: Small Business
Investment Companies (Part 107);
Surety Bond Guarantee (Part 115);
Business Loans (Part 120); Disaster
Loans (Part 123); Government
Contracting (Part 125); and HUBZone
(Part 126).
SBA has just completed a
comprehensive review of the regulations
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for the 8(a) Business Development/
Small Disadvantaged Business program
(Part 124) pursuant to section 610 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601,
et seq. The final rule reflects an
extensive public participation process,
including a lengthy notice and comment
period, several public hearings in
diverse areas of the country, and
consultations with various groups. See,
76 FR 8221 (Feb. 11, 2011). SBA is
currently conducting a similar review of
its size regulations (Part 121) and will
be soliciting specific comments on those
regulations as they are developed and
published in the Federal Register. In
light of these comprehensive reviews,
pursuant to the requirements of section
610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
SBA does not intend to include these
two sets of regulations in the
retrospective review under Executive
Order 13563.
IV. Request for Information
Consistent with the Agency’s
commitment to public participation in
the rulemaking process, SBA is issuing
this Request for Information (RFI) to
solicit views from the public on how
best to design a plan to conduct its
retrospective analysis of existing SBA
rules, and identify those rules that
should be included in the plan for
possible modification, streamlining,
expansion or repeal. While SBA
promulgates rules in accordance with
the law and to the best of its capability,
it is difficult to be certain of the
consequences of a rule, including its
costs and benefits, until it has been
tested. Therefore, SBA invites interested
parties to submit data that documents
the costs, burdens, and benefits of
existing regulations. The Agency
believes that members of the public are
likely to have useful information and
perspectives on the benefits and
burdens of existing regulations, and can
assist SBA in identifying and
prioritizing those rules that are most in
need of review.
SBA is accepting your comments from
now through April 1, 2011. Although
the Agency will not be able to respond
to every individual comment, your
input is valued and your ideas merit
careful consideration. By late May or
early June, you will have the
opportunity to review SBA’s
retrospective review plan on our Open
Government webpage, https://sba.gov/
opengovernment, as well as an initial
list of regulations that we plan to review
first.
As you comment, SBA requests that
you keep these key considerations in
mind:
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13533
• SBA must uphold its mission to
strengthen America’s economy by
providing tools to help grow businesses,
create jobs, and help victims recover
from disasters.
• SBA’s plan will be tailored to
reflect its resources, rulemaking history,
and volume.
• A number of laws or executive
orders already direct the Agency to
regularly review certain regulations.
Your input is requested on developing
a plan that is integrated with those
existing requirements.
V. List of Questions for Commenters
The list of questions below is
designed to identify issues that might
arise in the development of a
preliminary plan for the retrospective
analysis of the agency’s regulations.
This non-exhaustive list is meant to
assist in the formulation of public
comments and is not intended to restrict
the issues that may be addressed. SBA
requests that commenters identify the
specific regulation at issue and explain,
in as much detail as possible, why the
regulation should be modified,
streamlined, expanded, or withdrawn,
as well as specific suggestions of ways
SBA can better achieve its regulatory
objectives.
(1) How can SBA identify those rules
that might be modified, streamlined,
expanded, or repealed?
(2) What factors should the agency
consider in selecting and prioritizing
rules for review?
(3) Are there regulations that have
become unnecessary, or ineffective, and,
if so, what are they?
(4) Are there rules that can be
withdrawn without impairing SBA’s
regulatory programs and, if so, what are
they?
(5) Are there rules that have become
outdated and, if so, how can they be
modernized to better accomplish their
regulatory objectives?
(6) Are there rules that are still
necessary, but which have not operated
as well as expected such that a
modified, stronger, or slightly different
approach is justified?
(7) Are there regulations, or regulatory
processes that are unnecessarily
complicated or could be streamlined to
achieve regulatory objectives more
efficiently?
(8) Are there any technological
developments that can be leveraged to
modify, streamline, or repeal any
existing regulatory requirements?
(9) Are there any SBA regulations that
are not tailored to impose the least
burden on the public?
(10) How can SBA best obtain and
consider accurate, objective information
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 49 / Monday, March 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
and data about the costs, burdens, and
benefits of existing regulations?
(11) Are there existing sources of data
SBA can use to evaluate the postpromulgation effects of regulations over
time?
(12) Are there regulations that are
working well that can be expanded or
used as a model to fill gaps in other SBA
regulatory programs?
SBA notes that this RFI is issued
solely for information and planning
purposes and that the Agency is not
bound to any further actions related to
the comments submitted. All
submissions will be made publically
available on https://www.regulations.gov.
All comments received are considered
part of the public record and made
available for public inspection online at
https://www.regulations.gov. Such
information includes personal
identifying information (e.g. your name,
address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by
the commenter.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 5(b)(6).
Dated: March 8, 2011.
Sara D. Lipscomb,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2011–5839 Filed 3–11–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2011–0158; Directorate
Identifier 2010–NM–118–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; The Boeing
Company Model 767–200, –300, –300F,
and –400ER Series Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
The FAA proposes to
supersede an existing airworthiness
directive (AD) that applies to certain
Model 767–200, -300, -300F, and -400ER
series airplanes. The existing AD
currently requires an inspection to
determine if certain motor operated
valve actuators for the fuel tanks are
installed, and related investigative and
corrective actions if necessary. This
proposed AD would add airplanes and,
for certain airplanes, require additional
inspections to determine if certain
motor operated valve actuators for the
fuel tanks are installed, and related
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SUMMARY:
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investigative and corrective actions if
necessary. This proposed AD results
from fuel system reviews conducted by
the manufacturer. We are proposing this
AD to prevent an ignition source inside
the fuel tanks, which, in combination
with flammable fuel vapors, could result
in a fuel tank explosion and consequent
loss of the airplane.
DATES: We must receive comments on
this proposed AD by April 28, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE.,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this proposed AD, contact Boeing
Commercial Airplanes, Attention: Data
& Services Management, P.O. Box 3707,
MC 2H–65, Seattle, Washington 98124–
2207; telephone 206–544–5000,
extension 1; fax 206–766–5680; e-mail
me.boecom@boeing.com; Internet
https://www.myboeingfleet.com. You
may review copies of the referenced
service information at the FAA,
Transport Airplane Directorate, 1601
Lind Avenue, SW., Renton, Washington.
For information on the availability of
this material at the FAA, call 425–227–
1221.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov; or in person at the
Docket Management Facility between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays. The AD
docket contains this proposed AD, the
regulatory evaluation, any comments
received, and other information. The
street address for the Docket Office
(telephone 800–647–5527) is in the
ADDRESSES section. Comments will be
available in the AD docket shortly after
receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Douglas Bryant, Aerospace Engineer,
Propulsion Branch, ANM–140S, FAA,
Seattle Aircraft Certification Office,
1601 Lind Avenue SW., Renton,
Washington 98057–3356; telephone
425–917–6505; fax 425–917–6590; email douglas.n.bryant@faa.gov.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments about
this proposed AD. Send your comments
to an address listed under the
ADDRESSES section. Include ‘‘Docket No.
FAA–2011–0158; Directorate Identifier
2010–NM–118–AD’’ at the beginning of
your comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of this proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend this
proposed AD because of those
comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact we receive
about this proposed AD.
Discussion
On October 19, 2009, we issued AD
2009–22–13, amendment 39–16066 (74
FR 55755, October 29, 2009), for certain
Boeing Model 767–200, –300, –300F,
and –400ER series airplanes. That AD
requires an inspection to determine if
certain motor operated valve (MOV)
actuators for the fuel tanks are installed,
and related investigative and corrective
actions if necessary. That AD resulted
from fuel system reviews conducted by
the manufacturer. We issued that AD to
prevent an ignition source inside the
fuel tanks, which, in combination with
flammable fuel vapors, could result in a
fuel tank explosion and consequent loss
of the airplane.
Actions Since Existing AD Was Issued
Since we issued AD 2009–22–13,
Boeing issued a revision to Boeing Alert
Service Bulletin 767–28A0090, dated
July 3, 2008 (which was referenced as a
source of service information in AD
2009–22–13). Boeing Service Bulletin
767–28A0090, Revision 2, dated
September 2, 2010, corrects the group
configuration assignment for certain
airplanes, adds airplanes to the
effectivity, and adds additional work for
certain airplanes that accomplished
Boeing Alert Service Bulletin 767–
28A0090, dated July 3, 2008; or Boeing
Service Bulletin 767–28A0090, Revision
1, dated April 1, 2010. The actions
described in Boeing Service Bulletin
767–28A0090, Revision 2, dated
September 2, 2010, are similar to those
described in Boeing Alert Service
Bulletin 767–28A0090, dated July 3,
2008.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 49 (Monday, March 14, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 13532-13534]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-5839]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
13 CFR Chapter 1
[Docket No.: SBA-2011-0012]
Reducing Regulatory Burden; Retrospective Review Under Executive
Order 13563
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration
ACTION: Request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As part of its implementation of Executive Order 13563,
``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' the Small Business
Administration (SBA) is seeking comments and information from
interested parties to assist the agency in reviewing its existing
regulations to determine whether they should be streamlined, expanded,
or withdrawn. The primary objectives of this review are to make SBA's
regulatory program more cost effective and less burdensome on
participants in the Agency's programs while continuing to promote
economic growth, innovation, and job creation. SBA seeks public input
on the design of a plan to use for periodic retrospective review of its
regulations and an initial list of the rules to be reviewed under the
plan.
DATES: Comments are requested on or before April 13, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket Number SBA-
2011-0012 using any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Identify
comments by ``Docket Number SBA-2011-0012, Regulatory Burden RFI,'' and
follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: U.S. Small Business Administration, Office of the General
Counsel, 409 Third Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416.
SBA will post comments on https://www.regulations.gov. If you wish to
submit confidential business information (CBI) as defined in the User
Notice at https://www.regulations.gov, please submit the information to
Martin S. Conrey, Assistant General Counsel for Legislation and
Appropriations, Office of General Counsel, 409 Third Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20416. Highlight the information that you consider to be
CBI, and explain why you believe this information should be held
confidential. SBA will review the information and make the final
determination of whether it will publish the information or not.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Martin S. Conrey, Assistant General
Counsel for Legislation and Appropriations, Office of the General
Counsel, 409 Third Street, SW., Washington, DC 20416; telephone number:
202-619-0638; fax number: 202-205-6846; e-mail address:
martin.conrey@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
The mission of the Small Business Administration is to maintain and
strengthen the Nation's economy by enabling the establishment and
viability of small businesses, and by assisting in economic recovery of
communities after disasters. In carrying out this mission, SBA has
developed a regulatory policy that is implemented primarily through
several core program offices: Office of Capital Access, Office of
Disaster Assistance, Office of Entrepreneurial Development, Office of
Government Contracting and Business Development, Office of
International Trade, and Office of Investment and Innovation. SBA's
regulations are codified at Title 13 Code of Federal Regulations,
Chapter I, and consist of Parts 100 through 147.
II. Executive Order 13563
On January 18, 2011, the President issued Executive Order 13563,
``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' that requires Federal
agencies to seek more affordable, less intrusive means to achieve
policy goals, and to give careful consideration to the benefits and
costs of their regulations. The Executive Order also requires agencies
to review existing rules to remove outdated regulations that stifle job
creation and make the U.S. economy less competitive. Agencies are
directed to develop a preliminary plan under which they will
periodically review existing regulations to determine which should be
maintained, modified, strengthened, or withdrawn in order to increase
their effectiveness and decrease the burdens of the agency's regulatory
program.
III. Retrospective Review Plan
In compliance with the executive order, SBA seeks help in designing
the plan it will use for the periodic review of its existing
regulations and an initial list of candidate rules for review. The
Agency's goal is to create a systematic method for identifying those
significant rules that are obsolete, unnecessary, unjustified, or
counterproductive. The public is first asked to comment on how SBA
should devise its preliminary plan, with a defined method and schedule,
for identifying certain significant rules that may be obsolete,
unnecessary, unjustified, excessively burdensome, or counterproductive.
It would be helpful for comments to address how SBA could best evaluate
and analyze regulations in order to expand on those that work and to
modify, improve, or rescind those that do not. Comments might address
how SBA can best obtain and consider accurate, objective information
and data about the costs, burdens, and benefits of existing regulations
and whether there are existing sources of data that SBA can use to
evaluate the post-promulgation effects of regulations over time. SBA is
particularly interested in the public's views about how well its
current processes for reviewing regulations function and how those
processes might be expanded or otherwise adapted to meet the objectives
of Executive Order 13563. SBA is also interested in comments about
factors that we should consider in setting priorities and selecting
rules for review.
SBA intends for its preliminary plan to include an initial list of
candidate rules to review. SBA solicits suggestions for specific rules
that should be on the list. In suggesting rules for review,
[[Page 13533]]
commenters might usefully address, among other things, how SBA can use
the retrospective review process to achieve the following objectives:
(1) Promote economic growth, innovation, competitiveness, and job
creation; (2) eliminate outdated regulations; (3) lessen the burdens
imposed on those directly or indirectly affected by our regulations,
particularly small entities; (4) increase the benefits provided to the
public by our regulations, and improve the cost-benefit balance of our
regulations; (5) eliminate duplicative or overlapping regulations; (6)
reduce paperwork by eliminating duplication, lessening frequency,
allowing electronic submission, standardizing forms, exempting small
entities, or other means; (7) eliminate conflicts and inconsistencies
in SBA's regulations; (8) simplify or clarify language in regulations;
(9) revise regulations to address changes in technology, economic
conditions, or other factors; (10) determine if matters in an existing
regulation could be better handled fully by trade organizations or
participants without Federal regulations; (11) reduce burdens by
incorporating industry consensus standards into regulations; (12)
reconsider regulations that were based on scientific or other
information that has been discredited or superseded; and (13) expand
regulations that are insufficient to address their intended objective
or obtain additional benefits.
Comments should focus on regulations that have demonstrated
deficiencies. Comments that rehash debates over recently issued rules
will be less useful. The public should focus on rule changes that will
achieve a broad public impact, rather than an individual, personal or
corporate benefit. Where feasible, comments should reference a specific
regulation, by Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) citation, and provide
SBA information on what needs fixing and why. Comments do not
necessarily have to address how to fix the perceived problem, though
such comments are welcome. Lastly, we also want to stress that this
review is for existing rules; the public should not use this process to
submit comments on proposed rules.
With these factors in mind, SBA is contemplating focusing its
retrospective review on the rules that govern the following programs:
Small Business Investment Companies (Part 107); Surety Bond Guarantee
(Part 115); Business Loans (Part 120); Disaster Loans (Part 123);
Government Contracting (Part 125); and HUBZone (Part 126).
SBA has just completed a comprehensive review of the regulations
for the 8(a) Business Development/Small Disadvantaged Business program
(Part 124) pursuant to section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601, et seq. The final rule reflects an extensive public
participation process, including a lengthy notice and comment period,
several public hearings in diverse areas of the country, and
consultations with various groups. See, 76 FR 8221 (Feb. 11, 2011). SBA
is currently conducting a similar review of its size regulations (Part
121) and will be soliciting specific comments on those regulations as
they are developed and published in the Federal Register. In light of
these comprehensive reviews, pursuant to the requirements of section
610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, SBA does not intend to include
these two sets of regulations in the retrospective review under
Executive Order 13563.
IV. Request for Information
Consistent with the Agency's commitment to public participation in
the rulemaking process, SBA is issuing this Request for Information
(RFI) to solicit views from the public on how best to design a plan to
conduct its retrospective analysis of existing SBA rules, and identify
those rules that should be included in the plan for possible
modification, streamlining, expansion or repeal. While SBA promulgates
rules in accordance with the law and to the best of its capability, it
is difficult to be certain of the consequences of a rule, including its
costs and benefits, until it has been tested. Therefore, SBA invites
interested parties to submit data that documents the costs, burdens,
and benefits of existing regulations. The Agency believes that members
of the public are likely to have useful information and perspectives on
the benefits and burdens of existing regulations, and can assist SBA in
identifying and prioritizing those rules that are most in need of
review.
SBA is accepting your comments from now through April 1, 2011.
Although the Agency will not be able to respond to every individual
comment, your input is valued and your ideas merit careful
consideration. By late May or early June, you will have the opportunity
to review SBA's retrospective review plan on our Open Government
webpage, https://sba.gov/opengovernment, as well as an initial list of
regulations that we plan to review first.
As you comment, SBA requests that you keep these key considerations
in mind:
SBA must uphold its mission to strengthen America's
economy by providing tools to help grow businesses, create jobs, and
help victims recover from disasters.
SBA's plan will be tailored to reflect its resources,
rulemaking history, and volume.
A number of laws or executive orders already direct the
Agency to regularly review certain regulations. Your input is requested
on developing a plan that is integrated with those existing
requirements.
V. List of Questions for Commenters
The list of questions below is designed to identify issues that
might arise in the development of a preliminary plan for the
retrospective analysis of the agency's regulations. This non-exhaustive
list is meant to assist in the formulation of public comments and is
not intended to restrict the issues that may be addressed. SBA requests
that commenters identify the specific regulation at issue and explain,
in as much detail as possible, why the regulation should be modified,
streamlined, expanded, or withdrawn, as well as specific suggestions of
ways SBA can better achieve its regulatory objectives.
(1) How can SBA identify those rules that might be modified,
streamlined, expanded, or repealed?
(2) What factors should the agency consider in selecting and
prioritizing rules for review?
(3) Are there regulations that have become unnecessary, or
ineffective, and, if so, what are they?
(4) Are there rules that can be withdrawn without impairing SBA's
regulatory programs and, if so, what are they?
(5) Are there rules that have become outdated and, if so, how can
they be modernized to better accomplish their regulatory objectives?
(6) Are there rules that are still necessary, but which have not
operated as well as expected such that a modified, stronger, or
slightly different approach is justified?
(7) Are there regulations, or regulatory processes that are
unnecessarily complicated or could be streamlined to achieve regulatory
objectives more efficiently?
(8) Are there any technological developments that can be leveraged
to modify, streamline, or repeal any existing regulatory requirements?
(9) Are there any SBA regulations that are not tailored to impose
the least burden on the public?
(10) How can SBA best obtain and consider accurate, objective
information
[[Page 13534]]
and data about the costs, burdens, and benefits of existing
regulations?
(11) Are there existing sources of data SBA can use to evaluate the
post-promulgation effects of regulations over time?
(12) Are there regulations that are working well that can be
expanded or used as a model to fill gaps in other SBA regulatory
programs?
SBA notes that this RFI is issued solely for information and
planning purposes and that the Agency is not bound to any further
actions related to the comments submitted. All submissions will be made
publically available on https://www.regulations.gov.
All comments received are considered part of the public record and
made available for public inspection online at https://www.regulations.gov. Such information includes personal identifying
information (e.g. your name, address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by
the commenter.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 5(b)(6).
Dated: March 8, 2011.
Sara D. Lipscomb,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2011-5839 Filed 3-11-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025-01-P