Information Collection Being Reviewed by the Federal Communications Commission, 3266-3267 [2012-1164]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 14 / Monday, January 23, 2012 / Notices
does not display a valid OMB control
number.
Written Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before March 23, 2012.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting PRA comments, but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the FCC contact listed below as
soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Direct all PRA comments to
Leslie F. Smith, Office of Managing
Director (OMD), Federal
Communications Commission (FCC), or
via the Internet at Leslie.Smith@fcc.gov.
To submit your PRA comments by email
send them to: PRA@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Leslie F. Smith, Office of Managing
Director (OMD), Federal
Communications Commission (FCC),
(202) 418–0217, or via the Internet at
Leslie.Smith@fcc.gov.
OMB Control Number: 3060–0584.
Title: Administration of U.S. Certified
Accounting Authorities in Maritime
Mobile and Maritime Mobile-Satellite
Radio Services, FCC Forms 44 and 45.
Form Number(s): FCC Forms 44 and
45.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofit organizations.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 25 respondents; 150
responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 1–3
hours.
Frequency of Response:
Recordkeeping; On occasion, semiannual, and annual reporting
requirements; and Third-party
disclosure.
Obligation To Respond: Mandatory.
Statutory authority for this information
collection (IC) is contained in 47 U.S.C
154(i) and 303(r).
Total Annual Burden: 150 hours.
Total Annual Cost: $375,000.00.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: No
impact.
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
There is no need for confidentiality.
However, respondents may request
materials or information submitted to
the Commission be withheld from
public inspection pursuant to 47 CFR
0.459 of the Commission’s rules.
Needs and Uses: The Commission has
standards for accounting authorities in
the maritime mobile and maritimesatellite radio services under 47 CFR
part 3. The Commission uses these
standards to determine the eligibility of
applicants for certification as a U.S.
accounting authority, to ensure
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DATES:
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17:58 Jan 20, 2012
Jkt 226001
compliance with the maritime mobile
and maritime-satellite radio services,
and to identify accounting authorities to
the International Telecommunications
Union (ITU). Respondents are entities
seeking certification or those already
certified to be accounting authorities.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Deputy Manager, Office of the Secretary,
Office of Managing Director.
[FR Doc. 2012–1165 Filed 1–20–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
Information Collection Being Reviewed
by the Federal Communications
Commission
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
As part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork burden and as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3520), the Federal Communications
Commission invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on the
following information collection(s).
Comments are requested concerning: (a)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the Commission’s
burden estimate; (c) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and (e) ways to
further reduce the information burden
for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. No person shall be subject to
any penalty for failing to comply with
a collection of information subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) that
does not display a valid OMB control
number.
DATES: Written Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before March 23, 2012.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting PRA comments, but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the FCC contact listed below as
soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Submit your PRA comments
to Judith B.Herman, Federal
Communications Commission, via the
Internet at Judith-b.herman@fcc.gov. To
submit your PRA comments by email
send them to: PRA@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Judith B. Herman, Office of Managing
Director, (202) 418–0214.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: OMB
Control Number: 3060–1147.
Title: Wireless E911 Phase II Location
Accuracy Requirements, Third Report
and Order, FCC 11–107.
Form Number: N/A.
Type of Review: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Individuals and
households; business or other for-profit
entities; Not-for-profit institutions and
State, Local, or Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 4,898
respondents; 9,514 responses.
Estimated Time per Response:
5.5867143 hours (average).
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement and third party
disclosure requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Mandatory.
Statutory authority for this information
collection is contained in 47 U.S.C.
Sections 151, 154 and 332 of the
Communications Act of 1934, as
amended.
Total Annual Burden: 53,152 hours.
Total Annual Cost: N/A.
Privacy Impact Assessment: N/A.
Needs and Uses: The Commission
obtained OMB approval for this new
collection in March 2011. The
Commission is now seeking OMB
approval for a revision to this
information collection. The Commission
adopted and released a Third Report
and Order, FCC 11–107, PS Docket No.
07–114, which provides that new
Commercial Mobile Radio Service
(CMRS) providers, meeting the
definition of covered CMRS providers in
Section 20.18 and deploying networks
subsequent to the effective date of the
Third Report and Order that are not an
expansion or upgrade of an existing
CMRS network, must meet the handsetbased location accuracy standard from
the start. Consequently, the rule requires
new CMRS providers launching new
stand-alone networks during the eightyear implementation period for handsetbased CMRS wireless licensees to meet
the applicable handset-based location
accuracy standard in effect of the time
of deployment. Therefore, new rule
section 20.18(h)(2)(iv) specifies that new
CMRS providers must comply with
E:\FR\FM\23JAN1.SGM
23JAN1
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 14 / Monday, January 23, 2012 / Notices
paragraphs (h)(2)((i–iii) of Section 20.18,
which are the location accuracy
requirements for handset-based carriers.
OMB approved the information
collection for those rule paragraphs,
which the Second Report and Order
adopted, on March 30, 2011, under
OMB Control No. 3060–1147. The
Commission announced OMB’s
approval and the effective date in 76 FR
23713 of the Federal Register.
As a result, under the new rule
section adopted by Third Report and
Order, all new CMRS providers in
delivering emergency calls for Enhanced
911 service, must satisfy the handsetbased location accuracy standard at
either a county-based or Public Safety
Answering Point (PSAP)-based
geographic level. Similarly, in
accordance with the new rule and under
the paragraph provision of Section
20.18(h)(2)(iii), new CMRS providers
may exclude up to 15 percent of the
counties or PSAP areas they serve due
to heavy forestation that limits handsetbased technology accuracy in those
counties or areas. Therefore, new CMRS
providers will be required to file a list
of the specific counties or portions of
counties where they are utilizing their
respective exclusions. In its September
2010 Second Report and Order, 75 FR
70604, the Commission found that
permitting this exclusion properly but
narrowly accounts for the known
technical limitations of handset-based
location accuracy technologies, while
ensuring that the public safety
community and the public at large are
sufficiently informed of these
limitations.
When they have begun deploying
their new networks, the new CMRS
providers must submit initial reports, as
the Commission will announce after
OMB approval of this revised
information collection, with a list of the
areas that they are permitted to exclude
from the handset-based location
accuracy requirements. Accordingly, the
Commission will specify the procedures
for electronic filing into PS Docket No.
07–114, consistent with the current
OMB approved information collection
for handset-based carriers, and new
CMRS providers must send copies of the
exclusion reports to the National
Emergency Number Association, the
Association of Public-Safety
Communications Officials-International,
and the National Association of State
9–1–1 Administrators.
Further, the rules adopted by the
Commission’s September 2010 Second
Report and Order, 75 FR 70604, also
require that, two years after January 18,
2011, wireless carriers provide
confidence and uncertainty data on a
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17:58 Jan 20, 2012
Jkt 226001
per call basis to PSAPs. Because the
new rule adopted by the Third Report
and Order considers new CMRS
providers as providers covered under
the definition of CMR providers
pursuant to section 20.18 of the
Commission’s rules, new CMRS
providers will also be subject to the
information collection requirement to
provide this confidence and uncertainty
data.
Additionally, in view of the amended
location accuracy requirements and the
timeframes and benchmarks for
handset-based wireless carriers to
comply with them, in its September
2010 Second Report and Order, 75 FR
70604, the Commission recognized that
the waiver process is suitable to address
individual or unique problems, where
the Commission can analyze the
particular circumstances and the
potential impact to public safety. Thus,
similarly, the supporting statement for
this information collection revision
recognizes that new CMRS providers
might file waiver requests and,
therefore, be subject to a collection and
reporting requirement.
The Third Report and Order found
that requiring all new CMRS network
providers to comply with the
Commission’s handset-based location
accuracy standard is consistent with the
regulatory principle of ensuring
technological neutrality. Providers
deploying new CMRS networks are free
to use network-based location
techniques, or to combine network and
handset-based techniques, to provide
911 location information, provided that
they meet the accuracy criteria
applicable to handset-based providers.
Given the long-term goal of universal
support for one location accuracy
standard, the Commission believed that
such a mandate allows appropriate
planning and ensures that new
technology will comply with the most
stringent location accuracy standard
that applies to existing technology.
Section 47 CFR 20.18(h)(2)(iv)
requires that providers of new CMRS
networks that meet the definition of
covered CMRS providers under
paragraph (a) of this section must
comply with the requirements of
paragraphs (h)(2)(i)
(iii) of this section. For this purpose, a
‘‘new CMRS network’’ is a CMRS
network that is newly deployed
subsequent to the effective date of the
Third Report and Order in PS Docket
No. 07–114 and that is not an expansion
or upgrade of an existing CMRS
network.
The information provided by wireless
carriers deploying new CMRS networks
to report the counties or PSAP service
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3267
areas where the carriers cannot provide
E911 location accuracy at either the
county or the PSAP level will furnish
the Commission, affected PSAPs, state
and local emergency agencies, public
safety organizations and other interested
stakeholders the supplementary data
necessary for public safety awareness of
those areas where it is most difficult to
measure location accuracy during the
benchmark periods for handset-based
wireless carriers.
The provision of confidence and
uncertainty data to PSAPs by the new
CMRS providers and the SSPs
responsible for transporting that data
between them and PSAPs will enhance
the PSAPs’ ability to efficiently direct
first responders to the correct location of
emergencies to achieve the emergency
response goals of the nation in
responding expeditiously to emergency
crisis situations and in ensuring
homeland security.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Deputy Manager, Office of the Secretary,
Office of Managing Director.
[FR Doc. 2012–1164 Filed 1–20–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
[Document Identifier: OS–0990–0263; 30Day Notice]
Agency Information Collection
Request; 30-Day Public Comment
Request
Office of the Secretary, HHS.
In compliance with the requirement
of section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Office of the Secretary (OS), Department
of Health and Human Services, is
publishing the following summary of a
proposed collection for public
comment. Interested persons are invited
to send comments regarding this burden
estimate or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including any
of the following subjects: (1) The
necessity and utility of the proposed
information collection for the proper
performance of the agency’s functions;
(2) the accuracy of the estimated
burden; (3) ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and (4) the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology to
minimize the information collection
burden.
To obtain copies of the supporting
statement and any related forms for the
proposed paperwork collections
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\23JAN1.SGM
23JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 14 (Monday, January 23, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3266-3267]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-1164]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
Information Collection Being Reviewed by the Federal
Communications Commission
AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork burden
and as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3501-3520), the Federal Communications Commission invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment
on the following information collection(s). Comments are requested
concerning: (a) Whether the proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the
Commission, including whether the information shall have practical
utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden estimate; (c) ways
to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information
collected; (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents, including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of information technology; and (e)
ways to further reduce the information burden for small business
concerns with fewer than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. No person
shall be subject to any penalty for failing to comply with a collection
of information subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) that does
not display a valid OMB control number.
DATES: Written Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before March 23, 2012. If you anticipate that you will
be submitting PRA comments, but find it difficult to do so within the
period of time allowed by this notice, you should advise the FCC
contact listed below as soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Submit your PRA comments to Judith B.Herman, Federal
Communications Commission, via the Internet at Judith-b.herman@fcc.gov.
To submit your PRA comments by email send them to: PRA@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Judith B. Herman, Office of Managing
Director, (202) 418-0214.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: OMB Control Number: 3060-1147.
Title: Wireless E911 Phase II Location Accuracy Requirements, Third
Report and Order, FCC 11-107.
Form Number: N/A.
Type of Review: Revision of a currently approved collection.
Respondents: Individuals and households; business or other for-
profit entities; Not-for-profit institutions and State, Local, or
Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 4,898 respondents; 9,514 responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 5.5867143 hours (average).
Frequency of Response: On occasion reporting requirement and third
party disclosure requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Mandatory. Statutory authority for this
information collection is contained in 47 U.S.C. Sections 151, 154 and
332 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended.
Total Annual Burden: 53,152 hours.
Total Annual Cost: N/A.
Privacy Impact Assessment: N/A.
Needs and Uses: The Commission obtained OMB approval for this new
collection in March 2011. The Commission is now seeking OMB approval
for a revision to this information collection. The Commission adopted
and released a Third Report and Order, FCC 11-107, PS Docket No. 07-
114, which provides that new Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS)
providers, meeting the definition of covered CMRS providers in Section
20.18 and deploying networks subsequent to the effective date of the
Third Report and Order that are not an expansion or upgrade of an
existing CMRS network, must meet the handset-based location accuracy
standard from the start. Consequently, the rule requires new CMRS
providers launching new stand-alone networks during the eight-year
implementation period for handset-based CMRS wireless licensees to meet
the applicable handset-based location accuracy standard in effect of
the time of deployment. Therefore, new rule section 20.18(h)(2)(iv)
specifies that new CMRS providers must comply with
[[Page 3267]]
paragraphs (h)(2)((i-iii) of Section 20.18, which are the location
accuracy requirements for handset-based carriers. OMB approved the
information collection for those rule paragraphs, which the Second
Report and Order adopted, on March 30, 2011, under OMB Control No.
3060-1147. The Commission announced OMB's approval and the effective
date in 76 FR 23713 of the Federal Register.
As a result, under the new rule section adopted by Third Report and
Order, all new CMRS providers in delivering emergency calls for
Enhanced 911 service, must satisfy the handset-based location accuracy
standard at either a county-based or Public Safety Answering Point
(PSAP)-based geographic level. Similarly, in accordance with the new
rule and under the paragraph provision of Section 20.18(h)(2)(iii), new
CMRS providers may exclude up to 15 percent of the counties or PSAP
areas they serve due to heavy forestation that limits handset-based
technology accuracy in those counties or areas. Therefore, new CMRS
providers will be required to file a list of the specific counties or
portions of counties where they are utilizing their respective
exclusions. In its September 2010 Second Report and Order, 75 FR 70604,
the Commission found that permitting this exclusion properly but
narrowly accounts for the known technical limitations of handset-based
location accuracy technologies, while ensuring that the public safety
community and the public at large are sufficiently informed of these
limitations.
When they have begun deploying their new networks, the new CMRS
providers must submit initial reports, as the Commission will announce
after OMB approval of this revised information collection, with a list
of the areas that they are permitted to exclude from the handset-based
location accuracy requirements. Accordingly, the Commission will
specify the procedures for electronic filing into PS Docket No. 07-114,
consistent with the current OMB approved information collection for
handset-based carriers, and new CMRS providers must send copies of the
exclusion reports to the National Emergency Number Association, the
Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials-International,
and the National Association of State 9-1-1 Administrators.
Further, the rules adopted by the Commission's September 2010
Second Report and Order, 75 FR 70604, also require that, two years
after January 18, 2011, wireless carriers provide confidence and
uncertainty data on a per call basis to PSAPs. Because the new rule
adopted by the Third Report and Order considers new CMRS providers as
providers covered under the definition of CMR providers pursuant to
section 20.18 of the Commission's rules, new CMRS providers will also
be subject to the information collection requirement to provide this
confidence and uncertainty data.
Additionally, in view of the amended location accuracy requirements
and the timeframes and benchmarks for handset-based wireless carriers
to comply with them, in its September 2010 Second Report and Order, 75
FR 70604, the Commission recognized that the waiver process is suitable
to address individual or unique problems, where the Commission can
analyze the particular circumstances and the potential impact to public
safety. Thus, similarly, the supporting statement for this information
collection revision recognizes that new CMRS providers might file
waiver requests and, therefore, be subject to a collection and
reporting requirement.
The Third Report and Order found that requiring all new CMRS
network providers to comply with the Commission's handset-based
location accuracy standard is consistent with the regulatory principle
of ensuring technological neutrality. Providers deploying new CMRS
networks are free to use network-based location techniques, or to
combine network and handset-based techniques, to provide 911 location
information, provided that they meet the accuracy criteria applicable
to handset-based providers. Given the long-term goal of universal
support for one location accuracy standard, the Commission believed
that such a mandate allows appropriate planning and ensures that new
technology will comply with the most stringent location accuracy
standard that applies to existing technology.
Section 47 CFR 20.18(h)(2)(iv) requires that providers of new CMRS
networks that meet the definition of covered CMRS providers under
paragraph (a) of this section must comply with the requirements of
paragraphs (h)(2)(i) (iii) of this section. For this purpose, a ``new
CMRS network'' is a CMRS network that is newly deployed subsequent to
the effective date of the Third Report and Order in PS Docket No. 07-
114 and that is not an expansion or upgrade of an existing CMRS
network.
The information provided by wireless carriers deploying new CMRS
networks to report the counties or PSAP service areas where the
carriers cannot provide E911 location accuracy at either the county or
the PSAP level will furnish the Commission, affected PSAPs, state and
local emergency agencies, public safety organizations and other
interested stakeholders the supplementary data necessary for public
safety awareness of those areas where it is most difficult to measure
location accuracy during the benchmark periods for handset-based
wireless carriers.
The provision of confidence and uncertainty data to PSAPs by the
new CMRS providers and the SSPs responsible for transporting that data
between them and PSAPs will enhance the PSAPs' ability to efficiently
direct first responders to the correct location of emergencies to
achieve the emergency response goals of the nation in responding
expeditiously to emergency crisis situations and in ensuring homeland
security.
Federal Communications Commission.
Bulah P. Wheeler,
Deputy Manager, Office of the Secretary, Office of Managing Director.
[FR Doc. 2012-1164 Filed 1-20-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P