Rules of Adjudication and Enforcement, 64803-64810 [2011-26664]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 19, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Parts Installation
(h) As of the effective date of this AD, no
person may install on any airplane a water
accumulator assembly, P/N 50029–001,
9435015, 50030–001, or 9435014 for Model
CL–600–2B19 (Regional Jet Series 100 & 440)
airplanes, or P/N 50033–001 for Model CL–
600–2C10 (Regional Jet Series 700, 701, &
702), Model CL–600–2D15 (Regional Jet
Series 705), and Model CL–600–2D24
(Regional Jet Series 900) airplanes on the
pitot and static lines of the ADC.
Credit for Actions Accomplished in
Accordance With Previous Service
Information
(i) Replacing water accumulator assemblies
in accordance with Bombardier Service
Bulletin 670BA–34–147, dated April 1, 2009;
or Revision A, dated November 3, 2009 ((for
Model CL–600–2B19 (Regional Jet Series 100
& 440) airplanes)), before the effective date of
this AD is acceptable for compliance with the
corresponding replacement required by
paragraph (g)(1) of this AD.
(j) Replacing water accumulator assemblies
in accordance with Bombardier Service
Bulletin 670BA–34–030, dated April 1, 2009;
or Revision A, dated November 3, 2009 ((for
Model CL–600–2C10 (Regional Jet Series 700,
701, & 702), CL–600–2D15 (Regional Jet
Series 705), and CL–600–2D24 (Regional Jet
Series 900) airplanes)); before the effective
date of this AD, is acceptable for compliance
with the corresponding replacement required
by paragraph (g)(2) of this AD.
FAA AD Differences
Note 1: This AD differs from the MCAI
and/or service information as follows: No
differences.
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Other FAA AD Provisions
(k) The following provisions also apply to
this AD:
(1) Alternative Methods of Compliance
(AMOCs): The Manager, New York Aircraft
Certification Office (ACO), ANE–170, FAA,
has the authority to approve AMOCs for this
AD, if requested using the procedures found
in 14 CFR 39.19. In accordance with 14 CFR
39.19, send your request to your principal
inspector or local Flight Standards District
Office, as appropriate. If sending information
directly to the manager of the ACO, send it
to ATTN: Program Manager, Continuing
Operational Safety, FAA, New York ACO,
1600 Stewart Avenue, Suite 410, Westbury,
New York 11590; telephone: (516) 228–7300;
fax: (516) 794–5531. Before using any
approved AMOC, notify your appropriate
principal inspector, or lacking a principal
inspector, the manager of the local flight
standards district office/certificate holding
district office. The AMOC approval letter
must specifically reference this AD.
(2) Airworthy Product: For any requirement
in this AD to obtain corrective actions from
a manufacturer or other source, use these
actions if they are FAA-approved. Corrective
actions are considered FAA-approved if they
are approved by the State of Design Authority
(or their delegated agent). You are required
to assure the product is airworthy before it
is returned to service.
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Related Information
(l) Refer to MCAI Transport Canada Civil
Aviation Airworthiness Directive CF–2010–
37, dated October 28, 2010; Bombardier
Service Bulletin 601R–34–147, Revision B,
dated March 8, 2011; and Bombardier Service
Bulletin 670BA–34–030, Revision B, dated
March 23, 2010; for related information.
Material Incorporated by Reference
(m) You must use Bombardier Service
Bulletin 601R–34–147, Revision B, dated
March 8, 2011; and Bombardier Service
Bulletin 670BA–34–030, Revision B, dated
March 23, 2010; as applicable; to do the
actions required by this AD, unless the AD
specifies otherwise.
(1) The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference of
this service information under 5 U.S.C.
552(a) and 1 CFR part 51.
(2) For service information identified in
ˆ
this AD, contact Bombardier, Inc., 400 Cote´
Vertu Road West, Dorval, Quebec H4S 1Y9,
Canada; phone: 514–855–5000; fax: 514–
855–7401; e-mail: thd.crj@aero.bombardier.
com; Internet: https://www.bombardier.com.
(3) You may review copies of the 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.
(4) You may also review copies of the
service information that is incorporated by
reference at the National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030, or go
to: https://www.archives.gov/federal_register/
code_of_federal_regulations/ibr_locations.
html.
Issued in Renton, Washington, on
September 28, 2011.
Ali Bahrami,
Manager, Transport Airplane Directorate,
Aircraft Certification Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–26081 Filed 10–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
19 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. MISC–032]
Rules of Adjudication and
Enforcement
International Trade
Commission
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The United States
International Trade Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) amends its Rules of
Practice and Procedure concerning rules
of adjudication and enforcement. The
amendments are necessary to gather
more information on public interest
issues arising from complaints filed
SUMMARY:
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64803
with the Commission requesting
institution of an investigation under
Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930.
The intended effect of the amendments
is to aid the Commission in identifying
investigations that require further
development of public interest issues in
the record, and to identify and develop
information regarding the public
interest at each stage of the
investigation.
DATES: Effective November 18, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Megan M. Valentine, Office of the
General Counsel, United States
International Trade Commission,
telephone 202–708–2301. Hearingimpaired individuals are advised that
information on this matter can be
obtained by contacting the
Commission’s TDD terminal at 202–
205–1810. General information
concerning the Commission may also be
obtained by accessing its Internet server
at https://www.usitc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 335 of the Tariff Act of 1930
(19 U.S.C. 1335) authorizes the
Commission to adopt such reasonable
procedures, rules, and regulations as it
deems necessary to carry out its
functions and duties. This rulemaking
seeks to update certain provisions of the
Commission’s existing Rules of Practice
and Procedure. The Commission is
amending its rules covering
investigations under Section 337 of the
Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1337)
(‘‘Section 337’’) in order to increase the
efficiency of its Section 337
investigations. Specifically, the changes
to the Commission’s Rules are for the
purpose of improving the Commission’s
procedures and ensuring the
completeness of the record with respect
to the required analysis concerning the
public interest under Sections 337(d)(1)
and (f)(1). There is no change in the
Commission’s substantive practice with
respect to its consideration of the public
interest factors in its determinations
relating to the appropriate remedy.
The Commission published a notice
of proposed rulemaking (‘‘NOPR’’) in
the Federal Register at 75 FR 60671
(Oct. 1, 2010), proposing to amend the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure to gather more information
on public interest issues. Consistent
with its ordinary practice, the
Commission invited the public to
comment on all the proposed rules
amendments. This practice entails the
following steps: (1) Publication of an
NOPR; (2) solicitation of public
comments on the proposed
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amendments; (3) Commission review of
public comments on the proposed
amendments; and (4) publication of
final amendments at least thirty days
prior to their effective date.
The NOPR requested public comment
on the proposed rules within 60 days of
publication of the NOPR. In response to
requests from the American Intellectual
Property Law Association (‘‘AIPLA’’)
and the Intellectual Property Owners
Association (‘‘IPO’’), the Chairman
granted an extension by letter of
December 2, 2010, to allow those
entities to submit comments until
January 7, 2011. The Commission
received a total of eight sets of
comments from corporations or
organizations, including one each from
the ITC Trial Lawyers Association
(‘‘ITCTLA’’); Microsoft Corp.
(‘‘Microsoft’’); Intellectual Ventures,
LLC (‘‘Intellectual Ventures’’); the
Ministry of Commerce of the People’s
Republic of China (‘‘MOFCOM’’); the
China Chamber of Commerce for Light
Industrial Products & Arts-Crafts
(‘‘CCCLA’’); the Computer &
Communications Industry Association
(‘‘CCIA’’), and the IPO. In addition, the
law firm of Adduci, Mastriani &
Schaumberg LLP (‘‘AMS’’) filed a set of
comments. Three sets of comments were
received from persons writing in their
individual capacities, viz., Ms. Mary
White, Mr. Steven Beard, and a group of
economists including Messrs. Fei Deng,
Greg Leonard, and Mario Lopez. The
IPO’s comments were filed one week
late on January 14, 2011. The AIPLA did
not submit comments.
The Commission has carefully
considered all comments that it
received. The Commission’s response is
provided below in a section-by-section
analysis. The Commission appreciates
the time and effort of the commentators
in preparing their submissions.
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, the Commission certifies
that these regulatory amendments will
not have a significant impact on small
business entities.
Overview of the Amendments to the
Regulations
The final regulations contain eleven
(11) changes from those proposed in the
NOPR. These changes are summarized
here.
First, with regard to rule 210.12,
relating to the complaint, the
Commission has determined that it will
not require complainants to include
public interest allegations in the
complaint. Second, the Commission has
determined to add final rule 210.8(b) to
require complainants to file a separate
statement of public interest
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concurrently with the complaint. Final
rule 210.8(b) contains a list of the issues
that a complainant should address in its
public interest statement, which is
similar to the list contained in proposed
rule 210.12(a)(12). Third, the
Commission has determined to add final
rule 210.8(c)(1) to provide for the
responses to a Commission preinstitution Federal Register notice that
will solicit comments regarding the
public interest, including addressing
complainant’s filing under rule 210.8(b),
from proposed respondents and the
public upon receipt of a complaint.
Included in this section is a requirement
that public interest submissions are due
eight (8) calendar days after publication
of the pre-institution notice in the
Federal Register. Fourth, the
Commission has added final rule
210.8(c)(2) to provide that complainants
may file reply submissions to responses
submitted by the public and proposed
respondents in response to the
Commission’s pre-institution Federal
Register notice under final rule
210.8(c)(1). Any such replies are due
within three (3) calendar days following
the filing of submissions by proposed
respondents and the public. Fifth,
current rule 210.8(b) is redesignated
210.8(d).
Sixth, with regard to proposed rule
210.13(b), the Commission has
determined that respondents will
likewise not be required to address the
public interest in their response to the
complaint. Therefore, proposed rule
210.13(b) will not appear in the final
rules. Seventh, the Commission has
determined to add final rule 210.14(f) to
require respondents to submit a
statement of public interest in response
to complainants’ filings under § 210.8(b)
and (c)(2) when the Commission has
delegated the matter of public interest to
the presiding administrative law judge
(‘‘ALJ’’).
Eighth, the Commission has
determined to amend proposed rule
210.50(a)(4) to clarify that the parties are
requested, but not required, to file
comments on the public interest thirty
(30) days after issuance of the presiding
ALJ’s recommended determination
(‘‘RD’’) on remedy, bonding, and where
ordered, the public interest. These
comments may include any information
relating to the public interest, including
any updates to the information provided
pursuant to sections 210.8(b) and (c)
and 210.14(f), and are limited to five (5)
pages, inclusive of attachments.
Members of the public will be given an
opportunity to comment on the RD in
response to a Federal Register notice
that will be issued by the Commission
after issuance of the presiding ALJ’s RD.
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Ninth, the Commission has determined
to redesignate the currently
undesignated paragraph following
current rule 210.50(a)(4) as final rules
210.50(a)(4)(i), (ii), (iii), and (iv).
Tenth, the Commission has
determined to amend rule 210.10(b) to
indicate that the comments received
during the pre-institution period—
under final rules 210.8(b) and (c)—are
the general basis for the Commission’s
determination as to whether to delegate
the issue of public interest to the ALJ.
Rule 210.10(b) is also amended to
clarify the limits on discovery when the
Commission orders the ALJ to consider
the public interest. Eleventh, the
Commission has determined to add final
rule 210.42(a)(1)(ii)(C) to clarify that,
when ordered to take evidence on the
public interest, the ALJ shall include
analysis of the public interest in his RD.
A comprehensive explanation of the
rule changes is provided in the sectionby-section analysis below. The sectionby-section analysis includes a
discussion of all modifications
suggested by the commentators. As a
result of some of the comments, the
Commission has determined to modify
several of the proposed amendments
and to add several new sections to the
final rule as summarized above. The
section-by-section analysis will refer to
the rules as they appeared in the NOPR.
Any new rules will be discussed with
respect to the previously proposed
rules.
Section-by-Section Analysis
19 CFR Part 210
Subpart C—Pleadings
Section 210.12
The NOPR proposed to amend
§ 210.12 by adding a subsection (12) to
§ 210.12(a) to require that the
complainant provide in its complaint
specific information regarding how
issuance of an exclusion order and/or a
cease and desist order in an
investigation could affect the public
health and welfare in the United States,
competitive conditions in the United
States economy, the production of like
or directly competitive articles in the
United States, or United States
consumers.
The NOPR further proposed adding a
paragraph (k) to § 210.12 to provide that,
when a complaint is filed, the Secretary
to the Commission will publish a notice
in the Federal Register soliciting
comments from the public and the
proposed respondents on any public
interest issues arising from the
complaint. Under the proposed rules,
these comments would be limited to
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five pages and would be required to be
filed within five days of publication of
the notice. The purpose of the proposed
amendments to 210.12 was to gather
information for the Commission to
consider in deciding whether to refer
the public interest issues to the ALJ.
Microsoft, Intellectual Ventures, and
AMS contend that if the Commission
seeks more information on the public
interest, it would be sufficient to allow
the parties and the public to comment
in response to a pre-institution Federal
Register notice published immediately
after the filing of the complaint.
Microsoft, Intellectual Ventures, and
AMS are of the view that it would be
unnecessary and burdensome to require
the complaint and the respondents’
responses to the complaint to include
information on the public interest in
addition to any submissions the parties
might file in response to the preinstitution Federal Register notice.
AMS states that the Commission’s
recent practice of soliciting comments at
the beginning of the investigation is a
good one and should be made a
permanent part of Section 337
procedure. AMS notes that many parties
and members of the public have taken
advantage of the opportunity to file such
comments since the Commission began
soliciting them in 2010. AMS states that
‘‘[i]t would not be consistent with the
remedial purpose of Section 337 if
potential complainants were deterred
from coming to the ITC due to concerns
about the burdens associated with
addressing public interest issues before
there has been any adjudication of
violation or the scope of the remedy.’’
Microsoft states that requiring
information on the public interest in the
complaint and responses thereto would
be unduly burdensome in light of the
rare instances where the public interest
has been a factor in deciding whether to
issue relief. Microsoft states that to the
extent the Commission believes
amendment to its rules is necessary, the
pre-institution Federal Register notice
alone would identify to the Commission
the few instances warranting early
development of public interest
information. Microsoft, however, urges
the Commission to make clear that the
Commission is not expanding the
breadth of the statutory public interest
factors with any amendment. It believes
that open-ended and undefined
submissions regarding ‘‘competitive
conditions in the United States
economy’’ would provide little guidance
to the Commission.
According to Intellectual Ventures,
the public interest information required
in the complaint under the proposed
rules may not be in the possession of
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many complainants and determining the
potential public interest impact of a
hypothetical remedy is a highly
speculative endeavor, particularly at the
outset of an investigation. Moreover, the
proposed rules could place a burden
upon potential complainants to conduct
extensive research on subjects far
outside their businesses and expertise.
Intellectual Ventures believes a pleading
requirement would not only burden the
parties, but would run the risk of
reintroducing at least the perception
that the Commission is making a
determination of injury as part of the
determination of violation, which is in
direct opposition to the Congressional
mandate that there is no longer an
injury requirement in Section 337
investigations. Intellectual Ventures is
particularly concerned about domestic
industries that are based on the
exploitation of intellectual property
through engineering, research and
development, and licensing. Intellectual
Ventures also states that ‘‘by placing a
de facto burden on complainant to deny
the existence of public interest
concerns—a burden which the statute
does not require them to meet—this
proposal may deter some complainants
from coming to the ITC at all, which
would be contrary to the purpose and
intent of Section 337 to protect domestic
industries from unfair import
competition.’’ While Intellectual
Ventures is opposed to any change in
the current rules, it states that it is better
to solicit comments through the Federal
Register during the pre-institution stage
of the investigation than to require the
information in the pleadings.
Although not part of the official
comments, on January 19, 2011, during
the Third Annual Live at the ITC—
Forum on Section 337 of the Tariff Act
of 1930, panelists expressed concerns
that ordering a complainant to act
against its own interest by listing public
interest issues in the complaint is
essentially unfair because the statute
directs the issuance of an exclusion
order unless, upon consideration of the
public interest, the Commission decides
not to do so. Another concern was the
burden such a requirement would place
on non-practicing entities (NPEs) which
might not actually know what their
licensees are doing with the asserted
patented technology. One panelist
raised the possibility that NPEs might be
subject to sanctions if they could not
truthfully answer the public interest
questions in the complaint.
On the other hand, the ITCTLA does
not object to requiring public interest
information in the complaint.
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Commission Response
The Commission has determined that
it will not require complainants to
include public interest allegations in the
complaint. Instead, the Commission will
obtain public interest information from
the parties early in the investigation in
a format different from that which was
proposed in the NOPR. Specifically,
instead of including public interest
information in the complaint,
complainants will be required to file a
separate statement of public interest
concurrently with the filing of the
complaint. If a complainant includes
information which it deems confidential
in the submission, it will be required to
also file a nonconfidential version
concurrently with its complaint. This
final rule will be designated as 210.8(b).
Current rule 210.8(b) will be
redesignated as 210.8(d), as discussed
below.
The ITCTLA suggests that the
Commission solicit even more specific
information concerning the public
interest. In particular, the ITCTLA
suggests that the complainant identify,
to the best of its knowledge, the ‘‘like or
directly competitive articles,’’ and how
the complainant’s requested relief
would affect consumers in the United
States. The ITCTLA also suggests
different language for some of the
Commission’s final rules. For instance,
it suggests that the amendments be more
consistent with the statutory public
interest factors and proposes that a fifth
provision be included that would
require a statement as to how a
company’s requested relief would affect
consumers in the United States. The
ITCTLA also suggests that the comments
be directed to the ‘‘requested’’ exclusion
order and cease and desist order rather
than to a generic exclusion order and
cease and desist order.
MOFCOM suggests that the public
interest considerations be expanded to
include the sales of upstream and
downstream products of the subject
articles, and the operation condition of
the importer, exporter, and retailer of
the subject articles. The CCCLA suggests
that the public interest factors include
market conditions and the
competitiveness of importers,
distributors and retailers in the
upstream and downstream industry
related to the subject articles.
Economists Deng, Leonard, and Lopez
suggest that the Commission refrain
from seeking information on an
exhaustive list and instead lay out
general types of information that might
prove fruitful. Some examples of
information they deem relevant in
evaluating the impact of an exclusion
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order, are as follows: (1) The costs and
time it would take a consumer to switch
to substitute products, (2) the loss in
consumer welfare due to reduction in
product variety in differentiated product
industries, (3) the potential for a price
increase from the reduction in
competition, (4) the ability of noninfringing firms to offer close substitutes
and the time required to do so, (5)
potential entrants, i.e., potential new
suppliers of substitute goods, and (6) the
potential profit lost by vertically-related
firms versus the potential profit gained
by competitors and competitors’
vertically-related firms.
The CCIA suggests that the
Commission adopt for its public interest
rules the standard for obtaining a
permanent injunction in a federal
district court laid out by the Supreme
Court in eBay Inc v. MercExchange,
L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006) (‘‘eBay’’).
The CCIA suggested that the
Commission would need to do so in
order to comply with United States
obligations under Article III: 4 of the
GATT, specifically, a GATT decision,
United States—Section 337 of the Tariff
Act of 1930 (Nov. 7, 1989).
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that
complainants’ statement concerning the
public interest under final rule 210.8(b)
should be focused as follows: (a)
Explain how the articles potentially
subject to the order are used in the
United States; (b) identify any public
health, safety, or welfare concerns
relating to the requested remedial
orders; (c) identify like or directly
competitive articles that complainant,
its licensees, or third parties make
which could replace the subject articles
if they were to be excluded; (d) indicate
whether the complainant, its licensees,
and/or third parties have the capacity to
replace the volume of articles subject to
the potential orders in a commercially
reasonable time in the United States;
and (e) state how the requested relief
would impact consumers. These topics
will replace those currently listed in
proposed rule 210.12(a)(12). The
Commission has determined that the
final rules will not adopt the test for
permanent injunctions articulated in
eBay.
Several parties (Mary White, the
ITCTLA, AMS, MOFCOM, and the
CCCLA) state that five days is too short
a time for proposed respondents and the
public to respond to the pre-institution
Federal Register notice soliciting
comments. The ITCTLA suggests
extending this time period to seven
business days; MOFCOM suggests 10
calendar days; and AMS and the CCCLA
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suggest 15 calendar days. ITCTLA
suggests that an additional period of
seven (7) business days be allowed for
responses to these early comments.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined to
provide more time for public comment
beyond what was proposed in the NOPR
(rule 210.12(k)). Specifically, the
Commission will require that public
interest submissions be due eight (8)
calendar days after publication of the
pre-institution notice in the Federal
Register. If any such submission
includes information which the
submitting entity deems confidential, it
will be required to also file a
nonconfidential version concurrently
with its confidential submission. This
requirement will appear in final rule
210.8(c)(1).
Steven Beard suggests that public
comments in response to the preinstitution Federal Register notice
should be forwarded to the parties in
the adjudicative proceeding.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that
public interest comments should not be
forwarded by the Commission to the
complainant and proposed respondents,
since the Commission’s Electronic
Document Information System (EDIS) is
available to allow access to any
comments that are filed. No
amendments to the final rules will be
made in this regard.
MOFCOM criticizes the ‘‘and/or’’
language of the proposed amendment to
§ 210.12(k), which it believes suggests
that in some cases either, but not both,
the public or the proposed respondents
will have the right to comment on the
public interest.
Commission Response
This is not the intent of the
amendments, so to address this
comment, final rule 210.8(c)(1) states
that both proposed respondents and the
public may respond to complainants’
filings under 210.8(b).
The ITCTLA points out that under the
proposed amendment to rule 210.13,
respondents are permitted to submit a
formal response to any public interest
submissions made by members of the
general public pursuant to proposed
rules 210.12(k), but that no such
opportunity exists as a matter of right
for the complainant to do so. The
ITCTLA proposes that Rule
210.12(a)(13) be added to afford a
complainant an opportunity to file a
reply to any comments received from
the general public and respondents.
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Commission Response
The Commission has determined that
the complainant will be allowed under
final rule 210.8(c)(2) to file a reply
submission to responses submitted by
the public and proposed respondents to
the Commission’s pre-institution notice.
Any such replies are due within three
(3) calendar days of the filings under
final rule 210.8(c)(1) and are limited to
five (5) pages, inclusive of attachments.
If a complainant includes information
that it deems confidential in the
submission, it will be required to also
file a nonconfidential version
concurrently with its confidential
submission.
Section 210.13
The NOPR proposed adding a
subsection (4) to section 210.13(b) to
require respondents’ response to the
complaint to address the public interest
statements made in the complaint and
any comments received from the public
with respect to the public interest.
The ITCTLA proposes that the
respondent be allowed to amend or
supplement the public interest
statement contained in its response to
the complaint and notice of
investigation to respond to any replies
that might be filed by complainants. The
ITCTLA recommends that since this
submission is made early in the
investigation, the respondent be
permitted to supplement its public
interest submission under proposed
Rule 210.13(b)(4), where necessary and
with good cause shown.
Commission Response
Since the Commission has determined
that complainants will not be required
to include public interest information in
the complaint, respondents will
likewise not be required to address the
public interest in the response to the
complaint. The Commission has,
however, determined that respondents
must submit a mandatory statement of
public interest if the Commission has
delegated the matter of public interest to
the ALJ, as discussed below in
conjunction with proposed amendments
to rule 210.50. This provision is
reflected in final rule 210.14(f).
Subpart G—Determinations and
Actions Taken
Section 210.50
The NOPR further proposed to add
language to section 210.50(a)(4) to
provide that, after the service of the
presiding ALJ’s RD on remedy and
bonding, the parties are instructed to
submit to the Commission within thirty
(30) days any information relating to the
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public interest, including any updates to
the information provided in the
complaint and response, as required by
the proposed amendments to §§ 210.12
and 210.13. Members of the public
would also be permitted to submit
information with respect to the public
interest under the proposed rule.
The NOPR further proposed to amend
section 210.50(b)(1) to provide that
unless the Commission orders
otherwise, an ALJ shall not take
evidence on the issue of the public
interest for purposes of the RD under
§ 210.42(a)(1)(ii). If the Commission
orders the ALJ to take evidence on the
public interest, the extent of the taking
of discovery by the parties shall be at
the discretion of the presiding ALJ.
The ITCTLA, IPO, Microsoft, and
Intellectual Ventures are concerned that,
by requiring public interest submissions
subsequent to the issuance of the RD but
prior to the issuance of the
Commission’s notice of review, a
misperception may be created that the
Commission is weighing public interest
information as part of its threshold
merits inquiry on review. The ITCTLA
further points out that at this stage of
the investigation, it is not known what,
if any, portions of the final initial
determination (‘‘ID’’) the Commission
has taken under review. Thus, if the
Commission determines not to review a
final ID finding no violation, or
determines to review and remand issues
to the ALJ, any submissions on the
public interest at this time would be
irrelevant or untimely.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined to
implement in its final regulations its
current practice of requesting party
comments on the public interest within
thirty (30) days after the RD issues,
under final rule 210.50(a)(4).
Solicitation of these comments is not
limited to cases in which the
Commission has delegated the public
interest issue to the ALJ. Final rule
210.50(a)(4) has been amended to clarify
that the parties are requested, but not
required, to file comments under this
provision. Such submissions are limited
to five (5) pages, inclusive of
attachments. The final rule does not
allow members of the public to submit
similar comments. Rather, the
Commission will issue a Federal
Register notice soliciting comments
from the public after an RD issues.
Additionally, the Commission has
determined to amend rule 210.50(a)(4)
to clarify that the undesignated
paragraph following current rule
210.50(a)(4) will be preserved as rule
§ 210.50(a)(4)(i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) in
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compliance with Federal Register
requirements.
With respect to the proposed
amendments to rule 210.50(b)(1), while
generally supporting the Commission’s
efforts to develop a better record on the
public interest, the ITCTLA states that it
expects that the Commission will rarely
refer the public interest issue to the ALJ
and that the proposed rules will not
change the Commission’s practice
substantively. The ITCTLA believes the
proposed rules balance the interests of
complainants, respondents, and the
public by giving each a fair opportunity
to present public interest issues early in
the investigation and to update
information at each stage of the
investigation. The ITCTLA warns that
delegation of the issue of public interest
to the ALJ has the ‘‘potential for a
significant expansion of the scope of
discovery in Section 337 investigations,
particularly with respect to third-party
discovery.’’ The ITCTLA and
Intellectual Ventures state that
discovery regarding the public interest
may lead to significant party and nonparty costs, and the ITCTLA notes that
discovery could lead to an extension of
the time required to complete
investigations. In this connection, the
ITCTLA suggests that the Commission
limit the scope of the public interest
issue that it may delegate to the ALJ in
a given case based on the complainant’s
statement of what articles are like or
directly competitive. Specifically, the
ITCTLA suggests that the Commission
include a preamble stating that it
expects ALJs to limit such discovery
appropriately, with particular
consideration for the interests of third
parties, and to ensure that public
interest discovery does not delay the
investigation and is not used
improperly.
Intellectual Ventures, Microsoft, and
AMS state that the current rules, which
solicit comments on the public interest
and analysis of public interest evidence
only after a final ID and RD is issued by
the presiding ALJ, are adequate.
Intellectual Ventures believes that
consideration of the public interest as
implemented in the NOPR would have
a detrimental effect on Section 337 by
increasing the burdens on Commission
resources, particularly those of the ALJs,
and on the parties. Intellectual Ventures
submits that Section 337’s statutory
framework puts the public interest in
issue only near the end of an
investigation, after a violation is found
and an appropriate remedy is
determined. It argues that, given the
infrequency with which genuine public
interest concerns have been implicated
in Section 337 investigations, early
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consideration of the factors is neither
necessary nor appropriate in most
investigations. It points out that
consideration of the public interest at an
early stage may encompass
investigations where public interest
considerations are non-existent, or will
not have an impact by the time the
Commission reaches a determination on
violation, e.g., some issues could be
mooted if patents are found not
infringed or invalid.
Intellectual Ventures suggests that the
final version of rule 210.50 provide for
the Commission to delegate only the
gathering of evidence to the ALJ, such
that the ALJ would collect information
and forward it to the Commission
without analyzing or addressing the
issue himself. Intellectual Ventures
expresses concern that allowing the ALJ
to both take evidence on the public
interest and analyze that evidence
would run afoul of Congress’s decision,
reflected in the 1988 amendments to the
Trade Act, to eliminate the injury
requirement in Section 337
investigations. Intellectual Ventures also
notes that the costs associated with
public interest discovery could
potentially discourage potential
complainants from making use of
Section 337 proceedings particularly
due to the broad nature of the public
interest factors addressed in § 337(d)
and (f). Intellectual Ventures expresses
concern at the implication that the
public will not have any input on the
public interest issue during discovery,
while also questioning the feasibility of
having non-parties present evidence
concerning the public interest during
discovery. Intellectual Ventures further
submits that leaving discovery on the
public interest to the ALJs’ discretion
will lead to inconsistent practices
among the ALJs, and ostensibly,
inconsistent results in the analysis of
public interest evidence.
The IPO supports the Commission’s
intent of furthering its efforts under the
statute to consider the effect of any
remedial relief granted in Section 337
investigations. It is concerned, however,
that the proposed rule delegates a new
obligation to the ALJs, who are already
faced with challenging time lines.
According to the IPO, delegating the
collection of evidence to the ALJs places
a significant, and in the vast majority of
cases, a needless burden on them at a
time when caseloads are growing and
target dates have lengthened. It is also
concerned that the new rules interject
the public interest consideration into
the investigation too early, creating a
situation where the violation
determination would be improperly
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influenced by the public interest
considerations.
Microsoft is concerned that the
proposed amendments will
unnecessarily interject ‘‘additional (and
potentially burdensome) factual,
contention, and expert discovery in the
name of ‘public policy’ ’’ that does not
truly correspond with the purpose of the
statute. It notes that the public interest
has overridden a Commission order in
only a few cases, and states that the
application of any new rules should be
correspondingly limited to the narrow
instances in which public interest
concerns are truly relevant. Microsoft
asserts that information received at the
beginning of the investigation may be
out of date or otherwise irrelevant by
the time any exclusion order would
issue.
AMS states that, historically, the
public interest rarely has been relevant
in the administration of Section 337. It
asserts that referring the public interest
issue to the ALJ would, in most cases,
be superfluous and premature, noting
that a large percentage of cases settle or
result in a determination of no violation.
The IPO and Intellectual Ventures
comment that referring the public
interest issue to the ALJ will increase
the instances of discovery abuse,
particularly in regard to third parties.
The ITCTLA also warns that the
proposed rules could have the
unintended consequence of discovery
abuse, particularly in regard to third
parties. Intellectual Ventures and
Microsoft believe that the proposed
rules amendments could overwhelm the
Commission process at all stages,
particularly by overburdening the ALJ,
and lead to longer target dates for the
completion of investigations.
Mary White suggests that the
Commission clarify that the ALJ would
not be allowed to take public interest
evidence, or consider the public interest
comments, unless ordered to do so by
the Commission.
On the other hand, Steven Beard
suggests that an ALJ should be able to
take evidence on the issue of the public
interest, without restrictions, in all
investigations and should be mandated
to address the substantive issues raised
in the public comments when writing
their decisions. MOFCOM also believes
the ALJ should always be empowered to
take evidence on and to address the
public interest without reliance on a
Commission order.
Commission Response
Rule 210.10(b) has been amended to
indicate that the comments received
during the pre-institution period—
under final rules 210.8(b) and (b)—are
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the general basis for the Commission’s
determination as to whether to delegate
the issue of public interest to the ALJ.
Since proposed rule 210.50(b)(1) clearly
states that ‘‘[u]nless the Commission
orders otherwise, an ALJ shall not take
evidence on the issue of the public
interest * * *[,]’’ the final rule will not
be amended in that respect. The
amendment to rule 210.10(b), however,
makes clear that, when directed to
consider the public interest, the ALJ is
expected to limit public interest
discovery appropriately, with particular
consideration for third parties, and not
allow such discovery to delay the
investigation or be used improperly.
The Commission notes that, when the
ALJ is not directed to consider the
public interest, the proposed
amendments do not expand scope of
discovery beyond the issues bearing
upon violation. Furthermore, the
Commission has amended current rule
210.42(a)(1)(ii) to include
§ 210.42(a)(1)(ii)(C), which provides
that, when ordered to take evidence on
the public interest, the ALJ shall include
analysis of the public interest in his RD.
Regulatory Analysis of Proposed
Amendments to the Commission’s Rules
The Commission has determined that
the final rules do not meet the criteria
described in section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, Oct. 4, 1993)
and thus do not constitute a significant
regulatory action for purposes of the
Executive Order.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) is inapplicable to this
rulemaking because it is not one for
which a notice of final rulemaking is
required under 5 U.S.C. 553(b) or any
other statute. Although the Commission
chose to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking, these regulations are
‘‘agency rules of procedure and
practice,’’ and thus are exempt from the
notice requirement imposed by 5 U.S.C.
553(b).
These final rules do not contain
federalism implications warranting the
preparation of a federalism summary
impact statement pursuant to Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, Aug. 4,
1999).
No actions are necessary under the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) because the final
rules will not result in the expenditure
by State, local, and tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector,
of $100,000,000 or more in any one
year, and will not significantly or
uniquely affect small governments.
The final rules are not major rules as
defined by section 804 of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
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Fairness Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et
seq.). Moreover, they are exempt from
the reporting requirements of the
Contract With America Advancement
Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–121) because
they concern rules of agency
organization, procedure, or practice that
do not substantially affect the rights or
obligations of non-agency parties.
The amendments are not subject to
section 3504(h) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
because it is part of an administrative
action or investigation against specific
individuals or entities. 44 U.S.C.
3518(c)(1)(B)(ii).
List of Subjects in 19 CFR Part 210
Administration practice and
procedure, Business and industry,
Customs duties and inspection, Imports,
Investigations.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, 19 CFR part 210 is amended
as set forth below:
PART 210—ADJUDICATION AND
ENFORCEMENT
1. The authority citation for part 210
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 19 U.S.C. 1333, 1335, and 1337.
2. Amend § 210.8 by redesignating
paragraph (b) as paragraph (d), and
adding new paragraphs (b) and (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 210.8 Commencement of reinstitution
proceedings.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Provide specific information
regarding the public interest.
Complainant must file, concurrently
with the complaint, a separate statement
of public interest, not to exceed five
pages, inclusive of attachments,
addressing how issuance of the
requested relief, i.e., a general exclusion
order, a limited exclusion order, and/or
a cease and desist order, in this
investigation could affect the public
health and welfare in the United States,
competitive conditions in the United
States economy, the production of like
or directly competitive articles in the
United States, or United States
consumers. In particular, the
submission should:
(1) Explain how the articles
potentially subject to the requested
remedial orders are used in the United
States;
(2) Identify any public health, safety,
or welfare concerns relating to the
requested remedial orders;
(3) Identify like or directly
competitive articles that complainant,
its licensees, or third parties make
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which could replace the subject articles
if they were to be excluded;
(4) Indicate whether the complainant,
its licensees, and/or third parties have
the capacity to replace the volume of
articles subject to the requested
remedial orders in a commercially
reasonable time in the United States;
and
(5) State how the requested remedial
orders would impact consumers.
(c) Publication of notice of filing. (1)
When a complaint is filed, the Secretary
to the Commission will publish a notice
in the Federal Register inviting
comments from the public and proposed
respondents on any public interest
issues arising from the complaint and
potential exclusion and/or cease and
desist orders. In response to the notice,
members of the public and proposed
respondents may provide specific
information regarding the public
interest in a written submission not to
exceed five pages, inclusive of
attachments, to the Secretary to the
Commission within eight (8) calendar
days of publication of notice of the
filing of a complaint. Comments that
substantively address allegations made
in the complaint will not be considered.
Members of the public and proposed
respondents may address how issuance
of the requested exclusion order and/or
a cease and desist order in this
investigation could affect the public
health and welfare in the United States,
competitive conditions in the United
States economy, the production of like
or directly competitive articles in the
United States, or United States
consumers. Submissions should:
(i) Explain how the articles
potentially subject to the requested
remedial orders are used in the United
States;
(ii) Identify any public health, safety,
or welfare concerns relating to the
requested remedial orders;
(iii) Identify like or directly
competitive articles that complainant,
its licensees, or third parties make
which could replace the subject articles
if they were to be excluded;
(iv) Indicate whether the complainant,
its licensees, and/or third parties have
the capacity to replace the volume of
articles subject to the requested
remedial orders in a commercially
reasonable time in the United States;
and
(v) State how the requested remedial
orders would impact consumers.
(2) Complainant may file a reply to
any submissions received under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section not to
exceed five pages, inclusive of
attachments, to the Secretary to the
Commission within three (3) calendar
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days following the filing of the
submissions.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 210.10 by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 210.10
Institution of investigation.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) An investigation shall be instituted
by the publication of a notice in the
Federal Register. The notice will define
the scope of the investigation and may
be amended as provided in § 210.14(b)
and (b). The Commission may order the
administrative law judge to take
evidence and to issue a recommended
determination on the public interest
based generally on the submissions of
the parties and the public under
§ 210.8(b) and (c). If the Commission
orders the administrative law judge to
take evidence with respect to the public
interest, the administrative law judge
will limit public interest discovery
appropriately, with particular
consideration for third parties, and will
ensure that such discovery will not
delay the investigation or be used
improperly. Public interest issues will
not be within the scope of discovery
unless the administrative law judge is
specifically ordered by the Commission
to take evidence on these issues.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 210.14 by revising the
section heading and adding paragraph
(f) to read as follows:
§ 210.14 Amendments to pleadings and
notice; supplemental submissions;
counterclaims; respondent submissions on
the public interest.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Respondent submissions on the
public interest. When the Commission
has ordered the administrative law
judge to take evidence with respect to
the public interest under § 210.50(b)(1),
respondents must submit a statement
concerning the public interest,
including any response to the issues
raised by the complainant pursuant to
§ 210.8(b) and (c)(2), at the same time
that their response to the complaint is
due. This submission must be no longer
than five pages, inclusive of
attachments.
■ 5. In § 210.42, revise the heading of
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) and add paragraph
(a)(1)(ii)(C) to read as follows:
§ 210.42
Initial determinations.
(a)(1)(i) * * *
(ii) Recommended determination on
issues concerning permanent relief,
bonding, and the public interest. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(C) The public interest under sections
337(d)(1) and (f)(1) in investigations
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64809
where the Commission has ordered the
administrative law judge under
§ 210.50(b)(1) to take evidence with
respect to the public interest.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. In § 210.50, revise paragraph (a)(4)
and (b)(1) to read as follows:
§ 210.50 Commission action, the public
interest, and bonding by respondents.
(a) * * *
(4) Receive submissions from the
parties, interested persons, and other
Government agencies and departments
with respect to the subject matter of
paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(3) of
this section. After a recommended
determination on remedy is issued by
the presiding administrative law judge,
the parties are requested to submit to
the Commission, within 30 days from
service of the recommended
determination, any information relating
to the public interest, including any
updates to the information requested by
§§ 210.8(b) and (c) and 210.14(f). Any
submissions under this section are
limited to 5 pages, inclusive of
attachments.
(i) When the matter under
consideration pursuant to paragraph
(a)(1) of this section is whether to grant
some form of permanent relief, the
submissions described in paragraph
(a)(4) of this section shall be filed by the
deadlines specified in the Commission
notice issued pursuant to § 210.46(a).
(ii) When the matter under
consideration is whether to grant some
form of temporary relief, such
submissions shall be filed by the
deadlines specified in § 210.67(b),
unless the Commission orders
otherwise.
(iii) Any submission from a party
shall be served upon the other parties in
accordance with § 210.4(g). The parties’
submissions, as well as any filed by
interested persons or other agencies
shall be available for public inspection
in the Office of the Secretary.
(iv) The Commission will consider
motions for oral argument or, when
necessary, a hearing with respect to the
subject matter of this section, except
that no hearing or oral argument will be
permitted in connection with a motion
for temporary relief.
(b)(1) With respect to an
administrative law judge’s authorization
to take evidence or other information
and to hear arguments from the parties
and other interested persons on the
issues of appropriate Commission
action, the public interest, and bonding
by the respondents for purposes of an
initial determination on temporary
relief, see §§ 210.61, 210.62, and
210.66(a). For purposes of the
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recommended determination required
by § 210.42(a)(1)(ii), an administrative
law judge shall take evidence or other
information and hear arguments from
the parties and other interested persons
on the issues of appropriate
Commission action and bonding by the
respondents upon order of the
Commission. Unless the Commission
orders otherwise, and except as
provided for in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, an administrative law judge
shall not take evidence on the issue of
the public interest for purposes of the
recommended determination under
§ 210.42(a)(1)(ii).
*
*
*
*
*
Issued: October 11, 2011.
By order of the Commission.
James R. Holbein,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2011–26664 Filed 10–18–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. FDA 1993–N–0259 (Formerly
Docket No. 1993N–0085)]
Beverages: Bottled Water Quality
Standard; Establishing an Allowable
Level for di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Final rule.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is amending its
bottled water quality standard
regulations by establishing an allowable
level for the chemical di(2ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP). As a
consequence, bottled water
manufacturers are required to monitor
their finished bottled water products for
DEHP at least once each year under the
current good manufacturing practice
(CGMP) regulations for bottled water.
Bottled water manufacturers are also
required to monitor their source water
for DEHP as often as necessary, but at
least once every year unless they meet
the criteria for source water monitoring
exemptions under the CGMP
regulations. This final rule will ensure
that FDA’s standards for the minimum
quality of bottled water, as affected by
DEHP, will be no less protective of the
public health than those set by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
for public drinking water.
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SUMMARY:
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This rule is effective April 16,
2012. The incorporation by reference of
certain publications listed in the rule is
approved by the Director of the Federal
Register as of April 16, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lauren Posnick Robin, Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS–
317), Food and Drug Administration,
5100 Paint Branch Pkwy., College Park,
MD 20740, 240–402–1639. Hearingimpaired or speech-impaired
individuals may access this number
through TTY by calling the toll-free
Federal Relay Service at 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Background
In the Federal Register of August 4,
1993 (58 FR 41612), FDA published a
proposal (‘‘the 1993 proposed rule’’) to
revise the bottled water quality standard
regulations in 21 CFR part 103 (now 21
CFR 165.110(b)) to establish or modify
the allowable levels in bottled water for
5 inorganic chemicals and 18 synthetic
organic chemicals, and to maintain the
existing allowable level for the
inorganic chemical sulfate. As required
under Section 410 of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act),
FDA proposed these revisions in
response to the publication by EPA of a
final rule (57 FR 31776; July 17, 1992)
that established national primary
drinking water regulations (NPDWRs)
consisting of maximum contaminant
levels (MCLs) for the same 23 chemicals
and establishing an MCL for sulfate in
public drinking water under the Safe
Drinking Water Act (SDWA). In a final
rule published March 26, 1996 (61 FR
13258), FDA maintained its existing
allowable level for sulfate and adopted
the proposed allowable levels for the 5
inorganic chemicals and 17 of the
synthetic organic chemicals. FDA
deferred final action on the proposed
allowable level of 0.006 milligrams/liter
(mg/L) for the chemical DEHP, in
response to a comment stating that the
proposed allowable level conflicted
with an existing prior sanction for this
substance in § 181.27 (21 CFR 181.27).
In the Federal Register of April 1,
2010 (75 FR 16363), FDA announced
that it was reopening the comment
period for the 1993 proposed rule to
seek further comment on finalizing the
allowable level for DEHP in the bottled
water quality standard. At the same
time, FDA addressed the issue of the
prior sanction for the use of DEHP
under § 181.27, which resulted in
deferral of final action in 1996. FDA
also provided updates on the use of
DEHP in bottled water bottles and lid
gaskets, and on international standards
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for DEHP in bottled water. Finally, FDA
provided information on analytical
methods for measuring DEHP that were
adopted by EPA after the 1993 proposed
rule and sought comment on the
possible inclusion of these methods in
a final regulation.
II. Summary of and Response to
Comments
The agency received 10 responses,
each containing one or more comments,
to the April 1, 2010, Federal Register
document reopening the comment
period for the 1993 proposed rule. The
agency previously received 13
responses, each containing one or more
comments, to the 1993 proposed rule.
Some comments addressed issues that
are outside the scope of this final rule
(e.g., monitoring requirements, other
chemicals, and food labeling), and thus
will not be discussed here.
Most comments supported adoption
of an allowable level for DEHP. As
noted previously, one comment
received in response to the 1993
proposed rule stated that the proposed
allowable level for DEHP conflicted
with an existing prior sanction for this
substance in § 181.27. This comment
also stated that DEHP is routinely used
as a plasticizer in gaskets, and that such
gaskets are permitted for use under
relevant European national regulations.
FDA responded to this comment in the
April 1, 2010, Federal Register
document. Briefly, FDA stated that the
prior sanction for the use of DEHP in
§ 181.27 does not preclude the agency
from establishing an allowable level for
DEHP in the bottled water quality
standard under § 165.110(b). FDA also
stated that it appears that DEHP
currently is not used in caps or closures
for bottled water in the United States
(Ref. 1), and that DEHP use is not
permitted under European Commission
regulations for plastic caps or plastic lid
gaskets in metal caps (Ref. 2). Finally,
FDA stated that several international
organizations have adopted standards
for DEHP that are the same or similar to
the proposed allowable level of 0.006
mg/L, and that the International Bottled
Water Association (IBWA), a trade
association representing a large segment
of the U.S. bottled water industry,
adopted EPA’s 0.006 mg/L standard for
DEHP (40 CFR 141.61(c)) in its Model
Code by 1995, suggesting that U.S.
manufacturers already are able to meet
the proposed level (Refs. 3 and 4). FDA
did not receive any comments
disagreeing with FDA’s conclusions.
Two comments received in response
to the April 1, 2010, Federal Register
document opposed action related to
DEHP in bottled water. The first
E:\FR\FM\19OCR1.SGM
19OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 202 (Wednesday, October 19, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 64803-64810]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-26664]
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INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
19 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. MISC-032]
Rules of Adjudication and Enforcement
AGENCY: International Trade Commission
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The United States International Trade Commission
(``Commission'') amends its Rules of Practice and Procedure concerning
rules of adjudication and enforcement. The amendments are necessary to
gather more information on public interest issues arising from
complaints filed with the Commission requesting institution of an
investigation under Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930. The intended
effect of the amendments is to aid the Commission in identifying
investigations that require further development of public interest
issues in the record, and to identify and develop information regarding
the public interest at each stage of the investigation.
DATES: Effective November 18, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Megan M. Valentine, Office of the
General Counsel, United States International Trade Commission,
telephone 202-708-2301. Hearing-impaired individuals are advised that
information on this matter can be obtained by contacting the
Commission's TDD terminal at 202-205-1810. General information
concerning the Commission may also be obtained by accessing its
Internet server at https://www.usitc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 335 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1335) authorizes
the Commission to adopt such reasonable procedures, rules, and
regulations as it deems necessary to carry out its functions and
duties. This rulemaking seeks to update certain provisions of the
Commission's existing Rules of Practice and Procedure. The Commission
is amending its rules covering investigations under Section 337 of the
Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1337) (``Section 337'') in order to
increase the efficiency of its Section 337 investigations.
Specifically, the changes to the Commission's Rules are for the purpose
of improving the Commission's procedures and ensuring the completeness
of the record with respect to the required analysis concerning the
public interest under Sections 337(d)(1) and (f)(1). There is no change
in the Commission's substantive practice with respect to its
consideration of the public interest factors in its determinations
relating to the appropriate remedy.
The Commission published a notice of proposed rulemaking (``NOPR'')
in the Federal Register at 75 FR 60671 (Oct. 1, 2010), proposing to
amend the Commission's Rules of Practice and Procedure to gather more
information on public interest issues. Consistent with its ordinary
practice, the Commission invited the public to comment on all the
proposed rules amendments. This practice entails the following steps:
(1) Publication of an NOPR; (2) solicitation of public comments on the
proposed
[[Page 64804]]
amendments; (3) Commission review of public comments on the proposed
amendments; and (4) publication of final amendments at least thirty
days prior to their effective date.
The NOPR requested public comment on the proposed rules within 60
days of publication of the NOPR. In response to requests from the
American Intellectual Property Law Association (``AIPLA'') and the
Intellectual Property Owners Association (``IPO''), the Chairman
granted an extension by letter of December 2, 2010, to allow those
entities to submit comments until January 7, 2011. The Commission
received a total of eight sets of comments from corporations or
organizations, including one each from the ITC Trial Lawyers
Association (``ITCTLA''); Microsoft Corp. (``Microsoft''); Intellectual
Ventures, LLC (``Intellectual Ventures''); the Ministry of Commerce of
the People's Republic of China (``MOFCOM''); the China Chamber of
Commerce for Light Industrial Products & Arts-Crafts (``CCCLA''); the
Computer & Communications Industry Association (``CCIA''), and the IPO.
In addition, the law firm of Adduci, Mastriani & Schaumberg LLP
(``AMS'') filed a set of comments. Three sets of comments were received
from persons writing in their individual capacities, viz., Ms. Mary
White, Mr. Steven Beard, and a group of economists including Messrs.
Fei Deng, Greg Leonard, and Mario Lopez. The IPO's comments were filed
one week late on January 14, 2011. The AIPLA did not submit comments.
The Commission has carefully considered all comments that it
received. The Commission's response is provided below in a section-by-
section analysis. The Commission appreciates the time and effort of the
commentators in preparing their submissions.
As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the Commission
certifies that these regulatory amendments will not have a significant
impact on small business entities.
Overview of the Amendments to the Regulations
The final regulations contain eleven (11) changes from those
proposed in the NOPR. These changes are summarized here.
First, with regard to rule 210.12, relating to the complaint, the
Commission has determined that it will not require complainants to
include public interest allegations in the complaint. Second, the
Commission has determined to add final rule 210.8(b) to require
complainants to file a separate statement of public interest
concurrently with the complaint. Final rule 210.8(b) contains a list of
the issues that a complainant should address in its public interest
statement, which is similar to the list contained in proposed rule
210.12(a)(12). Third, the Commission has determined to add final rule
210.8(c)(1) to provide for the responses to a Commission pre-
institution Federal Register notice that will solicit comments
regarding the public interest, including addressing complainant's
filing under rule 210.8(b), from proposed respondents and the public
upon receipt of a complaint. Included in this section is a requirement
that public interest submissions are due eight (8) calendar days after
publication of the pre-institution notice in the Federal Register.
Fourth, the Commission has added final rule 210.8(c)(2) to provide that
complainants may file reply submissions to responses submitted by the
public and proposed respondents in response to the Commission's pre-
institution Federal Register notice under final rule 210.8(c)(1). Any
such replies are due within three (3) calendar days following the
filing of submissions by proposed respondents and the public. Fifth,
current rule 210.8(b) is redesignated 210.8(d).
Sixth, with regard to proposed rule 210.13(b), the Commission has
determined that respondents will likewise not be required to address
the public interest in their response to the complaint. Therefore,
proposed rule 210.13(b) will not appear in the final rules. Seventh,
the Commission has determined to add final rule 210.14(f) to require
respondents to submit a statement of public interest in response to
complainants' filings under Sec. 210.8(b) and (c)(2) when the
Commission has delegated the matter of public interest to the presiding
administrative law judge (``ALJ'').
Eighth, the Commission has determined to amend proposed rule
210.50(a)(4) to clarify that the parties are requested, but not
required, to file comments on the public interest thirty (30) days
after issuance of the presiding ALJ's recommended determination
(``RD'') on remedy, bonding, and where ordered, the public interest.
These comments may include any information relating to the public
interest, including any updates to the information provided pursuant to
sections 210.8(b) and (c) and 210.14(f), and are limited to five (5)
pages, inclusive of attachments. Members of the public will be given an
opportunity to comment on the RD in response to a Federal Register
notice that will be issued by the Commission after issuance of the
presiding ALJ's RD. Ninth, the Commission has determined to redesignate
the currently undesignated paragraph following current rule
210.50(a)(4) as final rules 210.50(a)(4)(i), (ii), (iii), and (iv).
Tenth, the Commission has determined to amend rule 210.10(b) to
indicate that the comments received during the pre-institution period--
under final rules 210.8(b) and (c)--are the general basis for the
Commission's determination as to whether to delegate the issue of
public interest to the ALJ. Rule 210.10(b) is also amended to clarify
the limits on discovery when the Commission orders the ALJ to consider
the public interest. Eleventh, the Commission has determined to add
final rule 210.42(a)(1)(ii)(C) to clarify that, when ordered to take
evidence on the public interest, the ALJ shall include analysis of the
public interest in his RD.
A comprehensive explanation of the rule changes is provided in the
section-by-section analysis below. The section-by-section analysis
includes a discussion of all modifications suggested by the
commentators. As a result of some of the comments, the Commission has
determined to modify several of the proposed amendments and to add
several new sections to the final rule as summarized above. The
section-by-section analysis will refer to the rules as they appeared in
the NOPR. Any new rules will be discussed with respect to the
previously proposed rules.
Section-by-Section Analysis
19 CFR Part 210
Subpart C--Pleadings
Section 210.12
The NOPR proposed to amend Sec. 210.12 by adding a subsection (12)
to Sec. 210.12(a) to require that the complainant provide in its
complaint specific information regarding how issuance of an exclusion
order and/or a cease and desist order in an investigation could affect
the public health and welfare in the United States, competitive
conditions in the United States economy, the production of like or
directly competitive articles in the United States, or United States
consumers.
The NOPR further proposed adding a paragraph (k) to Sec. 210.12 to
provide that, when a complaint is filed, the Secretary to the
Commission will publish a notice in the Federal Register soliciting
comments from the public and the proposed respondents on any public
interest issues arising from the complaint. Under the proposed rules,
these comments would be limited to
[[Page 64805]]
five pages and would be required to be filed within five days of
publication of the notice. The purpose of the proposed amendments to
210.12 was to gather information for the Commission to consider in
deciding whether to refer the public interest issues to the ALJ.
Microsoft, Intellectual Ventures, and AMS contend that if the
Commission seeks more information on the public interest, it would be
sufficient to allow the parties and the public to comment in response
to a pre-institution Federal Register notice published immediately
after the filing of the complaint. Microsoft, Intellectual Ventures,
and AMS are of the view that it would be unnecessary and burdensome to
require the complaint and the respondents' responses to the complaint
to include information on the public interest in addition to any
submissions the parties might file in response to the pre-institution
Federal Register notice.
AMS states that the Commission's recent practice of soliciting
comments at the beginning of the investigation is a good one and should
be made a permanent part of Section 337 procedure. AMS notes that many
parties and members of the public have taken advantage of the
opportunity to file such comments since the Commission began soliciting
them in 2010. AMS states that ``[i]t would not be consistent with the
remedial purpose of Section 337 if potential complainants were deterred
from coming to the ITC due to concerns about the burdens associated
with addressing public interest issues before there has been any
adjudication of violation or the scope of the remedy.''
Microsoft states that requiring information on the public interest
in the complaint and responses thereto would be unduly burdensome in
light of the rare instances where the public interest has been a factor
in deciding whether to issue relief. Microsoft states that to the
extent the Commission believes amendment to its rules is necessary, the
pre-institution Federal Register notice alone would identify to the
Commission the few instances warranting early development of public
interest information. Microsoft, however, urges the Commission to make
clear that the Commission is not expanding the breadth of the statutory
public interest factors with any amendment. It believes that open-ended
and undefined submissions regarding ``competitive conditions in the
United States economy'' would provide little guidance to the
Commission.
According to Intellectual Ventures, the public interest information
required in the complaint under the proposed rules may not be in the
possession of many complainants and determining the potential public
interest impact of a hypothetical remedy is a highly speculative
endeavor, particularly at the outset of an investigation. Moreover, the
proposed rules could place a burden upon potential complainants to
conduct extensive research on subjects far outside their businesses and
expertise. Intellectual Ventures believes a pleading requirement would
not only burden the parties, but would run the risk of reintroducing at
least the perception that the Commission is making a determination of
injury as part of the determination of violation, which is in direct
opposition to the Congressional mandate that there is no longer an
injury requirement in Section 337 investigations. Intellectual Ventures
is particularly concerned about domestic industries that are based on
the exploitation of intellectual property through engineering, research
and development, and licensing. Intellectual Ventures also states that
``by placing a de facto burden on complainant to deny the existence of
public interest concerns--a burden which the statute does not require
them to meet--this proposal may deter some complainants from coming to
the ITC at all, which would be contrary to the purpose and intent of
Section 337 to protect domestic industries from unfair import
competition.'' While Intellectual Ventures is opposed to any change in
the current rules, it states that it is better to solicit comments
through the Federal Register during the pre-institution stage of the
investigation than to require the information in the pleadings.
Although not part of the official comments, on January 19, 2011,
during the Third Annual Live at the ITC--Forum on Section 337 of the
Tariff Act of 1930, panelists expressed concerns that ordering a
complainant to act against its own interest by listing public interest
issues in the complaint is essentially unfair because the statute
directs the issuance of an exclusion order unless, upon consideration
of the public interest, the Commission decides not to do so. Another
concern was the burden such a requirement would place on non-practicing
entities (NPEs) which might not actually know what their licensees are
doing with the asserted patented technology. One panelist raised the
possibility that NPEs might be subject to sanctions if they could not
truthfully answer the public interest questions in the complaint.
On the other hand, the ITCTLA does not object to requiring public
interest information in the complaint.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that it will not require complainants
to include public interest allegations in the complaint. Instead, the
Commission will obtain public interest information from the parties
early in the investigation in a format different from that which was
proposed in the NOPR. Specifically, instead of including public
interest information in the complaint, complainants will be required to
file a separate statement of public interest concurrently with the
filing of the complaint. If a complainant includes information which it
deems confidential in the submission, it will be required to also file
a nonconfidential version concurrently with its complaint. This final
rule will be designated as 210.8(b). Current rule 210.8(b) will be
redesignated as 210.8(d), as discussed below.
The ITCTLA suggests that the Commission solicit even more specific
information concerning the public interest. In particular, the ITCTLA
suggests that the complainant identify, to the best of its knowledge,
the ``like or directly competitive articles,'' and how the
complainant's requested relief would affect consumers in the United
States. The ITCTLA also suggests different language for some of the
Commission's final rules. For instance, it suggests that the amendments
be more consistent with the statutory public interest factors and
proposes that a fifth provision be included that would require a
statement as to how a company's requested relief would affect consumers
in the United States. The ITCTLA also suggests that the comments be
directed to the ``requested'' exclusion order and cease and desist
order rather than to a generic exclusion order and cease and desist
order.
MOFCOM suggests that the public interest considerations be expanded
to include the sales of upstream and downstream products of the subject
articles, and the operation condition of the importer, exporter, and
retailer of the subject articles. The CCCLA suggests that the public
interest factors include market conditions and the competitiveness of
importers, distributors and retailers in the upstream and downstream
industry related to the subject articles.
Economists Deng, Leonard, and Lopez suggest that the Commission
refrain from seeking information on an exhaustive list and instead lay
out general types of information that might prove fruitful. Some
examples of information they deem relevant in evaluating the impact of
an exclusion
[[Page 64806]]
order, are as follows: (1) The costs and time it would take a consumer
to switch to substitute products, (2) the loss in consumer welfare due
to reduction in product variety in differentiated product industries,
(3) the potential for a price increase from the reduction in
competition, (4) the ability of non-infringing firms to offer close
substitutes and the time required to do so, (5) potential entrants,
i.e., potential new suppliers of substitute goods, and (6) the
potential profit lost by vertically-related firms versus the potential
profit gained by competitors and competitors' vertically-related firms.
The CCIA suggests that the Commission adopt for its public interest
rules the standard for obtaining a permanent injunction in a federal
district court laid out by the Supreme Court in eBay Inc v.
MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006) (``eBay''). The CCIA
suggested that the Commission would need to do so in order to comply
with United States obligations under Article III: 4 of the GATT,
specifically, a GATT decision, United States--Section 337 of the Tariff
Act of 1930 (Nov. 7, 1989).
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that complainants' statement
concerning the public interest under final rule 210.8(b) should be
focused as follows: (a) Explain how the articles potentially subject to
the order are used in the United States; (b) identify any public
health, safety, or welfare concerns relating to the requested remedial
orders; (c) identify like or directly competitive articles that
complainant, its licensees, or third parties make which could replace
the subject articles if they were to be excluded; (d) indicate whether
the complainant, its licensees, and/or third parties have the capacity
to replace the volume of articles subject to the potential orders in a
commercially reasonable time in the United States; and (e) state how
the requested relief would impact consumers. These topics will replace
those currently listed in proposed rule 210.12(a)(12). The Commission
has determined that the final rules will not adopt the test for
permanent injunctions articulated in eBay.
Several parties (Mary White, the ITCTLA, AMS, MOFCOM, and the
CCCLA) state that five days is too short a time for proposed
respondents and the public to respond to the pre-institution Federal
Register notice soliciting comments. The ITCTLA suggests extending this
time period to seven business days; MOFCOM suggests 10 calendar days;
and AMS and the CCCLA suggest 15 calendar days. ITCTLA suggests that an
additional period of seven (7) business days be allowed for responses
to these early comments.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined to provide more time for public
comment beyond what was proposed in the NOPR (rule 210.12(k)).
Specifically, the Commission will require that public interest
submissions be due eight (8) calendar days after publication of the
pre-institution notice in the Federal Register. If any such submission
includes information which the submitting entity deems confidential, it
will be required to also file a nonconfidential version concurrently
with its confidential submission. This requirement will appear in final
rule 210.8(c)(1).
Steven Beard suggests that public comments in response to the pre-
institution Federal Register notice should be forwarded to the parties
in the adjudicative proceeding.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that public interest comments should
not be forwarded by the Commission to the complainant and proposed
respondents, since the Commission's Electronic Document Information
System (EDIS) is available to allow access to any comments that are
filed. No amendments to the final rules will be made in this regard.
MOFCOM criticizes the ``and/or'' language of the proposed amendment
to Sec. 210.12(k), which it believes suggests that in some cases
either, but not both, the public or the proposed respondents will have
the right to comment on the public interest.
Commission Response
This is not the intent of the amendments, so to address this
comment, final rule 210.8(c)(1) states that both proposed respondents
and the public may respond to complainants' filings under 210.8(b).
The ITCTLA points out that under the proposed amendment to rule
210.13, respondents are permitted to submit a formal response to any
public interest submissions made by members of the general public
pursuant to proposed rules 210.12(k), but that no such opportunity
exists as a matter of right for the complainant to do so. The ITCTLA
proposes that Rule 210.12(a)(13) be added to afford a complainant an
opportunity to file a reply to any comments received from the general
public and respondents.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined that the complainant will be allowed
under final rule 210.8(c)(2) to file a reply submission to responses
submitted by the public and proposed respondents to the Commission's
pre-institution notice. Any such replies are due within three (3)
calendar days of the filings under final rule 210.8(c)(1) and are
limited to five (5) pages, inclusive of attachments. If a complainant
includes information that it deems confidential in the submission, it
will be required to also file a nonconfidential version concurrently
with its confidential submission.
Section 210.13
The NOPR proposed adding a subsection (4) to section 210.13(b) to
require respondents' response to the complaint to address the public
interest statements made in the complaint and any comments received
from the public with respect to the public interest.
The ITCTLA proposes that the respondent be allowed to amend or
supplement the public interest statement contained in its response to
the complaint and notice of investigation to respond to any replies
that might be filed by complainants. The ITCTLA recommends that since
this submission is made early in the investigation, the respondent be
permitted to supplement its public interest submission under proposed
Rule 210.13(b)(4), where necessary and with good cause shown.
Commission Response
Since the Commission has determined that complainants will not be
required to include public interest information in the complaint,
respondents will likewise not be required to address the public
interest in the response to the complaint. The Commission has, however,
determined that respondents must submit a mandatory statement of public
interest if the Commission has delegated the matter of public interest
to the ALJ, as discussed below in conjunction with proposed amendments
to rule 210.50. This provision is reflected in final rule 210.14(f).
Subpart G--Determinations and Actions Taken
Section 210.50
The NOPR further proposed to add language to section 210.50(a)(4)
to provide that, after the service of the presiding ALJ's RD on remedy
and bonding, the parties are instructed to submit to the Commission
within thirty (30) days any information relating to the
[[Page 64807]]
public interest, including any updates to the information provided in
the complaint and response, as required by the proposed amendments to
Sec. Sec. 210.12 and 210.13. Members of the public would also be
permitted to submit information with respect to the public interest
under the proposed rule.
The NOPR further proposed to amend section 210.50(b)(1) to provide
that unless the Commission orders otherwise, an ALJ shall not take
evidence on the issue of the public interest for purposes of the RD
under Sec. 210.42(a)(1)(ii). If the Commission orders the ALJ to take
evidence on the public interest, the extent of the taking of discovery
by the parties shall be at the discretion of the presiding ALJ.
The ITCTLA, IPO, Microsoft, and Intellectual Ventures are concerned
that, by requiring public interest submissions subsequent to the
issuance of the RD but prior to the issuance of the Commission's notice
of review, a misperception may be created that the Commission is
weighing public interest information as part of its threshold merits
inquiry on review. The ITCTLA further points out that at this stage of
the investigation, it is not known what, if any, portions of the final
initial determination (``ID'') the Commission has taken under review.
Thus, if the Commission determines not to review a final ID finding no
violation, or determines to review and remand issues to the ALJ, any
submissions on the public interest at this time would be irrelevant or
untimely.
Commission Response
The Commission has determined to implement in its final regulations
its current practice of requesting party comments on the public
interest within thirty (30) days after the RD issues, under final rule
210.50(a)(4). Solicitation of these comments is not limited to cases in
which the Commission has delegated the public interest issue to the
ALJ. Final rule 210.50(a)(4) has been amended to clarify that the
parties are requested, but not required, to file comments under this
provision. Such submissions are limited to five (5) pages, inclusive of
attachments. The final rule does not allow members of the public to
submit similar comments. Rather, the Commission will issue a Federal
Register notice soliciting comments from the public after an RD issues.
Additionally, the Commission has determined to amend rule 210.50(a)(4)
to clarify that the undesignated paragraph following current rule
210.50(a)(4) will be preserved as rule Sec. 210.50(a)(4)(i), (ii),
(iii), and (iv) in compliance with Federal Register requirements.
With respect to the proposed amendments to rule 210.50(b)(1), while
generally supporting the Commission's efforts to develop a better
record on the public interest, the ITCTLA states that it expects that
the Commission will rarely refer the public interest issue to the ALJ
and that the proposed rules will not change the Commission's practice
substantively. The ITCTLA believes the proposed rules balance the
interests of complainants, respondents, and the public by giving each a
fair opportunity to present public interest issues early in the
investigation and to update information at each stage of the
investigation. The ITCTLA warns that delegation of the issue of public
interest to the ALJ has the ``potential for a significant expansion of
the scope of discovery in Section 337 investigations, particularly with
respect to third-party discovery.'' The ITCTLA and Intellectual
Ventures state that discovery regarding the public interest may lead to
significant party and non-party costs, and the ITCTLA notes that
discovery could lead to an extension of the time required to complete
investigations. In this connection, the ITCTLA suggests that the
Commission limit the scope of the public interest issue that it may
delegate to the ALJ in a given case based on the complainant's
statement of what articles are like or directly competitive.
Specifically, the ITCTLA suggests that the Commission include a
preamble stating that it expects ALJs to limit such discovery
appropriately, with particular consideration for the interests of third
parties, and to ensure that public interest discovery does not delay
the investigation and is not used improperly.
Intellectual Ventures, Microsoft, and AMS state that the current
rules, which solicit comments on the public interest and analysis of
public interest evidence only after a final ID and RD is issued by the
presiding ALJ, are adequate. Intellectual Ventures believes that
consideration of the public interest as implemented in the NOPR would
have a detrimental effect on Section 337 by increasing the burdens on
Commission resources, particularly those of the ALJs, and on the
parties. Intellectual Ventures submits that Section 337's statutory
framework puts the public interest in issue only near the end of an
investigation, after a violation is found and an appropriate remedy is
determined. It argues that, given the infrequency with which genuine
public interest concerns have been implicated in Section 337
investigations, early consideration of the factors is neither necessary
nor appropriate in most investigations. It points out that
consideration of the public interest at an early stage may encompass
investigations where public interest considerations are non-existent,
or will not have an impact by the time the Commission reaches a
determination on violation, e.g., some issues could be mooted if
patents are found not infringed or invalid.
Intellectual Ventures suggests that the final version of rule
210.50 provide for the Commission to delegate only the gathering of
evidence to the ALJ, such that the ALJ would collect information and
forward it to the Commission without analyzing or addressing the issue
himself. Intellectual Ventures expresses concern that allowing the ALJ
to both take evidence on the public interest and analyze that evidence
would run afoul of Congress's decision, reflected in the 1988
amendments to the Trade Act, to eliminate the injury requirement in
Section 337 investigations. Intellectual Ventures also notes that the
costs associated with public interest discovery could potentially
discourage potential complainants from making use of Section 337
proceedings particularly due to the broad nature of the public interest
factors addressed in Sec. 337(d) and (f). Intellectual Ventures
expresses concern at the implication that the public will not have any
input on the public interest issue during discovery, while also
questioning the feasibility of having non-parties present evidence
concerning the public interest during discovery. Intellectual Ventures
further submits that leaving discovery on the public interest to the
ALJs' discretion will lead to inconsistent practices among the ALJs,
and ostensibly, inconsistent results in the analysis of public interest
evidence.
The IPO supports the Commission's intent of furthering its efforts
under the statute to consider the effect of any remedial relief granted
in Section 337 investigations. It is concerned, however, that the
proposed rule delegates a new obligation to the ALJs, who are already
faced with challenging time lines. According to the IPO, delegating the
collection of evidence to the ALJs places a significant, and in the
vast majority of cases, a needless burden on them at a time when
caseloads are growing and target dates have lengthened. It is also
concerned that the new rules interject the public interest
consideration into the investigation too early, creating a situation
where the violation determination would be improperly
[[Page 64808]]
influenced by the public interest considerations.
Microsoft is concerned that the proposed amendments will
unnecessarily interject ``additional (and potentially burdensome)
factual, contention, and expert discovery in the name of `public
policy' '' that does not truly correspond with the purpose of the
statute. It notes that the public interest has overridden a Commission
order in only a few cases, and states that the application of any new
rules should be correspondingly limited to the narrow instances in
which public interest concerns are truly relevant. Microsoft asserts
that information received at the beginning of the investigation may be
out of date or otherwise irrelevant by the time any exclusion order
would issue.
AMS states that, historically, the public interest rarely has been
relevant in the administration of Section 337. It asserts that
referring the public interest issue to the ALJ would, in most cases, be
superfluous and premature, noting that a large percentage of cases
settle or result in a determination of no violation. The IPO and
Intellectual Ventures comment that referring the public interest issue
to the ALJ will increase the instances of discovery abuse, particularly
in regard to third parties. The ITCTLA also warns that the proposed
rules could have the unintended consequence of discovery abuse,
particularly in regard to third parties. Intellectual Ventures and
Microsoft believe that the proposed rules amendments could overwhelm
the Commission process at all stages, particularly by overburdening the
ALJ, and lead to longer target dates for the completion of
investigations.
Mary White suggests that the Commission clarify that the ALJ would
not be allowed to take public interest evidence, or consider the public
interest comments, unless ordered to do so by the Commission.
On the other hand, Steven Beard suggests that an ALJ should be able
to take evidence on the issue of the public interest, without
restrictions, in all investigations and should be mandated to address
the substantive issues raised in the public comments when writing their
decisions. MOFCOM also believes the ALJ should always be empowered to
take evidence on and to address the public interest without reliance on
a Commission order.
Commission Response
Rule 210.10(b) has been amended to indicate that the comments
received during the pre-institution period--under final rules 210.8(b)
and (b)--are the general basis for the Commission's determination as to
whether to delegate the issue of public interest to the ALJ. Since
proposed rule 210.50(b)(1) clearly states that ``[u]nless the
Commission orders otherwise, an ALJ shall not take evidence on the
issue of the public interest * * *[,]'' the final rule will not be
amended in that respect. The amendment to rule 210.10(b), however,
makes clear that, when directed to consider the public interest, the
ALJ is expected to limit public interest discovery appropriately, with
particular consideration for third parties, and not allow such
discovery to delay the investigation or be used improperly. The
Commission notes that, when the ALJ is not directed to consider the
public interest, the proposed amendments do not expand scope of
discovery beyond the issues bearing upon violation. Furthermore, the
Commission has amended current rule 210.42(a)(1)(ii) to include Sec.
210.42(a)(1)(ii)(C), which provides that, when ordered to take evidence
on the public interest, the ALJ shall include analysis of the public
interest in his RD.
Regulatory Analysis of Proposed Amendments to the Commission's Rules
The Commission has determined that the final rules do not meet the
criteria described in section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735, Oct. 4, 1993) and thus do not constitute a significant
regulatory action for purposes of the Executive Order.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) is
inapplicable to this rulemaking because it is not one for which a
notice of final rulemaking is required under 5 U.S.C. 553(b) or any
other statute. Although the Commission chose to publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking, these regulations are ``agency rules of procedure
and practice,'' and thus are exempt from the notice requirement imposed
by 5 U.S.C. 553(b).
These final rules do not contain federalism implications warranting
the preparation of a federalism summary impact statement pursuant to
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, Aug. 4, 1999).
No actions are necessary under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) because the final rules will not result in
the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100,000,000 or more in any one
year, and will not significantly or uniquely affect small governments.
The final rules are not major rules as defined by section 804 of
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5
U.S.C. 801 et seq.). Moreover, they are exempt from the reporting
requirements of the Contract With America Advancement Act of 1996 (Pub.
L. 104-121) because they concern rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice that do not substantially affect the rights or
obligations of non-agency parties.
The amendments are not subject to section 3504(h) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), because it is part of an
administrative action or investigation against specific individuals or
entities. 44 U.S.C. 3518(c)(1)(B)(ii).
List of Subjects in 19 CFR Part 210
Administration practice and procedure, Business and industry,
Customs duties and inspection, Imports, Investigations.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, 19 CFR part 210 is amended
as set forth below:
PART 210--ADJUDICATION AND ENFORCEMENT
0
1. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 19 U.S.C. 1333, 1335, and 1337.
0
2. Amend Sec. 210.8 by redesignating paragraph (b) as paragraph (d),
and adding new paragraphs (b) and (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 210.8 Commencement of reinstitution proceedings.
* * * * *
(b) Provide specific information regarding the public interest.
Complainant must file, concurrently with the complaint, a separate
statement of public interest, not to exceed five pages, inclusive of
attachments, addressing how issuance of the requested relief, i.e., a
general exclusion order, a limited exclusion order, and/or a cease and
desist order, in this investigation could affect the public health and
welfare in the United States, competitive conditions in the United
States economy, the production of like or directly competitive articles
in the United States, or United States consumers. In particular, the
submission should:
(1) Explain how the articles potentially subject to the requested
remedial orders are used in the United States;
(2) Identify any public health, safety, or welfare concerns
relating to the requested remedial orders;
(3) Identify like or directly competitive articles that
complainant, its licensees, or third parties make
[[Page 64809]]
which could replace the subject articles if they were to be excluded;
(4) Indicate whether the complainant, its licensees, and/or third
parties have the capacity to replace the volume of articles subject to
the requested remedial orders in a commercially reasonable time in the
United States; and
(5) State how the requested remedial orders would impact consumers.
(c) Publication of notice of filing. (1) When a complaint is filed,
the Secretary to the Commission will publish a notice in the Federal
Register inviting comments from the public and proposed respondents on
any public interest issues arising from the complaint and potential
exclusion and/or cease and desist orders. In response to the notice,
members of the public and proposed respondents may provide specific
information regarding the public interest in a written submission not
to exceed five pages, inclusive of attachments, to the Secretary to the
Commission within eight (8) calendar days of publication of notice of
the filing of a complaint. Comments that substantively address
allegations made in the complaint will not be considered. Members of
the public and proposed respondents may address how issuance of the
requested exclusion order and/or a cease and desist order in this
investigation could affect the public health and welfare in the United
States, competitive conditions in the United States economy, the
production of like or directly competitive articles in the United
States, or United States consumers. Submissions should:
(i) Explain how the articles potentially subject to the requested
remedial orders are used in the United States;
(ii) Identify any public health, safety, or welfare concerns
relating to the requested remedial orders;
(iii) Identify like or directly competitive articles that
complainant, its licensees, or third parties make which could replace
the subject articles if they were to be excluded;
(iv) Indicate whether the complainant, its licensees, and/or third
parties have the capacity to replace the volume of articles subject to
the requested remedial orders in a commercially reasonable time in the
United States; and
(v) State how the requested remedial orders would impact consumers.
(2) Complainant may file a reply to any submissions received under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section not to exceed five pages, inclusive of
attachments, to the Secretary to the Commission within three (3)
calendar days following the filing of the submissions.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 210.10 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 210.10 Institution of investigation.
* * * * *
(b) An investigation shall be instituted by the publication of a
notice in the Federal Register. The notice will define the scope of the
investigation and may be amended as provided in Sec. 210.14(b) and
(b). The Commission may order the administrative law judge to take
evidence and to issue a recommended determination on the public
interest based generally on the submissions of the parties and the
public under Sec. 210.8(b) and (c). If the Commission orders the
administrative law judge to take evidence with respect to the public
interest, the administrative law judge will limit public interest
discovery appropriately, with particular consideration for third
parties, and will ensure that such discovery will not delay the
investigation or be used improperly. Public interest issues will not be
within the scope of discovery unless the administrative law judge is
specifically ordered by the Commission to take evidence on these
issues.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 210.14 by revising the section heading and adding
paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 210.14 Amendments to pleadings and notice; supplemental
submissions; counterclaims; respondent submissions on the public
interest.
* * * * *
(f) Respondent submissions on the public interest. When the
Commission has ordered the administrative law judge to take evidence
with respect to the public interest under Sec. 210.50(b)(1),
respondents must submit a statement concerning the public interest,
including any response to the issues raised by the complainant pursuant
to Sec. 210.8(b) and (c)(2), at the same time that their response to
the complaint is due. This submission must be no longer than five
pages, inclusive of attachments.
0
5. In Sec. 210.42, revise the heading of paragraph (a)(1)(ii) and add
paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(C) to read as follows:
Sec. 210.42 Initial determinations.
(a)(1)(i) * * *
(ii) Recommended determination on issues concerning permanent
relief, bonding, and the public interest. * * *
* * * * *
(C) The public interest under sections 337(d)(1) and (f)(1) in
investigations where the Commission has ordered the administrative law
judge under Sec. 210.50(b)(1) to take evidence with respect to the
public interest.
* * * * *
0
6. In Sec. 210.50, revise paragraph (a)(4) and (b)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 210.50 Commission action, the public interest, and bonding by
respondents.
(a) * * *
(4) Receive submissions from the parties, interested persons, and
other Government agencies and departments with respect to the subject
matter of paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(3) of this section. After
a recommended determination on remedy is issued by the presiding
administrative law judge, the parties are requested to submit to the
Commission, within 30 days from service of the recommended
determination, any information relating to the public interest,
including any updates to the information requested by Sec. Sec.
210.8(b) and (c) and 210.14(f). Any submissions under this section are
limited to 5 pages, inclusive of attachments.
(i) When the matter under consideration pursuant to paragraph
(a)(1) of this section is whether to grant some form of permanent
relief, the submissions described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section
shall be filed by the deadlines specified in the Commission notice
issued pursuant to Sec. 210.46(a).
(ii) When the matter under consideration is whether to grant some
form of temporary relief, such submissions shall be filed by the
deadlines specified in Sec. 210.67(b), unless the Commission orders
otherwise.
(iii) Any submission from a party shall be served upon the other
parties in accordance with Sec. 210.4(g). The parties' submissions, as
well as any filed by interested persons or other agencies shall be
available for public inspection in the Office of the Secretary.
(iv) The Commission will consider motions for oral argument or,
when necessary, a hearing with respect to the subject matter of this
section, except that no hearing or oral argument will be permitted in
connection with a motion for temporary relief.
(b)(1) With respect to an administrative law judge's authorization
to take evidence or other information and to hear arguments from the
parties and other interested persons on the issues of appropriate
Commission action, the public interest, and bonding by the respondents
for purposes of an initial determination on temporary relief, see
Sec. Sec. 210.61, 210.62, and 210.66(a). For purposes of the
[[Page 64810]]
recommended determination required by Sec. 210.42(a)(1)(ii), an
administrative law judge shall take evidence or other information and
hear arguments from the parties and other interested persons on the
issues of appropriate Commission action and bonding by the respondents
upon order of the Commission. Unless the Commission orders otherwise,
and except as provided for in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, an
administrative law judge shall not take evidence on the issue of the
public interest for purposes of the recommended determination under
Sec. 210.42(a)(1)(ii).
* * * * *
Issued: October 11, 2011.
By order of the Commission.
James R. Holbein,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2011-26664 Filed 10-18-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020-02-P