Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for Office of Management and Budget Review; Comment Request; Voluntary National Retail Food Regulatory Program Standards, 17132-17135 [2011-7191]
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17132
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2011 / Notices
information as well as the adoption of
electronic recordkeeping and electronic
submission of data to the agency; and,
review of product tracing procedures
should be part of standard audits.
(Response) FDA agrees that
recordkeeping is key to effective
solicits comments. Such changes to the
current recordkeeping requirements can
only be accomplished by notice and
comment rulemaking.
FDA estimates the burden of this
collection of information as follows:
product tracing. However, to the extent
that the comments suggest changes to
the requirements of the recordkeeping
regulations in sections 1.326 through
1.363, such requests are outside the
scope of the four collection of
information topics on which the notice
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING BURDEN 1
Number of
recordkeepers
Annual frequency per
recordkeeping
1.337, 1.345, and 1.352 (Records maintenance) ................
1.337, 1.345, and 1.352 (Learning for new firms) ...............
379,493
18,975
1
1
379,493
18,975
13.228
4.790
5,020,000
90,890
Total ..............................................................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
5,110,890
21 CFR Section
1 There
Hours per
record
Total hours
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
This estimate is based on FDA’s
estimate of the number of facilities
affected by the final rule entitled
‘‘Establishment and Maintenance of
Records Under the Public Health
Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness
and Response Act of 2002,’’ published in
the Federal Register of December 9,
2004 (69 FR 71562 at 71630). With
regard to records maintenance, FDA
estimates that approximately 379,493
facilities will spend 13.228 hours
collecting, recording, and checking for
accuracy of the limited amount of
additional information required by the
regulations, for a total of 5,020,000
hours annually. In addition, FDA
estimates that new firms entering the
affected businesses will incur a burden
from learning the regulatory
requirements and understanding the
records required for compliance. In this
regard, the Agency estimates the
number of new firms entering the
affected businesses to be 5 percent of
379,493, or 18,975 firms. Thus, FDA
estimates that approximately 18,975
facilities will spend 4.790 hours
learning about the recordkeeping and
records access requirements, for a total
of 90,890 hours annually. Therefore, the
total annual recordkeeping burden is
estimated to be 5,110,890 hours.
Dated: March 23, 2011.
David Dorsey,
Acting Deputy Commissioner for Policy,
Planning and Budget.
[FR Doc. 2011–7188 Filed 3–25–11; 8:45 am]
Emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Total annual
records
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2011–N–0017]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for Office of
Management and Budget Review;
Comment Request; Voluntary National
Retail Food Regulatory Program
Standards
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a proposed collection of
information has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and clearance under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(the PRA).
DATES: Fax written comments on the
collection of information by April 27,
2011.
SUMMARY:
To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–7285, or e-mailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB control number 0910–0621. Also
include the FDA docket number found
in brackets in the heading of this
document.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Denver Presley, Jr., Office of Information
Management, Food and Drug
Administration, 1350 Piccard Dr., PI50–
400B, Rockville, MD 20850, 301–796–
3793.
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In
compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA
has submitted the following proposed
collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Voluntary National Retail Food
Regulatory Program Standards—(OMB
Control Number 0910–0621)—Extension
The Program Standards define nine
essential elements of an effective
regulatory program for retail food
establishments, establish basic quality
control criteria for each element, and
provide a means of recognition for those
state, local, and tribal regulatory
programs that meet the Program
Standards. The program elements
addressed by the Program Standards are
as follows: (1) Regulatory foundation,
(2) trained regulatory staff, (3)
inspection program based on Hazard
Analysis and Critical Control Point
(HACCP) principles, (4) uniform
inspection program, (5) foodborne
illness and food defense preparedness
and response, (6) compliance and
enforcement, (7) industry and
community relations, (8) program
support and resources, and (9) program
assessment. Each standard includes a
list of records needed to document
compliance with the standard (referred
to in the Program Standards document
as ‘‘quality records’’) and has one or
more corresponding appendices that
contain forms and worksheets to
facilitate the collection of information
needed to assess the retail food
regulatory program against that
standard. The respondents are State,
local and tribal government Agencies.
Regulatory Agencies may use existing,
available records or may choose to
develop and use alternate forms and
worksheets that capture the same
information.
In the course of their normal
activities, state, local, and tribal
E:\FR\FM\28MRN1.SGM
28MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2011 / Notices
regulatory Agencies already collect and
keep on file many of the records needed
as quality records to document
compliance with each of the Program
Standards. Although the detail and
format in which this information is
collected and recorded may vary by
jurisdiction, records that are kept as a
usual and customary part of normal
Agency activities include inspection
records, written quality assurance
procedures and records of quality
assurance checks, staff training
certificates and other training records, a
log or database of food-related illness or
injury complaints, records of
investigations resulting from such
complaints, an inventory of inspection
equipment, records of outside audits,
and records of outreach efforts (e.g.,
meeting agendas and minutes,
documentation of food safety education
activities). No new recordkeeping
burden is associated with these existing
records, which are already a part of
usual and customary program
recordkeeping activities by state, local,
and tribal regulatory Agencies, and
which can serve as quality records
under the Program Standards.
State, local, and tribal regulatory
Agencies that enroll in the Program
Standards and seek listing in the FDA
National Registry are required to report
to FDA on the completion of the
following three management tasks
outlined in the Program Standards: (1)
Conducting a program self assessment,
(2) conducting a baseline survey of the
regulated industry, and (3) obtaining an
independent outside audit (verification
audit). The results are reported to FDA
on Form FDA 3519, ‘‘FDA National
Registry Report’’ and Form FDA 3520,
‘‘Permission to Publish in National
Registry.’’ These forms are located in
Appendix I of the Program Standards
document. If a regulatory Agency
follows all the recordkeeping
recommendations in the individual
standards and their appendices, it will
have all the information needed to
complete the forms.
In April 2010, the Conference for
Food Protection approved changes to
the Program Standards. The changes
have been incorporated into a draft 2011
revision, which will be available at:
https://www.fda.gov/
retailfoodprotection. One change was to
provide an extension of time for
completion of the three management
tasks. Another change was the inclusion
of clarifying language in Standard 9 that
a jurisdiction may use its inspection
data to conduct its study of risk factor
occurrence. Although this was always
the intent in Standard 9, it was not clear
to jurisdictions that this was a viable
option.
FDA analyzed whether incorporation
of these changes alters its estimate of the
recordkeeping and reporting burdens.
FDA concluded that the changes will
lessen the annual recordkeeping burden
estimate because the management tasks
will be conducted on a less frequent
basis annually. Thus, based on its
experience with the Program Standards
over the past 3 years, FDA has reduced
its estimate of the hours per record to
94.29, from the previously estimated
157 hours per record in 2008. The
reduced recordkeeping burden hour
estimates are shown in table 1 of this
document. FDA notes that jurisdictions
that choose to analyze their inspection
data per the Standard 9 criteria will
enjoy a less resource intensive method
for tracking risk factor trends over time.
However, the Agency has not reduced
its estimate of 333 hours for Standard 9
shown in table 2 of this document. The
Agency will consider reducing this
estimate in a future information
collection request based on supporting
17133
data it expects to receive in the future
from participating jurisdictions. The
two noted changes had no effect on the
reporting burden hour estimates shown
in table 2 of this document.
Recordkeeping
FDA’s recordkeeping burden estimate
includes time required for a State, local,
or tribal Agency to review the
instructions in the Program Standards,
compile information from existing
sources, and create any records
recommended in the Program Standards
that are not already kept in the normal
course of the Agency’s usual and
customary activities. Worksheets
(Appendices) are provided to assist in
this compilation. In estimating the time
needed for the program self-assessment
(Program Standards 1–8, shown in table
1 of this document), FDA considered
responses from four state and three local
jurisdictions that participated in an FDA
Program Standards Pilot study. Table 2
of this document shows the estimated
recordkeeping burden for the
completion of the baseline data
collection and table 3 of this document
shows the estimated recordkeeping
burden for the verification audit.
In the Federal Register of January 12,
2011 (76 FR 2124), FDA published a 60day notice requesting public comment
on the proposed collection of
information. FDA received six comment
letters in response to the notice. One
comment was generally supportive of
the necessity of the information
collection and its practical utility. Five
letters contained comments outside the
scope of the four collections of
information topics on which the notice
solicits comments and thus, will not be
addressed here.
FDA estimates the burden for this
collection of information as follows:
TABLE 1—SELF ASSESSMENT
Standard
Recordkeeping activity
No. 1. Regulatory Foundation
Self Assessment: (Appendix A) Completion of worksheet recording results of evaluations
and comparison on worksheets 1.
Self Assessment: (Appendix B–2 and B–4)1 Completion of the Center for Food Protection
Field Training Manual and Documentation of Successful Completion—Field Training
Process; completion of summary worksheet of each employee training records 2.
Self Assessment: (Appendix C 1) Completion of worksheet documentation ..........................
16
Self Assessment: (Appendix D 1) Completion of worksheet documentation of jurisdiction’s
quality assurance procedures 2.
Self Assessment: (Appendix E 1) Completion of worksheet documentation ..........................
19
Self Assessment: (Appendix F 1) Selection and review of 20 to 70 establishment files @
25 minutes per file. Estimate is based on a mean number of 45. Completion of worksheet.
Self Assessment: (Appendix G 1) Completion of worksheet ..................................................
19
Emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
No. 2. Trained Regulatory
Staff.
No. 3. Hazard Analysis and
Critical Control Point.
No. 4. Uniform Inspection
Program.
No. 5. Foodborne Illness Investigation.
No. 6. Compliance Enforcement.
No. 7. Industry & Community
Relations.
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Hours per record
28MRN1
19.3
4
5
2
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 1—SELF ASSESSMENT—Continued
Standard
Recordkeeping activity
No. 8. Program Support and
Resources.
Subtotal ...........................
Self Assessment: (Appendix H 1) Selection and review of establishment files ......................
8
.................................................................................................................................................
92.3
1 Or
Hours per record
comparable documentation.
will vary depending on number of regulated food establishments and the number of inspectors employed by the jurisdiction.
2 Estimates
TABLE 2—BASELINE DATA COLLECTION
Standard
Recordkeeping activity
Hours per record
No. 9. Program Assessment ..
Baseline Data Collection (Appendices I & J) Selection and inspection of randomly selected statistical sample of 9 to 87 establishments from each of 9 facility types 1.
333
1 Calculation based on mean sample size of 39 and average FDA inspection time for each establishment type. Estimates will vary depending
on number of regulated food establishments within a jurisdiction and the number of inspectors employed by the jurisdiction.
TABLE 3—VERIFICATION AUDIT
Standard
Recordkeeping activity
Hours per record
No. 9 ......................................
Verification Audit (Appendices I & J) 1 ....................................................................................
46.15
1 We
estimate that no more than 50% of time spent to complete self assessment of all 9 Standards is spent completing verification audit worksheets. Time will be considerably less if less than 9 standards require verification audits.
Thus, FDA estimates the
recordkeeping burden for this collection
of information as follows:
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING BURDEN 1
Total annual
records
Average burden
per recordkeeping
(in hours)
Number of recordkeepers
Number of records
per recordkeeper
Appendices A–J .....................................
500
1
500
94.29
47,145
Total ................................................
..............................
..............................
..............................
..............................
47,145
FDA Worksheets 2
Total hours
1 There
Emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
2 Or
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
comparable documentation.
FDA bases its estimates of the number
of recordkeepers and the hours per
record on its experience with the
Program Standards over the past 3 years.
FDA estimates that approximately 500
regulatory jurisdictions will participate
in the Program Standards. There are
approximately 3,000 jurisdictions in the
United States and its territories that
have retail food regulatory programs.
Enrollment in the Program Standards is
voluntary and, therefore, FDA does not
expect all jurisdictions to participate.
FDA bases its estimate of the hours
per record on the recordkeeping
estimates for the management tasks of
self assessment, baseline data collection,
and verification audit (tables 1, 2, and
3 of this document) that enrolled
jurisdictions must perform, a total of
471.45 hours (92.3 + 333 + 46.15 =
471.45). As noted, based on its
experience with the Program Standards
over the past 3 years, FDA has reduced
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17:14 Mar 25, 2011
Jkt 223001
its estimate of the number of
recordkeeping hours that enrolled
jurisdictions will perform annually to
94.29, from the previously estimated
157 hours per record in 2008. FDA
estimates that, annually, 500
recordkeepers will spend 94.29 hours
performing the required recordkeeping
for a total of 47,145 hours.
Reporting
FDA requires regulatory jurisdictions
that participate in the Program
Standards to submit two forms
annually: Form FDA 3519, ‘‘FDA
National Registry Report,’’ and Form
FDA 3520, ‘‘Permission to Publish in
National Registry.’’ Form FDA 3519
requires the name and address of the
jurisdiction; completion dates for the
self assessment, baseline survey
(original and update), and verification
audit; names of the person(s) who
completed the self-assessment,
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Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
verification audit, baseline survey,
baseline survey update, and action plan;
signature of the program manager; and
date the form was completed. Form FDA
3520 requires the name of the
jurisdiction, completion date of the self
assessment, date of the verification
audit report, name of the auditor,
signature and title of the official
completing the form, and date the form
was completed.
The reporting burden in table 5 of this
document includes only the time
necessary to fill out and send the forms,
as compiling the underlying information
(including self-assessment reports,
baseline surveys, outside audits, and
supporting documentation) is accounted
for under the recordkeeping estimates in
table 1 of this document.
FDA estimates the reporting burden
for this collection of information as
follows:
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17135
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2011 / Notices
TABLE 5—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN 1
Form FDA No.
Number of
respondents
Number of
responses per
respondent
Total annual
respondents
Average burden
per response
(in Hours) 2
3519 .......................................................
3520 .......................................................
CFP Training Plan and Log ...................
Total ................................................
500
500
500
..............................
1
1
3
..............................
500
500
1,500
..............................
1/60
1/60
1/60
..............................
1 There
Total hours
50
50
150
250
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
estimates of less than 1 hour are expressed as a fraction of an hour in the format ‘‘[number of minutes per response]/60’’.
2 Burden
FDA bases its estimates of the number
of respondents and the hours per
response on its experience with the
Program Standards over the past 3 years.
As explained previously in this
document, FDA estimates that 500
regulatory jurisdictions will enroll in
the Program Standards. FDA estimates a
total of 12 minutes annually for each
enrolled jurisdiction to complete both
forms. FDA bases its estimate on the
small number of data elements on the
two forms and the ease of availability of
the information. FDA estimates that,
annually, 500 regulatory jurisdictions
will submit one Form FDA 3519 for a
total of 500 annual responses. Each
submission is estimated to take 0.1 hour
per response for a total of 50 hours. FDA
estimates that, annually, 500 regulatory
jurisdictions will submit one Form FDA
3520 for a total of 500 annual responses.
Each of these submissions is estimated
to take 0.1 hour per response for a total
of 50 hours. FDA estimates that,
annually, 500 regulatory jurisdictions
will submit three requests for
documentation of successful completion
of staff training using the CFP Training
Plan and Log for a total of 1,500 annual
responses. Each submission is estimated
to take 0.1 hour per response for a total
of 150 hours. Thus, the total reporting
burden for this information collection is
250 hours.
Dated: March 23, 2011.
David Dorsey,
Acting Deputy Commissioner for Policy,
Planning and Budget.
[FR Doc. 2011–7191 Filed 3–25–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
Emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2011–N–0148]
Clarifying Edits to Existing Special
Controls Guidance Documents;
Availability
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:14 Mar 25, 2011
Jkt 223001
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing the
availability of updated special controls
guidance documents for class II devices,
which contain edits that reflect the
Agency’s effort to clarify questions and
confusion regarding its position on the
binding nature of special controls
guidance documents. The revised
language does not change the Agency’s
position or view, but rather is intended
to clarify its position and remedy any
possible confusion or
misunderstanding.
DATES: Submit either electronic or
written comments on this document at
any time. General comments on Agency
guidance documents are welcome at any
time.
ADDRESSES: See the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section for electronic
access to affected documents.
Submit electronic comments on this
document to https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit written
comments to the Division of Dockets
Management (HFA–305), Food and Drug
Administration, 5630 Fishers Lane, rm.
1061, Rockville, MD 20852. Identify
comments with the docket number
found in brackets in the heading of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Philip Desjardins, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Bldg. 66, rm. 5452, Silver Spring,
MD 20993–0002, 301–796–5678; or
Stephen Ripley, Center for Biologics
Evaluation and Research (HFM–17),
Food and Drug Administration, 1401
Rockville Pike, suite 200N, Rockville,
MD 20852, 301–827–6210.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Background
In December 2008, FDA revised the
cover sheet and standard language in
newly issued special controls guidance
documents to clarify the effect of a
guidance that has been established as a
special control (‘‘special controls
guidance’’). In order to comply with the
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
special controls guidance,
manufacturers must address each
identified risk to health presented in the
guidance for the class II device by either
meeting the recommendations of the
guidance or by some other means that
provides equivalent assurances of safety
and effectiveness.
FDA is now updating all preDecember 2008 special controls
guidance documents with the revised
standard language. Revisions to the
special controls guidance documents
include clarifying the statement of the
special controls guidance document’s
effect by replacing the standard
language with the following statement:
‘‘The firm must show that its device
addresses the issues of safety and
effectiveness identified in this guidance,
either by meeting the recommendations
of this guidance or by some other means
that provides equivalent assurances of
safety and effectiveness.’’
Special controls guidance documents
on the following topics have been
affected: 1
1. Acute Upper Airway Obstruction
Devices,
2. Clitoral Engorgement Devices,
3. Anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S.
cerevisiae) Antibody (ASCA) Premarket
Notifications,
4. Shoulder Joint Metal/Polymer/
Metal Nonconstrained or SemiConstrained Porous-Coated Uncemented
Prosthesis,
5. B-Type Natriuretic Peptide
Premarket Notifications,
6. Home Uterine Activity Monitors,
7. Pharmacy Compounding Systems,
8. Tissue Culture Media for Human ex
vivo Tissue and Cell Culture Processing
Applications,
9. Indwelling Blood Gas Analyzers,
10. Ingestible Telemetric
Gastrointestinal Capsule Imaging
System,
11. Premarket Notifications for
Automated Differential Cell Counter for
Immature or Abnormal Blood Cells,
12. Medical Washers and Medical
Washer-Disinfectors,
1 All guidance titles throughout this document
reflect the style of the published versions.
E:\FR\FM\28MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 59 (Monday, March 28, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17132-17135]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-7191]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA-2011-N-0017]
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for Office
of Management and Budget Review; Comment Request; Voluntary National
Retail Food Regulatory Program Standards
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is announcing that a
proposed collection of information has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for review and clearance under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the PRA).
DATES: Fax written comments on the collection of information by April
27, 2011.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on the information collection are
received, OMB recommends that written comments be faxed to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer,
FAX: 202-395-7285, or e-mailed to oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the OMB control number 0910-0621.
Also include the FDA docket number found in brackets in the heading of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Denver Presley, Jr., Office of
Information Management, Food and Drug Administration, 1350 Piccard Dr.,
PI50-400B, Rockville, MD 20850, 301-796-3793.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA has
submitted the following proposed collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
Voluntary National Retail Food Regulatory Program Standards--(OMB
Control Number 0910-0621)--Extension
The Program Standards define nine essential elements of an
effective regulatory program for retail food establishments, establish
basic quality control criteria for each element, and provide a means of
recognition for those state, local, and tribal regulatory programs that
meet the Program Standards. The program elements addressed by the
Program Standards are as follows: (1) Regulatory foundation, (2)
trained regulatory staff, (3) inspection program based on Hazard
Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) principles, (4) uniform
inspection program, (5) foodborne illness and food defense preparedness
and response, (6) compliance and enforcement, (7) industry and
community relations, (8) program support and resources, and (9) program
assessment. Each standard includes a list of records needed to document
compliance with the standard (referred to in the Program Standards
document as ``quality records'') and has one or more corresponding
appendices that contain forms and worksheets to facilitate the
collection of information needed to assess the retail food regulatory
program against that standard. The respondents are State, local and
tribal government Agencies. Regulatory Agencies may use existing,
available records or may choose to develop and use alternate forms and
worksheets that capture the same information.
In the course of their normal activities, state, local, and tribal
[[Page 17133]]
regulatory Agencies already collect and keep on file many of the
records needed as quality records to document compliance with each of
the Program Standards. Although the detail and format in which this
information is collected and recorded may vary by jurisdiction, records
that are kept as a usual and customary part of normal Agency activities
include inspection records, written quality assurance procedures and
records of quality assurance checks, staff training certificates and
other training records, a log or database of food-related illness or
injury complaints, records of investigations resulting from such
complaints, an inventory of inspection equipment, records of outside
audits, and records of outreach efforts (e.g., meeting agendas and
minutes, documentation of food safety education activities). No new
recordkeeping burden is associated with these existing records, which
are already a part of usual and customary program recordkeeping
activities by state, local, and tribal regulatory Agencies, and which
can serve as quality records under the Program Standards.
State, local, and tribal regulatory Agencies that enroll in the
Program Standards and seek listing in the FDA National Registry are
required to report to FDA on the completion of the following three
management tasks outlined in the Program Standards: (1) Conducting a
program self assessment, (2) conducting a baseline survey of the
regulated industry, and (3) obtaining an independent outside audit
(verification audit). The results are reported to FDA on Form FDA 3519,
``FDA National Registry Report'' and Form FDA 3520, ``Permission to
Publish in National Registry.'' These forms are located in Appendix I
of the Program Standards document. If a regulatory Agency follows all
the recordkeeping recommendations in the individual standards and their
appendices, it will have all the information needed to complete the
forms.
In April 2010, the Conference for Food Protection approved changes
to the Program Standards. The changes have been incorporated into a
draft 2011 revision, which will be available at: https://www.fda.gov/retailfoodprotection. One change was to provide an extension of time
for completion of the three management tasks. Another change was the
inclusion of clarifying language in Standard 9 that a jurisdiction may
use its inspection data to conduct its study of risk factor occurrence.
Although this was always the intent in Standard 9, it was not clear to
jurisdictions that this was a viable option.
FDA analyzed whether incorporation of these changes alters its
estimate of the recordkeeping and reporting burdens. FDA concluded that
the changes will lessen the annual recordkeeping burden estimate
because the management tasks will be conducted on a less frequent basis
annually. Thus, based on its experience with the Program Standards over
the past 3 years, FDA has reduced its estimate of the hours per record
to 94.29, from the previously estimated 157 hours per record in 2008.
The reduced recordkeeping burden hour estimates are shown in table 1 of
this document. FDA notes that jurisdictions that choose to analyze
their inspection data per the Standard 9 criteria will enjoy a less
resource intensive method for tracking risk factor trends over time.
However, the Agency has not reduced its estimate of 333 hours for
Standard 9 shown in table 2 of this document. The Agency will consider
reducing this estimate in a future information collection request based
on supporting data it expects to receive in the future from
participating jurisdictions. The two noted changes had no effect on the
reporting burden hour estimates shown in table 2 of this document.
Recordkeeping
FDA's recordkeeping burden estimate includes time required for a
State, local, or tribal Agency to review the instructions in the
Program Standards, compile information from existing sources, and
create any records recommended in the Program Standards that are not
already kept in the normal course of the Agency's usual and customary
activities. Worksheets (Appendices) are provided to assist in this
compilation. In estimating the time needed for the program self-
assessment (Program Standards 1-8, shown in table 1 of this document),
FDA considered responses from four state and three local jurisdictions
that participated in an FDA Program Standards Pilot study. Table 2 of
this document shows the estimated recordkeeping burden for the
completion of the baseline data collection and table 3 of this document
shows the estimated recordkeeping burden for the verification audit.
In the Federal Register of January 12, 2011 (76 FR 2124), FDA
published a 60-day notice requesting public comment on the proposed
collection of information. FDA received six comment letters in response
to the notice. One comment was generally supportive of the necessity of
the information collection and its practical utility. Five letters
contained comments outside the scope of the four collections of
information topics on which the notice solicits comments and thus, will
not be addressed here.
FDA estimates the burden for this collection of information as
follows:
Table 1--Self Assessment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Recordkeeping activity Hours per record
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. 1. Regulatory Foundation................ Self Assessment: (Appendix A) Completion of 16
worksheet recording results of evaluations
and comparison on worksheets \1\.
No. 2. Trained Regulatory Staff............. Self Assessment: (Appendix B-2 and B-4)\1\ 19.3
Completion of the Center for Food Protection
Field Training Manual and Documentation of
Successful Completion--Field Training
Process; completion of summary worksheet of
each employee training records \2\.
No. 3. Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Self Assessment: (Appendix C \1\) Completion 4
Point. of worksheet documentation.
No. 4. Uniform Inspection Program........... Self Assessment: (Appendix D \1\) Completion 19
of worksheet documentation of jurisdiction's
quality assurance procedures \2\.
No. 5. Foodborne Illness Investigation...... Self Assessment: (Appendix E \1\) Completion 5
of worksheet documentation.
No. 6. Compliance Enforcement............... Self Assessment: (Appendix F \1\) Selection 19
and review of 20 to 70 establishment files @
25 minutes per file. Estimate is based on a
mean number of 45. Completion of worksheet.
No. 7. Industry & Community Relations....... Self Assessment: (Appendix G \1\) Completion 2
of worksheet.
[[Page 17134]]
No. 8. Program Support and Resources........ Self Assessment: (Appendix H \1\) Selection 8
and review of establishment files.
Subtotal................................ .............................................. 92.3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Or comparable documentation.
\2\ Estimates will vary depending on number of regulated food establishments and the number of inspectors
employed by the jurisdiction.
Table 2--Baseline Data Collection
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Recordkeeping activity Hours per record
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. 9. Program Assessment................... Baseline Data Collection (Appendices I & J) 333
Selection and inspection of randomly selected
statistical sample of 9 to 87 establishments
from each of 9 facility types \1\.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Calculation based on mean sample size of 39 and average FDA inspection time for each establishment type.
Estimates will vary depending on number of regulated food establishments within a jurisdiction and the number
of inspectors employed by the jurisdiction.
Table 3--Verification Audit
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard Recordkeeping activity Hours per record
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. 9....................................... Verification Audit (Appendices I & J) \1\..... 46.15
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ We estimate that no more than 50% of time spent to complete self assessment of all 9 Standards is spent
completing verification audit worksheets. Time will be considerably less if less than 9 standards require
verification audits.
Thus, FDA estimates the recordkeeping burden for this collection of
information as follows:
Table 4--Estimated Annual Recordkeeping Burden \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average burden
FDA Worksheets \2\ Number of Number of records Total annual per recordkeeping Total hours
recordkeepers per recordkeeper records (in hours)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendices A-J........................................... 500 1 500 94.29 47,145
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................ ................. ................. ................. ................. 47,145
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
\2\ Or comparable documentation.
FDA bases its estimates of the number of recordkeepers and the
hours per record on its experience with the Program Standards over the
past 3 years. FDA estimates that approximately 500 regulatory
jurisdictions will participate in the Program Standards. There are
approximately 3,000 jurisdictions in the United States and its
territories that have retail food regulatory programs. Enrollment in
the Program Standards is voluntary and, therefore, FDA does not expect
all jurisdictions to participate.
FDA bases its estimate of the hours per record on the recordkeeping
estimates for the management tasks of self assessment, baseline data
collection, and verification audit (tables 1, 2, and 3 of this
document) that enrolled jurisdictions must perform, a total of 471.45
hours (92.3 + 333 + 46.15 = 471.45). As noted, based on its experience
with the Program Standards over the past 3 years, FDA has reduced its
estimate of the number of recordkeeping hours that enrolled
jurisdictions will perform annually to 94.29, from the previously
estimated 157 hours per record in 2008. FDA estimates that, annually,
500 recordkeepers will spend 94.29 hours performing the required
recordkeeping for a total of 47,145 hours.
Reporting
FDA requires regulatory jurisdictions that participate in the
Program Standards to submit two forms annually: Form FDA 3519, ``FDA
National Registry Report,'' and Form FDA 3520, ``Permission to Publish
in National Registry.'' Form FDA 3519 requires the name and address of
the jurisdiction; completion dates for the self assessment, baseline
survey (original and update), and verification audit; names of the
person(s) who completed the self-assessment, verification audit,
baseline survey, baseline survey update, and action plan; signature of
the program manager; and date the form was completed. Form FDA 3520
requires the name of the jurisdiction, completion date of the self
assessment, date of the verification audit report, name of the auditor,
signature and title of the official completing the form, and date the
form was completed.
The reporting burden in table 5 of this document includes only the
time necessary to fill out and send the forms, as compiling the
underlying information (including self-assessment reports, baseline
surveys, outside audits, and supporting documentation) is accounted for
under the recordkeeping estimates in table 1 of this document.
FDA estimates the reporting burden for this collection of
information as follows:
[[Page 17135]]
Table 5--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average burden
Form FDA No. Number of responses per Total annual per response (in Total hours
respondents respondent respondents Hours) \2\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3519..................................................... 500 1 500 1/60 50
3520..................................................... 500 1 500 1/60 50
CFP Training Plan and Log................................ 500 3 1,500 1/60 150
Total................................................ ................. ................. ................. ................. 250
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
\2\ Burden estimates of less than 1 hour are expressed as a fraction of an hour in the format ``[number of minutes per response]/60''.
FDA bases its estimates of the number of respondents and the hours
per response on its experience with the Program Standards over the past
3 years. As explained previously in this document, FDA estimates that
500 regulatory jurisdictions will enroll in the Program Standards. FDA
estimates a total of 12 minutes annually for each enrolled jurisdiction
to complete both forms. FDA bases its estimate on the small number of
data elements on the two forms and the ease of availability of the
information. FDA estimates that, annually, 500 regulatory jurisdictions
will submit one Form FDA 3519 for a total of 500 annual responses. Each
submission is estimated to take 0.1 hour per response for a total of 50
hours. FDA estimates that, annually, 500 regulatory jurisdictions will
submit one Form FDA 3520 for a total of 500 annual responses. Each of
these submissions is estimated to take 0.1 hour per response for a
total of 50 hours. FDA estimates that, annually, 500 regulatory
jurisdictions will submit three requests for documentation of
successful completion of staff training using the CFP Training Plan and
Log for a total of 1,500 annual responses. Each submission is estimated
to take 0.1 hour per response for a total of 150 hours. Thus, the total
reporting burden for this information collection is 250 hours.
Dated: March 23, 2011.
David Dorsey,
Acting Deputy Commissioner for Policy, Planning and Budget.
[FR Doc. 2011-7191 Filed 3-25-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-01-P