Consolidation of Permit Procedures; Denial and Revocation of Permits, 37481-37495 [2013-14638]
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37481
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 78, No. 120
Friday, June 21, 2013
7 CFR Parts 319, 322, and 360
Supporting documents and any
comments we receive on this docket
may be viewed at https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2011-0085 or
in our reading room, which is located in
room 1141 of the USDA South Building,
14th Street and Independence Avenue
SW., Washington, DC. Normal reading
room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except
holidays. To be sure someone is there to
help you, please call (202) 799–7039
before coming.
[Docket No. APHIS–2011–0085]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
RIN 0579–AD76
Consolidation of Permit Procedures;
Denial and Revocation of Permits
Mr.
Marc Phillips, Senior Regulatory Policy
Specialist, Regulatory Compliance and
Coordination, RPM, PPQ, APHIS, 4700
River Road Unit 133, Riverdale, MD
20737–1231; (301) 851–2114.
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
Background
We are proposing to
consolidate the regulations concerning
the issuance of permits for the
importation and interstate movement of
a wide variety of regulated plants, plant
products, and other articles. We would
also make corresponding changes to the
regulations concerning permits for the
importation and interstate movement of
noxious weeds and the importation of
honeybees and other beekeeping
articles. We are also proposing to
include new provisions in our
regulations for the denial of a permit
and the revocation of a permit once
issued. These changes would make our
permit procedures more transparent and
easier to use, allow us to evaluate a
permit application more quickly and
thoroughly, and help us hold permittees
accountable for complying with permit
conditions.
DATES: We will consider all comments
that we receive on or before August 20,
2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by either of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2011-00850001.
• Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery:
Send your comment to Docket No.
APHIS–2011–0085, Regulatory Analysis
and Development, PPD, APHIS, Station
3A–03.8, 4700 River Road Unit 118,
Riverdale, MD 20737–1238.
The Plant Protection Act, as amended,
(PPA, 7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) states that
it is the responsibility of the Secretary
of Agriculture to facilitate exports,
imports, and interstate commerce of
agricultural products and other
commodities that pose a risk of
harboring plant pests or noxious weeds
in ways that will reduce the risk of
dissemination of plant pests or noxious
weeds that could constitute a threat to
crops and other plants or plant products
and burden interstate or foreign
commerce. The Secretary may prohibit
or restrict the importation, entry,
exportation, or movement in interstate
commerce of any plant, plant product,
noxious weed, or article if the Secretary
determines that the prohibition or
restriction is necessary to prevent the
introduction of a plant pest or noxious
weed into the United States or the
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed within the United States.
To implement these prohibitions and
restrictions, the PPA further provides
that the Secretary may issue regulations,
including those that require that a
permit be obtained for plants, plant
products, noxious weeds, or other
regulated articles prior to their
importation or movement in interstate
commerce. The Secretary has delegated
the authority provided by the PPA to the
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS).
Regulations issued under the authority
of the PPA are administered and
AGENCY:
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SUMMARY:
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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enforced by APHIS’ Plant Protection
and Quarantine program (PPQ).
Requiring a written permit for the
importation or interstate movement of
plants, plant products, noxious weeds,
or other regulated articles reduces the
risk of the introduction or dissemination
of a plant pest or noxious weed in the
United States in several ways.
A permit informs applicants of the
requirements and conditions for
importation or interstate movement of
regulated articles that we have
determined are necessary to mitigate the
risk of introducing or disseminating a
plant pest or noxious weed. Requiring a
written permit also allows APHIS to
hold permittees accountable for
complying with permit conditions and
to specify the plant products allowed
into the United States or allowed to
move interstate. A permit prescribes the
binding conditions that the applicant for
a permit, and the permittee, must
adhere to under the permit and the
pertinent regulations. The information
contained in an application for a permit
must also provide for clear and
continuous accountability for the
importation or movement.
The regulations contained in 7 CFR
part 319, Foreign Quarantine Notices,
prohibit or restrict the importation into
the United States of certain plants,
roots, bulbs, seeds, or other plant
products to prevent plant pests and
noxious weeds from being introduced
and spread within the United States.
The restricted or prohibited plant
products include plants for planting, cut
flowers, fruits and vegetables, foreign
cotton and covers, sugarcane, citrus,
corn and related plants, rice, wheat, logs
and other unmanufactured wood
articles, packing materials, and coffee.
The regulations in 7 CFR part 322
prohibit or restrict the importation of
honeybees and honeybee semen in order
to prevent the introduction into the
United States of diseases and parasites
harmful to honeybees and of
undesirable species.
The regulations in 7 CFR part 360
restrict the importation and interstate
movement of those plants that are
designated as noxious weeds.
Each of the parts listed above
provides the requirements for permits
that are necessary to comply with the
regulations of that part. Those parts are
not, however, always consistent in their
requirements for obtaining a permit, the
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basis upon which we may deny or
revoke a permit, or how such a denial
or revocation may be appealed.
These inconsistencies have resulted
in confusion for applicants for a permit
concerning our permit procedures and
difficulties for APHIS in providing the
appropriate guidance concerning the
regulations. Additionally, the lack of
consistency in our permit procedures
has resulted in difficulties with the
enforcement of our regulations. There
have been instances of applicants for a
permit providing false or fraudulent
information. In other instances,
permittees have not complied with
requirements for using a permit.
Permittees must comply with all
requirements in the applicable
regulations and with all permit
conditions contained in the permit, and
with applicable administrative
instructions. Administrative
instructions are published guidance
stating how to comply with the
regulations with regard to a particular
commodity or situation, and are
incorporated into the regulations if they
are of general applicability. See, for
example, 7 CFR 319.24a,
‘‘Administrative instructions relating to
entry of corn into Guam.’’
In order to reduce the risk of the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest or noxious weed into or within the
United States, we intend to strengthen
and harmonize the requirements for a
permit for restricted plants, plant
products, and other articles regulated
under the PPA in parts 319, 322, and
360.
Specifically, we are proposing to
establish a new subpart in part 319
entitled ‘‘Permits: Application,
Issuance, Denial, and Revocation,’’
which would include §§ 319.7 through
319.7–5 and would serve as generally
applicable requirements in part 319 for
obtaining a permit to import or move
interstate plants or plant products. The
requirements contained in the new
subpart would provide applicants for
permits with more detailed information
regarding the process for applying for a
permit and indicate the type of
information we would require in a
permit application. We would also make
consistent and clear the provisions for
how we will approve, deny, or revoke
a permit. We would also apply the new
provisions, as appropriate, to parts 322
and 360.
We anticipate that these changes to
the regulations will make our permit
procedures more transparent and easier
to use, allow us to evaluate a permit
application more quickly and
thoroughly, and provide greater control
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and accountability for the permit
process.
These proposed changes, and the
provisions of the proposed new subpart,
are discussed in further detail directly
below.
Definitions
Section 319.7 would define terms we
propose to use in the permit regulations.
Some of the terms and definitions we
are proposing for § 319.7 are derived
from the definitions of these terms in
the PPA. We are proposing to use these
definitions in order to ensure that the
regulations are consistent with the PPA.
Those definitions are listed below:
• Article. Any material or tangible
objects that could harbor plant pests or
noxious weeds.
• Enter, entry. To move into, or the
act of movement into, the commerce of
the United States.
• Import, importation. To move into,
or the act of movement into, the
territorial limits of the United States.
• Means of conveyance. Any personal
property used for or intended for use for
the movement of any other personal
property.
• Move. To carry, enter, import, mail,
ship, or transport; to aid, abet, cause, or
induce the carrying, entering, importing,
mailing, shipping, or transporting; to
offer to carry, enter, import, mail, ship,
or transport; to receive to carry, enter,
import, mail, ship, or transport; to
release into the environment; or to allow
any of the activities described in this
definition.
• Permit. A written authorization,
including by electronic methods, to
move plants, plant products, biological
control organisms, plant pests, noxious
weeds, or articles under conditions
prescribed by the Administrator.
• Person. Any individual,
partnership, corporation, association,
joint venture, or other legal entity.
• Plant. Any plant (including any
plant part) for or capable of propagation,
including a tree, a tissue culture, a
plantlet culture, pollen, a shrub, a vine,
a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb,
a root, and a seed.
• Plant pest. Any living stage of any
of the following that can directly or
indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in any plant or plant
product: A protozoan, a nonhuman
animal, a parasitic plant, a bacterium, a
fungus, a virus or viroid, an infectious
agent or other pathogen, or any article
similar to or allied with any of the
foregoing.
• Plant product. Any flower, fruit,
vegetable, root, bulb, seed, or other
plant part that is not included in the
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definition of plant, or any manufactured
or processed plant or plant part.
• State. Any of the several States of
the United States, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin
Islands of the United States, or any
other territory or possession of the
United States.
• United States. All of the States.
Other definitions we are proposing for
§ 319.7 are based on definitions in other
parts of our regulations in 7 CFR chapter
III. These definitions are listed below:
• Administrative instructions.
Published documents related to the
enforcement of 7 CFR part 319 and
issued under authority thereof by the
Administrator.
• Administrator. The Administrator
of the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, or any employee of
the United States Department of
Agriculture delegated to act in his or her
stead.
• Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS). The Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service of the United
States Department of Agriculture.
• Consignment. A quantity of plants,
plant products, and/or other articles
being moved from one country to
another authorized, when required, by a
single permit. A consignment may be
composed of one or more commodities
or lots.
• Country of origin. The country
where the plants, or plants from which
the plant products are derived or were
grown or where the non-plant articles
were produced.
• Inspector. Any individual
authorized by the Administrator of the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service or the Commissioner of the
Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection, Department of Homeland
Security, to enforce the regulations in
part 319.
• Lot. All the regulated articles on a
single means of conveyance that are
derived from the same species of plant
or are the same type of non-plant article
and were subjected to the same
treatments prior to importation, and that
are consigned to the same person.
• Port of entry. A port at which a
specified shipment or means of
conveyance is accepted for entry, or
admitted without entry into the United
States for transit purposes.
• PPQ. The Plant Protection and
Quarantine program, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
• Regulated article. Any material or
tangible object regulated by 7 CFR part
319 for entry into the United States or
interstate movement.
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• Soil. The unconsolidated material
from the earth’s surface that consists of
rock and mineral particles mixed with
organic material and that supports or is
capable of supporting biotic
communities.
• Treatment. A procedure approved
by the Administrator for neutralizing
infestations or infections of plant pests
or plant diseases, such as fumigation,
application of chemicals or dry or moist
heat, or processing, utilization, or
storage.
Other definitions we are proposing for
§ 319.7 are new to the regulations or are
slightly different or expanded from
current definitions. These definitions
are discussed below.
To provide a clear framework for
distinguishing the stages involved in
issuing permits for the importation and
interstate movement of regulated
articles we would define two terms.
These terms are applicant and
permittee.
We would define an applicant as a
person at least 18 years of age who, on
behalf of him or herself or another
person, submits an application for a
permit to import into the United States
or move interstate a regulated article in
accordance with part 319. A permittee
would be defined as a person who on
behalf of him or herself or another
person, is legally the importer of an
article, meets the requirements of
§ 319.7–2(f), and is responsible for
compliance with the conditions for the
importation that is the subject of a
permit issued in accordance with part
319. It is important that the permittee be
the importer of the article because the
act of importing an article contrary to
the regulations is specifically identified
as a violation of law.
In § 319.7–1, we would make
consistent the information required in
an application for a permit for the
articles regulated by part 319. We would
require applicants to state the intended
use of the regulated article and we
would define intended use as the
purpose for the importation of the
regulated article, to include, but not be
limited to, consumption, propagation, or
research purposes. We would also
require that the proposed port of first
arrival be provided, and we would
define port of first arrival as the area,
such as a seaport, airport, or land
border, where a person or means of
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conveyance first arrives in the United
States, and where inspection of
regulated articles may be carried out by
inspectors.
We would clarify throughout part 319
that obtaining a permit does not
guarantee permission to import a
consignment of regulated articles, but
that an inspector at the port may
withhold permission pending a
determination regarding whether
remedial measures are necessary
pursuant to the PPA with respect to the
regulated article. We would also define
oral authorization as verbal permission
to import that may be granted by an
inspector at the port of entry.
Applying for a Permit
The regulations in proposed § 319.7–
1 would set out the specific information
a permit application must contain, how
we would handle a shipment that
arrives at a port before the permittee has
received the permit, and how we would
provide for oral authorizations at the
port of entry.
Paragraph (a) would provide that a
person who wishes to import regulated
articles into the United States must
apply for a permit, unless the regulated
articles are not subject to a requirement
that a permit be issued prior to a
consignment’s arrival. This standard
would continue to allow importation of
articles that the regulations currently
allow to enter without being
accompanied by a permit (e.g., most lots
of 12 or fewer plants for planting under
§ 319.37–3, certain log and lumber
articles authorized entry under the
general permit in § 319.40–3, or fruits
and vegetables from Canada entering
under the general permit in § 319.56–
10).
Proposed paragraph (a) would also set
out the requirements for an applicant to
obtain a permit. Under this paragraph,
an applicant for a permit to import
regulated articles into the United States
in accordance with part 319 would have
to be capable of acting in the capacity
of the permittee, or must designate a
permittee for the permit, should it be
issued. The duties of a permittee are
discussed later in this document.
Section 424(c) of the PPA (7 U.S.C.
7734(c)) provides that, for the purposes
of the PPA, the act, omission, or failure
of any officer, agent, or person acting for
or employed by another person within
the scope of his or her employment or
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office shall be deemed also to be the act,
omission, or failure of the other person.
We would make this responsibility clear
by building into the definition of
applicant that the application may be
for a permit on behalf of him or herself
or another person to act as permittee.
We would also require that the
applicant be at least 18 years of age.
Paragraph (b) would provide
applicants with information regarding
how to obtain and submit an application
for a permit. It would state that permit
applications must be submitted by the
applicant in writing or electronically
through one of the means listed at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/
plant_health/permits/index.shtml in
advance of the action(s) proposed on the
permit application. That Web page
would specify that persons may apply
for a permit via the Internet through
APHIS’ secure site for online permit
applications, and would provide a link
to that portal. It would also provide that
a person may submit a permit
application by faxing the application to
APHIS, and would specify the
appropriate fax number. Additionally, it
would state that an application may be
obtained by calling PPQ at the number
provided. Finally, it would provide that
a person may submit a permit
application by mailing it to APHIS at
the address provided.
Paragraph (c) would list the
information that every permit
application must contain, and paragraph
(d) would list other information APHIS
may require from some applicants
depending on the specific nature of the
articles in their shipments. Currently, in
the various subparts of part 319, permit
applications require certain information
in all cases (nature and origin of the
shipment, contact information for the
applicant, etc.), but there is substantial
variation in the description of
requirements. Much of the variation is
not significant but simply results from
the fact that the various subparts were
written at different times over a span of
50 years. In a few cases, the variation
results from a need to have additional
information to evaluate or control the
risks associated with specific types of
imports or pests. Table 1 below
summarizes how the current subparts of
part 319 address the information
required for permit applications.
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§ 319.24 et seq.
Subpart—corn diseases
• Name and address of the exporter
• Country and locality where
grown
• Port of departure
• Proposed port of entry
• Name and address of the importer or of the broker in the
United States to whom the permit should be sent
§ 319.8 et seq.
Subpart—foreign cotton and covers
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• Name and address of the importer
• Country from which such material
is to be imported
• Kind of cotton or covers it is desired to import
• Approximate quantity
• Proposed port of entry
• Name, address, and telephone
number of the importer
• Approximate quantity and kinds
(botanical designations) of articles intended to be imported
• Country(ies)
or
locality(ies)
where grown
• Intended United States port of
entry
• Means of transportation, e.g.,
mail, airmail, express, air express, freight, airfreight, or baggage
• Expected date of arrival
§ 319.37 et seq.
Subpart—plants for planting
§ 319.41 et seq.
Subpart—Indian corn or maize,
broomcorn, and related plants
• Name and address of the exporter
• Country and locality where
grown
• Port of arrival
• Name and address of the importer in the United States to
whom the permit should be sent
§ 319.40 et seq.
Subpart—logs, lumber, and other
wood articles
• Name and address of the applicant and, if the applicant’s address is not within the United
States, of an agent in the United
States whom the applicant
names for acceptance of service
of process
• Statement certifying the applicant
as the importer of record
• Specific type of regulated article
to be imported, including the
genus and species name of the
tree from which the regulated article was derived
• Country, and locality if known,
where the tree from which the
regulated article was derived was
harvested
• Quantity of the regulated article
to be imported
• Description of any processing,
treatment or handling to be performed prior to importation, including the location where any
processing or treatment was or
will be performed and the names
and dosage of any chemicals
employed in treatments
• Description of any processing,
treatment, or handling intended
to be performed following importation, including the location
where any processing or treatment will be performed and the
names and dosage of any
chemicals employed in treatments
• Whether the regulated article will
or will not be imported in a
sealed container or in a hold
• Means of conveyance to be used
• Intended port of first arrival in the
United, and any subsequent
ports in the United States at
which regulated articles may be
unloaded
• Destination and general intended
use of the regulated article
• Name and address of the importer in the United States to
whom the permit should be sent,
if other than the applicant
• Locality where the desired material has been grown
• Port of arrival
§ 319.55 et seq.
Subpart—rice
TABLE 1—COMPARISON OF INFORMATION REQUIRED FOR PERMIT APPLICATIONS
• Name and address of the importer in the United States
• Country or locality of origin of the
fruits or vegetables
• Anticipated port of first arrival
• Identity (scientific name preferred) and quantity of the fruit or
vegetable
§ 319.56 et seq.
Subpart—fruits and vegetables
• Name, address, and telephone
number of the importer.
• Approximate quantity and kinds
of articles intended to be imported.
• Country or locality of origin.
• Country(ies)
or
locality(ies)
where it is intended to be offloaded prior to arrival in the
United States.
• Intended U.S. port of entry.
• Means of transportation.
• Expected date of arrival.
§ 319.75 et seq.
Subpart—Khapra beetle
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Table 2 below describes the unified
permit application information
requirements that we are proposing to
replace the varied requirements in table
1. It includes both specific information
we would require for all permit
applications and additional information
that we may sometimes require based on
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the nature of the article imported
pursuant to the requested permit.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED PERMIT APPLICATION INFORMATION REQUIREMENTS
Information for all permits
(proposed § 319.7–1(c))
Additional information that may be required
(proposed § 319.7–1(d))
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• Legal name, address, and contact information of the applicant and of
the permittee, if different from the applicant.
• Specific type of regulated article (common and scientific names, if
applicable).
• Country of origin.
• Intended use of the regulated article.
• Intended port of first arrival.
• A description of any processing, treatment, or handling of the regulated article to be performed prior to or following importation, including the location where any processing or treatment was or will be
performed and the names and dosage of any chemical employed in
treatments of the regulated article.
The information we are proposing to
require for all applications would
provide us with the means to contact
and track applicants and evaluate, for
most cases, the risk posed by the
proposed importation. This evaluation
takes into account the type of article (to
consider what pests it may host) and the
country of origin (to consider what pests
are found there). The intended use of
the article is also often relevant, for
example, if it is intended for near-term
consumption or processing destructive
to pests. The intended port of arrival is
important information both for
workload planning and to consider
whether any pests of concern could
thrive or spread in that port’s climate.
Finally, the description of any
processing, treatment, or handling of the
article allows us to consider whether
pests would be destroyed by such
processes.
The second column of table 2 lists
information that APHIS may require
before issuing specific permits to make
a fully informed decision concerning
the risks of disseminating plant pests or
noxious weeds for a particular
importation. This represents
information that APHIS may sometimes
require either to properly assess the risk
associated with the proposed
importation or information relevant to
operational planning. For example, the
identity of countries that the
consignment is shipped through may be
relevant to risk in cases where certain
types of consignments can easily
become infested with pests not present
in the country of origin. In other cases
the quantity of a regulated article is
relevant when gauging whether
treatment facilities at the port of arrival
are of adequate size, and the estimated
date of arrival is relevant when port
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•
•
•
•
Means of conveyance.
Quantity of the regulated article.
Estimated date of arrival.
Name, address, and contact information of any broker or subsequent
custodian of the regulated article.
• Exporting country from which the article is to be moved, when not
the country of origin.
• Any other information determined to be necessary by the Administrator to inform the decision to issue the permit.
facilities are scheduled for renovation or
particularly busy periods. This type of
additional information would be
obtained from the applicant either
through automatic prompts in the
ePermits system triggered by applicant
responses, or in cases where ePermits is
not used, by APHIS contacting the
applicant after receiving the application.
Importantly, we propose to indicate in
paragraph (d) of § 319.7–1 that APHIS
may require from an applicant any other
information determined necessary by
the Administrator to inform the decision
to issue the permit or to safely manage
its entry at the port. Such information
may sometimes be required from an
applicant even after issuance of a
permit, for example, when additional
transportation requirements suddenly
become necessary. These are situations
where clearance of a consignment at the
scheduled port of first arrival is
impossible and the consignment is
directed to move from the arrival port
environs to another location for final
disposition. In such cases, APHIS may
need more information to assess the pest
risk and decide whether safeguards are
adequate and to contact the destination
port about safeguards there while the
off-loaded consignment is awaiting
transshipment.
Paragraph (e) of § 319.7–1 would
provide that an application for a permit
to import regulated articles into the
United States must be submitted at least
30 days prior to arrival of the article at
the port of entry; however, if, through
no fault of the permittee, a consignment
should arrive at a U.S. port before a
permit is received, we would provide
that the consignment may be held,
under suitable safeguards prescribed by
the inspector, in custody at the risk and
expense of the permittee pending
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issuance of a permit or authorization
from APHIS for entry.
We would also provide for oral
authorizations in paragraph (e). As
discussed above, an oral authorization
would be defined as verbal permission
to import that may be granted by an
inspector at the port of entry. We are
proposing that an oral authorization
could be granted by an inspector at the
port of entry for a shipment or a
consignment, provided all applicable
entry requirements are met, proof of
application for a written permit is
provided to the inspector, and PPQ
verifies that the application for a written
permit has been received and that PPQ
intends to issue the permit.
The oral authorization procedure
would replace current provisions in part
319 of the regulations for oral permits.
Some sections of part 319 allow oral
permits to be issued at the sole
discretion of an inspector, without
requiring prior submission of a permit
application. While APHIS has
operational practices in effect to track
when oral permits are authorized and
what they cover, there is no
corresponding requirement for
importers to keep track of when they
receive oral permission and what it
covers, which complicates compliance
audits and enforcement actions. Due to
these factors, we have determined that
oral permits do not provide a reliable
means of verifying that a permittee was
aware of permitting conditions at the
time he or she was issued the permit.
Because the proposed oral authorization
procedure includes a requirement that
an application for a written permit must
be underway before an oral
authorization is issued, it would
provide a link between oral
authorizations and documentation. The
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written application associated with the
oral authorization also includes
acknowledgment and acceptance of
permit conditions that may be assigned
by APHIS, which also strengthens the
oral authorization system compared to
the old oral permits system for articles
subject to part 319.
Issuance of Permits and Labels
Section 319.7–2 would contain the
provisions for the issuance of permits
and labels. In paragraph (a) of this
section, we would provide that, when
we receive an application for a permit,
we will issue a permit that prescribes
the applicable conditions for
importation if, after review of the
application, the Administrator
determines that the regulated article is
eligible to be imported into the United
States under those specific conditions.
A copy of the permit would be provided
to the permittee. The permit would only
be valid for the time period indicated on
the permit. In addition to listing the
applicable conditions of entry, the
permit would also specify the port of
entry and, when needed, allowed ports
of first arrival. (This may be needed, for
example, for air parcel post deliveries
that arrive in the United States and then
move by surface transportation, usually
by a bonded carrier, to another
destination for entry. Such shipments
must be cleared at a port of first arrival
that has a U.S. Department of
Agriculture plant inspection station.)
Paragraph (b) would require that an
applicant for a permit for the
importation of regulated articles into the
United States designate the person who
will be named as the permittee upon the
permit’s issuance. As discussed above,
the applicant and the permittee may be
the same person.
As noted above, the PPA provides that
the act, omission, or failure of any
officer, agent or person acting for or
employed by another person within the
scope of his or her employment or office
shall be deemed also to be the act,
omission, or failure of the other person.
We would include this standard in
paragraph (c) to make it clear that
responsibility for violating a permit
condition applies to the permittee and
is not limited to just the person who
commits the violation, if that person is
acting as an agent for the applicant or
permittee.
Paragraph (d) would provide that
failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging,
counterfeiting, or defacing permits or
shipping labels, may result in
immediate revocation of relevant
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permits (i.e., the permit for which a
condition was violated, or any valid
permit that the permittee altered to
extend its scope), denial of any future
applications for permits, and other
remedial actions ordered by an
inspector and civil or criminal penalties
for the permittee, as authorized by the
PPA.
Paragraph (e) would provide that the
permittee remains responsible for the
consignment regardless of any
delegation to a subsequent custodian of
the importation. Such subsequent
custodians include entities such as
brokers or transporters.
Paragraph (f) would include
requirements for the permittee. These
requirements are necessary because we
must be able to clearly identify and
when necessary contact the person
legally responsible for the importation
or movement that is the subject of the
permit. If the permittee is an individual,
he or she would be required, during any
periods when articles are being
imported or moved interstate under the
permit, to maintain and be physically
present during normal business hours at
an address within the United States
specified on the permit.
If the permittee is a corporation,
institution, association or other legal
entity, the legal entity would have to
maintain an address or a business office
in the United States with a designated
individual for service of process.
Proposed paragraph (f) would also
require that the permittee serve as the
contact for the purpose of
communications associated with the
movement of the regulated article for
the duration of the permit, and ensure
compliance with the applicable
regulatory requirements and permit
conditions associated with the
movement of the regulated article for
the duration of the permit. The
permittee would also be required to
provide written or electronic
acknowledgment and acceptance of
permit conditions and acknowledge that
failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging,
counterfeiting, or defacing permits or
shipping labels, may result in
immediate revocation of the permit,
denial of any future applications for
permits, and other remedial actions
under the PPA. We would require that
the permittee comply with all
conditions of the permit for the entirety
of its prescribed duration. The permittee
would also be required to inform the
PPQ Permit Unit of a change in contact
information for the permittee within 10
business days of such change.
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Paragraph (g) would provide that the
importation of regulated articles may
only proceed, even if a permit is issued,
if all applicable requirements of the
permit or any other documents or
instructions issued by APHIS are met.
Such documents may include APHIS
administrative instructions, compliance
agreements, and preclearance
documents. While APHIS tries to ensure
that permittees are fully informed at the
time of permit issuance as to exactly
what APHIS requirements will apply to
their shipments when they arrive,
sometimes this is not possible. There are
various reasons for this, ranging from
the minor (a clerical or data entry error
in the permit) to the substantial (new
data demonstrating existence of a pest
in an area or on a commodity where it
was not previously known). To directly
inform permittees, each permit contains
a statement that all requirements are
subject to change at any time during the
duration of the permit, and refers
permittees to PPQ Port Program
Manuals at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/
import_export/plants/manuals/ports/
index.shtml for current import
requirements for commodities. When it
is possible and there is time to do so,
APHIS will amend a permit and inform
the permittee before shipments arrive
that will be subject to new or revised
requirements. When there is not time to
do this or a large number of permits are
affected and they all cannot be amended
quickly, the new requirements are also
publicized using methods such as press
releases and the PPQ Stakeholder
Registry. Also, when new pest or other
information makes it necessary to
prohibit commodities that were
previously allowed entry, a Federal
Order 1 is usually issued and widely
distributed by APHIS.
APHIS issues labels for consignments
of some imported articles to expedite
clearance of approved imports, e.g., we
may issue labels to be applied to fruit
packed under approved conditions at an
approved packinghouse overseas.
Paragraph (h) would add provisions for
the labeling of regulated articles to be
imported under a permit issued in
accordance with part 319. It would state
that labels with information about the
shipment’s nature, origin, movement
1 A Federal Order is a document issued by
APHIS, typically in response to an immediate need,
when the Administrator of APHIS considers it
necessary to take regulatory action to protect
agriculture or prevent the entry and establishment
into the United States of a pest or disease. Federal
Orders are effective immediately under the
regulatory authority provided by the Plant
Protection Act, as amended, Section 412(a), 7 U.S.C.
7712(a). Federal Orders will remain in effect until
they are revised by another Federal Order or by
rulemaking, or are withdrawn.
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conditions, or other matters relevant to
the permit may be issued to the
importer for the importation of
regulated articles and will indicate that
the importation is authorized under the
conditions specified in the permit. The
quantity of labels will be sufficient for
the importer to affix one to the outer
packaging of each parcel. If APHIS has
required and issued labels for an
importation by either regulations in part
319 or specific permit conditions,
importations without the required labels
will be refused entry into the United
States.
Even if a permit has been issued for
the importation of a regulated article,
under the provisions of paragraph (i) the
regulated article may be imported only
if an inspector at the port of entry
determines that, based on the findings
of the inspection, no remedial measures
pursuant to the PPA are necessary.
Pursuant to the PPA, an inspector may
hold, seize, quarantine, treat, apply
other remedial measures to, destroy, or
otherwise dispose of plants, plant pests,
and other articles in accordance with
sections 414, 421, and 434 of the PPA
(7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and 7754).
Paragraph (j) of proposed § 319.7–2
would provide that a permit application
may be withdrawn at the request of the
applicant prior to the issuance of the
permit. A permit could be canceled after
issuance at the request of the permittee
under proposed paragraph (k), and
paragraph (l) would provide that a
permit may be amended if the
Administrator finds after issuance that
the permit was incomplete or contained
factual errors.
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Denial of Permits
Section 319.7–3 would contain the
regulations by which we could deny a
permit to import regulated articles into
the United States under this part.
The Administrator may deny an
application for a permit under the
provisions of proposed paragraph (a). A
denial, including the reason for the
denial, would be provided in writing,
including by electronic methods, to the
applicant as promptly as circumstances
permit. We would provide that the
denial of a permit may be appealed in
accordance with § 319.7–5.
Paragraph (b) would contain the
conditions under which the
Administrator may deny a permit to
import regulated articles. These
conditions would include risks posed
both by the applicant and by the article.
We propose to provide that a permit
may be denied if APHIS determines that
an applicant is not likely to abide by
permit conditions. Factors that may lead
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to such a determination would include,
but not be limited to, the following.
• The applicant, or another legal
entity in which the applicant has a
substantial interest, has not complied
with any permit that was previously
issued by APHIS;
• APHIS determines that issuing the
permit would circumvent any order
revoking or denying a permit under the
Act;
• APHIS determines that the
applicant has previously failed to
comply with any APHIS regulation;
• The applicant has previously failed
to comply with any Federal, State, or
local law, regulation or instruction
concerning plant health;
• The applicant has failed to comply
with the laws or regulations of a
national plant protection organization or
equivalent body, as these pertain to
plant health;
• The applicant has made false or
fraudulent statements or provided false
or fraudulent records to APHIS, or;
• The applicant has been convicted or
has pled nolo contendere to any crime
involving fraud, bribery, extortion, or
any other crime involving a lack of
integrity.
The above factors represent reasons
APHIS might determine, based on past
actions and their relevance to the
application under consideration, that an
applicant cannot be trusted to abide by
permit conditions. Additionally, we
could also deny a permit if the
application for a permit contains
information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, or
deceptive. A permit could also be
denied for the regulated article for
which the permit is sought if, in APHIS’
opinion, the action under the permit
would present an unacceptable risk of
introducing or disseminating a plant, or
if the importation is adverse to the
conduct of an eradication, suppression,
control, or regulatory program of APHIS,
or to applicable import regulations or
any administrative instructions. A
permit could be denied if the
government of the State or Territory into
which the article would be imported
objects to the proposed importation and
provides specific, detailed information
that there is a risk it will result in the
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed into the State, and APHIS concurs.
Withdrawal, Cancellation, and
Revocation of Permits
Section 319.7–4 would contain the
regulations under which we may revoke
a permit to import regulated articles into
the United States that has already been
issued under part 319. It would also
contain procedures for applicants to
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37487
withdraw their permit application, and
for permittees to cancel their permits.
Paragraph (a) would provide that an
applicant may withdraw a permit
application before issuance of a permit
by sending a written request to APHIS.
APHIS would then provide written
notification to the applicant as promptly
as circumstances allow regarding
reception of the request and withdrawal
of the application.
Paragraph (b) would provide that that
if a permittee wishes to cancel a permit
after its issuance, he or she must
provide the request in writing to APHIS.
APHIS would then provide written
notification to the applicant as promptly
as circumstances allow regarding
reception of the request and withdrawal
of the application.
Paragraph (c) would provide that the
Administrator may revoke any
outstanding permit to import regulated
articles into the United States, and that
a revocation, including the reason for
the revocation, would be provided in
writing, including by electronic
methods, to the permittee as promptly
as circumstances permit. The revocation
of a permit could be appealed in
accordance with proposed § 319.7–5.
Paragraph (d) would contain the
conditions under which the
Administrator may revoke a permit to
import a regulated article. Under this
paragraph, the Administrator could
revoke a permit to import a regulated
article if information is received
subsequent to the issuance of the permit
that would constitute cause for the
denial of an application under proposed
§ 319.7–3. A permit could also be
revoked if the Administrator determines
that the permittee has failed to maintain
the safeguards or otherwise observe the
conditions specified in the permit or in
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions.
Sections 414, 421, and 434 of the PPA
(7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and 7754) give the
Secretary the authority to hold, seize,
quarantine, treat, apply other remedial
measures to, destroy, or otherwise
dispose of plants, plant pests, and other
articles moving into or through the
United States, in order to prevent the
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed, without cost to the Federal
Government and in the manner the
Secretary considers appropriate and is
the least drastic action that is feasible
and that would be adequate to prevent
the dissemination of any plant pest or
noxious weed new to or not known to
be widely prevalent or distributed
within and throughout the United
States.
In light of this authority granted by
the PPA, paragraph (e) would contain
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the actions that must be taken if a
permit is revoked. It would provide that,
upon revocation of a permit, the
permittee must, without cost to the
Federal Government and in the manner
the Administrator considers
appropriate, surrender all regulated
articles covered by the revoked permit
and any other affected plant material to
an inspector; destroy all regulated
articles covered by the revoked permit
and any other affected plant material
under the supervision of an inspector;
or remove all regulated articles covered
by the revoked permit and any other
affected plant material from the United
States.
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Appeal of Denial or Revocation
Proposed § 319.7–5 would set out the
procedure for appealing a denial or
revocation of a permit to import
regulated articles into the United States.
As discussed above regarding proposed
§ 319.7–4(a), all denials of an
application for a permit, or revocations
of an existing permit, will be provided
in writing, including by electronic
methods, as promptly as circumstances
permit and will include the reasons for
the denial or revocation.
Paragraph (b) would provide that any
person whose application for a permit
has been denied or whose permit has
been revoked may appeal the decision
in writing to the Administrator within
10 business days from the date the
communication of notification of the
denial or revocation of the permit was
received. The appeal should state all
facts and reasons upon which the
person is relying to show that the denial
or revocation was incorrect.
The Administrator would grant or
deny the appeal in writing and will state
in writing the reason for the decision.
Changes to Other Subparts in Part 319
As discussed above, we are proposing
to establish the new subpart §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5 to contain and
consolidate the generally applicable
requirements in part 319 for obtaining a
permit to import or move interstate
plants or plant products.
Other subparts in part 319 currently
contain varying requirements relating to
permits. We are proposing to remove
those requirements from the regulations
and amend all the subparts with current
requirements to refer to the subpart we
are proposing to add. This would ensure
that common requirements apply to
permits for importation of any article
whose importation is regulated under
part 319.
In the paragraphs that follow, we
discuss the changes we are proposing to
the regulations contained in part 319
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and cite the specific areas of the
regulations we are proposing to change.
The foreign quarantine notices of 7
CFR part 319 to which we propose
changes are:
Plants and plant products imported
for experimental, therapeutic, or
developmental purposes under § 319.8.
This section contains requirements for
controlled import permits (CIP) that
may be used to import an article whose
importation is prohibited under part
319, or to import an article under
conditions that differ from those
prescribed in the relevant regulations in
part 319. This section was recently
promulgated in a final rule in the
Federal Register on May 2, 2013 (78 FR
25565–25572), and its provisions for
denial and revocation of permits are
substantially similar to those discussed
in this rule above. We propose to revise
the relevant paragraph (g) in § 319.6,
Denial and revocation of a CIP, to refer
to the provisions of the proposed new
subpart.
Foreign cotton and covers regulated
under §§ 319.8 through 319.8–26. In
§ 319.8–1, we would amend the
definition of permit to refer to the
provisions of the proposed new subpart.
We would remove specific language
from § 319.8–2(a) and (c) about the
written or oral form of a permit
application and the information it must
contain and information regarding
where a permit application may be
submitted. This information, updated to
be consistent with current APHIS
procedures, would now be available in
proposed § 319.7–1. We would also
remove § 319.8–2(d), which describes
what steps APHIS will take upon receipt
of an application. This information,
updated to be consistent with current
APHIS procedures, would now be
available in proposed § 319.7–2. We
would also remove paragraph (g), which
describes how certain shipments that
inadvertently arrive at a port in advance
of the issuance of a permit may be held
under safeguards pending issuance of
the permit. Proposed § 319.7–1(e) would
replace this provision with updated
language regarding safeguards at the
port of entry and oral authorizations for
entry. We would also add references in
§§ 319.8–1 and 319.8–2 to §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5 to aid readers in
locating the newly consolidated
information on permits.
Indian corn or maize and related
plants and their seeds regulated under
§§ 319.24 through 319.24–5 (the corn
diseases subpart) and §§ 319.41 through
319.46 (the Indian corn or maize,
broomcorn, and related plants subpart).
We would revise § 319.24–1, which
discusses the application for a permit, to
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add references to the proposed new
subpart, and remove §§ 319.24–2 and
319.24–4 as their provisions for the
issuance of permits and the notification
of arrival at the port would be covered
in the new subpart. We would also
remove language concerning the
application for a permit in § 319.41–2
and instead refer to the proposed new
subpart. In § 319.41–6, we would
remove language concerning special
mailing tags that are no longer used.
Citrus fruit and nursery stock
regulated under § 319.28. We would
remove paragraph (i), which deals with
permit cancellation and appeals, and
paragraph (j), which defines the term
inspector. These provisions would be
redundant if the proposed new subpart
is adopted.
Plants for planting regulated under
§§ 319.37 through 319.37–14. In
§ 319.37–3, we would add references to
the new subpart that provides for permit
procedures and remove language
concerning permit applications and oral
permits that is inconsistent with
provisions of the proposed new subpart.
Logs, lumber, and other
unmanufactured wood articles
regulated under §§ 319.40–1 through
319.40–11. In § 319.40–4, we would
remove information about permit
applications and add references to the
new subpart that provides for permit
applications and other procedures.
Rice regulated under §§ 319.55
through 319.55–7. In § 319.55–2, which
provides for the process of applying for
a permit to import rice products, we
would add references to the new
subpart that provides for permit
procedures and remove information
about permit applications that is
inconsistent with the provisions of the
proposed new subpart. We would
remove § 319.55–4 as it contains
information about permit issuance,
which is covered in the proposed new
subpart. In § 319.55–7, which provides
for the process of importing rice
products by mail, we would remove
information about mailing tags that is
covered in the proposed new subpart
and add the requirement that a permit
must be obtained for the importation
and all conditions of the permit must be
met.
Fruits and vegetables regulated under
§§ 319.56–1 through 319.56–58. In
§ 319.56–3, we would remove several
paragraphs that contain information
about permit applications and issuance,
oral permits, and the amendment,
withdrawal or denial of permits and the
appeal of these actions. We would
replace this information with a
reference to the proposed new subpart,
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which would contain information about
all these topics.
Those articles restricted in order to
prevent the entry of khapra beetle
regulated under §§ 319.75 through
319.75–9. Throughout these sections, we
would change the term ‘‘restricted
article’’ to ‘‘regulated article’’ to be
consistent with the rest of part 319 and
new §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5. In
§ 319.75–3, we would remove several
paragraphs that that contain information
about permit applications and issuance,
and the withdrawal of permits and the
appeal of a withdrawal, adding in their
place references to the new subpart that
provides for permit procedures.
Changes to Other Parts
As discussed above, we are proposing
to apply the new provisions, as
appropriate, contained in the new
subpart that provides for permit
procedures in part 319 to parts 322 and
360. This would provide more
consistency to our regulations
concerning the process for applying for
a permit, the type of information we
would require in a permit application,
and the provisions for approving,
denying, or revoking a permit, and the
process for appealing these actions.
Part 322—Bees, Beekeeping ByProducts, and Beekeeping Equipment
The regulations in 7 CFR part 322
prohibit or restrict the importation of
honeybees and honeybee semen in order
to prevent the introduction into the
United States of diseases and parasites
harmful to honeybees and of
undesirable species.
Section 322.13 regulates restricted
organisms and states that they may be
imported into the United States only by
Federal, State, or university researchers.
To this section we would add
requirements that an importer must also
be a person at least 18 years of age, and
must be physically present during
normal business hours at an address
within the United States specified on
the permit during any periods when
articles are being imported or moved
interstate under the permit. We would
also remove language in § 322.14 that
provides that an applicant for a permit
must be a resident, or sponsored by a
resident, of the United States, as it
would conflict with the proposed
change.
We would add to current § 322.15(c),
which sets out conditions for denial of
a permit, three of the conditions under
which we may deny a permit that are
discussed above under § 319.7–3. These
provisions for the denial of a permit
include:
• A permit may be denied to a person
who has previously failed to comply
with any APHIS regulation.
• A permit may be denied to a person
who has previously failed to comply
with any Federal, State, or local law,
regulation, or instruction concerning the
importation of prohibited or restricted
foreign agricultural products may also
be denied a permit.
• A permit may be denied if the
application for a permit contains
information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, or
deceptive.
We would also replace the provisions
of paragraph (e) of § 322.15 for the
appeal of a denial or cancellation of a
permit with the new requirements
proposed in § 319.7–5 and discussed
above.
Part 360—Noxious Weed Regulations
The regulations in 7 CFR part 360
prohibit or restrict the importation and
interstate movement of those plants that
are designated as noxious weeds, as
defined by the PPA.
Section 360.304 contains the
conditions under which we may deny a
permit to move a noxious weed. We
would add two additional conditions for
denial to this section that are similar to
conditions for denial that we proposed
to add in § 319.7–3.
We propose to provide that we may
deny a permit if the application for a
permit contains information that is
found to be materially false, fraudulent,
or deceptive. A permit may be denied to
37489
a person who has previously failed to
comply with any APHIS regulation.
We believe that these changes to the
regulations will harmonize our permit
procedures and make our permit
procedures clearer and easier to use.
Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory
Flexibility Act
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and,
therefore, has not been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget.
In accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, we have analyzed the
potential economic effects of this action
on small entities.
Entities that may be affected by the
proposed rule are importers of lumber
and plywood (North American Industry
Classification System [NAICS] code
423310); importers of other
miscellaneous durable goods, such as
logs, timber and packing material
(NAICS 423990); importers of drugs,
druggists’ supplies, herbs and weeds
(NAICS 424210); importers of flowers,
nursery stock, and florists’ supplies
(NAICS 424930), importers of fresh
fruits and vegetables (NAICS 424480);
importers of other grocery and related
products, such as coffee (NAICS
424490); importers of grains and field
beans (NAICS 424510); importers of
other farm product raw material, such as
raw cotton, sugarcane, honeybees and
honeybee semen (NAICS 424590); and
importers of farm supplies (NAICS
424910). The Small Business
Administration (SBA) has established
guidelines for determining which
establishments are to be considered
small. Imports/export merchants, agents
and brokers are identified within the
broader wholesaling trade sector.
A firm classified within any of these
NAICS wholesale industry categories is
considered small if it employs not more
than 100 persons. Based on information
from the 2007 Economic Census, as
shown in table 3, the majority of entities
that comprise these industries have
fewer than 100 employees.
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
TABLE 3—PREVALENCE OF SMALL ENTITIES IN CERTAIN INDUSTRIES THAT MAY BE AFFECTED BY THE RULE, 2007
Lumber, plywood, millwork, wood panel
(NAICS 423310) ...........................................
Other miscellaneous durable goods, construction material logs, timber, packing material
(NAICS 423990) ...........................................
16:09 Jun 20, 2013
Jkt 229001
Number of
establishments
with 100 or more
employees that
operated the
entire year
Number of
establishments
with fewer than
100 employees
that operated the
entire year
Small-entity
establishments
as a percentage
of those that
operated the
entire year
(percent)
8,984
8,303
2,123
6,180
74
10,270
8,764
532
8,232
94
Number of all
establishments
Industry wholesale merchants
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Number of
establishments
that operated the
entire year
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TABLE 3—PREVALENCE OF SMALL ENTITIES IN CERTAIN INDUSTRIES THAT MAY BE AFFECTED BY THE RULE, 2007—
Continued
While nearly all of the entities that
may be affected by the proposed rule are
small, none of the economic effects
would be significant. The proposed rule
would make the permit procedures
more transparent and easier to use,
enable APHIS to evaluate a permit
application more quickly and
thoroughly, and allow for more efficient
control of the issuance of permits and
entry of regulated articles.
Under these circumstances, the
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service has
determined that this action would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. If this proposed rule is
adopted: (1) All State and local laws and
regulations that are inconsistent with
this rule will be preempted; (2) no
retroactive effect will be given to this
rule; and (3) administrative proceedings
will not be required before parties may
file suit in court challenging this rule.
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule contains no new
information collection or recordkeeping
requirements under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.).
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 319
Coffee, Cotton, Fruits, Imports, Logs,
Nursery stock, Plant diseases and pests,
Quarantine, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rice,
Vegetables.
Jkt 229001
Number of
establishments
with fewer than
100 employees
that operated the
entire year
Small-entity
establishments
as a percentage
of those that
operated the
entire year
(percent)
8,535
5,074
7,700
4,437
2,321
230
5,379
4,207
70
95
13,068
4,851
11,763
4,680
3,286
1,238
8,477
3,442
72
74
765
7,738
663
7,199
43
61
620
7,138
94
99
4,218
Drugs, druggists’ supplies, botanical drugs,
herbs, weeds (NAICS 424210) ....................
Fresh fruits and vegetables (NAICS 424480)
Other grocery and related products, (coffee)
(NAICS 424490) ...........................................
Grains and field beans (NAICS 424510) .........
Other farm product raw material (raw cotton,
sugarcane, honeybees, honeybee semen)
(NAICS 424590) ...........................................
Farm supplies (NAICS 424910) .......................
Flower, nursery stock, and florists’ supplies
(NAICS 424930) ...........................................
16:09 Jun 20, 2013
Number of
establishments
with 100 or more
employees that
operated the
entire year
3,601
67
3,534
98
Number of all
establishments
Industry wholesale merchants
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Number of
establishments
that operated the
entire year
7 CFR Part 322
Bees, Honey, Imports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 360
Imports, Plants (Agriculture),
Quarantine, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements,
Transportation, Weeds.
Accordingly, we propose to amend 7
CFR chapter III as follows:
PART 319—FOREIGN QUARANTINE
NOTICES
1. The authority citation for part 319
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450 and 7701–7772
and 7781–7786; 21 U.S.C. 136 and 136a; 7
CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
2. Section 319.6 is amended by
revising paragraph (g) to read as follows:
■
§ 319.6
Controlled import permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Denial, withdrawal, cancellation,
or revocation of permit. The
Administrator may deny a permit
application in accordance with § 319.7–
3, and a permit may be withdrawn,
canceled, or revoked in accordance with
§ 319.7–4.
(1) Action upon revocation of permit.
Upon revocation of a permit, the
permittee must surrender, destroy, or
remove all regulated plant material
covered by the permit in accordance
with § 319.7–4(e).
(2) Appeal of denial or revocation.
Any person whose application for a
permit has been denied or whose permit
has been revoked may appeal the denial
or revocation in accordance with
§ 319.7–5.
*
*
*
*
*
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3. A subpart, consisting of §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5, is added to read as
follows:
■
Sfmt 4702
Subpart—Permits: Application, Issuance,
Denial, and Revocation
Sec.
319.7 Definitions.
319.7–1 Applying for a permit.
319.7–2 Issuance of permits and labels.
319.7–3 Denial of permits.
319.7–4 Withdrawal, cancellation, and
revocation of permits.
319.7–5 Appeal of denial or revocation.
Subpart—Permits: Application,
Issuance, Denial, and Revocation
§ 319.7
Definitions.
Administrative instructions.
Published documents related to the
enforcement of this part and issued
under authority of the Plant Protection
Act, as amended, by the Administrator.
Administrator. The Administrator of
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service or any employee of the United
States Department of Agriculture
delegated to act in his or her stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS). The Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service of the United
States Department of Agriculture.
Applicant. A person at least 18 years
of age who, on behalf of him or herself
or another person, submits an
application for a permit to import into
the United States or move interstate a
regulated article in accordance with this
part.
Approved. Approved by the
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
Article. Any material or tangible
objects that could harbor plant pests or
noxious weeds.
Consignment. A quantity of plants,
plant products, and/or other articles
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being moved from one country to
another authorized when required, by a
single permit. A consignment may be
composed of one or more commodities
or lots.
Country of origin. The country where
the plants, or plants from which the
plant products are derived or were
grown or where the non-plant articles
were produced.
Enter, entry. To move into, or the act
of movement into, the commerce of the
United States.
Import, importation. To move into, or
the act of movement into, the territorial
limits of the United States.
Inspector. Any individual authorized
by the Administrator of the Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service or the
Commissioner of the Bureau of Customs
and Border Protection, Department of
Homeland Security, to enforce the
regulations in this part.
Intended use. The purpose for the
importation of the regulated article,
including, but not limited to,
consumption, propagation, or research
purposes.
Lot. All the regulated articles on a
single means of conveyance that are
derived from the same species of plant
or are the same type of non-plant article
and were subjected to the same
treatments prior to importation, and that
are consigned to the same person.
Means of conveyance. Any personal
property used for or intended for use for
the movement of any other personal
property.
Move. To carry, enter, import, mail,
ship, or transport; to aid, abet, cause, or
induce the carrying, entering, importing,
mailing, shipping, or transporting; to
offer to carry, enter, import, mail, ship,
or transport; to receive to carry, enter,
import, mail, ship, or transport; to
release into the environment; or to allow
any of the activities described in this
definition.
Oral authorization. Verbal permission
to import that may be granted by an
inspector at the port of entry.
Permit. A written authorization,
including by electronic methods, to
move plants, plant products, biological
control organisms, plant pests, noxious
weeds, or articles under conditions
prescribed by the Administrator.
Permittee. The person who, on behalf
of self or another person, is legally the
importer of an article, meets the
requirements of § 319.7–2(f), and is
responsible for compliance with the
conditions for the importation that is
the subject of a permit issued in
accordance with part 319.
Person. Any individual, partnership,
corporation, association, joint venture,
or other legal entity.
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16:09 Jun 20, 2013
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Plant. Any plant (including any plant
part) for or capable of propagation,
including a tree, a tissue culture, a
plantlet culture, pollen, a shrub, a vine,
a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb,
a root, and a seed.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of
the following that can directly or
indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in any plant or plant
product: A protozoan; a nonhuman
animal; a parasitic plant; a bacterium; a
fungus; a virus or viroid; an infectious
agent or other pathogen; or any article
similar to or allied with any of the
foregoing enumerated articles.
Plant product. Any flower, fruit,
vegetable, root, bulb, seed, or other
plant part that is not included in the
definition of plant, or any manufactured
or processed plant or plant part.
Port of entry. A port at which a
specified shipment or means of
conveyance is accepted for entry or
admitted without entry into the United
States for transit purposes.
Port of first arrival. The area (such as
a seaport, airport, or land border) where
a person or means of conveyance first
arrives in the United States, and where
inspection of regulated articles may be
carried out by inspectors.
PPQ. The Plant Protection and
Quarantine Program, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service of the United
States Department of Agriculture,
delegated responsibility for enforcing
provisions of the Plant Protection Act
and related legislation, quarantines and
regulations.
Regulated article. Any material or
tangible object regulated by this part for
entry into the United States or interstate
movement.
Soil. The unconsolidated material
from the earth’s surface that consists of
rock and mineral particles mixed with
organic material and that supports or is
capable of supporting biotic
communities.
State. Any of the several States of the
United States, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin
Islands of the United States, or any
other territory or possession of the
United States.
Treatment. A procedure approved by
the Administrator for neutralizing
infestations or infections of plant pests
or diseases, such as fumigation,
application of chemicals or dry or moist
heat, or processing, utilization, or
storage.
United States. All of the States.
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§ 319.7–1
37491
Applying for a permit.
(a) Persons who wish to import
regulated articles into the United States
must apply for a permit, unless the
regulated articles are not subject to a
requirement under this part that a
permit be issued prior to a
consignment’s arrival. An applicant for
a permit to import regulated articles into
the United States in accordance with
this part must be:
(1) Capable of acting in the capacity
of the permittee in accordance with
§ 319.7–2(e), or must designate a
permittee who is so capable should the
permit be issued;
(2) Applying for a permit on behalf of
self or on behalf of another person as
permittee; and
(3) At least 18 years of age.
(b) Permit applications must be
submitted by the applicant in writing or
electronically through one of the means
listed at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/
plant_health/permits/index.shtml in
advance of the action(s) proposed on the
permit application.
(c) The application for a permit must
contain the following information:
(1) Legal name, address, and contact
information of the applicant, and of the
permittee if different from the applicant;
(2) Specific type of regulated article
(common and scientific names, if
applicable);
(3) Country of origin;
(4) Intended use of the regulated
article;
(5) Intended port of first arrival; and
(6) A description of any processing,
treatment, or handling of the regulated
article to be performed prior to or
following importation, including the
location where any processing or
treatment was or will be performed and
the names and dosage of any chemical
employed in treatments of the regulated
article.
(d) The application for a permit may
also require the following information:
(1) Means of conveyance;
(2) Quantity of the regulated article;
(3) Estimated date of arrival;
(4) Name, address, and contact
information of any broker or subsequent
custodian of the regulated article;
(5) Exporting country from which the
article is to be moved, when not the
country of origin; and
(6) Any other information determined
to be necessary by APHIS to inform the
decision to issue the permit.
(e) Application for a permit to import
regulated articles into the United States
must be submitted at least 30 days prior
to arrival of the article at the port of
entry.
(1) If, through no fault of the importer,
a consignment of regulated articles
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subject to a requirement under this part
that a permit be issued prior to a
consignment’s arrival arrives at a U.S.
port before a permit is received, the
consignment may be held, under
suitable safeguards prescribed by the
inspector, in custody at the risk and
expense of the importer pending
issuance of a permit or authorization
from APHIS.
(2) An oral authorization may be
granted by an inspector at the port of
entry for a consignment, provided that:
(i) All applicable entry requirements
are met;
(ii) Proof of application for a written
permit is provided to the inspector; and
(iii) PPQ verifies that the application
for a written permit has been received
and that PPQ intends to issue the
permit.
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 319.7–2
Issuance of permits and labels.
(a) Upon receipt of an application, a
permit indicating the applicable
conditions for importation will be
issued by APHIS if, after review of the
application, the regulated articles are, at
the discretion of the Administrator,
deemed eligible by the Administrator to
be imported into the United States
under the conditions specified in the
permit. A permit will be issued
specifying the applicable conditions of
entry and the port of entry, and a copy
will be provided to the permittee. The
permit will only be valid for the time
period indicated on the permit.
(b) The applicant for a permit for the
importation of regulated articles into the
United States must designate the person
who will be named as the permittee
upon the permit’s issuance. The
applicant and the permittee may be the
same person.
(c) The act, omission, or failure of the
permittee as an officer, agent, or person
acting for or employed by any other
person within the scope of his or her
employment or office will be deemed
also to be the act, omission, or failure of
the other person.
(d) Failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging,
counterfeiting, or defacing permits or
shipping labels, may result in
immediate revocation of the permit,
denial of any future permits, and civil
or criminal penalties for the permittee.
(e) The permittee will remain
responsible for the consignment
regardless of any delegation to a
subsequent custodian of the
importation.
(f) A permittee must:
(1) If an individual, have and
maintain an address in the United States
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16:09 Jun 20, 2013
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that is specified on the permit and be
physically present during normal
business hours at that address during
any periods when articles are being
imported or moved interstate under the
permit; or
(2) If another legal entity, maintain an
address or business office in the United
States with a designated individual for
service of process; and
(3) Serve as the contact for the
purpose of communications associated
with the movement of the regulated
article for the duration of the permit.
The PPQ Permit Unit must be informed
of a change in contact information for
the permittee within 10 business days of
such change;
(4) Ensure compliance with the
applicable regulatory requirements and
permit conditions associated with the
movement of the regulated article for
the duration of the permit;
(5) Provide written or electronic
acknowledgment and acceptance of
permit conditions when APHIS requests
such acknowledgment;
(6) Serve as the primary contact for
communication with APHIS regarding
the permit;
(7) Acknowledge in writing that in
accordance with Section 8313 of the
Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et
seq.), the actions, omissions, or failures
of any agent of the permittee may be
deemed the actions, omissions, or
failures of a permittee as well; and that
failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging,
counterfeiting, or defacing permits or
shipping labels, may result in
immediate revocation of the permit,
denial of any future permits, and civil
or criminal penalties for the permittee;
and
(8) Maintain all conditions of the
permit for the entirety of its prescribed
duration.
(g) The regulated article may be
imported only if all applicable
requirements of the permit issued for
the importation of the regulated article
or any other documents or instructions
issued by APHIS are met.
(h) In accordance with the regulations
in this part, labels may be issued to the
permittee for the importation of
regulated articles. Such labels may
contain information about the
shipment’s nature, origin, movement
conditions or other matters relevant to
the permit and will indicate that the
importation is authorized under the
conditions specified in the permit.
(1) If issued, the quantity of labels
will be sufficient for the permittee to
attach one to each parcel. Labels must
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
be affixed to the outer packaging of the
parcel.
(2) Importations without such
required labels will be refused entry
into the United States, unless a label is
not required and not issued for the
importation.
(i) Even if a permit has been issued for
the importation of a regulated article,
the regulated article may be imported
only if an inspector at the port of entry
determines that no remedial measures
pursuant to the Plant Protection Act are
necessary to mitigate or address any
plant pest or noxious weed risks.1
(j) A permit application may be
withdrawn at the request of the
applicant prior to the issuance of the
permit.
(k) A permit may be canceled after
issuance at the request of the permittee.
(l) A permit may be amended if
APHIS finds that the permit is
incomplete or contains factual errors.
§ 319.7–3
Denial of permits.
(a) APHIS may deny an application
for a permit to import a regulated article
into the United States. A denial,
including the reason for the denial, will
be provided in writing, including by
electronic methods, to the applicant as
promptly as circumstances permit. The
denial of a permit may be appealed in
accordance with § 319.7–5.
(b) APHIS may deny an application
for a permit to import a regulated
article:
(1) If APHIS determines that the
applicant is not likely to abide by
permit conditions. Factors that may lead
to such a determination include, but are
not limited to, the following:
(i) The applicant, or a partnership,
firm, corporation, or other legal entity in
which the applicant has a substantial
interest, financial or otherwise, has not
complied with any permit that was
previously issued by APHIS;
(ii) APHIS determines that issuing the
permit would circumvent any order
revoking or denying a permit under the
Plant Protection Act.
(iii) APHIS determines that the
applicant has previously failed to
comply with any APHIS regulation
(iv) APHIS determines that the
applicant has previously failed to
comply with any Federal, State, or local
law, regulation or instruction
concerning the importation of
prohibited or restricted foreign
agricultural products;
1 An inspector may hold, seize, quarantine, treat,
apply other remedial measures to, destroy, or
otherwise dispose of plants, plant pests, and other
articles in accordance with sections 414, 421, and
434 of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731,
and 7754).
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(v) APHIS determines that the
applicant has failed to comply with the
laws or regulations of a national plant
protection organization or equivalent
body, as these pertain to plant health;
(vi) APHIS determines that the
applicant has made false or fraudulent
statements or provided false or
fraudulent records to APHIS, or;
(vii) The applicant has been convicted
or has pled nolo contendere to any
crime involving fraud, bribery,
extortion, or any other crime involving
a lack of integrity.
(2) If the application for a permit
contains information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, deceptive,
or misrepresentative;
(3) If APHIS concludes that the
actions proposed under the permit
would present an unacceptable risk to
plants and plant products because of the
introduction or dissemination of a plant
pest, biological control organism, or
noxious weed within the United States;
(4) If the importation is adverse to the
conduct of an eradication, suppression,
control, or regulatory program of APHIS;
(5) If the importation is adverse to
applicable import regulations or any
administrative instructions or measures;
or
(6) If the State executive official, or a
State plant protection official authorized
to do so, objects to the movement in
writing and provides specific, detailed
information that there is a risk the
movement will result in the
dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed into the State, and APHIS
determines that such plant pest risk
cannot be adequately addressed or
mitigated.
TKELLEY on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 319.7–4 Withdrawal, cancellation, and
revocation of permits.
(a) Withdrawal of an application. If
the applicant wishes to withdraw a
permit application before issuance of a
permit, he or she must provide the
request in writing to APHIS. APHIS will
provide written notification to the
applicant as promptly as circumstances
allow regarding reception of the request
and withdrawal of the application.
(b) Cancellation of permit by
permittee. If a permittee wishes to
cancel a permit after its issuance, he or
she must provide the request in writing
to APHIS. APHIS will provide written
notification to the applicant as promptly
as circumstances allow regarding
reception of the request and withdrawal
of the application.
(c) Revocation of permit by APHIS.
APHIS may revoke any outstanding
permit to import regulated articles into
the United States. A revocation,
including the reason for the revocation,
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16:09 Jun 20, 2013
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will be provided in writing, including
by electronic methods, to the permittee
as promptly as circumstances permit.
The revocation of a permit may be
appealed in accordance with § 319.7–5.
(d) APHIS may revoke a permit to
import a regulated article if:
(1) Information is received subsequent
to the issuance of the permit of
circumstances that APHIS determines
would constitute cause for the denial of
an application under § 319.7–3; or
(2) APHIS determines that the
permittee has failed to maintain the
safeguards or otherwise observe the
conditions specified in the permit or in
any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions.
(e) Upon revocation of a permit, the
permittee must, without cost to the
Federal Government and in the manner
and method APHIS considers
appropriate, either:
(1) Surrender all regulated articles
covered by the revoked permit and any
other affected plant material to an
inspector;
(2) Destroy, under the supervision of
an inspector, all regulated articles
covered by the revoked permit and any
other affected plant material; or
(3) Remove all regulated articles
covered by the revoked permit and any
other affected plant material from the
United States.
§ 319.8–2
§ 319.7–5
§ 319.8–11
Appeal of denial or revocation.
(a) All denials of an application for a
permit, or revocations of an existing
permit, will be provided in writing,
including by electronic methods, as
promptly as circumstances permit and
will include the reasons for the denial
or revocation.
(b) Any person whose application for
a permit has been denied or whose
permit has been revoked may appeal the
decision in writing to APHIS within 10
business days from the date the
communication of notification of the
denial or revocation of the permit was
received. The appeal must state all facts
and reasons upon which the person is
relying to show that the denial or
revocation was incorrect.
(c) APHIS will grant or deny the
appeal in writing and will state in
writing the reason for the decision. The
denial or revocation will remain in
effect during the resolution of the
appeal.
§ 319.8–1
[Amended]
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
[Amended]
5. Section 319.8–2 is amended as
follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a), by removing, in
the third sentence, the words ‘‘stating
the name and address of the importer,
the country from which such material is
to be imported, and the kind of cotton
or covers it is desired to import’’ and
footnote 1, and adding the words ‘‘for a
permit in accordance with §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5’’ in their place.
■ b. By redesignating footnote 2 as
footnote 1.
■ c. By removing paragraphs (c) and (d)
and redesignating paragraphs (e) and (f)
as paragraphs (c) and (d), respectively.
■ d. In newly redesignated paragraph
(d), in the first sentence, by removing
the words ‘‘with all requirements set
forth therein and such additional
requirements in this subpart as are in
terms applicable thereto’’ and adding
the words ‘‘with all of the conditions
specified in the permit and any
applicable regulations or administrative
instructions of this part’’ in their place,
and by removing the second and third
sentences.
■ e. By removing paragraph (g) and
redesignating paragraph (h) as
paragraph (e).
■
§ 319.8–8
[Amended]
6. Section 319.8–8 is amended by
redesignating footnote 3 as footnote 2.
■
[Amended]
7. Section 319.8–11 is amended by
redesignating footnote 4 as footnote 3.
■
§ 319.8–17
[Amended]
8. Section 319.8–17 is amended by
redesignating footnote 5 as footnote 4.
■ 9. Section 319.24–1 is revised to read
as follows:
■
§ 319.24–1 Application for permits for
importation of corn.
Persons contemplating the
importation of corn into the United
States shall obtain a permit in
accordance with §§ 319.7 through
319.7–5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
§ 319.24–2
[Removed and Reserved]
10. Section 319.24–2 is removed and
reserved.
■
§ 319.24–4
[Removed and Reserved]
11. Section 319.24–4 is removed and
reserved.
■
§ 319.28
4. In § 319.8–1, the definition of
permit is amended by adding the words
‘‘and in §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5’’
before the period.
■
37493
[Amended]
12. Section 319.28 is amended by
removing paragraphs (i) and (j).
■ 13. Section 319.37–3 is amended as
follows:
■
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a. In paragraph (a) introductory text,
by adding the words ‘‘in accordance
with §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5’’ after the
word ‘‘Programs’’.
■ b. By removing and reserving
paragraph (b) and removing footnote 4.
■ c. By redesignating footnote 5 as
footnote 4.
■ d. By revising paragraph (d).
■ e. By removing paragraphs (e) and (f)
and redesignating paragraphs (g) and (h)
as paragraphs (e) and (f), respectively.
The revision reads as follows:
■
§ 319.37–3
■
■
*
*
*
*
(d) Any permit that has been issued
may be revoked by an inspector or
APHIS in accordance with § 319.7–4.
*
*
*
*
*
[Amended]
14. Section 319.37–5 is amended by
redesignating footnote 6 as footnote 5.
[Amended]
15. Section 319.37–6 is amended by
redesignating footnote 7 as footnote 6.
■
§ 319.37–7
[Amended]
16. Section 319.37–7 is amended by
redesignating footnote 8 as footnote 7.
■
§ 319.37–8
Application for permits.
Persons contemplating the
importation of any of the articles
specified in § 319.41–1(b) shall first
make application to the Plant Protection
and Quarantine Program for a permit in
accordance with §§ 319.7 through
319.7–5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
§ 319.41–6
■
§ 319.37–6
§ 319.41–2
24. Section 319.41–6 is revised to read
as follows:
Permits.
*
§ 319.37–5
23. Section 319.41–2 is revised to read
as follows:
[Amended]
17. Section 319.37–8 is amended by
redesignating footnotes 9, 10, and 11 as
footnotes 8, 9, and 10, respectively.
Importations by mail.
In addition to entries by freight or
express provided for in § 319.41–5,
importations are permitted by mail of
mature corn on the cob from the
countries specified in § 319.41–1(b)(2),
and clean shelled corn and clean seed
of the other plants covered by § 319.41,
provided that a permit has been issued
for the importation in accordance with
§§ 319.7 through 319.7–5 and all
conditions of the permit are met.
[Amended]
19. Section 319.40–4 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising paragraph (a).
■ b. By removing paragraphs (b)(3), (c),
and (d).
The revision reads as follows:
■
§ 319.40–4 Application for a permit to
import regulated articles; issuance and
withdrawal of permits.
§ 319.40–5
[Amended]
20. Section 319.40–5 is amended by
redesignating footnote 3 as footnote 1.
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§ 319.40–9
[Amended]
§ 319.40–10
[Amended]
22. Section 319.40–10 is amended by
redesignating footnote 6 as footnote 4.
■
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Application for permit.
[Removed and Reserved]
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*
§ 319.75–1
*
*
*
[Amended]
■
Regulated articles.1
Importations of seed or paddy rice,
rice straw, and rice hulls from all
foreign countries and localities may be
made by mail or cargo, provided that a
permit has been issued for the
importation in accordance with §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5 and all conditions of
the permit are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
§ 319.75–3
26. Section 319.55–4 is removed and
reserved.
■ 27. Section 319.55–7 is revised to read
as follows:
■
Importations by mail.
28. Section 319.56–3 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising paragraph (b)(2).
■ b. By removing paragraphs (b)(3),
(b)(4), (b)(5), and (b)(6).
■ c. In paragraph (c)(1), by removing the
words ‘‘under paragraph (b) of this
section’’ and adding in their place the
■
21. Section 319.40–5 is amended by
redesignating footnotes 4 and 5 as
footnotes 2 and 3, respectively.
■
*
*
*
*
*
1 The importation of regulated articles
may be subject to prohibitions or
restrictions under other provisions of 7
CFR part 319. For example, fresh whole
chilies (Capsicum spp.) and fresh whole
red peppers (Capsicum spp.) from
Pakistan are prohibited from being
imported into the United States under
the provisions of Subpart—Fruits and
Vegetables of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 32. Section 319.75–3 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 319.55–7
(a) Application procedure. A written
application for a permit must be
obtained and submitted in accordance
with §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 319.75 Restrictions on importation of
regulated articles; disposal of articles
refused importation.
§ 319.75–2
§ 319.37–13
§ 319.40–4
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Persons contemplating the
importation of any fruits or vegetables
under this subpart must apply for a
permit in accordance with §§ 319.7
through 319.7–5.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 29. Section 319.75 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising the section heading.
■ b. In paragraphs (a) and (c), by
removing the word ‘‘restricted’’ each
time it appears and adding the word
‘‘regulated’’ in its place.
§ 319.55–4
25. Section 319.55–2 is revised to read
as follows:
■
Application for a permit to import
seed or paddy rice from Mexico or rice
straw or rice hulls from any country
may be made to the Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs in accordance
with §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5.
[Amended]
*
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
§ 319.55–2
18. Section 319.37–13 is amended by
redesignating footnote 12 as footnote 11.
§ 319.56–3 General requirements for all
imported fruits and vegetables.
30. In § 319.75–1, the definition of
phytosanitary certificate of inspection is
amended by removing the word
‘‘restricted’’ each time it appears and
adding the word ‘‘regulated’’ in its
place.
■ 31. Section 319.75–2 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising the section heading.
■ b. In paragraph (a) introductory text,
by removing the word ‘‘restricted’’ each
time it appears and adding the word
‘‘regulated’’ in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
■
■
words ‘‘in accordance with this section
and with §§ 319.7 through 319.7–5’’.
The revision reads as follows:
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*
Permits.
A restricted article may be imported
only after issuance of a written permit
or oral authorization by the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs in
accordance with §§ 319.7 through
319.7–5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
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§ 319.75–4
[Amended]
paragraph (c)(5), and revising paragraph
(e) to read as follows:
33. Section 319.75–4 is amended by
removing the word ‘‘restricted’’ and
adding the word ‘‘regulated’’ in its
place.
§ 322.15 APHIS review of permit
applications; denial or revocation of
permits.
§ 319.75–5
*
■
[Amended]
34. In § 319.75–5, paragraphs (a) and
(b) are amended by removing the word
‘‘restricted’’ each time it appears in and
adding the word ‘‘regulated’’ in its
place.
■
§ 319.75–6
[Amended]
35. Section 319.75–6 is amended by
removing the word ‘‘restricted’’ and
adding the word ‘‘regulated’’ in its
place.
■
§ 319.75–7
[Amended]
36. In § 319.75–7, footnote 3 is
redesignated as footnote 4.
■
§ 319.75–8
[Amended]
37. Section 319.75–8 is amended by
removing the word ‘‘restricted’’ both
times it appears and adding the word
‘‘regulated’’ in its place.
■
§ 319.75–9
[Amended]
38. In § 319.75–9, paragraphs (a), (b),
and (c) are amended by removing the
word ‘‘restricted’’ each time it appears
in and adding the word ‘‘regulated’’ in
its place.
■
PART 322—BEES, BEEKEEPING
BYPRODUCTS, AND BEEKEEPING
EQUIPMENT
39. The authority citation for part 322
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 281; 7 U.S.C. 7701–
7772 and 7781–7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and
371.3.
40. In § 322.13, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 322.13 General requirements; restricted
organisms.
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(b) Persons importing restricted
organisms into the United States must
be and Federal, State, or university
researchers; be at least 18 years of age;
and be physically present during normal
business hours at an address within the
United States specified on the permit
during any periods when articles are
being imported or moved interstate
under the permit. All such importations
must be for research or experimental
purposes and in accordance with this
part.
§ 322.14
[Amended]
41. In § 322.14, paragraph (a)(1) is
amended by removing the second and
third sentences.
■ 42. Section 322.15 is amended by
revising the section heading, adding
■
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*
*
*
(c) * * *
(5) APHIS may also deny a permit to
import restricted organisms:
(i) To a person who has previously
failed to comply with any APHIS
regulation, except:
(A) A permit revoked in an
investigation concerning that failure has
been reinstated on appeal, at the
discretion of APHIS; or
(B) All measures ordered by APHIS to
correct the failure, including but not
limited to, payment of penalties or
restitution, have been complied with to
the satisfaction of APHIS.
(ii) To a person who has previously
failed to comply with any international
or Federal regulation or instruction
concerning the importation of
prohibited or restricted foreign
agricultural products; or
(iii) If the application for a permit
contains information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, deceptive,
or misrepresentative.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Appealing the denial of permit
applications or revocation of permits. If
your permit application has been denied
or your permit has been revoked, APHIS
will inform you in writing, including by
electronic methods, as promptly as
circumstances permit and will include
the reasons for the denial or revocation.
You may appeal the decision by writing
to APHIS within 10 business days from
the date you received the
communication notifying you of the
denial or revocation of the permit. Your
appeal must state all facts and reasons
upon which you are relying to show that
your permit application was wrongfully
denied or your permit was wrongfully
revoked. APHIS will grant or deny the
appeal in writing and will state in
writing the reason for the decision. The
denial or revocation will remain in
effect during the resolution of the
appeal.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 360—NOXIOUS WEED
REGULATIONS
43. The authority citation for part 360
continues to read as follows:
■
b. In paragraph (a)(5), by removing the
period at the end of the sentence and
adding the word ‘‘; or’’ in its place.
■ c. By adding paragraphs (a)(6) and (7).
■ d. In paragraph (b), introductory text,
by removing the word ‘‘cancel’’ and
adding the word ‘‘revoke’’ in its place.
■ e. In paragraph (c), by removing the
word ‘‘canceled’’ each time it appears
and adding the word ‘‘revoked’’ in its
place, and by removing the word
‘‘cancellation’’ and adding the word
‘‘revocation’’ in its place.
The revision and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 360.304 Denial of an application for a
permit to move a noxious weed; revocation
of a permit to move a noxious weed.
(a) * * *
(6) The application for the permit
contains information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, or
deceptive.
(7) APHIS may deny a permit to a
person who has previously failed to
comply with any APHIS regulation.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 45. Section 360.305 is amended by
revising the section heading and by
removing the word ‘‘canceled’’ each
time it appears and adding the word
‘‘revoked’’ in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 360.305 Disposal of noxious weeds when
permits are revoked.
*
*
*
*
*
Done in Washington, DC, this 14th day of
June 2013.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2013–14638 Filed 6–20–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
10 CFR Part 429
[Docket No. EERE–2013–BT–NOC–0023]
Appliance Standards and Rulemaking
Federal Advisory Committee: Notice of
Open Meetings for the Commercial
HVAC, WH, and Refrigeration
Certification Working Group and
Announcement of Working Group
Members To Negotiate Commercial
Certification Requirements for
Commercial HVAC, WH, and
Refrigeration Equipment
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701–7772 and 7781–
7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
44. Section 360.304 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising the section heading.
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of open meetings.
SUMMARY:
■
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AGENCY:
This notice announces the
open meetings of the Commercial
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[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 120 (Friday, June 21, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 37481-37495]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-14638]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 120 / Friday, June 21, 2013 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 37481]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
7 CFR Parts 319, 322, and 360
[Docket No. APHIS-2011-0085]
RIN 0579-AD76
Consolidation of Permit Procedures; Denial and Revocation of
Permits
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are proposing to consolidate the regulations concerning the
issuance of permits for the importation and interstate movement of a
wide variety of regulated plants, plant products, and other articles.
We would also make corresponding changes to the regulations concerning
permits for the importation and interstate movement of noxious weeds
and the importation of honeybees and other beekeeping articles. We are
also proposing to include new provisions in our regulations for the
denial of a permit and the revocation of a permit once issued. These
changes would make our permit procedures more transparent and easier to
use, allow us to evaluate a permit application more quickly and
thoroughly, and help us hold permittees accountable for complying with
permit conditions.
DATES: We will consider all comments that we receive on or before
August 20, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by either of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=APHIS-2011-0085-0001.
Postal Mail/Commercial Delivery: Send your comment to
Docket No. APHIS-2011-0085, Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD,
APHIS, Station 3A-03.8, 4700 River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737-
1238.
Supporting documents and any comments we receive on this docket may
be viewed at https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2011-
0085 or in our reading room, which is located in room 1141 of the USDA
South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue SW., Washington,
DC. Normal reading room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except holidays. To be sure someone is there to help you,
please call (202) 799-7039 before coming.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Marc Phillips, Senior Regulatory
Policy Specialist, Regulatory Compliance and Coordination, RPM, PPQ,
APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 133, Riverdale, MD 20737-1231; (301) 851-
2114.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Plant Protection Act, as amended, (PPA, 7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.)
states that it is the responsibility of the Secretary of Agriculture to
facilitate exports, imports, and interstate commerce of agricultural
products and other commodities that pose a risk of harboring plant
pests or noxious weeds in ways that will reduce the risk of
dissemination of plant pests or noxious weeds that could constitute a
threat to crops and other plants or plant products and burden
interstate or foreign commerce. The Secretary may prohibit or restrict
the importation, entry, exportation, or movement in interstate commerce
of any plant, plant product, noxious weed, or article if the Secretary
determines that the prohibition or restriction is necessary to prevent
the introduction of a plant pest or noxious weed into the United States
or the dissemination of a plant pest or noxious weed within the United
States.
To implement these prohibitions and restrictions, the PPA further
provides that the Secretary may issue regulations, including those that
require that a permit be obtained for plants, plant products, noxious
weeds, or other regulated articles prior to their importation or
movement in interstate commerce. The Secretary has delegated the
authority provided by the PPA to the Administrator of the Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). Regulations issued under the
authority of the PPA are administered and enforced by APHIS' Plant
Protection and Quarantine program (PPQ).
Requiring a written permit for the importation or interstate
movement of plants, plant products, noxious weeds, or other regulated
articles reduces the risk of the introduction or dissemination of a
plant pest or noxious weed in the United States in several ways.
A permit informs applicants of the requirements and conditions for
importation or interstate movement of regulated articles that we have
determined are necessary to mitigate the risk of introducing or
disseminating a plant pest or noxious weed. Requiring a written permit
also allows APHIS to hold permittees accountable for complying with
permit conditions and to specify the plant products allowed into the
United States or allowed to move interstate. A permit prescribes the
binding conditions that the applicant for a permit, and the permittee,
must adhere to under the permit and the pertinent regulations. The
information contained in an application for a permit must also provide
for clear and continuous accountability for the importation or
movement.
The regulations contained in 7 CFR part 319, Foreign Quarantine
Notices, prohibit or restrict the importation into the United States of
certain plants, roots, bulbs, seeds, or other plant products to prevent
plant pests and noxious weeds from being introduced and spread within
the United States. The restricted or prohibited plant products include
plants for planting, cut flowers, fruits and vegetables, foreign cotton
and covers, sugarcane, citrus, corn and related plants, rice, wheat,
logs and other unmanufactured wood articles, packing materials, and
coffee.
The regulations in 7 CFR part 322 prohibit or restrict the
importation of honeybees and honeybee semen in order to prevent the
introduction into the United States of diseases and parasites harmful
to honeybees and of undesirable species.
The regulations in 7 CFR part 360 restrict the importation and
interstate movement of those plants that are designated as noxious
weeds.
Each of the parts listed above provides the requirements for
permits that are necessary to comply with the regulations of that part.
Those parts are not, however, always consistent in their requirements
for obtaining a permit, the
[[Page 37482]]
basis upon which we may deny or revoke a permit, or how such a denial
or revocation may be appealed.
These inconsistencies have resulted in confusion for applicants for
a permit concerning our permit procedures and difficulties for APHIS in
providing the appropriate guidance concerning the regulations.
Additionally, the lack of consistency in our permit procedures has
resulted in difficulties with the enforcement of our regulations. There
have been instances of applicants for a permit providing false or
fraudulent information. In other instances, permittees have not
complied with requirements for using a permit. Permittees must comply
with all requirements in the applicable regulations and with all permit
conditions contained in the permit, and with applicable administrative
instructions. Administrative instructions are published guidance
stating how to comply with the regulations with regard to a particular
commodity or situation, and are incorporated into the regulations if
they are of general applicability. See, for example, 7 CFR 319.24a,
``Administrative instructions relating to entry of corn into Guam.''
In order to reduce the risk of the introduction or dissemination of
a plant pest or noxious weed into or within the United States, we
intend to strengthen and harmonize the requirements for a permit for
restricted plants, plant products, and other articles regulated under
the PPA in parts 319, 322, and 360.
Specifically, we are proposing to establish a new subpart in part
319 entitled ``Permits: Application, Issuance, Denial, and
Revocation,'' which would include Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5 and
would serve as generally applicable requirements in part 319 for
obtaining a permit to import or move interstate plants or plant
products. The requirements contained in the new subpart would provide
applicants for permits with more detailed information regarding the
process for applying for a permit and indicate the type of information
we would require in a permit application. We would also make consistent
and clear the provisions for how we will approve, deny, or revoke a
permit. We would also apply the new provisions, as appropriate, to
parts 322 and 360.
We anticipate that these changes to the regulations will make our
permit procedures more transparent and easier to use, allow us to
evaluate a permit application more quickly and thoroughly, and provide
greater control and accountability for the permit process.
These proposed changes, and the provisions of the proposed new
subpart, are discussed in further detail directly below.
Definitions
Section 319.7 would define terms we propose to use in the permit
regulations. Some of the terms and definitions we are proposing for
Sec. 319.7 are derived from the definitions of these terms in the PPA.
We are proposing to use these definitions in order to ensure that the
regulations are consistent with the PPA. Those definitions are listed
below:
Article. Any material or tangible objects that could
harbor plant pests or noxious weeds.
Enter, entry. To move into, or the act of movement into,
the commerce of the United States.
Import, importation. To move into, or the act of movement
into, the territorial limits of the United States.
Means of conveyance. Any personal property used for or
intended for use for the movement of any other personal property.
Move. To carry, enter, import, mail, ship, or transport;
to aid, abet, cause, or induce the carrying, entering, importing,
mailing, shipping, or transporting; to offer to carry, enter, import,
mail, ship, or transport; to receive to carry, enter, import, mail,
ship, or transport; to release into the environment; or to allow any of
the activities described in this definition.
Permit. A written authorization, including by electronic
methods, to move plants, plant products, biological control organisms,
plant pests, noxious weeds, or articles under conditions prescribed by
the Administrator.
Person. Any individual, partnership, corporation,
association, joint venture, or other legal entity.
Plant. Any plant (including any plant part) for or capable
of propagation, including a tree, a tissue culture, a plantlet culture,
pollen, a shrub, a vine, a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb, a
root, and a seed.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of the following that
can directly or indirectly injure, cause damage to, or cause disease in
any plant or plant product: A protozoan, a nonhuman animal, a parasitic
plant, a bacterium, a fungus, a virus or viroid, an infectious agent or
other pathogen, or any article similar to or allied with any of the
foregoing.
Plant product. Any flower, fruit, vegetable, root, bulb,
seed, or other plant part that is not included in the definition of
plant, or any manufactured or processed plant or plant part.
State. Any of the several States of the United States, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin Islands of the
United States, or any other territory or possession of the United
States.
United States. All of the States.
Other definitions we are proposing for Sec. 319.7 are based on
definitions in other parts of our regulations in 7 CFR chapter III.
These definitions are listed below:
Administrative instructions. Published documents related
to the enforcement of 7 CFR part 319 and issued under authority thereof
by the Administrator.
Administrator. The Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service, or any employee of the United States
Department of Agriculture delegated to act in his or her stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service of the United States
Department of Agriculture.
Consignment. A quantity of plants, plant products, and/or
other articles being moved from one country to another authorized, when
required, by a single permit. A consignment may be composed of one or
more commodities or lots.
Country of origin. The country where the plants, or plants
from which the plant products are derived or were grown or where the
non-plant articles were produced.
Inspector. Any individual authorized by the Administrator
of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service or the Commissioner
of the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland
Security, to enforce the regulations in part 319.
Lot. All the regulated articles on a single means of
conveyance that are derived from the same species of plant or are the
same type of non-plant article and were subjected to the same
treatments prior to importation, and that are consigned to the same
person.
Port of entry. A port at which a specified shipment or
means of conveyance is accepted for entry, or admitted without entry
into the United States for transit purposes.
PPQ. The Plant Protection and Quarantine program, Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service.
Regulated article. Any material or tangible object
regulated by 7 CFR part 319 for entry into the United States or
interstate movement.
[[Page 37483]]
Soil. The unconsolidated material from the earth's surface
that consists of rock and mineral particles mixed with organic material
and that supports or is capable of supporting biotic communities.
Treatment. A procedure approved by the Administrator for
neutralizing infestations or infections of plant pests or plant
diseases, such as fumigation, application of chemicals or dry or moist
heat, or processing, utilization, or storage.
Other definitions we are proposing for Sec. 319.7 are new to the
regulations or are slightly different or expanded from current
definitions. These definitions are discussed below.
To provide a clear framework for distinguishing the stages involved
in issuing permits for the importation and interstate movement of
regulated articles we would define two terms. These terms are applicant
and permittee.
We would define an applicant as a person at least 18 years of age
who, on behalf of him or herself or another person, submits an
application for a permit to import into the United States or move
interstate a regulated article in accordance with part 319. A permittee
would be defined as a person who on behalf of him or herself or another
person, is legally the importer of an article, meets the requirements
of Sec. 319.7-2(f), and is responsible for compliance with the
conditions for the importation that is the subject of a permit issued
in accordance with part 319. It is important that the permittee be the
importer of the article because the act of importing an article
contrary to the regulations is specifically identified as a violation
of law.
In Sec. 319.7-1, we would make consistent the information required
in an application for a permit for the articles regulated by part 319.
We would require applicants to state the intended use of the regulated
article and we would define intended use as the purpose for the
importation of the regulated article, to include, but not be limited
to, consumption, propagation, or research purposes. We would also
require that the proposed port of first arrival be provided, and we
would define port of first arrival as the area, such as a seaport,
airport, or land border, where a person or means of conveyance first
arrives in the United States, and where inspection of regulated
articles may be carried out by inspectors.
We would clarify throughout part 319 that obtaining a permit does
not guarantee permission to import a consignment of regulated articles,
but that an inspector at the port may withhold permission pending a
determination regarding whether remedial measures are necessary
pursuant to the PPA with respect to the regulated article. We would
also define oral authorization as verbal permission to import that may
be granted by an inspector at the port of entry.
Applying for a Permit
The regulations in proposed Sec. 319.7-1 would set out the
specific information a permit application must contain, how we would
handle a shipment that arrives at a port before the permittee has
received the permit, and how we would provide for oral authorizations
at the port of entry.
Paragraph (a) would provide that a person who wishes to import
regulated articles into the United States must apply for a permit,
unless the regulated articles are not subject to a requirement that a
permit be issued prior to a consignment's arrival. This standard would
continue to allow importation of articles that the regulations
currently allow to enter without being accompanied by a permit (e.g.,
most lots of 12 or fewer plants for planting under Sec. 319.37-3,
certain log and lumber articles authorized entry under the general
permit in Sec. 319.40-3, or fruits and vegetables from Canada entering
under the general permit in Sec. 319.56-10).
Proposed paragraph (a) would also set out the requirements for an
applicant to obtain a permit. Under this paragraph, an applicant for a
permit to import regulated articles into the United States in
accordance with part 319 would have to be capable of acting in the
capacity of the permittee, or must designate a permittee for the
permit, should it be issued. The duties of a permittee are discussed
later in this document.
Section 424(c) of the PPA (7 U.S.C. 7734(c)) provides that, for the
purposes of the PPA, the act, omission, or failure of any officer,
agent, or person acting for or employed by another person within the
scope of his or her employment or office shall be deemed also to be the
act, omission, or failure of the other person. We would make this
responsibility clear by building into the definition of applicant that
the application may be for a permit on behalf of him or herself or
another person to act as permittee. We would also require that the
applicant be at least 18 years of age.
Paragraph (b) would provide applicants with information regarding
how to obtain and submit an application for a permit. It would state
that permit applications must be submitted by the applicant in writing
or electronically through one of the means listed at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/plant_health/permits/index.shtml in advance of the
action(s) proposed on the permit application. That Web page would
specify that persons may apply for a permit via the Internet through
APHIS' secure site for online permit applications, and would provide a
link to that portal. It would also provide that a person may submit a
permit application by faxing the application to APHIS, and would
specify the appropriate fax number. Additionally, it would state that
an application may be obtained by calling PPQ at the number provided.
Finally, it would provide that a person may submit a permit application
by mailing it to APHIS at the address provided.
Paragraph (c) would list the information that every permit
application must contain, and paragraph (d) would list other
information APHIS may require from some applicants depending on the
specific nature of the articles in their shipments. Currently, in the
various subparts of part 319, permit applications require certain
information in all cases (nature and origin of the shipment, contact
information for the applicant, etc.), but there is substantial
variation in the description of requirements. Much of the variation is
not significant but simply results from the fact that the various
subparts were written at different times over a span of 50 years. In a
few cases, the variation results from a need to have additional
information to evaluate or control the risks associated with specific
types of imports or pests. Table 1 below summarizes how the current
subparts of part 319 address the information required for permit
applications.
[[Page 37484]]
Table 1--Comparison of Information Required for Permit Applications
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 319.41 et seq.
Sec. 319.8 et seq. Sec. 319.24 et seq. Sec. 319.37 et seq. Sec. 319.40 et seq. Subpart--Indian corn or Sec. 319.55 et seq. Sec. 319.56 et seq. Sec. 319.75 et seq.
Subpart--foreign cotton and Subpart--corn diseases Subpart--plants for Subpart--logs, lumber, and maize, broomcorn, and Subpart--rice Subpart--fruits and Subpart--Khapra beetle
covers planting other wood articles related plants vegetables
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name and address of Name and address of Name, address, and Name and address Name and address Name and address Name and address Name, address, and
the importer the exporter telephone number of the of the applicant and, if of the exporter of the importer in the of the importer in the telephone number of the
Country from which Country and importer the applicant's address is Country and United States to whom the United States importer.
such material is to be locality where grown Approximate not within the United locality where grown permit should be sent, if Country or Approximate
imported Port of departure quantity and kinds States, of an agent in the Port of arrival other than the applicant locality of origin of the quantity and kinds of
Kind of cotton or Proposed port of (botanical designations) United States whom the Name and address Locality where the fruits or vegetables articles intended to be
covers it is desired to entry of articles intended to be applicant names for of the importer in the desired material has been Anticipated port imported.
import Name and address of imported acceptance of service of United States to whom the grown of first arrival Country or
Approximate the importer or of the Country(ies) or process permit should be sent Port of arrival Identity locality of origin.
quantity broker in the United States locality(ies) where grown Statement (scientific name Country(ies) or
Proposed port of to whom the permit should Intended United certifying the applicant preferred) and quantity of locality(ies) where it is
entry be sent States port of entry as the importer of record the fruit or vegetable intended to be off-loaded
Means of Specific type of prior to arrival in the
transportation, e.g., regulated article to be United States.
mail, airmail, express, imported, including the Intended U.S. port
air express, freight, genus and species name of of entry.
airfreight, or baggage the tree from which the Means of
Expected date of regulated article was transportation.
arrival derived Expected date of
Country, and arrival.
locality if known, where
the tree from which the
regulated article was
derived was harvested
Quantity of the
regulated article to be
imported
Description of any
processing, treatment or
handling to be performed
prior to importation,
including the location
where any processing or
treatment was or will be
performed and the names
and dosage of any
chemicals employed in
treatments
Description of any
processing, treatment, or
handling intended to be
performed following
importation, including the
location where any
processing or treatment
will be performed and the
names and dosage of any
chemicals employed in
treatments
Whether the
regulated article will or
will not be imported in a
sealed container or in a
hold
Means of
conveyance to be used
Intended port of
first arrival in the
United, and any subsequent
ports in the United States
at which regulated
articles may be unloaded
Destination and
general intended use of
the regulated article
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 37485]]
Table 2 below describes the unified permit application information
requirements that we are proposing to replace the varied requirements
in table 1. It includes both specific information we would require for
all permit applications and additional information that we may
sometimes require based on the nature of the article imported pursuant
to the requested permit.
Table 2--Proposed Permit Application Information Requirements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional information that may be
Information for all permits required (proposed Sec. 319.7-
(proposed Sec. 319.7-1(c)) 1(d))
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Legal name, address, and Means of conveyance.
contact information of the Quantity of the regulated
applicant and of the permittee, if article.
different from the applicant. Estimated date of arrival.
Specific type of regulated Name, address, and contact
article (common and scientific information of any broker or
names, if applicable). subsequent custodian of the
Country of origin. regulated article.
Intended use of the Exporting country from
regulated article. which the article is to be moved,
Intended port of first when not the country of origin.
arrival. Any other information
A description of any determined to be necessary by the
processing, treatment, or handling Administrator to inform the
of the regulated article to be decision to issue the permit.
performed prior to or following
importation, including the
location where any processing or
treatment was or will be performed
and the names and dosage of any
chemical employed in treatments of
the regulated article.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The information we are proposing to require for all applications
would provide us with the means to contact and track applicants and
evaluate, for most cases, the risk posed by the proposed importation.
This evaluation takes into account the type of article (to consider
what pests it may host) and the country of origin (to consider what
pests are found there). The intended use of the article is also often
relevant, for example, if it is intended for near-term consumption or
processing destructive to pests. The intended port of arrival is
important information both for workload planning and to consider
whether any pests of concern could thrive or spread in that port's
climate. Finally, the description of any processing, treatment, or
handling of the article allows us to consider whether pests would be
destroyed by such processes.
The second column of table 2 lists information that APHIS may
require before issuing specific permits to make a fully informed
decision concerning the risks of disseminating plant pests or noxious
weeds for a particular importation. This represents information that
APHIS may sometimes require either to properly assess the risk
associated with the proposed importation or information relevant to
operational planning. For example, the identity of countries that the
consignment is shipped through may be relevant to risk in cases where
certain types of consignments can easily become infested with pests not
present in the country of origin. In other cases the quantity of a
regulated article is relevant when gauging whether treatment facilities
at the port of arrival are of adequate size, and the estimated date of
arrival is relevant when port facilities are scheduled for renovation
or particularly busy periods. This type of additional information would
be obtained from the applicant either through automatic prompts in the
ePermits system triggered by applicant responses, or in cases where
ePermits is not used, by APHIS contacting the applicant after receiving
the application.
Importantly, we propose to indicate in paragraph (d) of Sec.
319.7-1 that APHIS may require from an applicant any other information
determined necessary by the Administrator to inform the decision to
issue the permit or to safely manage its entry at the port. Such
information may sometimes be required from an applicant even after
issuance of a permit, for example, when additional transportation
requirements suddenly become necessary. These are situations where
clearance of a consignment at the scheduled port of first arrival is
impossible and the consignment is directed to move from the arrival
port environs to another location for final disposition. In such cases,
APHIS may need more information to assess the pest risk and decide
whether safeguards are adequate and to contact the destination port
about safeguards there while the off-loaded consignment is awaiting
transshipment.
Paragraph (e) of Sec. 319.7-1 would provide that an application
for a permit to import regulated articles into the United States must
be submitted at least 30 days prior to arrival of the article at the
port of entry; however, if, through no fault of the permittee, a
consignment should arrive at a U.S. port before a permit is received,
we would provide that the consignment may be held, under suitable
safeguards prescribed by the inspector, in custody at the risk and
expense of the permittee pending issuance of a permit or authorization
from APHIS for entry.
We would also provide for oral authorizations in paragraph (e). As
discussed above, an oral authorization would be defined as verbal
permission to import that may be granted by an inspector at the port of
entry. We are proposing that an oral authorization could be granted by
an inspector at the port of entry for a shipment or a consignment,
provided all applicable entry requirements are met, proof of
application for a written permit is provided to the inspector, and PPQ
verifies that the application for a written permit has been received
and that PPQ intends to issue the permit.
The oral authorization procedure would replace current provisions
in part 319 of the regulations for oral permits. Some sections of part
319 allow oral permits to be issued at the sole discretion of an
inspector, without requiring prior submission of a permit application.
While APHIS has operational practices in effect to track when oral
permits are authorized and what they cover, there is no corresponding
requirement for importers to keep track of when they receive oral
permission and what it covers, which complicates compliance audits and
enforcement actions. Due to these factors, we have determined that oral
permits do not provide a reliable means of verifying that a permittee
was aware of permitting conditions at the time he or she was issued the
permit. Because the proposed oral authorization procedure includes a
requirement that an application for a written permit must be underway
before an oral authorization is issued, it would provide a link between
oral authorizations and documentation. The
[[Page 37486]]
written application associated with the oral authorization also
includes acknowledgment and acceptance of permit conditions that may be
assigned by APHIS, which also strengthens the oral authorization system
compared to the old oral permits system for articles subject to part
319.
Issuance of Permits and Labels
Section 319.7-2 would contain the provisions for the issuance of
permits and labels. In paragraph (a) of this section, we would provide
that, when we receive an application for a permit, we will issue a
permit that prescribes the applicable conditions for importation if,
after review of the application, the Administrator determines that the
regulated article is eligible to be imported into the United States
under those specific conditions. A copy of the permit would be provided
to the permittee. The permit would only be valid for the time period
indicated on the permit. In addition to listing the applicable
conditions of entry, the permit would also specify the port of entry
and, when needed, allowed ports of first arrival. (This may be needed,
for example, for air parcel post deliveries that arrive in the United
States and then move by surface transportation, usually by a bonded
carrier, to another destination for entry. Such shipments must be
cleared at a port of first arrival that has a U.S. Department of
Agriculture plant inspection station.)
Paragraph (b) would require that an applicant for a permit for the
importation of regulated articles into the United States designate the
person who will be named as the permittee upon the permit's issuance.
As discussed above, the applicant and the permittee may be the same
person.
As noted above, the PPA provides that the act, omission, or failure
of any officer, agent or person acting for or employed by another
person within the scope of his or her employment or office shall be
deemed also to be the act, omission, or failure of the other person. We
would include this standard in paragraph (c) to make it clear that
responsibility for violating a permit condition applies to the
permittee and is not limited to just the person who commits the
violation, if that person is acting as an agent for the applicant or
permittee.
Paragraph (d) would provide that failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging, counterfeiting, or defacing
permits or shipping labels, may result in immediate revocation of
relevant permits (i.e., the permit for which a condition was violated,
or any valid permit that the permittee altered to extend its scope),
denial of any future applications for permits, and other remedial
actions ordered by an inspector and civil or criminal penalties for the
permittee, as authorized by the PPA.
Paragraph (e) would provide that the permittee remains responsible
for the consignment regardless of any delegation to a subsequent
custodian of the importation. Such subsequent custodians include
entities such as brokers or transporters.
Paragraph (f) would include requirements for the permittee. These
requirements are necessary because we must be able to clearly identify
and when necessary contact the person legally responsible for the
importation or movement that is the subject of the permit. If the
permittee is an individual, he or she would be required, during any
periods when articles are being imported or moved interstate under the
permit, to maintain and be physically present during normal business
hours at an address within the United States specified on the permit.
If the permittee is a corporation, institution, association or
other legal entity, the legal entity would have to maintain an address
or a business office in the United States with a designated individual
for service of process.
Proposed paragraph (f) would also require that the permittee serve
as the contact for the purpose of communications associated with the
movement of the regulated article for the duration of the permit, and
ensure compliance with the applicable regulatory requirements and
permit conditions associated with the movement of the regulated article
for the duration of the permit. The permittee would also be required to
provide written or electronic acknowledgment and acceptance of permit
conditions and acknowledge that failure to comply with all of the
conditions specified in the permit or any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions, or forging, counterfeiting, or defacing
permits or shipping labels, may result in immediate revocation of the
permit, denial of any future applications for permits, and other
remedial actions under the PPA. We would require that the permittee
comply with all conditions of the permit for the entirety of its
prescribed duration. The permittee would also be required to inform the
PPQ Permit Unit of a change in contact information for the permittee
within 10 business days of such change.
Paragraph (g) would provide that the importation of regulated
articles may only proceed, even if a permit is issued, if all
applicable requirements of the permit or any other documents or
instructions issued by APHIS are met. Such documents may include APHIS
administrative instructions, compliance agreements, and preclearance
documents. While APHIS tries to ensure that permittees are fully
informed at the time of permit issuance as to exactly what APHIS
requirements will apply to their shipments when they arrive, sometimes
this is not possible. There are various reasons for this, ranging from
the minor (a clerical or data entry error in the permit) to the
substantial (new data demonstrating existence of a pest in an area or
on a commodity where it was not previously known). To directly inform
permittees, each permit contains a statement that all requirements are
subject to change at any time during the duration of the permit, and
refers permittees to PPQ Port Program Manuals at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/plants/manuals/ports/index.shtml for
current import requirements for commodities. When it is possible and
there is time to do so, APHIS will amend a permit and inform the
permittee before shipments arrive that will be subject to new or
revised requirements. When there is not time to do this or a large
number of permits are affected and they all cannot be amended quickly,
the new requirements are also publicized using methods such as press
releases and the PPQ Stakeholder Registry. Also, when new pest or other
information makes it necessary to prohibit commodities that were
previously allowed entry, a Federal Order \1\ is usually issued and
widely distributed by APHIS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A Federal Order is a document issued by APHIS, typically in
response to an immediate need, when the Administrator of APHIS
considers it necessary to take regulatory action to protect
agriculture or prevent the entry and establishment into the United
States of a pest or disease. Federal Orders are effective
immediately under the regulatory authority provided by the Plant
Protection Act, as amended, Section 412(a), 7 U.S.C. 7712(a).
Federal Orders will remain in effect until they are revised by
another Federal Order or by rulemaking, or are withdrawn.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
APHIS issues labels for consignments of some imported articles to
expedite clearance of approved imports, e.g., we may issue labels to be
applied to fruit packed under approved conditions at an approved
packinghouse overseas. Paragraph (h) would add provisions for the
labeling of regulated articles to be imported under a permit issued in
accordance with part 319. It would state that labels with information
about the shipment's nature, origin, movement
[[Page 37487]]
conditions, or other matters relevant to the permit may be issued to
the importer for the importation of regulated articles and will
indicate that the importation is authorized under the conditions
specified in the permit. The quantity of labels will be sufficient for
the importer to affix one to the outer packaging of each parcel. If
APHIS has required and issued labels for an importation by either
regulations in part 319 or specific permit conditions, importations
without the required labels will be refused entry into the United
States.
Even if a permit has been issued for the importation of a regulated
article, under the provisions of paragraph (i) the regulated article
may be imported only if an inspector at the port of entry determines
that, based on the findings of the inspection, no remedial measures
pursuant to the PPA are necessary. Pursuant to the PPA, an inspector
may hold, seize, quarantine, treat, apply other remedial measures to,
destroy, or otherwise dispose of plants, plant pests, and other
articles in accordance with sections 414, 421, and 434 of the PPA (7
U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and 7754).
Paragraph (j) of proposed Sec. 319.7-2 would provide that a permit
application may be withdrawn at the request of the applicant prior to
the issuance of the permit. A permit could be canceled after issuance
at the request of the permittee under proposed paragraph (k), and
paragraph (l) would provide that a permit may be amended if the
Administrator finds after issuance that the permit was incomplete or
contained factual errors.
Denial of Permits
Section 319.7-3 would contain the regulations by which we could
deny a permit to import regulated articles into the United States under
this part.
The Administrator may deny an application for a permit under the
provisions of proposed paragraph (a). A denial, including the reason
for the denial, would be provided in writing, including by electronic
methods, to the applicant as promptly as circumstances permit. We would
provide that the denial of a permit may be appealed in accordance with
Sec. 319.7-5.
Paragraph (b) would contain the conditions under which the
Administrator may deny a permit to import regulated articles. These
conditions would include risks posed both by the applicant and by the
article.
We propose to provide that a permit may be denied if APHIS
determines that an applicant is not likely to abide by permit
conditions. Factors that may lead to such a determination would
include, but not be limited to, the following.
The applicant, or another legal entity in which the
applicant has a substantial interest, has not complied with any permit
that was previously issued by APHIS;
APHIS determines that issuing the permit would circumvent
any order revoking or denying a permit under the Act;
APHIS determines that the applicant has previously failed
to comply with any APHIS regulation;
The applicant has previously failed to comply with any
Federal, State, or local law, regulation or instruction concerning
plant health;
The applicant has failed to comply with the laws or
regulations of a national plant protection organization or equivalent
body, as these pertain to plant health;
The applicant has made false or fraudulent statements or
provided false or fraudulent records to APHIS, or;
The applicant has been convicted or has pled nolo
contendere to any crime involving fraud, bribery, extortion, or any
other crime involving a lack of integrity.
The above factors represent reasons APHIS might determine, based on
past actions and their relevance to the application under
consideration, that an applicant cannot be trusted to abide by permit
conditions. Additionally, we could also deny a permit if the
application for a permit contains information that is found to be
materially false, fraudulent, or deceptive. A permit could also be
denied for the regulated article for which the permit is sought if, in
APHIS' opinion, the action under the permit would present an
unacceptable risk of introducing or disseminating a plant, or if the
importation is adverse to the conduct of an eradication, suppression,
control, or regulatory program of APHIS, or to applicable import
regulations or any administrative instructions. A permit could be
denied if the government of the State or Territory into which the
article would be imported objects to the proposed importation and
provides specific, detailed information that there is a risk it will
result in the dissemination of a plant pest or noxious weed into the
State, and APHIS concurs.
Withdrawal, Cancellation, and Revocation of Permits
Section 319.7-4 would contain the regulations under which we may
revoke a permit to import regulated articles into the United States
that has already been issued under part 319. It would also contain
procedures for applicants to withdraw their permit application, and for
permittees to cancel their permits.
Paragraph (a) would provide that an applicant may withdraw a permit
application before issuance of a permit by sending a written request to
APHIS. APHIS would then provide written notification to the applicant
as promptly as circumstances allow regarding reception of the request
and withdrawal of the application.
Paragraph (b) would provide that that if a permittee wishes to
cancel a permit after its issuance, he or she must provide the request
in writing to APHIS. APHIS would then provide written notification to
the applicant as promptly as circumstances allow regarding reception of
the request and withdrawal of the application.
Paragraph (c) would provide that the Administrator may revoke any
outstanding permit to import regulated articles into the United States,
and that a revocation, including the reason for the revocation, would
be provided in writing, including by electronic methods, to the
permittee as promptly as circumstances permit. The revocation of a
permit could be appealed in accordance with proposed Sec. 319.7-5.
Paragraph (d) would contain the conditions under which the
Administrator may revoke a permit to import a regulated article. Under
this paragraph, the Administrator could revoke a permit to import a
regulated article if information is received subsequent to the issuance
of the permit that would constitute cause for the denial of an
application under proposed Sec. 319.7-3. A permit could also be
revoked if the Administrator determines that the permittee has failed
to maintain the safeguards or otherwise observe the conditions
specified in the permit or in any applicable regulations or
administrative instructions.
Sections 414, 421, and 434 of the PPA (7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and
7754) give the Secretary the authority to hold, seize, quarantine,
treat, apply other remedial measures to, destroy, or otherwise dispose
of plants, plant pests, and other articles moving into or through the
United States, in order to prevent the dissemination of a plant pest or
noxious weed, without cost to the Federal Government and in the manner
the Secretary considers appropriate and is the least drastic action
that is feasible and that would be adequate to prevent the
dissemination of any plant pest or noxious weed new to or not known to
be widely prevalent or distributed within and throughout the United
States.
In light of this authority granted by the PPA, paragraph (e) would
contain
[[Page 37488]]
the actions that must be taken if a permit is revoked. It would provide
that, upon revocation of a permit, the permittee must, without cost to
the Federal Government and in the manner the Administrator considers
appropriate, surrender all regulated articles covered by the revoked
permit and any other affected plant material to an inspector; destroy
all regulated articles covered by the revoked permit and any other
affected plant material under the supervision of an inspector; or
remove all regulated articles covered by the revoked permit and any
other affected plant material from the United States.
Appeal of Denial or Revocation
Proposed Sec. 319.7-5 would set out the procedure for appealing a
denial or revocation of a permit to import regulated articles into the
United States. As discussed above regarding proposed Sec. 319.7-4(a),
all denials of an application for a permit, or revocations of an
existing permit, will be provided in writing, including by electronic
methods, as promptly as circumstances permit and will include the
reasons for the denial or revocation.
Paragraph (b) would provide that any person whose application for a
permit has been denied or whose permit has been revoked may appeal the
decision in writing to the Administrator within 10 business days from
the date the communication of notification of the denial or revocation
of the permit was received. The appeal should state all facts and
reasons upon which the person is relying to show that the denial or
revocation was incorrect.
The Administrator would grant or deny the appeal in writing and
will state in writing the reason for the decision.
Changes to Other Subparts in Part 319
As discussed above, we are proposing to establish the new subpart
Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5 to contain and consolidate the
generally applicable requirements in part 319 for obtaining a permit to
import or move interstate plants or plant products.
Other subparts in part 319 currently contain varying requirements
relating to permits. We are proposing to remove those requirements from
the regulations and amend all the subparts with current requirements to
refer to the subpart we are proposing to add. This would ensure that
common requirements apply to permits for importation of any article
whose importation is regulated under part 319.
In the paragraphs that follow, we discuss the changes we are
proposing to the regulations contained in part 319 and cite the
specific areas of the regulations we are proposing to change.
The foreign quarantine notices of 7 CFR part 319 to which we
propose changes are:
Plants and plant products imported for experimental, therapeutic,
or developmental purposes under Sec. 319.8. This section contains
requirements for controlled import permits (CIP) that may be used to
import an article whose importation is prohibited under part 319, or to
import an article under conditions that differ from those prescribed in
the relevant regulations in part 319. This section was recently
promulgated in a final rule in the Federal Register on May 2, 2013 (78
FR 25565-25572), and its provisions for denial and revocation of
permits are substantially similar to those discussed in this rule
above. We propose to revise the relevant paragraph (g) in Sec. 319.6,
Denial and revocation of a CIP, to refer to the provisions of the
proposed new subpart.
Foreign cotton and covers regulated under Sec. Sec. 319.8 through
319.8-26. In Sec. 319.8-1, we would amend the definition of permit to
refer to the provisions of the proposed new subpart. We would remove
specific language from Sec. 319.8-2(a) and (c) about the written or
oral form of a permit application and the information it must contain
and information regarding where a permit application may be submitted.
This information, updated to be consistent with current APHIS
procedures, would now be available in proposed Sec. 319.7-1. We would
also remove Sec. 319.8-2(d), which describes what steps APHIS will
take upon receipt of an application. This information, updated to be
consistent with current APHIS procedures, would now be available in
proposed Sec. 319.7-2. We would also remove paragraph (g), which
describes how certain shipments that inadvertently arrive at a port in
advance of the issuance of a permit may be held under safeguards
pending issuance of the permit. Proposed Sec. 319.7-1(e) would replace
this provision with updated language regarding safeguards at the port
of entry and oral authorizations for entry. We would also add
references in Sec. Sec. 319.8-1 and 319.8-2 to Sec. Sec. 319.7
through 319.7-5 to aid readers in locating the newly consolidated
information on permits.
Indian corn or maize and related plants and their seeds regulated
under Sec. Sec. 319.24 through 319.24-5 (the corn diseases subpart)
and Sec. Sec. 319.41 through 319.46 (the Indian corn or maize,
broomcorn, and related plants subpart). We would revise Sec. 319.24-1,
which discusses the application for a permit, to add references to the
proposed new subpart, and remove Sec. Sec. 319.24-2 and 319.24-4 as
their provisions for the issuance of permits and the notification of
arrival at the port would be covered in the new subpart. We would also
remove language concerning the application for a permit in Sec.
319.41-2 and instead refer to the proposed new subpart. In Sec.
319.41-6, we would remove language concerning special mailing tags that
are no longer used.
Citrus fruit and nursery stock regulated under Sec. 319.28. We
would remove paragraph (i), which deals with permit cancellation and
appeals, and paragraph (j), which defines the term inspector. These
provisions would be redundant if the proposed new subpart is adopted.
Plants for planting regulated under Sec. Sec. 319.37 through
319.37-14. In Sec. 319.37-3, we would add references to the new
subpart that provides for permit procedures and remove language
concerning permit applications and oral permits that is inconsistent
with provisions of the proposed new subpart.
Logs, lumber, and other unmanufactured wood articles regulated
under Sec. Sec. 319.40-1 through 319.40-11. In Sec. 319.40-4, we
would remove information about permit applications and add references
to the new subpart that provides for permit applications and other
procedures.
Rice regulated under Sec. Sec. 319.55 through 319.55-7. In Sec.
319.55-2, which provides for the process of applying for a permit to
import rice products, we would add references to the new subpart that
provides for permit procedures and remove information about permit
applications that is inconsistent with the provisions of the proposed
new subpart. We would remove Sec. 319.55-4 as it contains information
about permit issuance, which is covered in the proposed new subpart. In
Sec. 319.55-7, which provides for the process of importing rice
products by mail, we would remove information about mailing tags that
is covered in the proposed new subpart and add the requirement that a
permit must be obtained for the importation and all conditions of the
permit must be met.
Fruits and vegetables regulated under Sec. Sec. 319.56-1 through
319.56-58. In Sec. 319.56-3, we would remove several paragraphs that
contain information about permit applications and issuance, oral
permits, and the amendment, withdrawal or denial of permits and the
appeal of these actions. We would replace this information with a
reference to the proposed new subpart,
[[Page 37489]]
which would contain information about all these topics.
Those articles restricted in order to prevent the entry of khapra
beetle regulated under Sec. Sec. 319.75 through 319.75-9. Throughout
these sections, we would change the term ``restricted article'' to
``regulated article'' to be consistent with the rest of part 319 and
new Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5. In Sec. 319.75-3, we would
remove several paragraphs that that contain information about permit
applications and issuance, and the withdrawal of permits and the appeal
of a withdrawal, adding in their place references to the new subpart
that provides for permit procedures.
Changes to Other Parts
As discussed above, we are proposing to apply the new provisions,
as appropriate, contained in the new subpart that provides for permit
procedures in part 319 to parts 322 and 360. This would provide more
consistency to our regulations concerning the process for applying for
a permit, the type of information we would require in a permit
application, and the provisions for approving, denying, or revoking a
permit, and the process for appealing these actions.
Part 322--Bees, Beekeeping By-Products, and Beekeeping Equipment
The regulations in 7 CFR part 322 prohibit or restrict the
importation of honeybees and honeybee semen in order to prevent the
introduction into the United States of diseases and parasites harmful
to honeybees and of undesirable species.
Section 322.13 regulates restricted organisms and states that they
may be imported into the United States only by Federal, State, or
university researchers. To this section we would add requirements that
an importer must also be a person at least 18 years of age, and must be
physically present during normal business hours at an address within
the United States specified on the permit during any periods when
articles are being imported or moved interstate under the permit. We
would also remove language in Sec. 322.14 that provides that an
applicant for a permit must be a resident, or sponsored by a resident,
of the United States, as it would conflict with the proposed change.
We would add to current Sec. 322.15(c), which sets out conditions
for denial of a permit, three of the conditions under which we may deny
a permit that are discussed above under Sec. 319.7-3. These provisions
for the denial of a permit include:
A permit may be denied to a person who has previously
failed to comply with any APHIS regulation.
A permit may be denied to a person who has previously
failed to comply with any Federal, State, or local law, regulation, or
instruction concerning the importation of prohibited or restricted
foreign agricultural products may also be denied a permit.
A permit may be denied if the application for a permit
contains information that is found to be materially false, fraudulent,
or deceptive.
We would also replace the provisions of paragraph (e) of Sec.
322.15 for the appeal of a denial or cancellation of a permit with the
new requirements proposed in Sec. 319.7-5 and discussed above.
Part 360--Noxious Weed Regulations
The regulations in 7 CFR part 360 prohibit or restrict the
importation and interstate movement of those plants that are designated
as noxious weeds, as defined by the PPA.
Section 360.304 contains the conditions under which we may deny a
permit to move a noxious weed. We would add two additional conditions
for denial to this section that are similar to conditions for denial
that we proposed to add in Sec. 319.7-3.
We propose to provide that we may deny a permit if the application
for a permit contains information that is found to be materially false,
fraudulent, or deceptive. A permit may be denied to a person who has
previously failed to comply with any APHIS regulation.
We believe that these changes to the regulations will harmonize our
permit procedures and make our permit procedures clearer and easier to
use.
Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, has not been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, we have analyzed
the potential economic effects of this action on small entities.
Entities that may be affected by the proposed rule are importers of
lumber and plywood (North American Industry Classification System
[NAICS] code 423310); importers of other miscellaneous durable goods,
such as logs, timber and packing material (NAICS 423990); importers of
drugs, druggists' supplies, herbs and weeds (NAICS 424210); importers
of flowers, nursery stock, and florists' supplies (NAICS 424930),
importers of fresh fruits and vegetables (NAICS 424480); importers of
other grocery and related products, such as coffee (NAICS 424490);
importers of grains and field beans (NAICS 424510); importers of other
farm product raw material, such as raw cotton, sugarcane, honeybees and
honeybee semen (NAICS 424590); and importers of farm supplies (NAICS
424910). The Small Business Administration (SBA) has established
guidelines for determining which establishments are to be considered
small. Imports/export merchants, agents and brokers are identified
within the broader wholesaling trade sector.
A firm classified within any of these NAICS wholesale industry
categories is considered small if it employs not more than 100 persons.
Based on information from the 2007 Economic Census, as shown in table
3, the majority of entities that comprise these industries have fewer
than 100 employees.
Table 3--Prevalence of Small Entities in Certain Industries That May Be Affected by the Rule, 2007
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small-entity
Number of Number of establishments
Number of establishments establishments as a percentage
Industry wholesale merchants Number of all establishments with 100 or more with fewer than of those that
establishments that operated employees that 100 employees operated the
the entire year operated the that operated entire year
entire year the entire year (percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lumber, plywood, millwork, wood panel (NAICS 423310).......... 8,984 8,303 2,123 6,180 74
Other miscellaneous durable goods, construction material logs, 10,270 8,764 532 8,232 94
timber, packing material (NAICS 423990)......................
[[Page 37490]]
Drugs, druggists' supplies, botanical drugs, herbs, weeds 8,535 7,700 2,321 5,379 70
(NAICS 424210)...............................................
Fresh fruits and vegetables (NAICS 424480).................... 5,074 4,437 230 4,207 95
Other grocery and related products, (coffee) (NAICS 424490)... 13,068 11,763 3,286 8,477 72
Grains and field beans (NAICS 424510)......................... 4,851 4,680 1,238 3,442 74
Other farm product raw material (raw cotton, sugarcane, 765 663 43 620 94
honeybees, honeybee semen) (NAICS 424590)....................
Farm supplies (NAICS 424910).................................. 7,738 7,199 61 7,138 99
Flower, nursery stock, and florists' supplies (NAICS 424930).. 4,218 3,601 67 3,534 98
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
While nearly all of the entities that may be affected by the
proposed rule are small, none of the economic effects would be
significant. The proposed rule would make the permit procedures more
transparent and easier to use, enable APHIS to evaluate a permit
application more quickly and thoroughly, and allow for more efficient
control of the issuance of permits and entry of regulated articles.
Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. If this proposed rule is adopted: (1) All State
and local laws and regulations that are inconsistent with this rule
will be preempted; (2) no retroactive effect will be given to this
rule; and (3) administrative proceedings will not be required before
parties may file suit in court challenging this rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule contains no new information collection or
recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 319
Coffee, Cotton, Fruits, Imports, Logs, Nursery stock, Plant
diseases and pests, Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rice, Vegetables.
7 CFR Part 322
Bees, Honey, Imports, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 360
Imports, Plants (Agriculture), Quarantine, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Transportation, Weeds.
Accordingly, we propose to amend 7 CFR chapter III as follows:
PART 319--FOREIGN QUARANTINE NOTICES
0
1. The authority citation for part 319 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450 and 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 21 U.S.C.
136 and 136a; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
0
2. Section 319.6 is amended by revising paragraph (g) to read as
follows:
Sec. 319.6 Controlled import permits.
* * * * *
(g) Denial, withdrawal, cancellation, or revocation of permit. The
Administrator may deny a permit application in accordance with Sec.
319.7-3, and a permit may be withdrawn, canceled, or revoked in
accordance with Sec. 319.7-4.
(1) Action upon revocation of permit. Upon revocation of a permit,
the permittee must surrender, destroy, or remove all regulated plant
material covered by the permit in accordance with Sec. 319.7-4(e).
(2) Appeal of denial or revocation. Any person whose application
for a permit has been denied or whose permit has been revoked may
appeal the denial or revocation in accordance with Sec. 319.7-5.
* * * * *
0
3. A subpart, consisting of Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5, is added
to read as follows:
Subpart--Permits: Application, Issuance, Denial, and Revocation
Sec.
319.7 Definitions.
319.7-1 Applying for a permit.
319.7-2 Issuance of permits and labels.
319.7-3 Denial of permits.
319.7-4 Withdrawal, cancellation, and revocation of permits.
319.7-5 Appeal of denial or revocation.
Subpart--Permits: Application, Issuance, Denial, and Revocation
Sec. 319.7 Definitions.
Administrative instructions. Published documents related to the
enforcement of this part and issued under authority of the Plant
Protection Act, as amended, by the Administrator.
Administrator. The Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service or any employee of the United States Department of
Agriculture delegated to act in his or her stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service of the United States Department of
Agriculture.
Applicant. A person at least 18 years of age who, on behalf of him
or herself or another person, submits an application for a permit to
import into the United States or move interstate a regulated article in
accordance with this part.
Approved. Approved by the Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service.
Article. Any material or tangible objects that could harbor plant
pests or noxious weeds.
Consignment. A quantity of plants, plant products, and/or other
articles
[[Page 37491]]
being moved from one country to another authorized when required, by a
single permit. A consignment may be composed of one or more commodities
or lots.
Country of origin. The country where the plants, or plants from
which the plant products are derived or were grown or where the non-
plant articles were produced.
Enter, entry. To move into, or the act of movement into, the
commerce of the United States.
Import, importation. To move into, or the act of movement into, the
territorial limits of the United States.
Inspector. Any individual authorized by the Administrator of the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service or the Commissioner of the
Bureau of Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland
Security, to enforce the regulations in this part.
Intended use. The purpose for the importation of the regulated
article, including, but not limited to, consumption, propagation, or
research purposes.
Lot. All the regulated articles on a single means of conveyance
that are derived from the same species of plant or are the same type of
non-plant article and were subjected to the same treatments prior to
importation, and that are consigned to the same person.
Means of conveyance. Any personal property used for or intended for
use for the movement of any other personal property.
Move. To carry, enter, import, mail, ship, or transport; to aid,
abet, cause, or induce the carrying, entering, importing, mailing,
shipping, or transporting; to offer to carry, enter, import, mail,
ship, or transport; to receive to carry, enter, import, mail, ship, or
transport; to release into the environment; or to allow any of the
activities described in this definition.
Oral authorization. Verbal permission to import that may be granted
by an inspector at the port of entry.
Permit. A written authorization, including by electronic methods,
to move plants, plant products, biological control organisms, plant
pests, noxious weeds, or articles under conditions prescribed by the
Administrator.
Permittee. The person who, on behalf of self or another person, is
legally the importer of an article, meets the requirements of Sec.
319.7-2(f), and is responsible for compliance with the conditions for
the importation that is the subject of a permit issued in accordance
with part 319.
Person. Any individual, partnership, corporation, association,
joint venture, or other legal entity.
Plant. Any plant (including any plant part) for or capable of
propagation, including a tree, a tissue culture, a plantlet culture,
pollen, a shrub, a vine, a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb, a
root, and a seed.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of the following that can
directly or indirectly injure, cause damage to, or cause disease in any
plant or plant product: A protozoan; a nonhuman animal; a parasitic
plant; a bacterium; a fungus; a virus or viroid; an infectious agent or
other pathogen; or any article similar to or allied with any of the
foregoing enumerated articles.
Plant product. Any flower, fruit, vegetable, root, bulb, seed, or
other plant part that is not included in the definition of plant, or
any manufactured or processed plant or plant part.
Port of entry. A port at which a specified shipment or means of
conveyance is accepted for entry or admitted without entry into the
United States for transit purposes.
Port of first arrival. The area (such as a seaport, airport, or
land border) where a person or means of conveyance first arrives in the
United States, and where inspection of regulated articles may be
carried out by inspectors.
PPQ. The Plant Protection and Quarantine Program, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service of the United States Department of
Agriculture, delegated responsibility for enforcing provisions of the
Plant Protection Act and related legislation, quarantines and
regulations.
Regulated article. Any material or tangible object regulated by
this part for entry into the United States or interstate movement.
Soil. The unconsolidated material from the earth's surface that
consists of rock and mineral particles mixed with organic material and
that supports or is capable of supporting biotic communities.
State. Any of the several States of the United States, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin Islands of the
United States, or any other territory or possession of the United
States.
Treatment. A procedure approved by the Administrator for
neutralizing infestations or infections of plant pests or diseases,
such as fumigation, application of chemicals or dry or moist heat, or
processing, utilization, or storage.
United States. All of the States.
Sec. 319.7-1 Applying for a permit.
(a) Persons who wish to import regulated articles into the United
States must apply for a permit, unless the regulated articles are not
subject to a requirement under this part that a permit be issued prior
to a consignment's arrival. An applicant for a permit to import
regulated articles into the United States in accordance with this part
must be:
(1) Capable of acting in the capacity of the permittee in
accordance with Sec. 319.7-2(e), or must designate a permittee who is
so capable should the permit be issued;
(2) Applying for a permit on behalf of self or on behalf of another
person as permittee; and
(3) At least 18 years of age.
(b) Permit applications must be submitted by the applicant in
writing or electronically through one of the means listed at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/plant_health/permits/index.shtml in advance of the
action(s) proposed on the permit application.
(c) The application for a permit must contain the following
information:
(1) Legal name, address, and contact information of the applicant,
and of the permittee if different from the applicant;
(2) Specific type of regulated article (common and scientific
names, if applicable);
(3) Country of origin;
(4) Intended use of the regulated article;
(5) Intended port of first arrival; and
(6) A description of any processing, treatment, or handling of the
regulated article to be performed prior to or following importation,
including the location where any processing or treatment was or will be
performed and the names and dosage of any chemical employed in
treatments of the regulated article.
(d) The application for a permit may also require the following
information:
(1) Means of conveyance;
(2) Quantity of the regulated article;
(3) Estimated date of arrival;
(4) Name, address, and contact information of any broker or
subsequent custodian of the regulated article;
(5) Exporting country from which the article is to be moved, when
not the country of origin; and
(6) Any other information determined to be necessary by APHIS to
inform the decision to issue the permit.
(e) Application for a permit to import regulated articles into the
United States must be submitted at least 30 days prior to arrival of
the article at the port of entry.
(1) If, through no fault of the importer, a consignment of
regulated articles
[[Page 37492]]
subject to a requirement under this part that a permit be issued prior
to a consignment's arrival arrives at a U.S. port before a permit is
received, the consignment may be held, under suitable safeguards
prescribed by the inspector, in custody at the risk and expense of the
importer pending issuance of a permit or authorization from APHIS.
(2) An oral authorization may be granted by an inspector at the
port of entry for a consignment, provided that:
(i) All applicable entry requirements are met;
(ii) Proof of application for a written permit is provided to the
inspector; and
(iii) PPQ verifies that the application for a written permit has
been received and that PPQ intends to issue the permit.
Sec. 319.7-2 Issuance of permits and labels.
(a) Upon receipt of an application, a permit indicating the
applicable conditions for importation will be issued by APHIS if, after
review of the application, the regulated articles are, at the
discretion of the Administrator, deemed eligible by the Administrator
to be imported into the United States under the conditions specified in
the permit. A permit will be issued specifying the applicable
conditions of entry and the port of entry, and a copy will be provided
to the permittee. The permit will only be valid for the time period
indicated on the permit.
(b) The applicant for a permit for the importation of regulated
articles into the United States must designate the person who will be
named as the permittee upon the permit's issuance. The applicant and
the permittee may be the same person.
(c) The act, omission, or failure of the permittee as an officer,
agent, or person acting for or employed by any other person within the
scope of his or her employment or office will be deemed also to be the
act, omission, or failure of the other person.
(d) Failure to comply with all of the conditions specified in the
permit or any applicable regulations or administrative instructions, or
forging, counterfeiting, or defacing permits or shipping labels, may
result in immediate revocation of the permit, denial of any future
permits, and civil or criminal penalties for the permittee.
(e) The permittee will remain responsible for the consignment
regardless of any delegation to a subsequent custodian of the
importation.
(f) A permittee must:
(1) If an individual, have and maintain an address in the United
States that is specified on the permit and be physically present during
normal business hours at that address during any periods when articles
are being imported or moved interstate under the permit; or
(2) If another legal entity, maintain an address or business office
in the United States with a designated individual for service of
process; and
(3) Serve as the contact for the purpose of communications
associated with the movement of the regulated article for the duration
of the permit. The PPQ Permit Unit must be informed of a change in
contact information for the permittee within 10 business days of such
change;
(4) Ensure compliance with the applicable regulatory requirements
and permit conditions associated with the movement of the regulated
article for the duration of the permit;
(5) Provide written or electronic acknowledgment and acceptance of
permit conditions when APHIS requests such acknowledgment;
(6) Serve as the primary contact for communication with APHIS
regarding the permit;
(7) Acknowledge in writing that in accordance with Section 8313 of
the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.), the actions,
omissions, or failures of any agent of the permittee may be deemed the
actions, omissions, or failures of a permittee as well; and that
failure to comply with all of the conditions specified in the permit or
any applicable regulations or administrative instructions, or forging,
counterfeiting, or defacing permits or shipping labels, may result in
immediate revocation of the permit, denial of any future permits, and
civil or criminal penalties for the permittee; and
(8) Maintain all conditions of the permit for the entirety of its
prescribed duration.
(g) The regulated article may be imported only if all applicable
requirements of the permit issued for the importation of the regulated
article or any other documents or instructions issued by APHIS are met.
(h) In accordance with the regulations in this part, labels may be
issued to the permittee for the importation of regulated articles. Such
labels may contain information about the shipment's nature, origin,
movement conditions or other matters relevant to the permit and will
indicate that the importation is authorized under the conditions
specified in the permit.
(1) If issued, the quantity of labels will be sufficient for the
permittee to attach one to each parcel. Labels must be affixed to the
outer packaging of the parcel.
(2) Importations without such required labels will be refused entry
into the United States, unless a label is not required and not issued
for the importation.
(i) Even if a permit has been issued for the importation of a
regulated article, the regulated article may be imported only if an
inspector at the port of entry determines that no remedial measures
pursuant to the Plant Protection Act are necessary to mitigate or
address any plant pest or noxious weed risks.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ An inspector may hold, seize, quarantine, treat, apply other
remedial measures to, destroy, or otherwise dispose of plants, plant
pests, and other articles in accordance with sections 414, 421, and
434 of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and 7754).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(j) A permit application may be withdrawn at the request of the
applicant prior to the issuance of the permit.
(k) A permit may be canceled after issuance at the request of the
permittee.
(l) A permit may be amended if APHIS finds that the permit is
incomplete or contains factual errors.
Sec. 319.7-3 Denial of permits.
(a) APHIS may deny an application for a permit to import a
regulated article into the United States. A denial, including the
reason for the denial, will be provided in writing, including by
electronic methods, to the applicant as promptly as circumstances
permit. The denial of a permit may be appealed in accordance with Sec.
319.7-5.
(b) APHIS may deny an application for a permit to import a
regulated article:
(1) If APHIS determines that the applicant is not likely to abide
by permit conditions. Factors that may lead to such a determination
include, but are not limited to, the following:
(i) The applicant, or a partnership, firm, corporation, or other
legal entity in which the applicant has a substantial interest,
financial or otherwise, has not complied with any permit that was
previously issued by APHIS;
(ii) APHIS determines that issuing the permit would circumvent any
order revoking or denying a permit under the Plant Protection Act.
(iii) APHIS determines that the applicant has previously failed to
comply with any APHIS regulation
(iv) APHIS determines that the applicant has previously failed to
comply with any Federal, State, or local law, regulation or instruction
concerning the importation of prohibited or restricted foreign
agricultural products;
[[Page 37493]]
(v) APHIS determines that the applicant has failed to comply with
the laws or regulations of a national plant protection organization or
equivalent body, as these pertain to plant health;
(vi) APHIS determines that the applicant has made false or
fraudulent statements or provided false or fraudulent records to APHIS,
or;
(vii) The applicant has been convicted or has pled nolo contendere
to any crime involving fraud, bribery, extortion, or any other crime
involving a lack of integrity.
(2) If the application for a permit contains information that is
found to be materially false, fraudulent, deceptive, or
misrepresentative;
(3) If APHIS concludes that the actions proposed under the permit
would present an unacceptable risk to plants and plant products because
of the introduction or dissemination of a plant pest, biological
control organism, or noxious weed within the United States;
(4) If the importation is adverse to the conduct of an eradication,
suppression, control, or regulatory program of APHIS;
(5) If the importation is adverse to applicable import regulations
or any administrative instructions or measures; or
(6) If the State executive official, or a State plant protection
official authorized to do so, objects to the movement in writing and
provides specific, detailed information that there is a risk the
movement will result in the dissemination of a plant pest or noxious
weed into the State, and APHIS determines that such plant pest risk
cannot be adequately addressed or mitigated.
Sec. 319.7-4 Withdrawal, cancellation, and revocation of permits.
(a) Withdrawal of an application. If the applicant wishes to
withdraw a permit application before issuance of a permit, he or she
must provide the request in writing to APHIS. APHIS will provide
written notification to the applicant as promptly as circumstances
allow regarding reception of the request and withdrawal of the
application.
(b) Cancellation of permit by permittee. If a permittee wishes to
cancel a permit after its issuance, he or she must provide the request
in writing to APHIS. APHIS will provide written notification to the
applicant as promptly as circumstances allow regarding reception of the
request and withdrawal of the application.
(c) Revocation of permit by APHIS. APHIS may revoke any outstanding
permit to import regulated articles into the United States. A
revocation, including the reason for the revocation, will be provided
in writing, including by electronic methods, to the permittee as
promptly as circumstances permit. The revocation of a permit may be
appealed in accordance with Sec. 319.7-5.
(d) APHIS may revoke a permit to import a regulated article if:
(1) Information is received subsequent to the issuance of the
permit of circumstances that APHIS determines would constitute cause
for the denial of an application under Sec. 319.7-3; or
(2) APHIS determines that the permittee has failed to maintain the
safeguards or otherwise observe the conditions specified in the permit
or in any applicable regulations or administrative instructions.
(e) Upon revocation of a permit, the permittee must, without cost
to the Federal Government and in the manner and method APHIS considers
appropriate, either:
(1) Surrender all regulated articles covered by the revoked permit
and any other affected plant material to an inspector;
(2) Destroy, under the supervision of an inspector, all regulated
articles covered by the revoked permit and any other affected plant
material; or
(3) Remove all regulated articles covered by the revoked permit and
any other affected plant material from the United States.
Sec. 319.7-5 Appeal of denial or revocation.
(a) All denials of an application for a permit, or revocations of
an existing permit, will be provided in writing, including by
electronic methods, as promptly as circumstances permit and will
include the reasons for the denial or revocation.
(b) Any person whose application for a permit has been denied or
whose permit has been revoked may appeal the decision in writing to
APHIS within 10 business days from the date the communication of
notification of the denial or revocation of the permit was received.
The appeal must state all facts and reasons upon which the person is
relying to show that the denial or revocation was incorrect.
(c) APHIS will grant or deny the appeal in writing and will state
in writing the reason for the decision. The denial or revocation will
remain in effect during the resolution of the appeal.
Sec. 319.8-1 [Amended]
0
4. In Sec. 319.8-1, the definition of permit is amended by adding the
words ``and in Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5'' before the period.
Sec. 319.8-2 [Amended]
0
5. Section 319.8-2 is amended as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), by removing, in the third sentence, the words
``stating the name and address of the importer, the country from which
such material is to be imported, and the kind of cotton or covers it is
desired to import'' and footnote 1, and adding the words ``for a permit
in accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5'' in their place.
0
b. By redesignating footnote 2 as footnote 1.
0
c. By removing paragraphs (c) and (d) and redesignating paragraphs (e)
and (f) as paragraphs (c) and (d), respectively.
0
d. In newly redesignated paragraph (d), in the first sentence, by
removing the words ``with all requirements set forth therein and such
additional requirements in this subpart as are in terms applicable
thereto'' and adding the words ``with all of the conditions specified
in the permit and any applicable regulations or administrative
instructions of this part'' in their place, and by removing the second
and third sentences.
0
e. By removing paragraph (g) and redesignating paragraph (h) as
paragraph (e).
Sec. 319.8-8 [Amended]
0
6. Section 319.8-8 is amended by redesignating footnote 3 as footnote
2.
Sec. 319.8-11 [Amended]
0
7. Section 319.8-11 is amended by redesignating footnote 4 as footnote
3.
Sec. 319.8-17 [Amended]
0
8. Section 319.8-17 is amended by redesignating footnote 5 as footnote
4.
0
9. Section 319.24-1 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.24-1 Application for permits for importation of corn.
Persons contemplating the importation of corn into the United
States shall obtain a permit in accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7
through 319.7-5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
Sec. 319.24-2 [Removed and Reserved]
0
10. Section 319.24-2 is removed and reserved.
Sec. 319.24-4 [Removed and Reserved]
0
11. Section 319.24-4 is removed and reserved.
Sec. 319.28 [Amended]
0
12. Section 319.28 is amended by removing paragraphs (i) and (j).
0
13. Section 319.37-3 is amended as follows:
[[Page 37494]]
0
a. In paragraph (a) introductory text, by adding the words ``in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5'' after the word
``Programs''.
0
b. By removing and reserving paragraph (b) and removing footnote 4.
0
c. By redesignating footnote 5 as footnote 4.
0
d. By revising paragraph (d).
0
e. By removing paragraphs (e) and (f) and redesignating paragraphs (g)
and (h) as paragraphs (e) and (f), respectively.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.37-3 Permits.
* * * * *
(d) Any permit that has been issued may be revoked by an inspector
or APHIS in accordance with Sec. 319.7-4.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.37-5 [Amended]
0
14. Section 319.37-5 is amended by redesignating footnote 6 as footnote
5.
Sec. 319.37-6 [Amended]
0
15. Section 319.37-6 is amended by redesignating footnote 7 as footnote
6.
Sec. 319.37-7 [Amended]
0
16. Section 319.37-7 is amended by redesignating footnote 8 as footnote
7.
Sec. 319.37-8 [Amended]
0
17. Section 319.37-8 is amended by redesignating footnotes 9, 10, and
11 as footnotes 8, 9, and 10, respectively.
Sec. 319.37-13 [Amended]
0
18. Section 319.37-13 is amended by redesignating footnote 12 as
footnote 11.
Sec. 319.40-4 [Amended]
0
19. Section 319.40-4 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising paragraph (a).
0
b. By removing paragraphs (b)(3), (c), and (d).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.40-4 Application for a permit to import regulated articles;
issuance and withdrawal of permits.
(a) Application procedure. A written application for a permit must
be obtained and submitted in accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through
319.7-5.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.40-5 [Amended]
0
20. Section 319.40-5 is amended by redesignating footnote 3 as footnote
1.
Sec. 319.40-9 [Amended]
0
21. Section 319.40-5 is amended by redesignating footnotes 4 and 5 as
footnotes 2 and 3, respectively.
Sec. 319.40-10 [Amended]
0
22. Section 319.40-10 is amended by redesignating footnote 6 as
footnote 4.
0
23. Section 319.41-2 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.41-2 Application for permits.
Persons contemplating the importation of any of the articles
specified in Sec. 319.41-1(b) shall first make application to the
Plant Protection and Quarantine Program for a permit in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
0
24. Section 319.41-6 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.41-6 Importations by mail.
In addition to entries by freight or express provided for in Sec.
319.41-5, importations are permitted by mail of mature corn on the cob
from the countries specified in Sec. 319.41-1(b)(2), and clean shelled
corn and clean seed of the other plants covered by Sec. 319.41,
provided that a permit has been issued for the importation in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5 and all conditions of
the permit are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
0
25. Section 319.55-2 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.55-2 Application for permit.
Application for a permit to import seed or paddy rice from Mexico
or rice straw or rice hulls from any country may be made to the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs in accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7
through 319.7-5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
Sec. 319.55-4 [Removed and Reserved]
0
26. Section 319.55-4 is removed and reserved.
0
27. Section 319.55-7 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.55-7 Importations by mail.
Importations of seed or paddy rice, rice straw, and rice hulls from
all foreign countries and localities may be made by mail or cargo,
provided that a permit has been issued for the importation in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5 and all conditions of
the permit are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
0
28. Section 319.56-3 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising paragraph (b)(2).
0
b. By removing paragraphs (b)(3), (b)(4), (b)(5), and (b)(6).
0
c. In paragraph (c)(1), by removing the words ``under paragraph (b) of
this section'' and adding in their place the words ``in accordance with
this section and with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.56-3 General requirements for all imported fruits and
vegetables.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Persons contemplating the importation of any fruits or
vegetables under this subpart must apply for a permit in accordance
with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5.
* * * * *
0
29. Section 319.75 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising the section heading.
0
b. In paragraphs (a) and (c), by removing the word ``restricted'' each
time it appears and adding the word ``regulated'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75 Restrictions on importation of regulated articles;
disposal of articles refused importation.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.75-1 [Amended]
0
30. In Sec. 319.75-1, the definition of phytosanitary certificate of
inspection is amended by removing the word ``restricted'' each time it
appears and adding the word ``regulated'' in its place.
0
31. Section 319.75-2 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising the section heading.
0
b. In paragraph (a) introductory text, by removing the word
``restricted'' each time it appears and adding the word ``regulated''
in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.75-2 Regulated articles.\1\
* * * * *
\1\ The importation of regulated articles may be subject to
prohibitions or restrictions under other provisions of 7 CFR part 319.
For example, fresh whole chilies (Capsicum spp.) and fresh whole red
peppers (Capsicum spp.) from Pakistan are prohibited from being
imported into the United States under the provisions of Subpart--Fruits
and Vegetables of this part.
* * * * *
0
32. Section 319.75-3 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 319.75-3 Permits.
A restricted article may be imported only after issuance of a
written permit or oral authorization by the Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs in accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-
5.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
[[Page 37495]]
Sec. 319.75-4 [Amended]
0
33. Section 319.75-4 is amended by removing the word ``restricted'' and
adding the word ``regulated'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75-5 [Amended]
0
34. In Sec. 319.75-5, paragraphs (a) and (b) are amended by removing
the word ``restricted'' each time it appears in and adding the word
``regulated'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75-6 [Amended]
0
35. Section 319.75-6 is amended by removing the word ``restricted'' and
adding the word ``regulated'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75-7 [Amended]
0
36. In Sec. 319.75-7, footnote 3 is redesignated as footnote 4.
Sec. 319.75-8 [Amended]
0
37. Section 319.75-8 is amended by removing the word ``restricted''
both times it appears and adding the word ``regulated'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75-9 [Amended]
0
38. In Sec. 319.75-9, paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) are amended by
removing the word ``restricted'' each time it appears in and adding the
word ``regulated'' in its place.
PART 322--BEES, BEEKEEPING BYPRODUCTS, AND BEEKEEPING EQUIPMENT
0
39. The authority citation for part 322 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 281; 7 U.S.C. 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 7
CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
0
40. In Sec. 322.13, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 322.13 General requirements; restricted organisms.
* * * * *
(b) Persons importing restricted organisms into the United States
must be and Federal, State, or university researchers; be at least 18
years of age; and be physically present during normal business hours at
an address within the United States specified on the permit during any
periods when articles are being imported or moved interstate under the
permit. All such importations must be for research or experimental
purposes and in accordance with this part.
Sec. 322.14 [Amended]
0
41. In Sec. 322.14, paragraph (a)(1) is amended by removing the second
and third sentences.
0
42. Section 322.15 is amended by revising the section heading, adding
paragraph (c)(5), and revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 322.15 APHIS review of permit applications; denial or revocation
of permits.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(5) APHIS may also deny a permit to import restricted organisms:
(i) To a person who has previously failed to comply with any APHIS
regulation, except:
(A) A permit revoked in an investigation concerning that failure
has been reinstated on appeal, at the discretion of APHIS; or
(B) All measures ordered by APHIS to correct the failure, including
but not limited to, payment of penalties or restitution, have been
complied with to the satisfaction of APHIS.
(ii) To a person who has previously failed to comply with any
international or Federal regulation or instruction concerning the
importation of prohibited or restricted foreign agricultural products;
or
(iii) If the application for a permit contains information that is
found to be materially false, fraudulent, deceptive, or
misrepresentative.
* * * * *
(e) Appealing the denial of permit applications or revocation of
permits. If your permit application has been denied or your permit has
been revoked, APHIS will inform you in writing, including by electronic
methods, as promptly as circumstances permit and will include the
reasons for the denial or revocation. You may appeal the decision by
writing to APHIS within 10 business days from the date you received the
communication notifying you of the denial or revocation of the permit.
Your appeal must state all facts and reasons upon which you are relying
to show that your permit application was wrongfully denied or your
permit was wrongfully revoked. APHIS will grant or deny the appeal in
writing and will state in writing the reason for the decision. The
denial or revocation will remain in effect during the resolution of the
appeal.
* * * * *
PART 360--NOXIOUS WEED REGULATIONS
0
43. The authority citation for part 360 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80,
and 371.3.
0
44. Section 360.304 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising the section heading.
0
b. In paragraph (a)(5), by removing the period at the end of the
sentence and adding the word ``; or'' in its place.
0
c. By adding paragraphs (a)(6) and (7).
0
d. In paragraph (b), introductory text, by removing the word ``cancel''
and adding the word ``revoke'' in its place.
0
e. In paragraph (c), by removing the word ``canceled'' each time it
appears and adding the word ``revoked'' in its place, and by removing
the word ``cancellation'' and adding the word ``revocation'' in its
place.
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 360.304 Denial of an application for a permit to move a noxious
weed; revocation of a permit to move a noxious weed.
(a) * * *
(6) The application for the permit contains information that is
found to be materially false, fraudulent, or deceptive.
(7) APHIS may deny a permit to a person who has previously failed
to comply with any APHIS regulation.
* * * * *
0
45. Section 360.305 is amended by revising the section heading and by
removing the word ``canceled'' each time it appears and adding the word
``revoked'' in its place.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 360.305 Disposal of noxious weeds when permits are revoked.
* * * * *
Done in Washington, DC, this 14th day of June 2013.
Kevin Shea,
Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2013-14638 Filed 6-20-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P