Incorporation By Reference, 60784-60798 [2013-24217]
Download as PDF
60784
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 78, No. 191
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
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.
OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL REGISTER
1 CFR Part 51
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
[Docket Number: OFR–13–0001]
RIN 3095–AB78
Incorporation By Reference
Office of the Federal Register,
National Archives and Records
Administration.
ACTION: Partial grant of petition, notice
of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
On February 13, 2012, the
Office of the Federal Register received a
petition to amend our regulations
governing the approval of agency
requests to incorporate material by
reference into the Code of Federal
Regulations. We agree with the
petitioners that our regulations need to
be updated, however the petitioners
proposed changes to our regulations that
go beyond our statutory authority. In
this document, we propose that agencies
seeking the Director’s approval of their
incorporation by reference requests add
more information regarding materials
incorporated by reference to the
preambles of their rulemaking
documents. We propose that they set
out in the preambles a discussion of the
actions they took to ensure the materials
are reasonably available to interested
parties or summarize the contents of the
materials they wish to incorporate by
reference.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received on
or before December 31, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified using the subject line of this
document, by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: Fedreg.legal@nara.gov.
Include the subject line of this
document in the subject line of the
message.
• Mail: the Office of the Federal
Register (NF), The National Archives
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
DATES:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
and Records Administration, 8601
Adelphi Road, College Park, MD.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of the
Federal Register, 800 North Capitol
Street NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC
20001.
Docket materials are available at the
Office of the Federal Register, 800 North
Capitol Street NW., Suite 700,
Washington, DC 20001, 202–741–6030.
Please contact the persons listed in the
section to schedule your inspection of
docket materials. The Office of the
Federal Register’s official hours of
business are Monday through Friday,
8:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m., excluding
Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Bunk, Director of Legal Affairs and
Policy, or Miriam Vincent, Staff
Attorney, Office of the Federal Register,
at Fedreg.legal@nara.gov, or 202–741–
6030.
The Office
of the Federal Register (OFR or we)
published a request for comments on a
petition to revise our regulations at 1
CFR part 51.1 The petition specifically
requested that we amend our
regulations to define ‘‘reasonably
available’’ and to include several
requirements related to the statutory
obligation that material incorporated by
reference (IBR) be reasonably available.
Our original request for comments had
a 30 day comment period. Since we
received requests from several
interested parties to extend the
comment period, we extended the
comment period until June 1, 2012.2
Our current regulations require that
agencies provide us with the materials
they wish to IBR. Once we approve an
IBR request, we maintain the IBR’d
materials in our library until they are
accessioned to the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA)
under our records schedule 3. NARA
then maintains this material as
permanent Federal records.
We agree with the petitioners that our
regulations need to be updated, however
the petitioners proposed changes to our
regulations that go beyond our statutory
authority. The petitioners contended
that changes in technology, including
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1 77
FR 11414 (February 27, 2012).
FR 16761 (March 22, 2012).
3 https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibrlocations.html last visited March 26, 2013.
2 77
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
our new Web site
www.federalregister.gov, along with
electronic Freedom of Information Act
(E–FOIA) reading rooms, have made the
print publication of the Federal Register
unnecessary. They also suggested that
the primary, original reason for allowing
IBR was to limit the amount of material
published in the Federal Register and
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). The
petitioners argued that with the advent
of the Internet and online access our
print-focused regulations are out of date
and obsolete. The petition then stated
that statutory authority and social
development since our current
regulations were first issued require that
material IBR’d into the CFR be available
online and free of charge.
The petition further suggested that
our regulations need to apply at the
proposed rule stage of agency
rulemaking projects and that the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA) and
the Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) Circular A–119 distinguish
between regulations that require use of
a particular standard and those that
‘‘serve to indicate that one of the ways
in which a regulation can be met is
through use of a particular standard
favoring the use of standards as nonbinding ways to meet compliance.’’ 4 In
addition, the petition argued that Veeck
v. S. Bldg. Code Cong. Int’l, 293 F.3d
791 (5th Cir. 2002) casts doubt on the
legality of charging for standards IBR’d.
Finally, the petition stated that in the
electronic age the benefits to the federal
government are diminished by
electronic publication as are the benefits
to the members of the class affected if
they have to pay high fees to access the
standards. Thus, agencies should at
least be required to demonstrate how
they tried to contain those costs.
The petitioners proposed regulation
text to enact their suggested revisions to
part 51. The petitioners’ regulation text
would require agencies to demonstrate
that material proposed to be IBR’d in the
regulation text was available throughout
the comment period: in the Federal
Docket Management System (FDMS) in
the docket for the proposal or interim
rule; on the agency’s Web site; or
readable free of charge on the Web site
of the voluntary standards organization
that created it during the comment
4 NARA–12–0002–0002.
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
period of a proposed rule or interim
rule. The petition suggested revising
51.7—‘‘What publications are
eligible’’—to limit IBR eligibility only to
standards that are available online for
free by adding a new (c)(3) that would
ban any standard not available for free
from being IBR’d. It also appeared to
revise 51.7(a)(2) to include documents
that would otherwise be considered
guidance documents. And, it would
revise 51.7(b) to limit our review of
agency created materials to whether the
material is available online. The petition
would then revise 51.9 to distinguish
between required standards and those
that could be used to show compliance
with a regulatory requirement. Finally,
the petition would add a requirement
that, in the electronic version of a
regulation, any material IBR’d into that
regulation would be hyperlinked.
The petitioners want us to require
that: (1) All material IBR’d into the CFR
be available for free online; and (2) the
Director of the Federal Register (the
Director) include a review of all
documents agencies list in their
guidance, in addition to their
regulations, as part of the IBR approval
process. We find these requirements go
beyond our statutory authority. Nothing
in the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) (5 U.S.C. chapter 5), E–FOIA, or
other statutes specifically address this
issue. If we required that all materials
IBR’d into the CFR be available for free,
that requirement would compromise the
ability of regulators to rely on voluntary
consensus standards, possibly requiring
them to create their own standards,
which is contrary to the NTTAA and the
OMB Circular A–119.
Further, the petition didn’t address
the Federal Register Act (FRA) (44
U.S.C. chapter 15), which still requires
print publication of both the Federal
Register and the CFR, or 44 U.S.C. 4102,
which allows the Superintendent of
Documents to charge a reasonable fee
for online access to the Federal
electronic information, including the
Federal Register.5 The petition
suggested that the Director monitor
proposed rules to ensure the material
proposed to be IBR’d is available during
the comment period of a proposed rule.
Then, once a rule is effective, we
monitor the agency to make sure the
IBR’d materials remain available online.
This requirement that OFR continue
monitoring agency rules is well beyond
the current resources available to this
office.
As for the petition’s limitation on
agency-created material, the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), at 5 U.S.C.
552(a), mandates approval by the
Director of material proposed for IBR to
safeguard the Federal Register system.
Thus, OFR regulations contain a
provision that material IBR’d must not
detract from the legal and practical
attributes of that system.6 An implied
presumption is that material developed
and published by a Federal agency is
inappropriate for IBR by that agency,
except in limited circumstances.
Otherwise, the Federal Register and
CFR could become a mere index to
material published elsewhere. This runs
counter to the central publication
system for Federal regulations
envisioned by Congress when it enacted
the FRA and the APA.7
Finally, the petition didn’t address
the enforcement of these provisions.
Agencies have the expertise on the
substantive matters addressed by the
regulations. To remove or suspend the
regulations because the IBR’d material is
no longer available online would create
a system where the only determining
factor for using a standard is whether it
is available for free online. This would
minimize and undermine the role of the
Federal agencies who are the
substantive subject matter experts and
who are better suited to determine what
standard should be IBR’d into the CFR
based on their statutory requirements,
the entities they regulate, and the needs
of the general public. Additionally, the
OFR’s mission under the FRA is to
maintain orderly codification of agency
documents of general applicability and
legal effect.8 As set out in the FRA and
the implementing regulations of the
Administrative Committee of the
Federal Register (ACFR) (found in 1
CFR chapter I), only the agency that
issues the regulations codified in a CFR
chapter can amend those regulations. If
an agency took the IBR’d material
offline, OFR could only add an editorial
note to the CFR explaining that the
IBR’d material was no longer available
online without charge. We could not
remove the regulations or deny agencies
the ability to issue or revise other
regulations. Revising our regulations as
proposed by the petition would simply
add requirements that could not be
adequately enforced and thus, likely
wouldn’t be complied with by agencies.
In this proposed rule, we are
proposing to require that if agencies
seek the Director’s approval of an IBR
request, they must set out the following
information in the preambles of their
rulemaking documents: discussions of
the actions the agency took to make the
also 44 U.S.C. 4101.
FR 34107 (August 6, 1982).
8 44 U.S.C. 1505 and 1510.
5 See
also 44 U.S.C. 4101.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
materials reasonably available to
interested parties or; summaries of the
content of the materials the agencies
wish to IBR.
Discussion of Comments
Authority of the Director To Issue
Regulations Regarding IBR
One commenter suggested that the
OFR does not have the proper authority
to amend the regulations in 1 CFR part
51. The commenter argued that because
the FRA creates the ACFR and grants it
rulemaking authority to issue
regulations to carry out the FRA, it is
the ACFR and not the Director who has
the authority to amend these
regulations.9 The commenter made this
claim relying on § 1505(a)(3), which
requires publication of documents or
classes of documents that Congress
requires be published in the Federal
Register.
We disagree with the commenter’s
analysis of these provisions. While the
FRA does require publication of those
documents, the FOIA does not require
that documents IBR’d be published in
the Federal Register. Section 552(a)
states that persons cannot be adversely
affected by documents that did not
publish in the Federal Register but were
required to be published unless the
person has actual notice of the
document. This section goes on to make
an exception for documents IBR’d if
they are reasonably available to the class
of persons affected by the matter and
approved by the Director. Under this
section, once these criteria are met,
material approved for IBR is ‘‘deemed
published in the Federal Register.’’
Thus, persons affected by the regulation
must comply with material IBR’d in the
regulation even though the IBR’d
document is not set out in the regulatory
text. Because section 552(a) specifically
states that the Director will approve
agency requests for IBR and material
IBR’d is not set out in regulatory text,
the Director has the sole authority to
issue regulations governing the IBRapproval request procedures. We have
maintained this position since the IBR
regulations were first issued in the
1960’s.
The regulations on the IBR approval
process were first issued by the Director
in 1967 and found at 1 CFR part 20.10
Even though this part was within the
ACFR’s CFR chapter, the preamble of
the document states ‘‘the Director of the
Federal Register hereby establishes
standards and procedures governing his
approval of instances of incorporation
6 See
7 47
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60785
9 See,
10 32
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
44 U.S.C. 1506.
FR 7899 (June 1, 1967).
02OCP1
60786
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
by reference.’’ 11 And, while these
regulations appear in the ACFR’s CFR
chapter, this final rule was issued and
signed solely by the Director. These
regulations were later republished,
along with the entire text of Chapter I,
by the ACFR in 1969; 12 however the
ACFR stated that the republication
contained no substantive changes to the
regulations. In 1972, the ACFR proposed
a major substantive revision of Chapter
I.13 In that proposed rule, the ACFR
proposed removing the IBR regulations
from Chapter I because ‘‘part 20 . . . is
a regulation of the Director of the
Federal Register rather than the
Administrative Committee.’’ 14 In that
same issue of the Federal Register, the
Director issued a proposed rule
proposing to establish a new Chapter II
in Title 1 of the CFR that governed IBR
approval procedures.15 These proposals
were not challenged on this issue, so the
final rules removing regulations from
the ACFR chapter and establishing a
new chapter for the Director were
published on November 4, 1972 at
23602 and 23614, respectively.
We specifically requested comments
on nine issues; we will address the
comments we received to each question.
1. Does ‘‘reasonably available’’ a. Mean
that the material should be available: i.
for free and ii. to anyone online?
A majority of the commenters agreed
that reasonably available means for free
to anyone online but provided no
additional comment on this. Several of
these commenters seemed to agree with
the general principle of access (as stated
in the procedural requirements set out
in various Federal statutes), specifically
that any interested persons should be
able to participate in informal notice
and comment rulemaking by
commenting on the standards an agency
intends to IBR into its regulations, but
didn’t provide more specific details.
Many commenters also agreed with the
petitioners’ contention that changes in
technology and decreased costs of
publication have made the print
publication of the Federal Register
unnecessary.
The commenters who were against
defining reasonably available expressed
concerns that current technology might
make it easier to publish material online
but did not change intellectual property
rights or the substantial costs associated
with developing standards. Several
standards development organizations
11 Id.
12 34
13 37
FR 19106 at 19115, December 2, 1969.
FR 6804 (April 4, 1972).
14 Id.
15 37
FR 6817 (April 4, 1972).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
(SDOs), along with others, commented
that ‘‘reasonably available’’ means that
these materials are made available
through a variety of means that may
include appropriate compensation to
the developer of the standard.
Another commenter agreed with the
petitioners because its members are
subject to enforcement actions that rely
on standards IBR’d into the regulations.
These standards play a critical role in its
members’ obligations because the
standards define when members may
face fines or disqualification. Thus, it is
critical that they have access to the
standards in part so that they can better
comply with the regulations and can
provide some oversight of the SDOs
making these organizations more
accountable for the standards.
While we understand the concerns of
this commenter regarding possible
enforcement actions, we do not believe
that there is one solution to the access
issue. Regulated entities, who may face
enforcement actions that lead to the loss
of a license, and their trade associations
should work directly with the agencies
issuing regulations to ensure that all
regulated entities and their
representatives have access to the
content of materials IBR’d. OFR staff do
not have the experience to determine
how access works best for a particular
regulated entity or industry.
One comment stated that charging a
fee for access to material IBR’d prevents
the poor from knowing the law. It stated
that standards should cost the same
amount as the Federal Register, which
it said is free. It went on to state that
having the material available for
inspection at the agency or OFR
imposed insurmountable barriers on the
poor who live far from the District of
Columbia. It also argued that 29 U.S.C.
794 requires agencies to make electronic
materials accessible to those with
disabilities, so not providing IBR’d
materials for free online was
inconsistent with the Rehabilitation
Act.16 Finally, this comment suggested
that if the material were not free, OFR
would need to set a dollar figure for the
materials that ensured they were
available to everyone, including the
poor.
The daily Federal Register is not
universally free. Section 1506(5) of the
FRA authorizes the ACFR to set
subscription rates for the Federal
16 The Rehabilitation Act ‘‘mandates only that
services provided non-handicapped individuals not
be denied [to a disabled person] because of he is
handicapped.’’ Lincoln Cercpac v. Health and
Hospitals Corp., 920 F. Supp. 488, 496 (S.D.N.Y.
1996), citing Flight v. Gloeckler, et al., 68 F.3d 61,
63, (2d Cir. 1995) and Rothschild v. Grottenthaler,
907 F.2d 286, 289–90 (2d Cir. 1990).
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Register and other publications.
Currently, a complete yearly
subscription, that includes indexes, is
$929.00. While GPO does not charge for
online access to the Federal Register or
to other federal government
publications, including the CFR,
Congress authorized the Superintendent
of Documents to charge for online
access to GPO publications. 44 U.S.C.
4101 requires the Superintendent of
Documents, under the direction of the
Public Printer, to maintain an electronic
directory of Federal information and
provide a system of electronic access to
Federal publications, including the
Congressional Record and the Federal
Register, distributed by the Government
Printing Office.17 Section 4102 allows
the Superintendent of Documents to
‘‘charge reasonable fee for use of the
directory and the system of access
provided under section 4101.’’
Paragraph (b) of this section states that
the fees charged must be set to recover
‘‘the incremental cost of dissemination
of the information’’ with the exception
of the depository libraries, for electronic
access to federal electronic information,
including the Federal Register.18 While
the Superintendent of Documents has
chosen not to charge for electronic
access to the daily Federal Register, this
section does indicate that the Congress
understands that there are costs to
posting and archiving materials online
and that recovering these costs is not
contrary to other Federal laws,
including the FRA and the APA.19
17 See H.R. Rep. No. 108 May 25, 1993, H.R. REP.
103–108
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE ELECTRONIC
INFORMATION ACCESS ENHANCEMENT ACT OF
1993
Mr. FORD.
Mr. President, I am pleased today to introduce
with the senior Senator from Alaska Mr. STEVENS
the Government Printing Office Electronic
Information Access Enhancement Act of 1993. This
legislation will greatly enhance free public access
to Federal electronic information.
The bill requires the Superintendent of
Documents at the Government Printing Office to
provide an online CONGRESSIONAL RECORD and
Federal Register free to depository libraries and at
the incremental costs of distribution to other users.
The bill allows other documents distributed by the
Superintendent of Documents to be added online as
practicable and permits agencies to voluntarily
disseminate their electronic publications through
the same system.
I believe this bill goes a long way toward ensuring
that taxpayers have affordable and timely access to
the Federal information which they have paid to
generate.
1993 WL 67458, 139 Cong. Rec. S2779–02, 1993
WL 67458.
18 See, 44 U.S.C. 4102(b).
19 One commenter also contends that charging for
access would violate the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (5 U.S.C. 801
et seq.). Both of those statutes require that agencies
mitigate the effect of regulations on small
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Congress required that within one
year of enactment (January 2013) the
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration (PHMSA) no longer IBR
voluntary consensus standards into its
regulations unless those standards have
been made available free of charge to the
public on the Internet.20 Congress has
not extended this requirement to all
materials IBR’d by any Federal agency
into their regulations. In fact, Congress
has instructed the Consumer Product
Safety Commission to use specific
ASTM standards, which are not
available for free.21 Thus, we disagree
with the petitioners and the commenters
who argue that Federal law requires that
all IBR’d standards must be available for
free online. By placing the requirement
on PHMSA not to IBR standards that are
not available free of charge on the
Internet (and on CPSC to IBR standards
that are not available free of charge),
Congress rightfully places the burden on
the subject matter expert to work with
the SDOs to provide access to the
standards these subject matter experts
believe need to be IBR’d.
One commenter also cited various
Supreme Court and other lower Federal
courts to further support their claim that
IBR’d materials should be free online 22
by suggesting charging for access to
these materials violates the APA. This
commenter claimed that requiring
interested parties to pay for materials an
agency proposes to IBR in a notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM) denies
commenters the ability to fully
participate in the rulemaking process
because they can’t learn the content of
the standards without paying a fee.
Further, this commenter claimed that
because the APA allows interested
parties to petition the government to
amend regulations the IBR materials
must remain free online while the
regulation is effective. Thus, the APA
businesses but do not suggest that agencies can only
issue regulations with no cost to small businesses.
Similarly, the goal of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public Law 104–4, is
to prevent the Federal government from imposing
a financial burden on state, local, and tribal
governments. It does not suggest that agencies can
only issue regulations without a cost of compliance.
20 Section 24 of the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory
Certainty, and Job Creation Act of 2011 (Pub. L.
112–90).
21 For example, 15 U.S.C. 2056b.
22 See, for example Portland Cement v.
Rukelshaus, 486 F.2d 375 (D.C. Cir 1973) and
United States v. Nova Scotia Food Products Corp.,
568 F.2d 240 (2d Cir. 1977). In all of these cases,
the government actively banned persons from a
court proceeding or withheld information from the
docket of an agency rulemaking. In these instances,
the government actively prohibited access to a
hearing or to information. This can be distinguished
from IBR in that the government does disclose the
relevant information regarding the standard it just
may not provide free access to it.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
requires that any material IBR’d must be
available for free to be considered
‘‘reasonably available.’’ However, the
cases that the commenter cited to
support this claim, both civil and
criminal, dealt with instances where the
government proactively prevented
access, in some instances by denying
access to court hearings and, in another,
by not disclosing scientific data relied
on during a rulemaking, for example.
IBR can be distinguished from these
cases because the government is not
prohibiting access to the materials.
These materials may not be as easily
accessible as the commenter would like,
but they are described in the regulatory
text in sufficient detail so that a member
of the public can identify the standard
IBR’d into the regulation. OFR
regulations also require that agencies
include publisher information and
agency contact information so that
anyone wishing to locate a standard has
contact information for the both the
standard’s publisher and the agency
IBRing the standard.
b. Create a digital divide by excluding
people without Internet access?
Almost all commenters stated that no
digital divide would be created because
people without Internet access could go
to a public library to access the
standards online. Some commenters
suggested that requiring print copies be
available in libraries and other facilities
would solve the digital divide problem.
A couple of commenters stated that
there was no digital divide because at
least 60% of Americans have Internet
access. A few commenters suggested
that a digital divide was not the
problem—our outdated regulations and
the fact that some of the material is only
available at the OFR was the real issue.
One commenter suggested that a digital
divide would be created if online access
to standards was in a read-only format
because someone reading the material at
the library couldn’t print the standard to
review at home or ask someone to bring
it to their home so they could examine
the standard if they couldn’t get to a
library.
Our proposed revisions to the IBR
approval regulations would maintain
the current process of agencies
maintaining a copy for public
inspection and providing a copy of the
standard to the OFR, while adding the
requirement that agencies set out, in the
preamble of the proposed and final
rules, how they addressed access issues
and made the material reasonably
available. This prevents a digital divide
by providing interested commenters the
information to contact the agency
directly to find out how to access the
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60787
standard, whether it is online or
accessible at an agency’s facility close to
the commenter.
2. Does ‘‘class of persons affected’’ need
to be defined? If so, how should it be
defined?
Whether or not commenters agreed
with the petitioner, most believed that
‘‘class of persons affected’’ did not need
to be defined. Some felt that the term
included ‘‘everyone’’ or ‘‘anyone
interested.’’ One group said it didn’t
need to be defined because it includes
anyone who has standing to challenge
the rule or intervene in a rulemaking
proceeding. Most commenters stated
that ‘‘class of persons affected’’ didn’t
need to be defined because it can
change depending on the specific
rulemaking and agencies involved, thus
a definition will fail because it is either
too broad to be meaningful or too
restricted to capture a total class.
Some commenters suggested that
various entities were within the class,
for example: consumer groups because
they play an important role in ensuring
that the standards are sufficiently
protective of the consumer health and
welfare; and SDOs because they are
impacted when an agency IBRs their
standards.
Another commenter stated that
‘‘affected persons’’ in § 552(a) of the
APA includes more persons than those
who are the direct subject of the
regulation. To support this claim, the
commenter referenced 5 U.S.C. 702 (the
APA’s judicial review provision) 23 to
allege that § 552(a)’s reasonably
available provision is broader than § 702
and includes anyone who may have a
stake in agency action. Thus, the class
of persons affected extends beyond
those who must comply with the
regulation.
Two commenters suggested
definitions. One of these commenters
suggested that ‘‘class of persons
affected,’’ ‘‘means a business entity,
organization, group, or individual who
either: (i) Would be required to comply
with the standard after, or if, it is IBR’d;
(ii) would be benefitted from the
standard’s IBR’d into a federal
regulation; (iii) needs to review and/or
analyze the materials proposed to be
IBR’d and/or being relied upon by a
Federal agency in a regulatory
proceeding, including (but not limited
to) a proposed rulemaking, agency
guidance, or similar agency
23 The commenter also cites Clarke v. Securities
Industry Ass’n, 479 U.S. 388 (1987) and Thompson
v. North American Stainless, 131 U.S. 863 (2011).
These Supreme Court cases dealt with who is
within the zone of interest under federal banking
laws and Title VII of the U.S. Code.
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
60788
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
publication.’’ 24 The other suggested a 2prong definition so that during the
NPRM stage of the rulemaking ‘‘class of
persons affected’’ would include anyone
who wants to comment on the proposal,
but during the final rule stage of the
rulemaking the definition would refer
primarily to ‘‘those who have a need to
know the standards to which their
conduct will be held.’’ 25
We did not propose a definition in
this NPRM because we share the
concerns of the commenter who worried
that defining this phrase would create
differentiation and may encourage the
formation of a complicated secondary
bureaucracy. We are also concerned that
any definition will fail because it is
either too broad to be meaningful or too
restricted to capture a total class. Thus,
we are not proposing a definition so that
agencies maintain the flexibility to
determine who is within the class of
persons affected by a regulation or
regulatory program on a case-by-case
basis to respond to specific situations.
3. Should agencies bear the cost of
making the material available for free
online?
When an SDO creates a standard, it
expends resources which are separate
from the actual expense of publication
and distribution. We lack the knowledge
and expertise to understand all of the
costs involved with standard
development, but we do acknowledge
that those costs exist. The SDO can bear
the cost of making its standard available
for free, the agency can bear the cost by
compensating the SDO for the lost sales,
or industry and individuals can bear the
cost by purchasing copies of the
standard.
Many commenters addressed this
issue solely from a technology standpoint. They argued that agencies already
have scanners, servers, and Web sites,
so scanning, storing, and posting files
online would result in a negligible cost.
Other commenters suggested that this
was a tangential issue and that there
were other options available to recover
the costs, but didn’t elaborate on those
other options. It’s arguably true that the
technological (and publication) costs are
continually decreasing, but these
comments addressed only the cost of
making something available online and
did not address costs associated with
making the standard available for free.
Other commenters suggested some
complex ways for the agencies or the
SDOs to recoup the cost of making the
standards free online, including creating
a new tax on SDOs whose standards are
24 See
25 See
NARA–12–0002–0122.
NARA–12–0002–0009.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
purchased in order to comply with
regulations, and having SDOs design a
per-use fee, in addition to royalties, so
that individuals could pay a small fee to
just access a standard but would have to
pay royalties to actually use it.
Amending the tax code and creating a
new business model for SDOs are
beyond the scope of the petition and
outside our regulatory authority.
Most individuals (those not
responding on behalf of an SDO,
industry, or trade group) felt that
agencies should bear the cost. One
person felt that agencies should bear the
cost of making standards free and online
because if standards are not free, our
government is not transparent. Others
felt that this was a basic role of
government and noted that we already
pay taxes, implying that citizens
shouldn’t have to also pay for standards.
One commenter asserted that interested
persons with legitimate interest can’t
afford the cost of purchasing access, so
agencies should provide free access, in
the interests of reducing costs and
burdens.
Transparency does not automatically
mean free access. It is the long-standing
policy of the Federal government to
recoup its costs. OMB Circular A–25
was first issued in 1959 and then
revised in 1993. Among its stated
objectives is to ‘‘allow the private sector
to compete with the Government
without disadvantage in supplying
comparable services, resources, or goods
where appropriate.’’ It also notes that ‘‘a
user charge . . . will be assessed against
each identifiable recipient for special
benefits derived from Federal activities
beyond those received by the general
public.’’ 26 An implied intent is to
reduce the costs and burdens on
taxpayers by not making them pay extra
for something they don’t need.
A common theme throughout the
comments from industry groups and
individuals was the idea that SDOs
would be willing to negotiate with the
government for a bulk discount for
licensing. However, the SDO comments
noted that the licensing fee would still
be substantial and would necessarily
result in increased budgets and
increased strain on taxpayers. Another
common theme throughout these
comments was the idea that the SDOs
derive significant, sometimes intangible,
benefits from having their work IBR’d
into a regulation and those benefits
more than offset the cost of developing
the standards themselves. Some of these
benefits include increased namerecognition and trust, increased revenue
26 https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_
a025#5 last visited June 7, 2013.
Jkt 232001
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
from additional training opportunities,
and an increase in the demand for
standards. We don’t have the knowledge
or expertise to have an opinion on this
issue but believe that agencies and
SDOs will continue to work together on
this issue.
Several individuals and trade groups
felt that if agencies had to bear the cost,
that would ‘‘maximize incentives to
bargain over licensing agreements’’ and
encourage ‘‘judicious use’’ of an
agency’s rulemaking authority to ease
the burden on small businesses.27
However, agencies are already directed
to take into account the impact a
rulemaking will have on small
businesses, including an assessment of
the costs involved, by various Federal
statutes and Executive Orders. After
making that assessment, agencies must
then determine which standard, if any,
is required.
The OFR is a procedural agency. We
do not have the subject matter expertise
(technical or legal) to tell another
agency how they can best reach a
rulemaking decision. Further, we do not
have that authority. Neither the FRA nor
the FOIA authorizes us to review
proposed and final rulemaking actions
for substance. We agree that agencies
should consider many factors when
engaging in rulemaking, including
assessing the cost and availability of
standards. So, we are proposing to
require agencies to either explain why
material is reasonably available and
how to get it or to summarize the
pertinent parts of the standard in the
preamble of both proposed and final
rules.
Several SDOs commented that if the
standards had to be freely available,
then the government should bear the
cost, but implied that industry and
individuals should continue to bear the
cost as needed. They noted that they
would lose more than just the sales
revenue from the standards if they had
to bear the cost, including potential
reduced value of membership and
potential degradation to the value of
standards and publications. Further,
without compensation, creation of new
standards would stop because the costs
of procuring them for free would be
prohibitively high resulting in an
unsustainable business model.
One interest group felt that our
question automatically assumed that the
cost to an agency would be significant.
It argued that SDOs would be able to
make standards available like a digital
lending library which would mitigate
the costs. They offered an example of
the American Petroleum Institute (API)
27 See,
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
for example, NARA–12–0002–0098.
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
making certain standards freely
available in response to the 2010 oil
spill in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf oil
spill).28
We note that API did not offer to
make all of its IBRed standards
available. So, we cannot infer that API
is making this a general practice or that
we can apply this situation generally
across all SDOs. And, as several other
commenters noted, shifting the cost
burden to agencies would result in the
entire burden of the standards
development process being borne by
taxpayers. We can take this example,
however, as evidence that agencies and
SDOs do work together to choose the
best solution for a particular situation.
One group asserted that since the
Federal government bears the cost of
making all Federal regulations available
for free online, it should also make all
IBR’d standards free and online.
However, as we’ve discussed elsewhere
in this petition, the Government
Printing Office has the authority to
charge for online access and it already
charges for subscriptions to the paper
Federal Register and CFR, so the
Federal government does not have an
obligation to bear the cost of making all
regulations available for free online.
Several commenters suggested that we
allow agencies to limit free Internet
access only to parties that would suffer
an undue burden if they were required
to pay the going rate for private
standards. These suggestions are
impractical. They could create
differentiation and encourage the
formation of a complicated secondary
bureaucracy, which we have touched on
already.
As discussed, the OFR is a procedural
agency and we publish documents from
hundreds of Federal agencies. We
would have neither the technological
resources nor the staff to make sure
agencies were making such a
distinction, nor are we in the position
to continually monitor outside Web
sites. We wouldn’t take steps to prevent
such a determination, but have no
authority to require it or enforce such a
requirement.
One individual suggested that since
standards organizations are non-profit
entities they should provide their
standards for free. Another asserted that
the SDOs were already rewarded for
their work since they draft standards on
behalf of government or industry. One
person implied that the government was
already paying the SDOs to develop the
standards.
Many SDOs are non-profit
organizations, but not all are. Even if all
28 See
NARA–12–0002–0092.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
60789
SDOs were non-profit organizations, we
don’t have the authority to require that
they give away assets, products, or
services. Further, most SDOs develop
standards in response to industry or
member needs; they are not employed
by the Federal government and very
few, if any, draft standards at the
direction of the Federal government,
and even then, only in very limited and
specific circumstances.
One SDO noted that the current
Federal policy reflects a decision that
regulated industry and individuals
should bear costs of standards and that
businesses are the intended users of
certain standards. It added that most
businesses already accept the cost of
certain standards as a ‘‘recognized,
accepted, and tax-deductible cost of
doing business.’’ The SDO added that
since the cost to business is not
exorbitant but the cost would be
‘‘exorbitant’’ to the Federal government,
‘‘imposing cost to taxpayers would be
misguided.’’ 29
We choose to leave the burden on the
agencies and their subject matter experts
to work with the SDOs to provide access
to the standards these subject matter
experts believe need to be IBR’d. They
continue to have the burden, but they
also continue to have the flexibility to
come up with the best solution for a
particular situation.
One industry group asserted that
agencies should bear the cost, but that
the cost would not be significant
because the Federal government could
exercise its right under the Takings
Clause of the Fifth Amendment for any
copyrighted material it wished to use.
This comment is outside the scope of
this petition for rulemaking, as we
discuss in section 10.
programs.’’ 31 If agencies chose not to
use SDO material, they could revert to
developing government-unique
standards. Several other commenters
disputed that option, noting that forcing
an agency to hire subject matter experts
and develop the expertise it lacks runs
counter to OMB Circular A–119.
Further, agencies might need additional
IT support staff, contract management
staff, and administrative staff to meet
the new demands for access.
It seems clear that, if agencies must
bear the burden to make material free
online, and since most material is not
currently free, then agency budgets
would have to increase to make the
material free. It is unclear if, or how,
agency infrastructure would be
impacted or how much budgets would
need to increase.
Several other commenters noted that
the budgetary impact should be
irrelevant. If an agency chooses to use
a standard, then it has to meet all of its
legal and financial responsibilities.
Another commenter added that if an
agency didn’t want to IBR material, it
could simply republish the material in
the regulation in the Federal Register.
While we agree that it should be an
agency decision to use or not to use a
standard, based on a variety of factors,
agencies cannot simply republish
material. The Federal Register and CFR
have substantial limitations on what can
be published. For example, we cannot
publish in color, so any standard that
relies on color could not be published,
regardless of the copyright status.32
Also, 1 CFR 51.7(c) states that material
published in the Federal Register
cannot be IBR’d. So if one agency chose
to republish material rather than IBR it,
no other agency would be able to IBR
that material.
4. How would this impact agencies’
budget and infrastructure, for example?
5. How would OFR review of proposed
rules for IBR impact agency rulemaking
and policy, given the additional time
and possibility of denial of an IBR
approval request at the final rule stage
of the rulemaking?
Several individuals replied that there
would be minimal or no impact since all
agencies should already have a web
presence and document management
systems.30 Other commenters concluded
that there was no evidence that agencies
would have increased expense when
providing standards for free online.
Many more commenters (individuals,
industry groups, and SDOs) all agreed
that there would be a significant impact
to an agency’s budget. One individual
noted that the costs could be ‘‘enormous
and threaten the viability of regulatory
29 NARA–12–0002–0123.
30 Again,
these commenters focused only on the
costs involved with posting a document and not
with making it free.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Several commenters suggested that
OFR review at the proposed rule stage
would create substantial delays in the
already long agency informal
rulemaking process. Some suggested
that OFR does not have the authority to
review proposed rules because we are
not subject matter experts in the areas
regulated by other federal agencies. One
commenter stated that if OFR were to
circumvent the development of rules by
31 Again, these commenters focused only on the
costs involved with posting a document and not
with making it free.
32 See, for example 1 CFR 51.7(b).
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
60790
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
agencies with the statutory expertise
and obligation, OFR would essentially
drive the development of those rules
which is not part of its mission. Another
suggested that OFR review of NPRMs
would also create a disincentive for
agencies to use voluntary consensus
standards. Other commenters suggested
that our review of NPRMs was
unnecessary because the SDOs use
consensus development platforms that
allow resolution of stakeholder
concerns.
Another commenter stated that while
OFR is already required to review IBR
requests at the NPRM stage under 5
U.S.C. 552(a)(1)(E), we need to issue
clear rules so that IBR review would not
delay publication of the NRPM and so
that agencies will see a reduced risk that
their request will be denied.
We received a comment that stated
OFR review at the NPRM stage may be
constructive if it were limited to
ensuring the availability of documents
for public comment. Another stated that
without adequate IBR review, agencies
that failed to ensure that IBR’d
standards were reasonably available
were likely to face noncompliance and
costly litigation. We agree with these
comments. Even though a substantive
review of IBR’d materials referenced in
a proposed rule is beyond our authority
and resources, OFR does have the
authority to review NPRMs to ensure
our publication requirements are met.
We have not reviewed IBR’d material in
NPRMs for approval because agencies
may decide to request approval for
different standards at the final rule stage
based on changed circumstances,
including public comments on the
NPRM, requiring a new approval at the
final rule stage. Or, agencies could
decide to withdraw the NPRM. In this
document, we propose to review agency
NPRMs to ensure that the agency
provides either: an explanation of how
it worked to make the proposed IBR’d
material reasonably available to
commenters or; a summary of the
proposed IBR’d material. This would
not unduly delay publication of agency
NPRMs and does not go beyond OFR’s
statutory authority.
At least two commenters suggested
that the petition does not require or
suggest review at the NPRM stage. These
commenters asserted that this review
isn’t needed because their NPRM text
requires agencies to demonstrate in their
draft final rules that the IBR’d standard
was available online during the
comment period. Further, agencies
would know that they can only expect
approval if commenters had access to
the proposed IBR’d material during the
comment period. Thus, the burden on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
OFR would be reduced because we
would not have to continue with caseby-case determinations of ‘‘reasonable
availability.’’ Another commenter
suggested OFR should automatically
grant approval when proposed IBR’d
materials are posted on Web sites that
archive and authenticate, so there
should be no delay in approval.
These suggestions imply that OFR
should rubber stamp agency IBR
approval requests as long as the agency
states it provided the materials online.
We can only carry out the intent of the
petition if we review the NPRMs to
make sure the proposed IBR’d materials
are available online for free or verify
that the proposed IBR’d material is
actually online during the comment
period. To adequately ensure that the
proposed IBR’d proposed materials are
online during the comment period, OFR
would need to verify that fact during the
comment period to effectively enforce
this requirement. Adding a requirement
that agencies need to make proposed
IBR’d materials available online during
the NPRM stage will not ensure that
agencies actually follow that
requirement; we need to have some way
to verify compliance. Thus, in this
NPRM, we are proposing to review
agency NPRMs to ensure that the agency
provides an explanation of how it
worked to make the material it proposes
to IBR reasonably available to
commenters or to provide a summary of
the proposed IBR’d material.
6. Should OFR have the authority to
deny IBR approval requests if the
material is not available online for free?
Of the commenters who felt that we
should redefine ‘‘reasonably available’’
as meaning free and online, most agreed
that we should also then deny requests
if the IBR’d material is not available
online for free. At least one group felt
that we shouldn’t deny a request but
that instead we should negotiate an
agreement between the agency and the
SDO that would make the standard
available for free and online. And, one
commenter felt that OMB should also
have the authority to deny requests if
IBR’d material was not free and
online.33 One commenter felt that we
should refuse to publish final rules that
didn’t have a link to the online IBR’d
material. Another implied that if an
agency established good cause for using
a standard that wasn’t free and online,
we couldn’t deny the request for IBR
approval.
33 As noted elsewhere, the Federal Register Act
gives sole approval authority to the Director of the
Federal Register.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Other commenters were concerned
that if we restricted agencies to this
requirement, we would be put in the
‘‘untenable position of supervising
Federal standards policy.’’ 34 They also
noted that this could place OFR in the
middle of a contentious fight over
copyright limitations. We agree.35 As
discussed elsewhere, our authority is
limited to procedural and publication
issues. We do not have the authority to
direct another agency on substantive
rulemaking issues, including IBR. Our
proposed regulatory changes would
require agencies to describe how the
IBR’d material is reasonably available,
with free and online being but one
option.
Several commenters recommended
we adopt new and very complex
regulatory schemes so that we wouldn’t
immediately deny IBR’d material that
wasn’t free and online but that we
would make sure it eventually became
available, even if not free and online.36
Not only would some of these new
duties be outside the scope of our
statutory authority, we do not have the
resources or the expertise to implement
and carry out these schemes.
7. The Administrative Conference of the
United States Recently Issued a
Recommendation on IBR. 77 FR 2257
(January 17, 2012). In light of this
recommendation, should we update our
guidance on this topic instead of
amending our regulations?
Some commenters felt that we
shouldn’t update either our guidance or
our regulations. Of the commenters who
argued that we should use our
regulations to require that IBR’d
material be available for free and online,
about half saw no point in also updating
our guidance and the other half didn’t
object. A small number of commenters
asserted that we should not update our
Document Drafting Handbook (DDH)
because it’s not a policy document and
we don’t set Federal government policy.
The ACUS Recommendations didn’t
suggest that we develop policy for the
Federal government regarding IBR. As
34 NARA–12–0002–0123.
35 We discuss copyright concerns in more detail
in section 10.
36 One plan would require that we oversee
negotiations between the agency and SDO and make
sure that the SDO was negotiating in good faith.
Then, if the material could still not be made
available online for free, we would create and
maintain a fair use library of material that we had
not approved for IBR but that the agency wanted to
enforce through actual notice. Under a second plan,
we would first just recommend that agencies use
material that is free and online, then we would give
priority review to requests to IBR material that was
free and online, and finally, after 10 years, we
would deny any request to incorporate material that
wasn’t freely available online.
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
the name indicates, these are actions or
considerations that agencies are
recommended to think about when
determining what, if any, material
would be needed for IBR. We see no
problem with updating our DDH with
some of the recommendations to give
agencies another resource or reminder
on IBR best practices and procedures.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
8. Given that the petition raises policy
rather than procedural issues, would
OMB be better placed to determine
reasonable availability?
Some commenters felt that we need to
define ‘‘reasonable availability’’ and that
OMB should have no role in this
process, citing the FOIA. Others thought
that we should work in concert with
OMB to determine ‘‘reasonable
availability.’’ A third group asserted that
OMB should set policy, noting that it
already has in OMB Circular A–119.
As we’ve already discussed, requiring
that agencies only use material that is
free and online could effectively bar
them from using material their subject
matter experts have decided is the best
option. So, that change would have
significant and immediate policy
implications. In response to question 7,
commenters already noted that OFR
does not set policy for the Federal
government. In fact, OMB has the role
of policy-maker. We have neither the
authority nor the expertise to determine
what material is appropriate to IBR into
a rulemaking. OMB and the other
agencies should work together to set
policy that best meets their needs.
9. How would an extended IBR review
period at both the NPRM and final rule
stages impact agencies?
Many commenters raised the same
issues in response to question 9 as they
did in their responses to question 5.
Some concluded there would be no
impact since we would not need
additional time to review either NPRMs
or final rules because the IBR’d material
is either available or it’s not. Others
suggested that our review would slow
the process of a rulemaking, which
would have detrimental effect and add
levels of unnecessary complication.
Some suggested that an extended IBR
review period would diminish many of
the benefits associated with the use of
standards that are IBR’d. One
commenter stated that OFR review
would have a chilling effect on agencies’
willingness to IBR voluntary standards
in support of regulatory actions, which
would undermine Federal law and
policy, set forth in the NTTAA and
OMB Circular A–119.
Another commenter believed that
OFR approval of IBRs should be
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
expeditious and involve limited review.
This commenter recommended that
where there is an approved method for
public access, OFR review should
normally occur in 3 days not 20 and that
agencies should be allowed to state that
all future editions are IBR’d with some
type of administrative approval. This
commenter further stated that ‘‘because
the FRA is nothing more than a
reporting statute, the Director should
delay or reject an agency filing only to
promote clarity, authenticity, and—in
the case of IBR—public availability.’’ 37
Therefore, according to this commenter
OFR should summarily approve IBR
requests of materials that are posted on
archival Web sites.
To the extent that one commenter
suggested that we completely abandon
our current regulations we disagree. Our
current regulations, while issued 30
years ago, provide the foundations for
transparency by requiring detailed
information for the standard, including
the title, date, revision, and publisher,
be set out in the regulatory text. Without
this basic information set out in the
regulatory text no one could be sure
which standard was actually IBR’d in a
regulation. It wouldn’t matter what
standards were available online if it
weren’t clear which standard was IBR’d.
Simply updating regulations by some
type of administrative notice and then
adding an editorial note to the CFR
would not provide a means of orderly
codification as required by the FRA and
1 CFR chapter 1. Therefore, we decline
to propose this suggestion as a means of
updating IBR references. Instead, our
NPRM adds a requirement that agencies
provide an explanation in the preambles
of both their proposed and final rules
that discusses how the IBR materials
were made reasonably available (which
could have been a summary of the IBR’d
material in the NPRM) along with
complying with the current regulations
set out in part 51. This added
requirement will not greatly increase the
burden on OFR resources while
providing interested parties more
information on how agencies are
working to ensure the IBR’d materials
are reasonably available.
10. Other Issues
a. Constitutional Issues.
b. Copyright Issues.
c. Outdated standards IBR’d into the CFR.
d. Standards should be used as guidance not
requirements.
e. Concerns regarding the misuse of the IBR
process.
f. Indirect IBR of standards.
37 See
PO 00000
NARA–12–0002–0118.
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60791
g. International stance—trade imbalance,
Export Administration Regulations,
International Traffic in Arms Regulations.
h. OFR mission.
i. Miscellaneous suggestions.
a. Constitutional Issues
Several commenters argued that the
government could simply exercise the
Takings Clause of the 5th Amendment.
We are not experts in how the Federal
government would exercise the Takings
Clause. However, there is nothing ever
‘‘simple’’ about the process.38 We will
leave it up to the agencies to decide the
best course of action for their situation
and not try to substitute our judgment
for theirs.
Another commenter questioned the
constitutionality of the current system,
arguing that forcing the public to pay for
standards effectively limits access and
thus restricts public participation in
government. Most of the cases cited,
however, dealt with the government or
the courts preventing public access.39
Given the Government Printing Office’s
statutory authority to charge for the
Federal Register and CFR, we find this
argument unpersuasive.
b. Copyright Issues
Several commenters claim that once a
standard is IBR’d into a regulation it
becomes law and loses its copyright
protection.40 Therefore, IBR’d standards
must be available for free online. Other
commenters, including the petitioners,
don’t go quite so far. Instead they claim
that when agencies IBR copyrighted
material into their regulations, the 5th
Circuit’s decision casts doubt on the
legality of charging the public for access
to that IBR’d material, see Veeck v.
Southern Building Code Congress
International, Inc., 293 F.3d 791 (5th
Cir. 2002).41
In Veeck, the court held that in some
instances model building codes
developed by an organization adopted
38 Inquiry as to whether a governmental action is
an unconstitutional taking, by its nature, does not
lend itself to any set formula, and a determination
of whether justice and fairness require that
economic injuries caused by public action be
compensated by the government, rather than remain
disproportionately concentrated on a few persons,
is essentially ad hoc and fact intensive 10 A.L.R.
Fed. 2d 231 (Originally published in 2006).
39 Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court for
Norfolk County, 457 U.S. 596, 604 (US 1982)
(quoting Mills v. Alabama, 384 U.S. 214, 218
(1966)); see also Press Enterprise v. Superior Court,
478 U.S. 1 (1986). Cf. In re Gitto Global Corp., 422
F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2005); Leigh v. Salazar, 677F.3d 892
(9th Cir.2012). The commenter also references Cf.
Harper v. Virginia Bd. Of Elections, 383 U.S. 663,
666–68 (1966), overturning poll taxes.
40 Citing Banks v. Manchester, 128 U.S. 244,
(1888).
41 Veeck v. Southern Building Code Congress
International, Inc., 293 F.3d 791 (5th Cir. 2002).
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
60792
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
by government entities into regulations
may become law, and to the extent that
the building code becomes law it enters
the public domain. Federal law still
provides exclusive ownership rights for
copyright holders 42 and provides that
Federal agencies can be held liable for
copyright infringement.43 Additionally,
both the NTTAA and OMB Circular A–
119 require that federal agencies
‘‘observe and protect’’ the rights of
copyright holders when IBRing into law
voluntary consensus standards.44
Recent developments in Federal law,
including the Veeck decision and the
amendments to FOIA have not expressly
overruled U.S. copyright law or the
NTTAA, therefore, we agree with the
commenters who said that when the
Federal government references
copyrighted works, those works should
not lose their copyright. However, the
responsible government agency should
collaborate with the SDOs and other
publishers of IBR’d materials to ensure
that the public does have reasonable
access to the referenced documents.
Therefore, in this NPRM we propose to
require that agencies discuss how they
have worked with copyright holders to
make the IBR’d standards reasonably
available to commenters and to
regulated entities.
Another commenter suggested that
OFR loan out electronic versions of
copyrighted standards much like a
library. Unfortunately, this goes beyond
our statutory authority and agency’s
resources.
One commenter stated that the OFR
should work with agencies to take a
collaborative approach to copyright, not
one based solely on entitlement, to
promote the consensus standard system.
This commenter recommended a fivecategory approach to collaboration.45
1. Free, but copyrighted—the material
would be marked as copyrighted but
would be available free and online.
2. Extraneous—OFR would work with
agencies to remove extraneous IBRs
from the CFR.
3. Generally approved limitations—
OFR would allow agencies to make
further accommodations to standards
developed by voluntary consensus
organizations, such as read-only online
access to IBR’d standards. (Here the
commenter sets out several conditions
both agencies and SDOs would need to
meet to get IBR approval.)
4. Good Cause—OFR should approve
additional restrictions access if the SDO
42 17
U.S.C. 106.
U.S.C. 1498(b).
44 OMB Circular A–119.
45 See NARA–12–0002–0118.
43 28
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
shows good cause based on its business
structure.
5. Agency Necessity—if a SDO refuses
to collaborate with an agency without
showing good cause or if the agency
argues there is no alternative than using
a highly restrictive standard, the OFR
may not be able to require electronic
public access. So OFR would encourage
agencies to work with NIST to find an
alternative standard.
We decline to take this commenters
approach and note that we do not have
the resources to establish such a
complicated regulatory scheme for IBR
approval. This plan would also increase
the time needed to approve agency IBR
requests, unnecessarily duplicate
agencies’ attempts to make standards
available, and add delays to an already
complicated rulemaking system.
c. Outdated Standards IBR’d Into the
CFR
A few commenters mentioned that
some of the standards IBR’d into the
CFR were outdated or expressed
concern that agencies were failing to
update the IBR references in the CFR.
One commenter suggested that greater
public access to IBR’d standards might
alert policy and industry communities
to the fact that Federal regulations
reference outdated private standards
and need to be updated to improve
public safety. Another commenter stated
that some standards are out of date or
out of print and are not easily available.
This commenter noted that some OSHA
IBR’d materials date from the 1950s.46
This commenter expressed concern that
the current version of a standard may
contain valuable information even
though the historical version is still
IBR’d in the Federal regulation text.
This commenter suggested that sales of
historical documents are not related to
support of the current version and
should be free for the agency and the
SDO and that SDOs should charge only
for the current version. The commenter
didn’t want a situation where an
employer must buy two versions of the
same standard.
In the past few years, we have
reviewed a number of agency IBR
approval requests that seek to retain,
expand, or create IBRs using very old
standards of questionable availability. In
some cases, there may be no appropriate
alternative or recent standards and
agencies may have no choice but to rely
on older material for IBR.
To address this issue, we required
that agencies provide additional contact
information for older standards that are
not readily available from their original
publishers. Examples of regulations that
include modified availability
arrangements for old, difficult to obtain
IBR’d documents include National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA) regulations at 36 CFR part 1234
(74 FR 51004, October 2, 2009),
Department of Energy (DOE) regulations
at 10 CFR part 430 (74 FR 54445,
October 22, 2009), and OSHA
regulations at 29 CFR part 1926 (75 FR
47906, August 9, 2010). While we don’t
agree with the petitioners that we have
the statutory authority to require that
these agencies post these IBR materials
online, we do require that they provide
a way for interested parties to contact
the agencies directly to work out an
arrangement so that the IBR’d materials
could be examined at an agency location
more convenient to the requester.
In January of 2011, President Obama
issued Executive Order 13563,
‘‘Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review,’’ dated January 18, 2011,47
which was closely followed by OMB
Memorandum M–11–10, ‘‘Memorandum
for the Heads of Executive Departments
and Agencies, and of Independent
Regulatory Agencies.’’ After these
documents were issued, the legal staff of
the OFR wrote a blog post discussing
section 6 of Executive Order 13563. This
section instructs agencies to conduct
periodic, retrospective review and
analysis of existing regulations with an
eye toward determining which, if any,
‘‘may be outmoded, ineffective,
insufficient, or excessively burdensome,
and to modify, streamline, expand, or
repeal them . . . so as to make the
agency’s regulatory program more
effective and less burdensome in
achieving regulatory objectives.’’ OMB
Memorandum M–11–10 reiterates and
expands on this, stating that ‘‘[w]hile
systematic review should focus on the
elimination of rules that are no longer
justified or necessary, such review
should also consider strengthening,
complementing, or modernizing rules
where necessary or appropriate. . .’’.
We suggested in our blog post that
agencies use this regulatory review to
pay special attention to any IBR’d
materials cited in those regulations.
Agencies should be mindful of the
requirement that such materials be
‘‘reasonably available to and useable by
the class of persons affected by the
publication’’ 48 and that IBR approval is
‘‘limited to the edition of the
publication that is approved.’’ 49 We
further stated in this blog post that it is
incumbent on agencies to periodically
47 76
FR 3821; January 21, 2011.
1 CFR 51.7(a)(4).
49 (see 1 CFR 51.1(f)).
48 See
46 See
Jkt 232001
PO 00000
NARA–12–002–0147.
Frm 00009
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
review materials approved for IBR in
their regulations and update them as
appropriate. All IBR’d materials must be
‘‘reasonably available’’ to the regulated
parties no matter their age or source. If
this becomes a problem using the
contact information included in the
CFR, agencies are required to update the
regulations with current, complete
contact information or to arrange for—
and publish—instructions for
alternative means of availability if
necessary.50
Another commenter listed agency
regulations, some of which IBR
standards others do not. This
commenter then states that the average
age of a standard IBR’d into the CFR is
24 years old. This, he claims, is ‘‘in part
. . . due to the antiquated practices of
the Federal Register.’’ 51 He continues
by stating that at least part of the
problem is that the OFR has not
implemented an ACUS recommendation
from 1979 that suggested OFR issue a
rule establishing a procedure for Federal
agencies to use a joint rule to update
particular standards into their
regulations.52 According to the
commenter, this procedure would allow
any agency with a superseded standard
to participate. The procedure would
also allow for each agency to make its
own decisions on how to use a
particular standard.
Forcing all agencies that wish to IBR
a particular standard to work together to
issue a joint rule would not
automatically shorten the time it takes
for agencies to complete rulemaking
projects. Coordinating among agencies
is not always easy given their differing
statutory authority and missions. ACUS
Recommendation 78–4 suggests that
when a standard is IBR’d by two or
more agencies, the OFR should
coordinate the publication of a joint rule
to update the standard. The
Recommendation suggests that OFR
should prepare a NPRM that would
publish under the name of each agency.
However, ACFR regulations require
each agency to publish their own
regulations, so the OFR could not
prepare such a document.53
50 See https://www.federalregister.gov/blog/2011/
02/executive-order-13563-and-incorporation-byreference, last visited on March 15, 2013.
51 See comment NARA–12–0002–0118.
52 See ACUS Recommendation 78–4 (44 FR 1357,
January 5, 1979).
53 See 1 CFR 21.21. While outside the scope of the
petition, the commenter also states the OFR
unreasonably limits agencies use of crossreferencing other agencies regulations in the CFR.
The Federal Register Act requires orderly
codification (44 U.S.C. 1510) and gives the ACFR
the authority to issue regulations that ensure the
orderly codification of agency rules and regulations.
The ACFR’s regulation on cross-referencing is
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
The statute allows agencies to IBR
standards with the approval of the
Director. The OFR interprets this
language to require that agencies make
a request to the Director. There is no
prohibition on agencies issuing a joint
final rule to revise their regulations to
update IBR’d materials within their own
regulations, if they choose to work
together as the Recommendation
suggests.
d. Standards Should Be Used as
Guidance Not Requirements
A couple of commenters suggested
that SDO standards should be used in
agency guidance materials instead of in
regulations. If agencies did that, the
public would not be required to comply
with those standards and they wouldn’t
need to be posted online for free as
discussed in the petition. According to
these commenters, this is a better
solution to IBR because the public can
decide if purchasing the standard would
help them comply with the regulation.
It would also ensure that SDOs are
compensated for their work, while
creating a market incentive for them to
keep their prices reasonable in relation
to the alternative standards. SDO
standards would be supportive of
compliance and would not become the
law. At least one commenter suggested
‘‘the NTTAA and [OMB] Circular A–119
make a distinction between regulations
affirmatively requiring a specified
course of conduct and standards that
serve to indicate but one means by
which those requirements may be
satisfied.’’ 54 This commenter states that
the benefits of using standards as
guidance include:
1. Lessening burdens on the OFR.
Guidance is not required to be
published in the Federal Register so we
don’t have to review them.
2. Making it easier to update
standards. Agencies wouldn’t have to go
through a rulemaking each time the
SDO issued a new version of a standard.
Another commenter recommended
that OMB Circular A–119 should
discuss the distinction between rules
and ‘‘regulatory guidance.’’ The
commenter wanted OMB to encourage
agencies to withdraw standards IBR’d in
the CFR in favor of IBRing these
standards into agency directives and
interpretations, which the commenter
found at 1 CFR 21.21. Paragraph (c) of this section
requires that each agency set out its own regulations
in the CFR in full text. It limits the use of crossreferencing to particular situations set out in this
section. Orderly codification cannot be carried out
without some boundaries and restrictions. We have
found that many times cross references are not
updated and thus are not useful.
54 See NARA–12–0002–0149.
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60793
claims are ‘‘equally authoritative, but
changeable by notice.’’ 55 The
commenter suggests that by doing this
the public develops an awareness of the
standard while SDOs copyrights are
protected.
The FRA and the APA 56 require that
documents of general applicability and
legal effect be published in the Federal
Register and codified in the CFR. Thus,
what these commenters suggest could
jeopardize agencies’ enforcement of
requirements needed to maintain the
health and safety of the public by
removing them from the CFR. In
addition, agencies are not generally
required to codify their guidance
documents, policy letters, or directives
in the CFR and thus, they may not be
published in the Federal Register. 57 So,
if standards are only referenced in
guidance, some of the transparency is
gone because there would be no
uniformity as to how the standard is
referenced in the guidance document. In
many instances, agency-issued guidance
and policy statements become binding
as a practical matter.58 But, because
these documents might not be published
in the Federal Register and are not
codified, it’s not clear how moving an
IBR from regulation text to documents
that are more difficult to locate provides
the public with adequate knowledge of
the document. If the documents are not
submitted for publication in the Federal
Register, then the OFR legal staff can’t
review them. We do not have the staff
or other resources needed to check each
agency’s Web site for documents that
should be published in the Federal
Register. Also, it is not clear why
55 See NARA–12–0002–0118. This commenter
also suggests that OFR should allow agencies to IBR
agency documents into Federal Register notice
documents provided the agency provides an
authenticated version of its document for Federal
Register custody. As we discussed earlier, we
discourage agencies from IBR’ing agency-created
materials so that a shadow publication system is not
established and the transparency of a centralized
publication system established under the FRA is
maintained.
56 44 U.S.C. 1505, 1510 and 5 U.S.C. 553,
respectively.
57 ACUS Recommendation 76–2 (41 FR 29653,
July 19, 1976) recommends that agencies publish
their statements of general policy and
interpretations of general applicability in the
Federal Register citing 5 U.S.C. 522(a)(1)(D). This
recommendation further recommends that when
these documents are of continuing interest to the
public they should be ‘‘preserved’’ in the CFR. 41
FR 29654. The recommendation also suggests that
agencies preserve their statements of basis and
purpose related to a rule by having them published
in the CFR at least once in the CFR edition for the
year rule is originally codified. Many agencies have
not followed this recommendation, most likely
because some of the material is published in the
United States Government Manual or they find the
cost prohibitive.
58 See NARA–12–0002–0162.
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
60794
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
agencies would need IBR approval for
these non-regulatory documents.
This commenter also stated that ‘‘[t]o
the extent standards remain in the
codified rules, OMB should streamline
the process of incorporating new
editions.’’ 59 It’s not clear what the
commenter is referring to with this
statement. If this commenter wanted
OMB to suggest ways agencies can work
through their internal and OMB
clearance processes to make that process
more streamlined, then we agree. OMB
should work with agencies to improve
and expedite the clearance process. If
the commenter is suggesting that OMB
change the way IBR approval process
works, we disagree with the commenter.
Under statute, only the Director can
approve agency requests to IBR material
into the CFR, OMB may suggest ways to
make the process more streamlined but
it cannot change the regulations
regarding IBR in 1 CFR part 51.
Other commenters offered similar
suggestions to ‘‘improve’’ the IBR
process. One suggestion would be to
allow agencies to simply file an updated
standard with the OFR. We would file
it and the agency would not have to go
through the rulemaking process to
update its standards. Then, we would
periodically annotate the CFR with
editorial notes stating that the standard
that is codified is no longer applicable.
One commenter suggested that if an
agency were required by Congress to
update the standard, the agency could
simply link to that annotation.
Going back to the FRA, the APA, 1
CFR chapters I and II, and the general
principles of transparency already
discussed, these suggestions are
untenable. Notice, whether actual or
constructive, is one of the main pillars
of our Federal regulatory process. If an
agency has given notice, through a final
rule codified in the CFR, that a specific
standard is required, it can’t require
something else. And since we don’t
consider annotations to the CFR part of
the regulation, any editor’s note we
added would be unenforceable. But, we
couldn’t add such a note because we
have no authority to substantively
change another agency’s regulations.
Another commenter suggested that
agencies should be able to remove
lengthy ‘‘enforcement policies’’ from the
CFR and then IBR them. As we’ve
already discussed, however, this would
create a shadow system of regulations.
Several other commenters appeared to
suggest that we allow and approve
material to be IBR’d into preambles,
guidance documents, informal
procedures, and Notice documents. One
59 See
NARA–12–0002–0118.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
theory appears to be that if agencies
could IBR material into documents that
were not in the CFR, it would be much
easier and faster for them to update the
standards with new versions. But, as
we’ve already discussed, agencies IBR
material in order to enforce compliance
with that material. Only material in the
CFR can be enforced, so IBR’ing
material into documents that aren’t
enforceable won’t meet agency needs.
Agencies are already allowed to
reference outside material in those
documents, so adding a layer of review
and approval, while significantly taxing
our resources, would not make the IBR
process quicker and simpler; it would
have the exact opposite effect.
A second theory for expanding IBR to
more than final rules seems to be to
ensure that the public has access to all
material they need to be able to
comment on an agency NPRM, even if
the agency never intends to IBR the
document at a final rule stage. While the
OFR endorses this idea, the agency
docket is the appropriate (and current)
place for this material. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)
clearly discusses IBR in the context of
final rules and the requirements that are
part of final rules. It is not concerned
with ensuring adequate opportunity to
comment. Other parts of the APA put
that burden on the issuing agency, not
on us, see 5 U.S.C. § 553.
A commenter was concerned that we
would approve an IBR with a general
reference to the Internet, rather than a
specific instance, since Web sites and
domains can easily change. However,
the Director does not approve any
‘‘general references,’’ whether online or
not. He approves specific editions or
versions of specific standards. We
strongly encourage agencies to include
Web site addresses where the standard
can be obtained, but even if that
addresses changes, it won’t affect the
validity of the IBR approval.
e. Concerns Regarding the Misuse of the
IBR Process
Several commenters expressed a
general concern that allowing agencies
to IBR material into the CFR
circumvented the requirements of notice
and comment rulemaking. One
commenter claimed it is inappropriate
to IBR consensus standards that have
not gone through an economic analysis
and an opportunity for broad public
comment. The primary concern of this
comment is that voluntary consensus
organizations don’t take into account
the economic impact of their consensus
standards. Since many standards offer a
very complex and stringent protocol
that industry can choose to adopt to
enhance safety, these standards are not
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
a replacement for a rulemaking because
they don’t account for the economic
impact of the protocols.
As previously stated, we are not
subject matter experts in the many
subject areas in which agencies request
IBR approval of standards into their
regulations; we are not able to
determine how a standard was
developed or if there are alternative
standards the agency could IBR instead.
We believe it is up to the agency to
determine these questions and examine
the economic impact on regulated
entities during the rulemaking process.
We propose that agencies seeking the
Director’s approval of their IBR requests
include in the preambles of their
rulemaking documents a discussion of
the actions the agency took to ensure the
materials were reasonably available to
interested parties or summaries of the
contents of the materials the agencies
are seeking to IBR.
At least 2 commenters raised concerns
about the IBR of API’s RP/1162 entitled
Public Awareness.60 They claim that
IBR’ing this standard was a misuse of
the IBR process because this standard is
not technical in nature. These
commenters assert that the NTTAA and
OMB Circular A–119 envision that IBR
will be limited to technical standards or
specifications. They suggest that by
IBR’ing this standard on developing a
public awareness program to increase
public awareness of pipeline operations
and safety issues, the agency effectively
transferred its authority to issue
regulations to the private organization.
FOIA and the regulations in 1 CFR
part 51 do not limit IBR approval to
only technical standards. We don’t have
the resources to determine what types of
standards are appropriate for an agency
to IBR. We assume that agencies have
fully considered the impact of any
documents they wish to IBR, including
whether they are in fact delegating their
rulemaking authority to a third-party.
We do not review material submitted for
IBR to determine if it is technical in
nature or is a performance-based
requirement; we leave that
determination to the agency subject
matter experts. We review the IBR’d
material to ensure it meets the
requirements set out in part 51.
f. Indirect IBR’d Standards
At least 3 commenters raised the issue
that some of the IBR’d standards also
reference other standards in their text.
These commenters stated that obtaining
IBR’d material can cost several
thousands of dollars a year. One
60 See NARA–12–0002–0077 and NARA–12–
0002–0092.
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
commenter uses, as an example, the
ASTM foundry standard, which the
commenter said cross-references 35
other consensus standards.61 These
commenters mentioned that these costs
may be cumulative, as companies or
individuals must purchase multiple
layers of IBR’d documents. In sum,
these commenters seemed to suggest
that OFR mandate that the primary IBR
material and all tiered IBR material be
placed online to greatly reduce the cost
of access to IBR’d standards and expand
the number of people who can view the
IBR’d standards.
Our regulations have never contained
any provision to allow for IBR of
anything but the primary standards and,
as a practical matter, we have no
mechanism for approving anything but
those primary standards. The OFR is a
procedural agency and we do not have
subject matter or policy jurisdiction
over any agency or SDO. We must
assume that agencies have fully
considered the impact of any document,
and, by extension, material IBR’d, they
publish in the Federal Register. In many
instances, agencies reference third-party
standards in their NPRMs, so both the
general public and the regulated public
can review and comment on those
standards before they are formally IBR’d
in the CFR. We do not review material
submitted for IBR to determine if it also
has other materials IBR’d; we look only
at the criteria set out in our regulations.
Determining that an agency intends to
require some type of compliance with
documents referenced in third-party
standards is outside our jurisdiction;
similarly, we cannot determine whether
or not the subject matter of a third-party
standard is appropriate for any given
agency.
We do recommend to agencies that
they carefully consider what standards
they wish to IBR and the impact of that
standard on the regulated entities. If
asked, we would suggest that the agency
review the second tier standards to
determine if it wished to IBR any of
those standards. If the agency decides to
IBR any second tier standards we will
work with the agency on its IBR
approval request for those standards.
The agency could opt to discuss those
‘‘second tier’’ standards in the preamble.
One commenter stated that we
shouldn’t reject or delay IBR approval
based on secondary references within a
standard. For the reasons stated above
we don’t do this now and our NPRM
does not suggest that we begin doing
this.
61 See
NARA–12–0002–0147.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
g. International Stance—Trade
Imbalance, Export Administration
Regulations, International Traffic in
Arms Regulations
Several commenters expressed
concern that granting the petition would
create unnecessary problems under U.S.
international obligations. These
commenters stated that the U.S.
standards development system is
independent of government control and
offers a level of assurance to the world
that IBR’d standards are not crafted to
establish or encourage trade barriers.
They were concerned that any revisions
to our regulations could fundamentally
undermine this system and would cause
the U.S. to lose this competitive
advantage. It might also compromise the
role that standards play in protecting
health, safety, and the environment.
These commenters also expressed
concern that if the U.S. were to lose its
competitive advantage, other countries
would be quick to seize the opportunity.
We understand that the U.S. is a party
to international agreements under
which it is obligated to use relevant
international standards in Federal
regulations.62 We strongly recommend
that agencies work with the United
States Trade Representative, and the
Departments of State and Commerce to
make sure their regulations meet U.S.
international obligations. In part, this is
why we decline to grant the petitions
request to completely revise our
regulations. Instead, we are proposing to
revise our regulations to require that
agencies discuss in the preambles of
their rulemaking documents how the
IBR’d materials were made reasonably
available under Federal law and policy,
including any international obligations
if applicable.
One commenter voiced a concern that
placing export-controlled information in
the public domain could happen if we
adopted the changes suggested in the
petition. This commenter then stated
that this type of information is subject
to the Export Administration
Regulations (EAR) or controlled by the
International Traffic in Arms
Regulations (ITAR). The Department of
Commerce and the Department of State
have the authority over these types of
controlled information. This commenter
then recommends that any revisions to
part 51 include the following language:
‘‘Nothing herein requires or authorizes
the release to the public either directly
or through incorporation by reference of
any information subject to the export
control restrictions as promulgated by
62 See for example, the World Trade Organization
Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, Article
2.4.
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60795
the U.S. Department of State or the U.S.
Department of Commerce.’’ 63 Because
we are not proposing to require agencies
to post all materials IBR’d online, we
decline to propose adding the
commenter’s suggested language to part
51.
h. OFR Mission
One commenter suggested that OFR
needs to focus on a new mission related
to IBR and provided the following
suggestions related to public domain
and privately created documents. In
regard to public domain documents, this
commenter appeared to recommend that
we encourage agencies to IBR agency
guidance and other agency documents
into guidance documents, preambles,
and notice documents.64 This
commenter also seemed to suggest that
these types of documents be IBR’d into
the CFR; for example, an agency would
IBR the preamble of a NPRM into the
final rule. Thus, he would have us do
away with the current prohibition found
in 1 CFR 51.7(c)(1) that prohibits
agencies from IBR’ing material that
published in the Federal Register. He
suggested that this would ensure that
we maintain archival records of
important preambles and agency
guidance. However, this misses the
point of IBR and of its requirements.
Any document that published in the
Federal Register is automatically part of
the Federal record, with its own
permanent citation,65 so IBRing a
preamble, for example, would only
create a more-complicated citation
system with no apparent benefit.
As previously discussed, there is an
implied presumption that material
developed and published by a Federal
agency is inappropriate for IBR by that
agency, except in limited circumstances.
Otherwise, the Federal Register and
CFR could become a mere index to
material published elsewhere. This runs
counter to the central publication
system for Federal regulations
envisioned by Congress in the FRA and
the APA.66 We do not have the
resources to review and approve IBR
references in non-regulatory text
including guidance documents,
preambles, and notice documents. Our
focus with IBR approval continues to be
placed on CFR regulatory text when
agencies wish to require the use of
materials not published in the Federal
Register.
63 See
NARA–12–0002–0134.
NARA–12–002–0118. This commenter also
suggests that the Director IBR the OFR’s Document
Drafting Handbook into part 51.
65 See 44 U.S.C. 1507.
66 47 FR 34107 (August 6, 1982).
64 See
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
60796
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
As for privately created materials, this
commenter wanted us to focus on
helping agencies publish and archive
legal materials in secure, electronic
formats. This commenter believed 1
CFR part 51 is unnecessarily
burdensome and prohibits agencies
from using many of the efficient tools
the Internet makes available.
We are not the Government Printing
Office, whose mission is to help
agencies publish and post online agency
documents. Our mission is to publish
the documents Congress required to be
published in the FRA.67 As for the
commenter’s suggestion that the current
part 51 is burdensome and prohibits
agencies from effectively using the
Internet, we disagree. The current part
51 provides basic procedural
requirements that ensure agencies are
referencing IBR’d materials so that it is
clear which documents are IBR’d into
the CFR. Our requirements also provide
that agencies include direct contact
information in the regulatory text so that
the reader does not have to search for
agency and publisher contact
information elsewhere. Our regulations
allow agencies the flexibility to work
with SDOs and other publishers to post
the material online or provide other
means of access to the materials IBR’d
into the CFR.
Finally, this commenter wanted us to
work with NIST to create a database
with the IBR’d standards. He felt OFR’s
record schedule for IBR’d materials is
burdensome because we accession some
material to NARA while it’s still IBR’d
in current regulations. To correct this,
the commenter seemed to suggest the
OFR maintain digital scans of all IBR’d
material and provide a high quality
searchable Web site that links to the
CFR and the IBR’d material. This
commenter also suggested that we
remove contact information from the
CFR and maintain it only in this
database.
We are happy to work with NIST so
that its database of IBR’d standards on
www.standards.gov is current. Since the
NIST database only tracks consensus
standards, we will continue to maintain
our finding aid of IBR’d materials on the
eCFR (www.ecfr.gov) to assist people
looking for other types of documents
that have been IBR’d. As discussed in
detail previously, we disagree with the
suggestion that Federal law and current
technology require that copyright
protections no longer apply to materials
that have been IBR’d so decline to create
a site that provides digital scans of
67 See
44 U.S.C. 1505 and 1510.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
IBR’d materials.68 Finally, we believe
that the contact information for OFR,
agencies, and publishers of IBR’d
materials is important and needs to
remain in the CFR.
i. Miscellaneous Suggestions
One commenter requested that we
require agencies to make all outside
materials they relied on in drafting the
rulemaking documents available online
for free. We have statutory authority
only with regard to material IBR’d, not
to all other material referenced. While
we encourage agencies to make that
material available, but we cannot
require them to do so.69
One commenter recommended that
we eliminate IBR entirely and make
agencies issue performance-based,
rather than standards-based regulations.
This is well outside our statutory
authority. Agencies currently choose
whether performance-based or
prescriptive regulations, or a hybrid of
both, is best for each specific
rulemaking, and whether any part of the
performance or prescriptive
requirements are best found in existing
standards. We do not have the authority
or the expertise to substitute our
judgment for theirs.
Another commenter also raised the
issue of conformity assessment.70
However, that too is outside the scope
of our authority, our expertise, and this
petition.
One commenter expressed frustration
with private corporations and
government corruption. Others objected
to the idea that regulations could
become law without allowing citizens
access. One commenter asserted that
agencies should not publish regulations
individually, that there needed to be a
central repository that published
regulations which would be available
online. He also recommended an
elaborate file-naming convention for all
regulations and NPRMs, not just those
containing IBR material.71 One
68 Within the past few years, we’ve begun
allowing agencies to submit all electronic IBR
approval requests. When agencies choose this
request process, they provide us with electronic
copies of the materials they wish to IBR. Because
we have limited server space, we have a record
schedule for these documents as well, so we will
still need to research where the IBR’d materials are
stored. Thus, having digital copies of documents
does not solve the perceived problem.
69 As noted in section 1, however, agencies are
already required to disclose scientific data that
they’ve relied on for rulemaking. United States v.
Nova Scotia Food Products Corp., 568 F.2d 240 (2d
Cir. 1977).
70 See, for example, NARA–12–0002–0063 and
0067.
71 Since this describes fairly well the Federal
Register system, as established in 1935, we agree
with the comment regarding centralization of
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
submitter provided a copy of OSHA’s
acceptance of Industrial Consensus
Standards from the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), but
without explaining its relevance to the
petition.72
We also received recommendations
to:
• Create a government SDO and to
nationalize existing standards
• Change the existing SDO model
• Make all standards open-source
• Host all online standards 73
• Revise the tax code
• Amend HR 2854
• Make all agency drafts publically
available
• Have Federal agencies use objective
criteria to evaluate the potential IBR of
voluntary non-consensus standards
• Analyze how other Federal agencies
compile data and meta-data.
The OFR has no authority to create
agencies, change how SDOs operate, or
amend existing statutes. Further, we
cannot make agency drafts publically
available. The ACFR regulations,74
which were upheld by a Federal court,75
specifically state that we hold all
documents in confidence until they are
placed on public inspection and filed
for publication Finally, we cannot
implement changes in other agencies.
One commenter requested that OFR
conduct an audit of all IBR’d standards.
We decline. The last audit our office
undertook lasted several years, with
many more staff and many fewer IBR’d
standards, and was done shortly after
the Director became the sole person
authorized to approve IBR requests.
This commenter also requested
permission to install a high speed copier
in our office which non-OFR employees
would use to copy and scan IBR’d
material. The Antideficiency Act, 31
U.S.C. 1342, prevents us from accepting
voluntary services and ethics rules
prevent us from accepting gifts. Finally
this commenter requested that NARA
systematically archive all ANSI
standards, even those not IBR’d, to
ensure continuing access to these
standards. Although we are an office
within NARA, we are only involved in
archiving records as a client—that is, we
send our material for archiving
according to our records schedule just
like any other Federal agency. We don’t
regulations. However, changing how documents are
named is outside the scope of this petition.
72 We do discuss international issues elsewhere in
section 10, including the GATT.
73 Online standards are, by definition, already
online, so we see no need to also host them through
our domains.
74 1 CFR 17.2(a).
75 Kennecott Utah Copper Corp. v. U.S. Dept. of
Interior, 88 F.3d 1191 (D.C. Cir. 1996).
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
have the authority to speak on behalf of
NARA. In addition, ANSI is not a
government agency so OFR has no
authority to archive all of its standards.
Regulatory Analysis
Executive Order 12866
The NPRM has been drafted in
accordance with Executive Order 12866,
section 1(b), ‘‘Principles of Regulation.’’
The Director has determined that this
NPRM is a significant regulatory action
as defined under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866. The proposed
rule has been submitted to OMB under
section 6(a)(3)(E) of Executive Order
12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This NPRM will not have a significant
impact on small entities since it
imposes requirements only on Federal
agencies. Members of the public can
access Federal Register publications for
free through the Government Printing
Office’s Web site. Accordingly, the head
of the agency certifies that the rule will
not, if promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
Federalism
This NPRM has no Federalism
implications under Executive Order
13132. It does not impose compliance
costs on state or local governments or
preempt state law.
Congressional Review
This NPRM is not a major rule as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The Director
will submit a rule report, including a
copy of this NPRM, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States as required under
the congressional review provisions of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1986.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
List of Subjects in 1 CFR Part 51
Administrative practice and
procedure, Code of Federal Regulations,
Federal Register, Incorporation by
reference.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, under the authority at 5
U.S.C. 552(a), the Director of the Federal
Register, proposes to amend chapter II
of title 1 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as set forth below:
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
1. The authority citation for part 51
continues to read:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a).
The Director developed this NPRM
after considering numerous statutes and
Executive Orders related to rulemaking.
Below is a summary of his
determinations with respect to this
rulemaking proceeding.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
PART 51—INCORPORATION BY
REFERENCE
Jkt 232001
■
2. Revise § 51.3 to read as follows:
§ 51.3 When will the Director approve a
publication?
(a)(1) The Director will informally
approve the proposed incorporation by
reference of a publication when the
preamble of a proposed rule meets the
requirements of this part (See § 51.5(a)).
(2) If the preamble of a proposed rule
does not meet the requirements of this
part, the Director will return the
document to the agency (See 1 CFR 2.4).
(b) The Director will formally approve
the incorporation by reference of a
publication in a final rule when the
following requirements are met:
(1) The publication is eligible for
incorporation by reference (See § 51.7).
(2) The preamble meets the
requirements of this part (See
§ 51.5(b)(2)).
(3) The language of incorporation
meets the requirements of this part (See
§ 51.9).
(4) The publication is on file with the
Office of the Federal Register.
(5) The Director has received a written
request from the agency to approve the
incorporation by reference of the
publication.
(c) The Director will notify the agency
of the approval or disapproval of an
incorporation by reference in a final rule
within 20 working days after the agency
has met all the requirements for
requesting approvals (See § 51.5).
■ 3. Revise § 51.5 to read as follows:
§ 51.5 How does an agency request
approval?
(a) In a proposed rule, the agency does
not request formal approval but must
either:
(1) Discuss the ways in which it
worked to make the materials it
proposes to incorporate by reference
reasonably available to interested
parties in the preamble of the proposed
rule, or
(2) Summarize the material it
proposes to incorporate by reference in
the preamble of the proposed rule.
(b) In a final rule, the agency must
request formal approval by:
(1) Making a written request for
approval at least 20 working days before
the agency intends to submit the final
rule document for publication;
(2) Discussing, in the preamble, the
ways in which it worked to make the
materials it incorporates by reference
reasonably available to interested
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
60797
parties and how interested parties can
obtain the materials;
(3) Sending a copy of the final rule
document that uses the proper language
of incorporation with the written
request (See § 51.9); and
(4) Ensuring that a copy of the
publication is on file at the Office of the
Federal Register.
(c) Agencies may consult with the
Office of the Federal Register at any
time with respect to the requirements of
this part.
■ 4. In § 51.7, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 51.7
What publications are eligible?
(a) A publication is eligible for
incorporation by reference under 5
U.S.C. 552(a) if it—
(1) Conforms to the policy stated in
§ 51.1;
(2) Either:
(i) Is published data, criteria,
standards, specifications, techniques,
illustrations, or similar material; or
(ii) Substantially reduces the volume
of material published in the Federal
Register; and
(3) Is reasonably available to and
usable by the class of persons affected
by the publication. In determining
whether a publication is usable, the
Director will consider—
(i) The completeness and ease of
handling of the publication; and
(ii) Whether it is bound, numbered,
and organized.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 51.9, revise paragraphs (a) and
(c) to read as follows:
§ 51.9 What is the proper language of
incorporation?
(a) The language incorporating a
publication by reference must be
precise, complete, and clearly state that
the incorporation by reference is
intended and completed by the final
rule document in which it appears.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) If the Director approves a
publication for incorporation by
reference in a final rule, the agency
must include—
(1) The following language under the
DATES caption of the preamble to the
final rule document (See 1 CFR 18.12):
The incorporation by reference of
certain publications listed in the
regulations is approved by the Director
of the Federal Register as of ______ .
(2) The preamble requirements set out
in § 51.5(b).
(3) The term ‘‘incorporation by
reference’’ in the list of index terms (See
1 CFR 18.20 Identification of subjects in
agency regulations).
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
60798
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
Dated: September 30, 2013.
Charles A. Barth,
Director, Office of the Federal Register.
[FR Doc. 2013–24217 Filed 9–30–13; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 1505–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2013–0363; Directorate
Identifier 2013–NM–031–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Airbus
Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM);
reopening of comment period.
AGENCY:
We are revising an earlier
proposed airworthiness directive (AD)
for all Airbus Model A330–200, –300
and –200 Freighter series airplanes, and
Model A340–200, –300, –500, and –600
series airplanes. The NPRM proposed to
require, for certain airplanes, revising
the airplane flight manual (AFM) to
advise the flight crew of emergency
procedures for addressing Angle of
Attack (AOA) sensor blockage. The
NPRM also proposed to mandate
replacing the AOA sensor conic plates
with AOA sensor flat plates, which is a
terminating action for the AFM revision.
The NPRM was prompted by a report
that an airplane equipped with AOA
sensors installed with conic plates
recently experienced blockage of all
sensors during climb, leading to
autopilot disconnection and activation
of the alpha protection (Alpha Prot)
when Mach number was increased. For
certain airplanes, this action revises the
NPRM by adding a modification of the
installation of certain AOA sensor flat
plates. We are proposing this AD to
prevent reduced control of the airplane.
Since these actions impose an
additional burden over that proposed in
the NPRM, we are reopening the
comment period to allow the public the
chance to comment on these proposed
changes.
DATES: We must receive comments on
this proposed AD by November 18,
2013.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
You may send comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:27 Oct 01, 2013
Jkt 232001
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this proposed AD, contact Airbus SAS—
Airworthiness Office—EAL, 1 Rond
Point Maurice Bellonte, 31707 Blagnac
Cedex, France; telephone +33 5 61 93 36
96; fax +33 5 61 93 45 80; email
airworthiness.A330-A340@airbus.com;
Internet https://www.airbus.com. You
may review copies of the referenced
service information at the FAA,
Transport Airplane Directorate, 1601
Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA. For
information on the availability of this
material at the FAA, call 425–227–1221.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://www.regulations.
gov; or in person at the Docket
Operations office between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this proposed AD, the MCAI,
the regulatory evaluation, any
comments received, and other
information. The street address for the
Docket Operations office (telephone
(800) 647–5527) is in the ADDRESSES
section. Comments will be available in
the AD docket shortly after receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Vladimir Ulyanov, Aerospace Engineer,
International Branch, ANM–116,
Transport Airplane Directorate, FAA,
1601 Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA
98057–3356; phone: 425–227–1138; fax:
425–227–1149.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments about
this proposed AD. Send your comments
to an address listed under the
ADDRESSES section. Include ‘‘Docket No.
FAA–2013–0363; Directorate Identifier
2013–NM–031–AD’’ at the beginning of
your comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of this proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend this
proposed AD based on those comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to https://
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact we receive
about this proposed AD.
Discussion
We proposed to amend 14 CFR part
39 with an earlier NPRM for the
specified products, which was
published in the Federal Register on
May 3, 2013 (78 FR 25902). The earlier
NPRM proposed to require actions
intended to address the unsafe
condition for the products listed above.
Actions Since Previous NPRM Was
Issued
Since the NPRM (78 FR 25902, May
3, 2013) was issued, Airbus has issued
revised service information, identified
below, due to an error in the
Accomplishment Instructions in the
original service information for the
installation. For airplanes on which the
installation in the original service
information was done, the revised
service information adds a modification
of that installation of the two AOA
sensor flat plates on the right-hand side
of the fuselage. The modification
ensures that both plates are flush with
the fuselage.
Revised Service Information
• Airbus Mandatory Service Bulletin
A330–34–3293, Revision 01, including
Appendix 01, dated June 12, 2013.
• Airbus Mandatory Service Bulletin
A340–34–4273, Revision 01, including
Appendix 01, dated June 12, 2013.
• Airbus Mandatory Service Bulletin
A340–34–5093, Revision 01, including
Appendix 01, dated June 12, 2013.
The actions described in this service
information are intended to correct the
unsafe condition identified in the
MCAI.
Comments
We gave the public the opportunity to
comment on the NPRM (78 FR 25902,
May 3, 2013). The following presents
the comments received on the NPRM
and the FAA’s response to each
comment.
Airbus asked that we replace the
original issues of the service
information specified in the earlier
NPRM (Airbus Mandatory Service
Bulletin A330–34–3293, dated January
31, 2013; and Airbus Mandatory Service
Bulletins A340–34–4273 and A340–34–
5093, both dated January 30, 2013).
Airbus stated that revised service
information was issued to correct an
error in the Accomplishment
Instructions of the original issues of the
service information, as specified under
E:\FR\FM\02OCP1.SGM
02OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 191 (Wednesday, October 2, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 60784-60798]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-24217]
========================================================================
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. 191 / Wednesday, October 2, 2013 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 60784]]
OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL REGISTER
1 CFR Part 51
[Docket Number: OFR-13-0001]
RIN 3095-AB78
Incorporation By Reference
AGENCY: Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records
Administration.
ACTION: Partial grant of petition, notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On February 13, 2012, the Office of the Federal Register
received a petition to amend our regulations governing the approval of
agency requests to incorporate material by reference into the Code of
Federal Regulations. We agree with the petitioners that our regulations
need to be updated, however the petitioners proposed changes to our
regulations that go beyond our statutory authority. In this document,
we propose that agencies seeking the Director's approval of their
incorporation by reference requests add more information regarding
materials incorporated by reference to the preambles of their
rulemaking documents. We propose that they set out in the preambles a
discussion of the actions they took to ensure the materials are
reasonably available to interested parties or summarize the contents of
the materials they wish to incorporate by reference.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before December 31, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified using the subject line
of this document, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Email: Fedreg.legal@nara.gov. Include the subject line of
this document in the subject line of the message.
Mail: the Office of the Federal Register (NF), The
National Archives and Records Administration, 8601 Adelphi Road,
College Park, MD.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of the Federal Register, 800
North Capitol Street NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC 20001.
Docket materials are available at the Office of the Federal
Register, 800 North Capitol Street NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC
20001, 202-741-6030. Please contact the persons listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to schedule your inspection of
docket materials. The Office of the Federal Register's official hours
of business are Monday through Friday, 8:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.,
excluding Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amy Bunk, Director of Legal Affairs
and Policy, or Miriam Vincent, Staff Attorney, Office of the Federal
Register, at Fedreg.legal@nara.gov, or 202-741-6030.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Office of the Federal Register (OFR or
we) published a request for comments on a petition to revise our
regulations at 1 CFR part 51.\1\ The petition specifically requested
that we amend our regulations to define ``reasonably available'' and to
include several requirements related to the statutory obligation that
material incorporated by reference (IBR) be reasonably available. Our
original request for comments had a 30 day comment period. Since we
received requests from several interested parties to extend the comment
period, we extended the comment period until June 1, 2012.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 77 FR 11414 (February 27, 2012).
\2\ 77 FR 16761 (March 22, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our current regulations require that agencies provide us with the
materials they wish to IBR. Once we approve an IBR request, we maintain
the IBR'd materials in our library until they are accessioned to the
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) under our records
schedule \3\. NARA then maintains this material as permanent Federal
records.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibr-locations.html last visited March 26, 2013.
_____________________________________-
We agree with the petitioners that our regulations need to be
updated, however the petitioners proposed changes to our regulations
that go beyond our statutory authority. The petitioners contended that
changes in technology, including our new Web site
www.federalregister.gov, along with electronic Freedom of Information
Act (E-FOIA) reading rooms, have made the print publication of the
Federal Register unnecessary. They also suggested that the primary,
original reason for allowing IBR was to limit the amount of material
published in the Federal Register and Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR). The petitioners argued that with the advent of the Internet and
online access our print-focused regulations are out of date and
obsolete. The petition then stated that statutory authority and social
development since our current regulations were first issued require
that material IBR'd into the CFR be available online and free of
charge.
The petition further suggested that our regulations need to apply
at the proposed rule stage of agency rulemaking projects and that the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (NTTAA) and
the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Circular A-119 distinguish
between regulations that require use of a particular standard and those
that ``serve to indicate that one of the ways in which a regulation can
be met is through use of a particular standard favoring the use of
standards as non-binding ways to meet compliance.'' \4\ In addition,
the petition argued that Veeck v. S. Bldg. Code Cong. Int'l, 293 F.3d
791 (5th Cir. 2002) casts doubt on the legality of charging for
standards IBR'd. Finally, the petition stated that in the electronic
age the benefits to the federal government are diminished by electronic
publication as are the benefits to the members of the class affected if
they have to pay high fees to access the standards. Thus, agencies
should at least be required to demonstrate how they tried to contain
those costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ NARA-12-0002-0002.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The petitioners proposed regulation text to enact their suggested
revisions to part 51. The petitioners' regulation text would require
agencies to demonstrate that material proposed to be IBR'd in the
regulation text was available throughout the comment period: in the
Federal Docket Management System (FDMS) in the docket for the proposal
or interim rule; on the agency's Web site; or readable free of charge
on the Web site of the voluntary standards organization that created it
during the comment
[[Page 60785]]
period of a proposed rule or interim rule. The petition suggested
revising 51.7--``What publications are eligible''--to limit IBR
eligibility only to standards that are available online for free by
adding a new (c)(3) that would ban any standard not available for free
from being IBR'd. It also appeared to revise 51.7(a)(2) to include
documents that would otherwise be considered guidance documents. And,
it would revise 51.7(b) to limit our review of agency created materials
to whether the material is available online. The petition would then
revise 51.9 to distinguish between required standards and those that
could be used to show compliance with a regulatory requirement.
Finally, the petition would add a requirement that, in the electronic
version of a regulation, any material IBR'd into that regulation would
be hyperlinked.
The petitioners want us to require that: (1) All material IBR'd
into the CFR be available for free online; and (2) the Director of the
Federal Register (the Director) include a review of all documents
agencies list in their guidance, in addition to their regulations, as
part of the IBR approval process. We find these requirements go beyond
our statutory authority. Nothing in the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) (5 U.S.C. chapter 5), E-FOIA, or other statutes specifically
address this issue. If we required that all materials IBR'd into the
CFR be available for free, that requirement would compromise the
ability of regulators to rely on voluntary consensus standards,
possibly requiring them to create their own standards, which is
contrary to the NTTAA and the OMB Circular A-119.
Further, the petition didn't address the Federal Register Act (FRA)
(44 U.S.C. chapter 15), which still requires print publication of both
the Federal Register and the CFR, or 44 U.S.C. 4102, which allows the
Superintendent of Documents to charge a reasonable fee for online
access to the Federal electronic information, including the Federal
Register.\5\ The petition suggested that the Director monitor proposed
rules to ensure the material proposed to be IBR'd is available during
the comment period of a proposed rule. Then, once a rule is effective,
we monitor the agency to make sure the IBR'd materials remain available
online. This requirement that OFR continue monitoring agency rules is
well beyond the current resources available to this office.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See also 44 U.S.C. 4101.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As for the petition's limitation on agency-created material, the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), at 5 U.S.C. 552(a), mandates
approval by the Director of material proposed for IBR to safeguard the
Federal Register system. Thus, OFR regulations contain a provision that
material IBR'd must not detract from the legal and practical attributes
of that system.\6\ An implied presumption is that material developed
and published by a Federal agency is inappropriate for IBR by that
agency, except in limited circumstances. Otherwise, the Federal
Register and CFR could become a mere index to material published
elsewhere. This runs counter to the central publication system for
Federal regulations envisioned by Congress when it enacted the FRA and
the APA.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See also 44 U.S.C. 4101.
\7\ 47 FR 34107 (August 6, 1982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the petition didn't address the enforcement of these
provisions. Agencies have the expertise on the substantive matters
addressed by the regulations. To remove or suspend the regulations
because the IBR'd material is no longer available online would create a
system where the only determining factor for using a standard is
whether it is available for free online. This would minimize and
undermine the role of the Federal agencies who are the substantive
subject matter experts and who are better suited to determine what
standard should be IBR'd into the CFR based on their statutory
requirements, the entities they regulate, and the needs of the general
public. Additionally, the OFR's mission under the FRA is to maintain
orderly codification of agency documents of general applicability and
legal effect.\8\ As set out in the FRA and the implementing regulations
of the Administrative Committee of the Federal Register (ACFR) (found
in 1 CFR chapter I), only the agency that issues the regulations
codified in a CFR chapter can amend those regulations. If an agency
took the IBR'd material offline, OFR could only add an editorial note
to the CFR explaining that the IBR'd material was no longer available
online without charge. We could not remove the regulations or deny
agencies the ability to issue or revise other regulations. Revising our
regulations as proposed by the petition would simply add requirements
that could not be adequately enforced and thus, likely wouldn't be
complied with by agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 44 U.S.C. 1505 and 1510.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this proposed rule, we are proposing to require that if agencies
seek the Director's approval of an IBR request, they must set out the
following information in the preambles of their rulemaking documents:
discussions of the actions the agency took to make the materials
reasonably available to interested parties or; summaries of the content
of the materials the agencies wish to IBR.
Discussion of Comments
Authority of the Director To Issue Regulations Regarding IBR
One commenter suggested that the OFR does not have the proper
authority to amend the regulations in 1 CFR part 51. The commenter
argued that because the FRA creates the ACFR and grants it rulemaking
authority to issue regulations to carry out the FRA, it is the ACFR and
not the Director who has the authority to amend these regulations.\9\
The commenter made this claim relying on Sec. 1505(a)(3), which
requires publication of documents or classes of documents that Congress
requires be published in the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See, 44 U.S.C. 1506.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with the commenter's analysis of these provisions.
While the FRA does require publication of those documents, the FOIA
does not require that documents IBR'd be published in the Federal
Register. Section 552(a) states that persons cannot be adversely
affected by documents that did not publish in the Federal Register but
were required to be published unless the person has actual notice of
the document. This section goes on to make an exception for documents
IBR'd if they are reasonably available to the class of persons affected
by the matter and approved by the Director. Under this section, once
these criteria are met, material approved for IBR is ``deemed published
in the Federal Register.'' Thus, persons affected by the regulation
must comply with material IBR'd in the regulation even though the IBR'd
document is not set out in the regulatory text. Because section 552(a)
specifically states that the Director will approve agency requests for
IBR and material IBR'd is not set out in regulatory text, the Director
has the sole authority to issue regulations governing the IBR-approval
request procedures. We have maintained this position since the IBR
regulations were first issued in the 1960's.
The regulations on the IBR approval process were first issued by
the Director in 1967 and found at 1 CFR part 20.\10\ Even though this
part was within the ACFR's CFR chapter, the preamble of the document
states ``the Director of the Federal Register hereby establishes
standards and procedures governing his approval of instances of
incorporation
[[Page 60786]]
by reference.'' \11\ And, while these regulations appear in the ACFR's
CFR chapter, this final rule was issued and signed solely by the
Director. These regulations were later republished, along with the
entire text of Chapter I, by the ACFR in 1969; \12\ however the ACFR
stated that the republication contained no substantive changes to the
regulations. In 1972, the ACFR proposed a major substantive revision of
Chapter I.\13\ In that proposed rule, the ACFR proposed removing the
IBR regulations from Chapter I because ``part 20 . . . is a regulation
of the Director of the Federal Register rather than the Administrative
Committee.'' \14\ In that same issue of the Federal Register, the
Director issued a proposed rule proposing to establish a new Chapter II
in Title 1 of the CFR that governed IBR approval procedures.\15\ These
proposals were not challenged on this issue, so the final rules
removing regulations from the ACFR chapter and establishing a new
chapter for the Director were published on November 4, 1972 at 23602
and 23614, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 32 FR 7899 (June 1, 1967).
\11\ Id.
\12\ 34 FR 19106 at 19115, December 2, 1969.
\13\ 37 FR 6804 (April 4, 1972).
\14\ Id.
\15\ 37 FR 6817 (April 4, 1972).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We specifically requested comments on nine issues; we will address
the comments we received to each question.
1. Does ``reasonably available'' a. Mean that the material should be
available: i. for free and ii. to anyone online?
A majority of the commenters agreed that reasonably available means
for free to anyone online but provided no additional comment on this.
Several of these commenters seemed to agree with the general principle
of access (as stated in the procedural requirements set out in various
Federal statutes), specifically that any interested persons should be
able to participate in informal notice and comment rulemaking by
commenting on the standards an agency intends to IBR into its
regulations, but didn't provide more specific details. Many commenters
also agreed with the petitioners' contention that changes in technology
and decreased costs of publication have made the print publication of
the Federal Register unnecessary.
The commenters who were against defining reasonably available
expressed concerns that current technology might make it easier to
publish material online but did not change intellectual property rights
or the substantial costs associated with developing standards. Several
standards development organizations (SDOs), along with others,
commented that ``reasonably available'' means that these materials are
made available through a variety of means that may include appropriate
compensation to the developer of the standard.
Another commenter agreed with the petitioners because its members
are subject to enforcement actions that rely on standards IBR'd into
the regulations. These standards play a critical role in its members'
obligations because the standards define when members may face fines or
disqualification. Thus, it is critical that they have access to the
standards in part so that they can better comply with the regulations
and can provide some oversight of the SDOs making these organizations
more accountable for the standards.
While we understand the concerns of this commenter regarding
possible enforcement actions, we do not believe that there is one
solution to the access issue. Regulated entities, who may face
enforcement actions that lead to the loss of a license, and their trade
associations should work directly with the agencies issuing regulations
to ensure that all regulated entities and their representatives have
access to the content of materials IBR'd. OFR staff do not have the
experience to determine how access works best for a particular
regulated entity or industry.
One comment stated that charging a fee for access to material IBR'd
prevents the poor from knowing the law. It stated that standards should
cost the same amount as the Federal Register, which it said is free. It
went on to state that having the material available for inspection at
the agency or OFR imposed insurmountable barriers on the poor who live
far from the District of Columbia. It also argued that 29 U.S.C. 794
requires agencies to make electronic materials accessible to those with
disabilities, so not providing IBR'd materials for free online was
inconsistent with the Rehabilitation Act.\16\ Finally, this comment
suggested that if the material were not free, OFR would need to set a
dollar figure for the materials that ensured they were available to
everyone, including the poor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Rehabilitation Act ``mandates only that services
provided non-handicapped individuals not be denied [to a disabled
person] because of he is handicapped.'' Lincoln Cercpac v. Health
and Hospitals Corp., 920 F. Supp. 488, 496 (S.D.N.Y. 1996), citing
Flight v. Gloeckler, et al., 68 F.3d 61, 63, (2d Cir. 1995) and
Rothschild v. Grottenthaler, 907 F.2d 286, 289-90 (2d Cir. 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The daily Federal Register is not universally free. Section 1506(5)
of the FRA authorizes the ACFR to set subscription rates for the
Federal Register and other publications. Currently, a complete yearly
subscription, that includes indexes, is $929.00. While GPO does not
charge for online access to the Federal Register or to other federal
government publications, including the CFR, Congress authorized the
Superintendent of Documents to charge for online access to GPO
publications. 44 U.S.C. 4101 requires the Superintendent of Documents,
under the direction of the Public Printer, to maintain an electronic
directory of Federal information and provide a system of electronic
access to Federal publications, including the Congressional Record and
the Federal Register, distributed by the Government Printing
Office.\17\ Section 4102 allows the Superintendent of Documents to
``charge reasonable fee for use of the directory and the system of
access provided under section 4101.'' Paragraph (b) of this section
states that the fees charged must be set to recover ``the incremental
cost of dissemination of the information'' with the exception of the
depository libraries, for electronic access to federal electronic
information, including the Federal Register.\18\ While the
Superintendent of Documents has chosen not to charge for electronic
access to the daily Federal Register, this section does indicate that
the Congress understands that there are costs to posting and archiving
materials online and that recovering these costs is not contrary to
other Federal laws, including the FRA and the APA.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See H.R. Rep. No. 108 May 25, 1993, H.R. REP. 103-108
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE ELECTRONIC INFORMATION ACCESS
ENHANCEMENT ACT OF 1993
Mr. FORD.
Mr. President, I am pleased today to introduce with the senior
Senator from Alaska Mr. STEVENS the Government Printing Office
Electronic Information Access Enhancement Act of 1993. This
legislation will greatly enhance free public access to Federal
electronic information.
The bill requires the Superintendent of Documents at the
Government Printing Office to provide an online CONGRESSIONAL RECORD
and Federal Register free to depository libraries and at the
incremental costs of distribution to other users. The bill allows
other documents distributed by the Superintendent of Documents to be
added online as practicable and permits agencies to voluntarily
disseminate their electronic publications through the same system.
I believe this bill goes a long way toward ensuring that
taxpayers have affordable and timely access to the Federal
information which they have paid to generate.
1993 WL 67458, 139 Cong. Rec. S2779-02, 1993 WL 67458.
\18\ See, 44 U.S.C. 4102(b).
\19\ One commenter also contends that charging for access would
violate the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) and
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (5 U.S.C. 801
et seq.). Both of those statutes require that agencies mitigate the
effect of regulations on small businesses but do not suggest that
agencies can only issue regulations with no cost to small
businesses. Similarly, the goal of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (UMRA), Public Law 104-4, is to prevent the Federal
government from imposing a financial burden on state, local, and
tribal governments. It does not suggest that agencies can only issue
regulations without a cost of compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 60787]]
Congress required that within one year of enactment (January 2013)
the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) no
longer IBR voluntary consensus standards into its regulations unless
those standards have been made available free of charge to the public
on the Internet.\20\ Congress has not extended this requirement to all
materials IBR'd by any Federal agency into their regulations. In fact,
Congress has instructed the Consumer Product Safety Commission to use
specific ASTM standards, which are not available for free.\21\ Thus, we
disagree with the petitioners and the commenters who argue that Federal
law requires that all IBR'd standards must be available for free
online. By placing the requirement on PHMSA not to IBR standards that
are not available free of charge on the Internet (and on CPSC to IBR
standards that are not available free of charge), Congress rightfully
places the burden on the subject matter expert to work with the SDOs to
provide access to the standards these subject matter experts believe
need to be IBR'd.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Section 24 of the Pipeline Safety, Regulatory Certainty,
and Job Creation Act of 2011 (Pub. L. 112-90).
\21\ For example, 15 U.S.C. 2056b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter also cited various Supreme Court and other lower
Federal courts to further support their claim that IBR'd materials
should be free online \22\ by suggesting charging for access to these
materials violates the APA. This commenter claimed that requiring
interested parties to pay for materials an agency proposes to IBR in a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) denies commenters the ability to
fully participate in the rulemaking process because they can't learn
the content of the standards without paying a fee. Further, this
commenter claimed that because the APA allows interested parties to
petition the government to amend regulations the IBR materials must
remain free online while the regulation is effective. Thus, the APA
requires that any material IBR'd must be available for free to be
considered ``reasonably available.'' However, the cases that the
commenter cited to support this claim, both civil and criminal, dealt
with instances where the government proactively prevented access, in
some instances by denying access to court hearings and, in another, by
not disclosing scientific data relied on during a rulemaking, for
example. IBR can be distinguished from these cases because the
government is not prohibiting access to the materials. These materials
may not be as easily accessible as the commenter would like, but they
are described in the regulatory text in sufficient detail so that a
member of the public can identify the standard IBR'd into the
regulation. OFR regulations also require that agencies include
publisher information and agency contact information so that anyone
wishing to locate a standard has contact information for the both the
standard's publisher and the agency IBRing the standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See, for example Portland Cement v. Rukelshaus, 486 F.2d
375 (D.C. Cir 1973) and United States v. Nova Scotia Food Products
Corp., 568 F.2d 240 (2d Cir. 1977). In all of these cases, the
government actively banned persons from a court proceeding or
withheld information from the docket of an agency rulemaking. In
these instances, the government actively prohibited access to a
hearing or to information. This can be distinguished from IBR in
that the government does disclose the relevant information regarding
the standard it just may not provide free access to it.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Create a digital divide by excluding people without Internet access?
Almost all commenters stated that no digital divide would be
created because people without Internet access could go to a public
library to access the standards online. Some commenters suggested that
requiring print copies be available in libraries and other facilities
would solve the digital divide problem. A couple of commenters stated
that there was no digital divide because at least 60% of Americans have
Internet access. A few commenters suggested that a digital divide was
not the problem--our outdated regulations and the fact that some of the
material is only available at the OFR was the real issue. One commenter
suggested that a digital divide would be created if online access to
standards was in a read-only format because someone reading the
material at the library couldn't print the standard to review at home
or ask someone to bring it to their home so they could examine the
standard if they couldn't get to a library.
Our proposed revisions to the IBR approval regulations would
maintain the current process of agencies maintaining a copy for public
inspection and providing a copy of the standard to the OFR, while
adding the requirement that agencies set out, in the preamble of the
proposed and final rules, how they addressed access issues and made the
material reasonably available. This prevents a digital divide by
providing interested commenters the information to contact the agency
directly to find out how to access the standard, whether it is online
or accessible at an agency's facility close to the commenter.
2. Does ``class of persons affected'' need to be defined? If so, how
should it be defined?
Whether or not commenters agreed with the petitioner, most believed
that ``class of persons affected'' did not need to be defined. Some
felt that the term included ``everyone'' or ``anyone interested.'' One
group said it didn't need to be defined because it includes anyone who
has standing to challenge the rule or intervene in a rulemaking
proceeding. Most commenters stated that ``class of persons affected''
didn't need to be defined because it can change depending on the
specific rulemaking and agencies involved, thus a definition will fail
because it is either too broad to be meaningful or too restricted to
capture a total class.
Some commenters suggested that various entities were within the
class, for example: consumer groups because they play an important role
in ensuring that the standards are sufficiently protective of the
consumer health and welfare; and SDOs because they are impacted when an
agency IBRs their standards.
Another commenter stated that ``affected persons'' in Sec. 552(a)
of the APA includes more persons than those who are the direct subject
of the regulation. To support this claim, the commenter referenced 5
U.S.C. 702 (the APA's judicial review provision) \23\ to allege that
Sec. 552(a)'s reasonably available provision is broader than Sec. 702
and includes anyone who may have a stake in agency action. Thus, the
class of persons affected extends beyond those who must comply with the
regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The commenter also cites Clarke v. Securities Industry
Ass'n, 479 U.S. 388 (1987) and Thompson v. North American Stainless,
131 U.S. 863 (2011). These Supreme Court cases dealt with who is
within the zone of interest under federal banking laws and Title VII
of the U.S. Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two commenters suggested definitions. One of these commenters
suggested that ``class of persons affected,'' ``means a business
entity, organization, group, or individual who either: (i) Would be
required to comply with the standard after, or if, it is IBR'd; (ii)
would be benefitted from the standard's IBR'd into a federal
regulation; (iii) needs to review and/or analyze the materials proposed
to be IBR'd and/or being relied upon by a Federal agency in a
regulatory proceeding, including (but not limited to) a proposed
rulemaking, agency guidance, or similar agency
[[Page 60788]]
publication.'' \24\ The other suggested a 2-prong definition so that
during the NPRM stage of the rulemaking ``class of persons affected''
would include anyone who wants to comment on the proposal, but during
the final rule stage of the rulemaking the definition would refer
primarily to ``those who have a need to know the standards to which
their conduct will be held.'' \25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See NARA-12-0002-0122.
\25\ See NARA-12-0002-0009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We did not propose a definition in this NPRM because we share the
concerns of the commenter who worried that defining this phrase would
create differentiation and may encourage the formation of a complicated
secondary bureaucracy. We are also concerned that any definition will
fail because it is either too broad to be meaningful or too restricted
to capture a total class. Thus, we are not proposing a definition so
that agencies maintain the flexibility to determine who is within the
class of persons affected by a regulation or regulatory program on a
case-by-case basis to respond to specific situations.
3. Should agencies bear the cost of making the material available for
free online?
When an SDO creates a standard, it expends resources which are
separate from the actual expense of publication and distribution. We
lack the knowledge and expertise to understand all of the costs
involved with standard development, but we do acknowledge that those
costs exist. The SDO can bear the cost of making its standard available
for free, the agency can bear the cost by compensating the SDO for the
lost sales, or industry and individuals can bear the cost by purchasing
copies of the standard.
Many commenters addressed this issue solely from a technology
stand-point. They argued that agencies already have scanners, servers,
and Web sites, so scanning, storing, and posting files online would
result in a negligible cost. Other commenters suggested that this was a
tangential issue and that there were other options available to recover
the costs, but didn't elaborate on those other options. It's arguably
true that the technological (and publication) costs are continually
decreasing, but these comments addressed only the cost of making
something available online and did not address costs associated with
making the standard available for free.
Other commenters suggested some complex ways for the agencies or
the SDOs to recoup the cost of making the standards free online,
including creating a new tax on SDOs whose standards are purchased in
order to comply with regulations, and having SDOs design a per-use fee,
in addition to royalties, so that individuals could pay a small fee to
just access a standard but would have to pay royalties to actually use
it. Amending the tax code and creating a new business model for SDOs
are beyond the scope of the petition and outside our regulatory
authority.
Most individuals (those not responding on behalf of an SDO,
industry, or trade group) felt that agencies should bear the cost. One
person felt that agencies should bear the cost of making standards free
and online because if standards are not free, our government is not
transparent. Others felt that this was a basic role of government and
noted that we already pay taxes, implying that citizens shouldn't have
to also pay for standards. One commenter asserted that interested
persons with legitimate interest can't afford the cost of purchasing
access, so agencies should provide free access, in the interests of
reducing costs and burdens.
Transparency does not automatically mean free access. It is the
long-standing policy of the Federal government to recoup its costs. OMB
Circular A-25 was first issued in 1959 and then revised in 1993. Among
its stated objectives is to ``allow the private sector to compete with
the Government without disadvantage in supplying comparable services,
resources, or goods where appropriate.'' It also notes that ``a user
charge . . . will be assessed against each identifiable recipient for
special benefits derived from Federal activities beyond those received
by the general public.'' \26\ An implied intent is to reduce the costs
and burdens on taxpayers by not making them pay extra for something
they don't need.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_a025#5 last
visited June 7, 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A common theme throughout the comments from industry groups and
individuals was the idea that SDOs would be willing to negotiate with
the government for a bulk discount for licensing. However, the SDO
comments noted that the licensing fee would still be substantial and
would necessarily result in increased budgets and increased strain on
taxpayers. Another common theme throughout these comments was the idea
that the SDOs derive significant, sometimes intangible, benefits from
having their work IBR'd into a regulation and those benefits more than
offset the cost of developing the standards themselves. Some of these
benefits include increased name-recognition and trust, increased
revenue from additional training opportunities, and an increase in the
demand for standards. We don't have the knowledge or expertise to have
an opinion on this issue but believe that agencies and SDOs will
continue to work together on this issue.
Several individuals and trade groups felt that if agencies had to
bear the cost, that would ``maximize incentives to bargain over
licensing agreements'' and encourage ``judicious use'' of an agency's
rulemaking authority to ease the burden on small businesses.\27\
However, agencies are already directed to take into account the impact
a rulemaking will have on small businesses, including an assessment of
the costs involved, by various Federal statutes and Executive Orders.
After making that assessment, agencies must then determine which
standard, if any, is required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See, for example, NARA-12-0002-0098.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OFR is a procedural agency. We do not have the subject matter
expertise (technical or legal) to tell another agency how they can best
reach a rulemaking decision. Further, we do not have that authority.
Neither the FRA nor the FOIA authorizes us to review proposed and final
rulemaking actions for substance. We agree that agencies should
consider many factors when engaging in rulemaking, including assessing
the cost and availability of standards. So, we are proposing to require
agencies to either explain why material is reasonably available and how
to get it or to summarize the pertinent parts of the standard in the
preamble of both proposed and final rules.
Several SDOs commented that if the standards had to be freely
available, then the government should bear the cost, but implied that
industry and individuals should continue to bear the cost as needed.
They noted that they would lose more than just the sales revenue from
the standards if they had to bear the cost, including potential reduced
value of membership and potential degradation to the value of standards
and publications. Further, without compensation, creation of new
standards would stop because the costs of procuring them for free would
be prohibitively high resulting in an unsustainable business model.
One interest group felt that our question automatically assumed
that the cost to an agency would be significant. It argued that SDOs
would be able to make standards available like a digital lending
library which would mitigate the costs. They offered an example of the
American Petroleum Institute (API)
[[Page 60789]]
making certain standards freely available in response to the 2010 oil
spill in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf oil spill).\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See NARA-12-0002-0092.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We note that API did not offer to make all of its IBRed standards
available. So, we cannot infer that API is making this a general
practice or that we can apply this situation generally across all SDOs.
And, as several other commenters noted, shifting the cost burden to
agencies would result in the entire burden of the standards development
process being borne by taxpayers. We can take this example, however, as
evidence that agencies and SDOs do work together to choose the best
solution for a particular situation.
One group asserted that since the Federal government bears the cost
of making all Federal regulations available for free online, it should
also make all IBR'd standards free and online. However, as we've
discussed elsewhere in this petition, the Government Printing Office
has the authority to charge for online access and it already charges
for subscriptions to the paper Federal Register and CFR, so the Federal
government does not have an obligation to bear the cost of making all
regulations available for free online.
Several commenters suggested that we allow agencies to limit free
Internet access only to parties that would suffer an undue burden if
they were required to pay the going rate for private standards. These
suggestions are impractical. They could create differentiation and
encourage the formation of a complicated secondary bureaucracy, which
we have touched on already.
As discussed, the OFR is a procedural agency and we publish
documents from hundreds of Federal agencies. We would have neither the
technological resources nor the staff to make sure agencies were making
such a distinction, nor are we in the position to continually monitor
outside Web sites. We wouldn't take steps to prevent such a
determination, but have no authority to require it or enforce such a
requirement.
One individual suggested that since standards organizations are
non-profit entities they should provide their standards for free.
Another asserted that the SDOs were already rewarded for their work
since they draft standards on behalf of government or industry. One
person implied that the government was already paying the SDOs to
develop the standards.
Many SDOs are non-profit organizations, but not all are. Even if
all SDOs were non-profit organizations, we don't have the authority to
require that they give away assets, products, or services. Further,
most SDOs develop standards in response to industry or member needs;
they are not employed by the Federal government and very few, if any,
draft standards at the direction of the Federal government, and even
then, only in very limited and specific circumstances.
One SDO noted that the current Federal policy reflects a decision
that regulated industry and individuals should bear costs of standards
and that businesses are the intended users of certain standards. It
added that most businesses already accept the cost of certain standards
as a ``recognized, accepted, and tax-deductible cost of doing
business.'' The SDO added that since the cost to business is not
exorbitant but the cost would be ``exorbitant'' to the Federal
government, ``imposing cost to taxpayers would be misguided.'' \29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ NARA-12-0002-0123.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We choose to leave the burden on the agencies and their subject
matter experts to work with the SDOs to provide access to the standards
these subject matter experts believe need to be IBR'd. They continue to
have the burden, but they also continue to have the flexibility to come
up with the best solution for a particular situation.
One industry group asserted that agencies should bear the cost, but
that the cost would not be significant because the Federal government
could exercise its right under the Takings Clause of the Fifth
Amendment for any copyrighted material it wished to use. This comment
is outside the scope of this petition for rulemaking, as we discuss in
section 10.
4. How would this impact agencies' budget and infrastructure, for
example?
Several individuals replied that there would be minimal or no
impact since all agencies should already have a web presence and
document management systems.\30\ Other commenters concluded that there
was no evidence that agencies would have increased expense when
providing standards for free online.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Again, these commenters focused only on the costs involved
with posting a document and not with making it free.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many more commenters (individuals, industry groups, and SDOs) all
agreed that there would be a significant impact to an agency's budget.
One individual noted that the costs could be ``enormous and threaten
the viability of regulatory programs.'' \31\ If agencies chose not to
use SDO material, they could revert to developing government-unique
standards. Several other commenters disputed that option, noting that
forcing an agency to hire subject matter experts and develop the
expertise it lacks runs counter to OMB Circular A-119. Further,
agencies might need additional IT support staff, contract management
staff, and administrative staff to meet the new demands for access.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Again, these commenters focused only on the costs involved
with posting a document and not with making it free.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It seems clear that, if agencies must bear the burden to make
material free online, and since most material is not currently free,
then agency budgets would have to increase to make the material free.
It is unclear if, or how, agency infrastructure would be impacted or
how much budgets would need to increase.
Several other commenters noted that the budgetary impact should be
irrelevant. If an agency chooses to use a standard, then it has to meet
all of its legal and financial responsibilities. Another commenter
added that if an agency didn't want to IBR material, it could simply
republish the material in the regulation in the Federal Register.
While we agree that it should be an agency decision to use or not
to use a standard, based on a variety of factors, agencies cannot
simply republish material. The Federal Register and CFR have
substantial limitations on what can be published. For example, we
cannot publish in color, so any standard that relies on color could not
be published, regardless of the copyright status.\32\ Also, 1 CFR
51.7(c) states that material published in the Federal Register cannot
be IBR'd. So if one agency chose to republish material rather than IBR
it, no other agency would be able to IBR that material.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See, for example 1 CFR 51.7(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. How would OFR review of proposed rules for IBR impact agency
rulemaking and policy, given the additional time and possibility of
denial of an IBR approval request at the final rule stage of the
rulemaking?
Several commenters suggested that OFR review at the proposed rule
stage would create substantial delays in the already long agency
informal rulemaking process. Some suggested that OFR does not have the
authority to review proposed rules because we are not subject matter
experts in the areas regulated by other federal agencies. One commenter
stated that if OFR were to circumvent the development of rules by
[[Page 60790]]
agencies with the statutory expertise and obligation, OFR would
essentially drive the development of those rules which is not part of
its mission. Another suggested that OFR review of NPRMs would also
create a disincentive for agencies to use voluntary consensus
standards. Other commenters suggested that our review of NPRMs was
unnecessary because the SDOs use consensus development platforms that
allow resolution of stakeholder concerns.
Another commenter stated that while OFR is already required to
review IBR requests at the NPRM stage under 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(1)(E), we
need to issue clear rules so that IBR review would not delay
publication of the NRPM and so that agencies will see a reduced risk
that their request will be denied.
We received a comment that stated OFR review at the NPRM stage may
be constructive if it were limited to ensuring the availability of
documents for public comment. Another stated that without adequate IBR
review, agencies that failed to ensure that IBR'd standards were
reasonably available were likely to face noncompliance and costly
litigation. We agree with these comments. Even though a substantive
review of IBR'd materials referenced in a proposed rule is beyond our
authority and resources, OFR does have the authority to review NPRMs to
ensure our publication requirements are met. We have not reviewed IBR'd
material in NPRMs for approval because agencies may decide to request
approval for different standards at the final rule stage based on
changed circumstances, including public comments on the NPRM, requiring
a new approval at the final rule stage. Or, agencies could decide to
withdraw the NPRM. In this document, we propose to review agency NPRMs
to ensure that the agency provides either: an explanation of how it
worked to make the proposed IBR'd material reasonably available to
commenters or; a summary of the proposed IBR'd material. This would not
unduly delay publication of agency NPRMs and does not go beyond OFR's
statutory authority.
At least two commenters suggested that the petition does not
require or suggest review at the NPRM stage. These commenters asserted
that this review isn't needed because their NPRM text requires agencies
to demonstrate in their draft final rules that the IBR'd standard was
available online during the comment period. Further, agencies would
know that they can only expect approval if commenters had access to the
proposed IBR'd material during the comment period. Thus, the burden on
OFR would be reduced because we would not have to continue with case-
by-case determinations of ``reasonable availability.'' Another
commenter suggested OFR should automatically grant approval when
proposed IBR'd materials are posted on Web sites that archive and
authenticate, so there should be no delay in approval.
These suggestions imply that OFR should rubber stamp agency IBR
approval requests as long as the agency states it provided the
materials online. We can only carry out the intent of the petition if
we review the NPRMs to make sure the proposed IBR'd materials are
available online for free or verify that the proposed IBR'd material is
actually online during the comment period. To adequately ensure that
the proposed IBR'd proposed materials are online during the comment
period, OFR would need to verify that fact during the comment period to
effectively enforce this requirement. Adding a requirement that
agencies need to make proposed IBR'd materials available online during
the NPRM stage will not ensure that agencies actually follow that
requirement; we need to have some way to verify compliance. Thus, in
this NPRM, we are proposing to review agency NPRMs to ensure that the
agency provides an explanation of how it worked to make the material it
proposes to IBR reasonably available to commenters or to provide a
summary of the proposed IBR'd material.
6. Should OFR have the authority to deny IBR approval requests if the
material is not available online for free?
Of the commenters who felt that we should redefine ``reasonably
available'' as meaning free and online, most agreed that we should also
then deny requests if the IBR'd material is not available online for
free. At least one group felt that we shouldn't deny a request but that
instead we should negotiate an agreement between the agency and the SDO
that would make the standard available for free and online. And, one
commenter felt that OMB should also have the authority to deny requests
if IBR'd material was not free and online.\33\ One commenter felt that
we should refuse to publish final rules that didn't have a link to the
online IBR'd material. Another implied that if an agency established
good cause for using a standard that wasn't free and online, we
couldn't deny the request for IBR approval.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ As noted elsewhere, the Federal Register Act gives sole
approval authority to the Director of the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters were concerned that if we restricted agencies to
this requirement, we would be put in the ``untenable position of
supervising Federal standards policy.'' \34\ They also noted that this
could place OFR in the middle of a contentious fight over copyright
limitations. We agree.\35\ As discussed elsewhere, our authority is
limited to procedural and publication issues. We do not have the
authority to direct another agency on substantive rulemaking issues,
including IBR. Our proposed regulatory changes would require agencies
to describe how the IBR'd material is reasonably available, with free
and online being but one option.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ NARA-12-0002-0123.
\35\ We discuss copyright concerns in more detail in section 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters recommended we adopt new and very complex
regulatory schemes so that we wouldn't immediately deny IBR'd material
that wasn't free and online but that we would make sure it eventually
became available, even if not free and online.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ One plan would require that we oversee negotiations between
the agency and SDO and make sure that the SDO was negotiating in
good faith. Then, if the material could still not be made available
online for free, we would create and maintain a fair use library of
material that we had not approved for IBR but that the agency wanted
to enforce through actual notice. Under a second plan, we would
first just recommend that agencies use material that is free and
online, then we would give priority review to requests to IBR
material that was free and online, and finally, after 10 years, we
would deny any request to incorporate material that wasn't freely
available online.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not only would some of these new duties be outside the scope of our
statutory authority, we do not have the resources or the expertise to
implement and carry out these schemes.
7. The Administrative Conference of the United States Recently Issued a
Recommendation on IBR. 77 FR 2257 (January 17, 2012). In light of this
recommendation, should we update our guidance on this topic instead of
amending our regulations?
Some commenters felt that we shouldn't update either our guidance
or our regulations. Of the commenters who argued that we should use our
regulations to require that IBR'd material be available for free and
online, about half saw no point in also updating our guidance and the
other half didn't object. A small number of commenters asserted that we
should not update our Document Drafting Handbook (DDH) because it's not
a policy document and we don't set Federal government policy.
The ACUS Recommendations didn't suggest that we develop policy for
the Federal government regarding IBR. As
[[Page 60791]]
the name indicates, these are actions or considerations that agencies
are recommended to think about when determining what, if any, material
would be needed for IBR. We see no problem with updating our DDH with
some of the recommendations to give agencies another resource or
reminder on IBR best practices and procedures.
8. Given that the petition raises policy rather than procedural issues,
would OMB be better placed to determine reasonable availability?
Some commenters felt that we need to define ``reasonable
availability'' and that OMB should have no role in this process, citing
the FOIA. Others thought that we should work in concert with OMB to
determine ``reasonable availability.'' A third group asserted that OMB
should set policy, noting that it already has in OMB Circular A-119.
As we've already discussed, requiring that agencies only use
material that is free and online could effectively bar them from using
material their subject matter experts have decided is the best option.
So, that change would have significant and immediate policy
implications. In response to question 7, commenters already noted that
OFR does not set policy for the Federal government. In fact, OMB has
the role of policy-maker. We have neither the authority nor the
expertise to determine what material is appropriate to IBR into a
rulemaking. OMB and the other agencies should work together to set
policy that best meets their needs.
9. How would an extended IBR review period at both the NPRM and final
rule stages impact agencies?
Many commenters raised the same issues in response to question 9 as
they did in their responses to question 5. Some concluded there would
be no impact since we would not need additional time to review either
NPRMs or final rules because the IBR'd material is either available or
it's not. Others suggested that our review would slow the process of a
rulemaking, which would have detrimental effect and add levels of
unnecessary complication. Some suggested that an extended IBR review
period would diminish many of the benefits associated with the use of
standards that are IBR'd. One commenter stated that OFR review would
have a chilling effect on agencies' willingness to IBR voluntary
standards in support of regulatory actions, which would undermine
Federal law and policy, set forth in the NTTAA and OMB Circular A-119.
Another commenter believed that OFR approval of IBRs should be
expeditious and involve limited review. This commenter recommended that
where there is an approved method for public access, OFR review should
normally occur in 3 days not 20 and that agencies should be allowed to
state that all future editions are IBR'd with some type of
administrative approval. This commenter further stated that ``because
the FRA is nothing more than a reporting statute, the Director should
delay or reject an agency filing only to promote clarity, authenticity,
and--in the case of IBR--public availability.'' \37\ Therefore,
according to this commenter OFR should summarily approve IBR requests
of materials that are posted on archival Web sites.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See NARA-12-0002-0118.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the extent that one commenter suggested that we completely
abandon our current regulations we disagree. Our current regulations,
while issued 30 years ago, provide the foundations for transparency by
requiring detailed information for the standard, including the title,
date, revision, and publisher, be set out in the regulatory text.
Without this basic information set out in the regulatory text no one
could be sure which standard was actually IBR'd in a regulation. It
wouldn't matter what standards were available online if it weren't
clear which standard was IBR'd. Simply updating regulations by some
type of administrative notice and then adding an editorial note to the
CFR would not provide a means of orderly codification as required by
the FRA and 1 CFR chapter 1. Therefore, we decline to propose this
suggestion as a means of updating IBR references. Instead, our NPRM
adds a requirement that agencies provide an explanation in the
preambles of both their proposed and final rules that discusses how the
IBR materials were made reasonably available (which could have been a
summary of the IBR'd material in the NPRM) along with complying with
the current regulations set out in part 51. This added requirement will
not greatly increase the burden on OFR resources while providing
interested parties more information on how agencies are working to
ensure the IBR'd materials are reasonably available.
10. Other Issues
a. Constitutional Issues.
b. Copyright Issues.
c. Outdated standards IBR'd into the CFR.
d. Standards should be used as guidance not requirements.
e. Concerns regarding the misuse of the IBR process.
f. Indirect IBR of standards.
g. International stance--trade imbalance, Export Administration
Regulations, International Traffic in Arms Regulations.
h. OFR mission.
i. Miscellaneous suggestions.
a. Constitutional Issues
Several commenters argued that the government could simply exercise
the Takings Clause of the 5th Amendment. We are not experts in how the
Federal government would exercise the Takings Clause. However, there is
nothing ever ``simple'' about the process.\38\ We will leave it up to
the agencies to decide the best course of action for their situation
and not try to substitute our judgment for theirs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Inquiry as to whether a governmental action is an
unconstitutional taking, by its nature, does not lend itself to any
set formula, and a determination of whether justice and fairness
require that economic injuries caused by public action be
compensated by the government, rather than remain disproportionately
concentrated on a few persons, is essentially ad hoc and fact
intensive 10 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 231 (Originally published in 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter questioned the constitutionality of the current
system, arguing that forcing the public to pay for standards
effectively limits access and thus restricts public participation in
government. Most of the cases cited, however, dealt with the government
or the courts preventing public access.\39\ Given the Government
Printing Office's statutory authority to charge for the Federal
Register and CFR, we find this argument unpersuasive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court for Norfolk County,
457 U.S. 596, 604 (US 1982) (quoting Mills v. Alabama, 384 U.S. 214,
218 (1966)); see also Press Enterprise v. Superior Court, 478 U.S. 1
(1986). Cf. In re Gitto Global Corp., 422 F.3d 1 (1st Cir. 2005);
Leigh v. Salazar, 677F.3d 892 (9th Cir.2012). The commenter also
references Cf. Harper v. Virginia Bd. Of Elections, 383 U.S. 663,
666-68 (1966), overturning poll taxes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Copyright Issues
Several commenters claim that once a standard is IBR'd into a
regulation it becomes law and loses its copyright protection.\40\
Therefore, IBR'd standards must be available for free online. Other
commenters, including the petitioners, don't go quite so far. Instead
they claim that when agencies IBR copyrighted material into their
regulations, the 5th Circuit's decision casts doubt on the legality of
charging the public for access to that IBR'd material, see Veeck v.
Southern Building Code Congress International, Inc., 293 F.3d 791 (5th
Cir. 2002).\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Citing Banks v. Manchester, 128 U.S. 244, (1888).
\41\ Veeck v. Southern Building Code Congress International,
Inc., 293 F.3d 791 (5th Cir. 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Veeck, the court held that in some instances model building
codes developed by an organization adopted
[[Page 60792]]
by government entities into regulations may become law, and to the
extent that the building code becomes law it enters the public domain.
Federal law still provides exclusive ownership rights for copyright
holders \42\ and provides that Federal agencies can be held liable for
copyright infringement.\43\ Additionally, both the NTTAA and OMB
Circular A-119 require that federal agencies ``observe and protect''
the rights of copyright holders when IBRing into law voluntary
consensus standards.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ 17 U.S.C. 106.
\43\ 28 U.S.C. 1498(b).
\44\ OMB Circular A-119.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recent developments in Federal law, including the Veeck decision
and the amendments to FOIA have not expressly overruled U.S. copyright
law or the NTTAA, therefore, we agree with the commenters who said that
when the Federal government references copyrighted works, those works
should not lose their copyright. However, the responsible government
agency should collaborate with the SDOs and other publishers of IBR'd
materials to ensure that the public does have reasonable access to the
referenced documents. Therefore, in this NPRM we propose to require
that agencies discuss how they have worked with copyright holders to
make the IBR'd standards reasonably available to commenters and to
regulated entities.
Another commenter suggested that OFR loan out electronic versions
of copyrighted standards much like a library. Unfortunately, this goes
beyond our statutory authority and agency's resources.
One commenter stated that the OFR should work with agencies to take
a collaborative approach to copyright, not one based solely on
entitlement, to promote the consensus standard system. This commenter
recommended a five-category approach to collaboration.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See NARA-12-0002-0118.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Free, but copyrighted--the material would be marked as
copyrighted but would be available free and online.
2. Extraneous--OFR would work with agencies to remove extraneous
IBRs from the CFR.
3. Generally approved limitations--OFR would allow agencies to make
further accommodations to standards developed by voluntary consensus
organizations, such as read-only online access to IBR'd standards.
(Here the commenter sets out several conditions both agencies and SDOs
would need to meet to get IBR approval.)
4. Good Cause--OFR should approve additional restrictions access if
the SDO shows good cause based on its business structure.
5. Agency Necessity--if a SDO refuses to collaborate with an agency
without showing good cause or if the agency argues there is no
alternative than using a highly restrictive standard, the OFR may not
be able to require electronic public access. So OFR would encourage
agencies to work with NIST to find an alternative standard.
We decline to take this commenters approach and note that we do not
have the resources to establish such a complicated regulatory scheme
for IBR approval. This plan would also increase the time needed to
approve agency IBR requests, unnecessarily duplicate agencies' attempts
to make standards available, and add delays to an already complicated
rulemaking system.
c. Outdated Standards IBR'd Into the CFR
A few commenters mentioned that some of the standards IBR'd into
the CFR were outdated or expressed concern that agencies were failing
to update the IBR references in the CFR. One commenter suggested that
greater public access to IBR'd standards might alert policy and
industry communities to the fact that Federal regulations reference
outdated private standards and need to be updated to improve public
safety. Another commenter stated that some standards are out of date or
out of print and are not easily available. This commenter noted that
some OSHA IBR'd materials date from the 1950s.\46\ This commenter
expressed concern that the current version of a standard may contain
valuable information even though the historical version is still IBR'd
in the Federal regulation text. This commenter suggested that sales of
historical documents are not related to support of the current version
and should be free for the agency and the SDO and that SDOs should
charge only for the current version. The commenter didn't want a
situation where an employer must buy two versions of the same standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See NARA-12-002-0147.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the past few years, we have reviewed a number of agency IBR
approval requests that seek to retain, expand, or create IBRs using
very old standards of questionable availability. In some cases, there
may be no appropriate alternative or recent standards and agencies may
have no choice but to rely on older material for IBR.
To address this issue, we required that agencies provide additional
contact information for older standards that are not readily available
from their original publishers. Examples of regulations that include
modified availability arrangements for old, difficult to obtain IBR'd
documents include National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
regulations at 36 CFR part 1234 (74 FR 51004, October 2, 2009),
Department of Energy (DOE) regulations at 10 CFR part 430 (74 FR 54445,
October 22, 2009), and OSHA regulations at 29 CFR part 1926 (75 FR
47906, August 9, 2010). While we don't agree with the petitioners that
we have the statutory authority to require that these agencies post
these IBR materials online, we do require that they provide a way for
interested parties to contact the agencies directly to work out an
arrangement so that the IBR'd materials could be examined at an agency
location more convenient to the requester.
In January of 2011, President Obama issued Executive Order 13563,
``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' dated January 18,
2011,\47\ which was closely followed by OMB Memorandum M-11-10,
``Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies, and
of Independent Regulatory Agencies.'' After these documents were
issued, the legal staff of the OFR wrote a blog post discussing section
6 of Executive Order 13563. This section instructs agencies to conduct
periodic, retrospective review and analysis of existing regulations
with an eye toward determining which, if any, ``may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal them . . . so as to make the agency's
regulatory program more effective and less burdensome in achieving
regulatory objectives.'' OMB Memorandum M-11-10 reiterates and expands
on this, stating that ``[w]hile systematic review should focus on the
elimination of rules that are no longer justified or necessary, such
review should also consider strengthening, complementing, or
modernizing rules where necessary or appropriate. . .''. We suggested
in our blog post that agencies use this regulatory review to pay
special attention to any IBR'd materials cited in those regulations.
Agencies should be mindful of the requirement that such materials be
``reasonably available to and useable by the class of persons affected
by the publication'' \48\ and that IBR approval is ``limited to the
edition of the publication that is approved.'' \49\ We further stated
in this blog post that it is incumbent on agencies to periodically
[[Page 60793]]
review materials approved for IBR in their regulations and update them
as appropriate. All IBR'd materials must be ``reasonably available'' to
the regulated parties no matter their age or source. If this becomes a
problem using the contact information included in the CFR, agencies are
required to update the regulations with current, complete contact
information or to arrange for--and publish--instructions for
alternative means of availability if necessary.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ 76 FR 3821; January 21, 2011.
\48\ See 1 CFR 51.7(a)(4).
\49\ (see 1 CFR 51.1(f)).
\50\ See https://www.federalregister.gov/blog/2011/02/executive-order-13563-and-incorporation-by-reference, last visited on March
15, 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter listed agency regulations, some of which IBR
standards others do not. This commenter then states that the average
age of a standard IBR'd into the CFR is 24 years old. This, he claims,
is ``in part . . . due to the antiquated practices of the Federal
Register.'' \51\ He continues by stating that at least part of the
problem is that the OFR has not implemented an ACUS recommendation from
1979 that suggested OFR issue a rule establishing a procedure for
Federal agencies to use a joint rule to update particular standards
into their regulations.\52\ According to the commenter, this procedure
would allow any agency with a superseded standard to participate. The
procedure would also allow for each agency to make its own decisions on
how to use a particular standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See comment NARA-12-0002-0118.
\52\ See ACUS Recommendation 78-4 (44 FR 1357, January 5, 1979).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forcing all agencies that wish to IBR a particular standard to work
together to issue a joint rule would not automatically shorten the time
it takes for agencies to complete rulemaking projects. Coordinating
among agencies is not always easy given their differing statutory
authority and missions. ACUS Recommendation 78-4 suggests that when a
standard is IBR'd by two or more agencies, the OFR should coordinate
the publication of a joint rule to update the standard. The
Recommendation suggests that OFR should prepare a NPRM that would
publish under the name of each agency. However, ACFR regulations
require each agency to publish their own regulations, so the OFR could
not prepare such a document.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See 1 CFR 21.21. While outside the scope of the petition,
the commenter also states the OFR unreasonably limits agencies use
of cross-referencing other agencies regulations in the CFR. The
Federal Register Act requires orderly codification (44 U.S.C. 1510)
and gives the ACFR the authority to issue regulations that ensure
the orderly codification of agency rules and regulations. The ACFR's
regulation on cross-referencing is found at 1 CFR 21.21. Paragraph
(c) of this section requires that each agency set out its own
regulations in the CFR in full text. It limits the use of cross-
referencing to particular situations set out in this section.
Orderly codification cannot be carried out without some boundaries
and restrictions. We have found that many times cross references are
not updated and thus are not useful.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The statute allows agencies to IBR standards with the approval of
the Director. The OFR interprets this language to require that agencies
make a request to the Director. There is no prohibition on agencies
issuing a joint final rule to revise their regulations to update IBR'd
materials within their own regulations, if they choose to work together
as the Recommendation suggests.
d. Standards Should Be Used as Guidance Not Requirements
A couple of commenters suggested that SDO standards should be used
in agency guidance materials instead of in regulations. If agencies did
that, the public would not be required to comply with those standards
and they wouldn't need to be posted online for free as discussed in the
petition. According to these commenters, this is a better solution to
IBR because the public can decide if purchasing the standard would help
them comply with the regulation. It would also ensure that SDOs are
compensated for their work, while creating a market incentive for them
to keep their prices reasonable in relation to the alternative
standards. SDO standards would be supportive of compliance and would
not become the law. At least one commenter suggested ``the NTTAA and
[OMB] Circular A-119 make a distinction between regulations
affirmatively requiring a specified course of conduct and standards
that serve to indicate but one means by which those requirements may be
satisfied.'' \54\ This commenter states that the benefits of using
standards as guidance include:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See NARA-12-0002-0149.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Lessening burdens on the OFR. Guidance is not required to be
published in the Federal Register so we don't have to review them.
2. Making it easier to update standards. Agencies wouldn't have to
go through a rulemaking each time the SDO issued a new version of a
standard.
Another commenter recommended that OMB Circular A-119 should
discuss the distinction between rules and ``regulatory guidance.'' The
commenter wanted OMB to encourage agencies to withdraw standards IBR'd
in the CFR in favor of IBRing these standards into agency directives
and interpretations, which the commenter claims are ``equally
authoritative, but changeable by notice.'' \55\ The commenter suggests
that by doing this the public develops an awareness of the standard
while SDOs copyrights are protected.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See NARA-12-0002-0118. This commenter also suggests that
OFR should allow agencies to IBR agency documents into Federal
Register notice documents provided the agency provides an
authenticated version of its document for Federal Register custody.
As we discussed earlier, we discourage agencies from IBR'ing agency-
created materials so that a shadow publication system is not
established and the transparency of a centralized publication system
established under the FRA is maintained.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FRA and the APA \56\ require that documents of general
applicability and legal effect be published in the Federal Register and
codified in the CFR. Thus, what these commenters suggest could
jeopardize agencies' enforcement of requirements needed to maintain the
health and safety of the public by removing them from the CFR. In
addition, agencies are not generally required to codify their guidance
documents, policy letters, or directives in the CFR and thus, they may
not be published in the Federal Register. \57\ So, if standards are
only referenced in guidance, some of the transparency is gone because
there would be no uniformity as to how the standard is referenced in
the guidance document. In many instances, agency-issued guidance and
policy statements become binding as a practical matter.\58\ But,
because these documents might not be published in the Federal Register
and are not codified, it's not clear how moving an IBR from regulation
text to documents that are more difficult to locate provides the public
with adequate knowledge of the document. If the documents are not
submitted for publication in the Federal Register, then the OFR legal
staff can't review them. We do not have the staff or other resources
needed to check each agency's Web site for documents that should be
published in the Federal Register. Also, it is not clear why
[[Page 60794]]
agencies would need IBR approval for these non-regulatory documents.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ 44 U.S.C. 1505, 1510 and 5 U.S.C. 553, respectively.
\57\ ACUS Recommendation 76-2 (41 FR 29653, July 19, 1976)
recommends that agencies publish their statements of general policy
and interpretations of general applicability in the Federal Register
citing 5 U.S.C. 522(a)(1)(D). This recommendation further recommends
that when these documents are of continuing interest to the public
they should be ``preserved'' in the CFR. 41 FR 29654. The
recommendation also suggests that agencies preserve their statements
of basis and purpose related to a rule by having them published in
the CFR at least once in the CFR edition for the year rule is
originally codified. Many agencies have not followed this
recommendation, most likely because some of the material is
published in the United States Government Manual or they find the
cost prohibitive.
\58\ See NARA-12-0002-0162.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This commenter also stated that ``[t]o the extent standards remain
in the codified rules, OMB should streamline the process of
incorporating new editions.'' \59\ It's not clear what the commenter is
referring to with this statement. If this commenter wanted OMB to
suggest ways agencies can work through their internal and OMB clearance
processes to make that process more streamlined, then we agree. OMB
should work with agencies to improve and expedite the clearance
process. If the commenter is suggesting that OMB change the way IBR
approval process works, we disagree with the commenter. Under statute,
only the Director can approve agency requests to IBR material into the
CFR, OMB may suggest ways to make the process more streamlined but it
cannot change the regulations regarding IBR in 1 CFR part 51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ See NARA-12-0002-0118.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters offered similar suggestions to ``improve'' the IBR
process. One suggestion would be to allow agencies to simply file an
updated standard with the OFR. We would file it and the agency would
not have to go through the rulemaking process to update its standards.
Then, we would periodically annotate the CFR with editorial notes
stating that the standard that is codified is no longer applicable. One
commenter suggested that if an agency were required by Congress to
update the standard, the agency could simply link to that annotation.
Going back to the FRA, the APA, 1 CFR chapters I and II, and the
general principles of transparency already discussed, these suggestions
are untenable. Notice, whether actual or constructive, is one of the
main pillars of our Federal regulatory process. If an agency has given
notice, through a final rule codified in the CFR, that a specific
standard is required, it can't require something else. And since we
don't consider annotations to the CFR part of the regulation, any
editor's note we added would be unenforceable. But, we couldn't add
such a note because we have no authority to substantively change
another agency's regulations.
Another commenter suggested that agencies should be able to remove
lengthy ``enforcement policies'' from the CFR and then IBR them. As
we've already discussed, however, this would create a shadow system of
regulations.
Several other commenters appeared to suggest that we allow and
approve material to be IBR'd into preambles, guidance documents,
informal procedures, and Notice documents. One theory appears to be
that if agencies could IBR material into documents that were not in the
CFR, it would be much easier and faster for them to update the
standards with new versions. But, as we've already discussed, agencies
IBR material in order to enforce compliance with that material. Only
material in the CFR can be enforced, so IBR'ing material into documents
that aren't enforceable won't meet agency needs. Agencies are already
allowed to reference outside material in those documents, so adding a
layer of review and approval, while significantly taxing our resources,
would not make the IBR process quicker and simpler; it would have the
exact opposite effect.
A second theory for expanding IBR to more than final rules seems to
be to ensure that the public has access to all material they need to be
able to comment on an agency NPRM, even if the agency never intends to
IBR the document at a final rule stage. While the OFR endorses this
idea, the agency docket is the appropriate (and current) place for this
material. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552(a) clearly discusses IBR in the context of
final rules and the requirements that are part of final rules. It is
not concerned with ensuring adequate opportunity to comment. Other
parts of the APA put that burden on the issuing agency, not on us, see
5 U.S.C. Sec. 553.
A commenter was concerned that we would approve an IBR with a
general reference to the Internet, rather than a specific instance,
since Web sites and domains can easily change. However, the Director
does not approve any ``general references,'' whether online or not. He
approves specific editions or versions of specific standards. We
strongly encourage agencies to include Web site addresses where the
standard can be obtained, but even if that addresses changes, it won't
affect the validity of the IBR approval.
e. Concerns Regarding the Misuse of the IBR Process
Several commenters expressed a general concern that allowing
agencies to IBR material into the CFR circumvented the requirements of
notice and comment rulemaking. One commenter claimed it is
inappropriate to IBR consensus standards that have not gone through an
economic analysis and an opportunity for broad public comment. The
primary concern of this comment is that voluntary consensus
organizations don't take into account the economic impact of their
consensus standards. Since many standards offer a very complex and
stringent protocol that industry can choose to adopt to enhance safety,
these standards are not a replacement for a rulemaking because they
don't account for the economic impact of the protocols.
As previously stated, we are not subject matter experts in the many
subject areas in which agencies request IBR approval of standards into
their regulations; we are not able to determine how a standard was
developed or if there are alternative standards the agency could IBR
instead. We believe it is up to the agency to determine these questions
and examine the economic impact on regulated entities during the
rulemaking process. We propose that agencies seeking the Director's
approval of their IBR requests include in the preambles of their
rulemaking documents a discussion of the actions the agency took to
ensure the materials were reasonably available to interested parties or
summaries of the contents of the materials the agencies are seeking to
IBR.
At least 2 commenters raised concerns about the IBR of API's RP/
1162 entitled Public Awareness.\60\ They claim that IBR'ing this
standard was a misuse of the IBR process because this standard is not
technical in nature. These commenters assert that the NTTAA and OMB
Circular A-119 envision that IBR will be limited to technical standards
or specifications. They suggest that by IBR'ing this standard on
developing a public awareness program to increase public awareness of
pipeline operations and safety issues, the agency effectively
transferred its authority to issue regulations to the private
organization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See NARA-12-0002-0077 and NARA-12-0002-0092.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOIA and the regulations in 1 CFR part 51 do not limit IBR approval
to only technical standards. We don't have the resources to determine
what types of standards are appropriate for an agency to IBR. We assume
that agencies have fully considered the impact of any documents they
wish to IBR, including whether they are in fact delegating their
rulemaking authority to a third-party. We do not review material
submitted for IBR to determine if it is technical in nature or is a
performance-based requirement; we leave that determination to the
agency subject matter experts. We review the IBR'd material to ensure
it meets the requirements set out in part 51.
f. Indirect IBR'd Standards
At least 3 commenters raised the issue that some of the IBR'd
standards also reference other standards in their text. These
commenters stated that obtaining IBR'd material can cost several
thousands of dollars a year. One
[[Page 60795]]
commenter uses, as an example, the ASTM foundry standard, which the
commenter said cross-references 35 other consensus standards.\61\ These
commenters mentioned that these costs may be cumulative, as companies
or individuals must purchase multiple layers of IBR'd documents. In
sum, these commenters seemed to suggest that OFR mandate that the
primary IBR material and all tiered IBR material be placed online to
greatly reduce the cost of access to IBR'd standards and expand the
number of people who can view the IBR'd standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ See NARA-12-0002-0147.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our regulations have never contained any provision to allow for IBR
of anything but the primary standards and, as a practical matter, we
have no mechanism for approving anything but those primary standards.
The OFR is a procedural agency and we do not have subject matter or
policy jurisdiction over any agency or SDO. We must assume that
agencies have fully considered the impact of any document, and, by
extension, material IBR'd, they publish in the Federal Register. In
many instances, agencies reference third-party standards in their
NPRMs, so both the general public and the regulated public can review
and comment on those standards before they are formally IBR'd in the
CFR. We do not review material submitted for IBR to determine if it
also has other materials IBR'd; we look only at the criteria set out in
our regulations. Determining that an agency intends to require some
type of compliance with documents referenced in third-party standards
is outside our jurisdiction; similarly, we cannot determine whether or
not the subject matter of a third-party standard is appropriate for any
given agency.
We do recommend to agencies that they carefully consider what
standards they wish to IBR and the impact of that standard on the
regulated entities. If asked, we would suggest that the agency review
the second tier standards to determine if it wished to IBR any of those
standards. If the agency decides to IBR any second tier standards we
will work with the agency on its IBR approval request for those
standards. The agency could opt to discuss those ``second tier''
standards in the preamble.
One commenter stated that we shouldn't reject or delay IBR approval
based on secondary references within a standard. For the reasons stated
above we don't do this now and our NPRM does not suggest that we begin
doing this.
g. International Stance--Trade Imbalance, Export Administration
Regulations, International Traffic in Arms Regulations
Several commenters expressed concern that granting the petition
would create unnecessary problems under U.S. international obligations.
These commenters stated that the U.S. standards development system is
independent of government control and offers a level of assurance to
the world that IBR'd standards are not crafted to establish or
encourage trade barriers. They were concerned that any revisions to our
regulations could fundamentally undermine this system and would cause
the U.S. to lose this competitive advantage. It might also compromise
the role that standards play in protecting health, safety, and the
environment. These commenters also expressed concern that if the U.S.
were to lose its competitive advantage, other countries would be quick
to seize the opportunity.
We understand that the U.S. is a party to international agreements
under which it is obligated to use relevant international standards in
Federal regulations.\62\ We strongly recommend that agencies work with
the United States Trade Representative, and the Departments of State
and Commerce to make sure their regulations meet U.S. international
obligations. In part, this is why we decline to grant the petitions
request to completely revise our regulations. Instead, we are proposing
to revise our regulations to require that agencies discuss in the
preambles of their rulemaking documents how the IBR'd materials were
made reasonably available under Federal law and policy, including any
international obligations if applicable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See for example, the World Trade Organization Agreement on
Technical Barriers to Trade, Article 2.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter voiced a concern that placing export-controlled
information in the public domain could happen if we adopted the changes
suggested in the petition. This commenter then stated that this type of
information is subject to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR)
or controlled by the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).
The Department of Commerce and the Department of State have the
authority over these types of controlled information. This commenter
then recommends that any revisions to part 51 include the following
language: ``Nothing herein requires or authorizes the release to the
public either directly or through incorporation by reference of any
information subject to the export control restrictions as promulgated
by the U.S. Department of State or the U.S. Department of Commerce.''
\63\ Because we are not proposing to require agencies to post all
materials IBR'd online, we decline to propose adding the commenter's
suggested language to part 51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See NARA-12-0002-0134.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
h. OFR Mission
One commenter suggested that OFR needs to focus on a new mission
related to IBR and provided the following suggestions related to public
domain and privately created documents. In regard to public domain
documents, this commenter appeared to recommend that we encourage
agencies to IBR agency guidance and other agency documents into
guidance documents, preambles, and notice documents.\64\ This commenter
also seemed to suggest that these types of documents be IBR'd into the
CFR; for example, an agency would IBR the preamble of a NPRM into the
final rule. Thus, he would have us do away with the current prohibition
found in 1 CFR 51.7(c)(1) that prohibits agencies from IBR'ing material
that published in the Federal Register. He suggested that this would
ensure that we maintain archival records of important preambles and
agency guidance. However, this misses the point of IBR and of its
requirements. Any document that published in the Federal Register is
automatically part of the Federal record, with its own permanent
citation,\65\ so IBRing a preamble, for example, would only create a
more-complicated citation system with no apparent benefit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See NARA-12-002-0118. This commenter also suggests that the
Director IBR the OFR's Document Drafting Handbook into part 51.
\65\ See 44 U.S.C. 1507.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As previously discussed, there is an implied presumption that
material developed and published by a Federal agency is inappropriate
for IBR by that agency, except in limited circumstances. Otherwise, the
Federal Register and CFR could become a mere index to material
published elsewhere. This runs counter to the central publication
system for Federal regulations envisioned by Congress in the FRA and
the APA.\66\ We do not have the resources to review and approve IBR
references in non-regulatory text including guidance documents,
preambles, and notice documents. Our focus with IBR approval continues
to be placed on CFR regulatory text when agencies wish to require the
use of materials not published in the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ 47 FR 34107 (August 6, 1982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 60796]]
As for privately created materials, this commenter wanted us to
focus on helping agencies publish and archive legal materials in
secure, electronic formats. This commenter believed 1 CFR part 51 is
unnecessarily burdensome and prohibits agencies from using many of the
efficient tools the Internet makes available.
We are not the Government Printing Office, whose mission is to help
agencies publish and post online agency documents. Our mission is to
publish the documents Congress required to be published in the FRA.\67\
As for the commenter's suggestion that the current part 51 is
burdensome and prohibits agencies from effectively using the Internet,
we disagree. The current part 51 provides basic procedural requirements
that ensure agencies are referencing IBR'd materials so that it is
clear which documents are IBR'd into the CFR. Our requirements also
provide that agencies include direct contact information in the
regulatory text so that the reader does not have to search for agency
and publisher contact information elsewhere. Our regulations allow
agencies the flexibility to work with SDOs and other publishers to post
the material online or provide other means of access to the materials
IBR'd into the CFR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ See 44 U.S.C. 1505 and 1510.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, this commenter wanted us to work with NIST to create a
database with the IBR'd standards. He felt OFR's record schedule for
IBR'd materials is burdensome because we accession some material to
NARA while it's still IBR'd in current regulations. To correct this,
the commenter seemed to suggest the OFR maintain digital scans of all
IBR'd material and provide a high quality searchable Web site that
links to the CFR and the IBR'd material. This commenter also suggested
that we remove contact information from the CFR and maintain it only in
this database.
We are happy to work with NIST so that its database of IBR'd
standards on www.standards.gov is current. Since the NIST database only
tracks consensus standards, we will continue to maintain our finding
aid of IBR'd materials on the eCFR (www.ecfr.gov) to assist people
looking for other types of documents that have been IBR'd. As discussed
in detail previously, we disagree with the suggestion that Federal law
and current technology require that copyright protections no longer
apply to materials that have been IBR'd so decline to create a site
that provides digital scans of IBR'd materials.\68\ Finally, we believe
that the contact information for OFR, agencies, and publishers of IBR'd
materials is important and needs to remain in the CFR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Within the past few years, we've begun allowing agencies to
submit all electronic IBR approval requests. When agencies choose
this request process, they provide us with electronic copies of the
materials they wish to IBR. Because we have limited server space, we
have a record schedule for these documents as well, so we will still
need to research where the IBR'd materials are stored. Thus, having
digital copies of documents does not solve the perceived problem.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Miscellaneous Suggestions
One commenter requested that we require agencies to make all
outside materials they relied on in drafting the rulemaking documents
available online for free. We have statutory authority only with regard
to material IBR'd, not to all other material referenced. While we
encourage agencies to make that material available, but we cannot
require them to do so.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ As noted in section 1, however, agencies are already
required to disclose scientific data that they've relied on for
rulemaking. United States v. Nova Scotia Food Products Corp., 568
F.2d 240 (2d Cir. 1977).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter recommended that we eliminate IBR entirely and make
agencies issue performance-based, rather than standards-based
regulations. This is well outside our statutory authority. Agencies
currently choose whether performance-based or prescriptive regulations,
or a hybrid of both, is best for each specific rulemaking, and whether
any part of the performance or prescriptive requirements are best found
in existing standards. We do not have the authority or the expertise to
substitute our judgment for theirs.
Another commenter also raised the issue of conformity
assessment.\70\ However, that too is outside the scope of our
authority, our expertise, and this petition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ See, for example, NARA-12-0002-0063 and 0067.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter expressed frustration with private corporations and
government corruption. Others objected to the idea that regulations
could become law without allowing citizens access. One commenter
asserted that agencies should not publish regulations individually,
that there needed to be a central repository that published regulations
which would be available online. He also recommended an elaborate file-
naming convention for all regulations and NPRMs, not just those
containing IBR material.\71\ One submitter provided a copy of OSHA's
acceptance of Industrial Consensus Standards from the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), but without explaining its relevance to
the petition.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Since this describes fairly well the Federal Register
system, as established in 1935, we agree with the comment regarding
centralization of regulations. However, changing how documents are
named is outside the scope of this petition.
\72\ We do discuss international issues elsewhere in section 10,
including the GATT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also received recommendations to:
Create a government SDO and to nationalize existing
standards
Change the existing SDO model
Make all standards open-source
Host all online standards \73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ Online standards are, by definition, already online, so we
see no need to also host them through our domains.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revise the tax code
Amend HR 2854
Make all agency drafts publically available
Have Federal agencies use objective criteria to evaluate
the potential IBR of voluntary non-consensus standards
Analyze how other Federal agencies compile data and meta-
data.
The OFR has no authority to create agencies, change how SDOs
operate, or amend existing statutes. Further, we cannot make agency
drafts publically available. The ACFR regulations,\74\ which were
upheld by a Federal court,\75\ specifically state that we hold all
documents in confidence until they are placed on public inspection and
filed for publication Finally, we cannot implement changes in other
agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ 1 CFR 17.2(a).
\75\ Kennecott Utah Copper Corp. v. U.S. Dept. of Interior, 88
F.3d 1191 (D.C. Cir. 1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter requested that OFR conduct an audit of all IBR'd
standards. We decline. The last audit our office undertook lasted
several years, with many more staff and many fewer IBR'd standards, and
was done shortly after the Director became the sole person authorized
to approve IBR requests. This commenter also requested permission to
install a high speed copier in our office which non-OFR employees would
use to copy and scan IBR'd material. The Antideficiency Act, 31 U.S.C.
1342, prevents us from accepting voluntary services and ethics rules
prevent us from accepting gifts. Finally this commenter requested that
NARA systematically archive all ANSI standards, even those not IBR'd,
to ensure continuing access to these standards. Although we are an
office within NARA, we are only involved in archiving records as a
client--that is, we send our material for archiving according to our
records schedule just like any other Federal agency. We don't
[[Page 60797]]
have the authority to speak on behalf of NARA. In addition, ANSI is not
a government agency so OFR has no authority to archive all of its
standards.
Regulatory Analysis
The Director developed this NPRM after considering numerous
statutes and Executive Orders related to rulemaking. Below is a summary
of his determinations with respect to this rulemaking proceeding.
Executive Order 12866
The NPRM has been drafted in accordance with Executive Order 12866,
section 1(b), ``Principles of Regulation.'' The Director has determined
that this NPRM is a significant regulatory action as defined under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866. The proposed rule has been
submitted to OMB under section 6(a)(3)(E) of Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This NPRM will not have a significant impact on small entities
since it imposes requirements only on Federal agencies. Members of the
public can access Federal Register publications for free through the
Government Printing Office's Web site. Accordingly, the head of the
agency certifies that the rule will not, if promulgated, have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Federalism
This NPRM has no Federalism implications under Executive Order
13132. It does not impose compliance costs on state or local
governments or preempt state law.
Congressional Review
This NPRM is not a major rule as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The
Director will submit a rule report, including a copy of this NPRM, to
each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the United
States as required under the congressional review provisions of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1986.
List of Subjects in 1 CFR Part 51
Administrative practice and procedure, Code of Federal Regulations,
Federal Register, Incorporation by reference.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, under the authority at 5
U.S.C. 552(a), the Director of the Federal Register, proposes to amend
chapter II of title 1 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth
below:
PART 51--INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE
0
1. The authority citation for part 51 continues to read:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a).
0
2. Revise Sec. 51.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.3 When will the Director approve a publication?
(a)(1) The Director will informally approve the proposed
incorporation by reference of a publication when the preamble of a
proposed rule meets the requirements of this part (See Sec. 51.5(a)).
(2) If the preamble of a proposed rule does not meet the
requirements of this part, the Director will return the document to the
agency (See 1 CFR 2.4).
(b) The Director will formally approve the incorporation by
reference of a publication in a final rule when the following
requirements are met:
(1) The publication is eligible for incorporation by reference (See
Sec. 51.7).
(2) The preamble meets the requirements of this part (See Sec.
51.5(b)(2)).
(3) The language of incorporation meets the requirements of this
part (See Sec. 51.9).
(4) The publication is on file with the Office of the Federal
Register.
(5) The Director has received a written request from the agency to
approve the incorporation by reference of the publication.
(c) The Director will notify the agency of the approval or
disapproval of an incorporation by reference in a final rule within 20
working days after the agency has met all the requirements for
requesting approvals (See Sec. 51.5).
0
3. Revise Sec. 51.5 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.5 How does an agency request approval?
(a) In a proposed rule, the agency does not request formal approval
but must either:
(1) Discuss the ways in which it worked to make the materials it
proposes to incorporate by reference reasonably available to interested
parties in the preamble of the proposed rule, or
(2) Summarize the material it proposes to incorporate by reference
in the preamble of the proposed rule.
(b) In a final rule, the agency must request formal approval by:
(1) Making a written request for approval at least 20 working days
before the agency intends to submit the final rule document for
publication;
(2) Discussing, in the preamble, the ways in which it worked to
make the materials it incorporates by reference reasonably available to
interested parties and how interested parties can obtain the materials;
(3) Sending a copy of the final rule document that uses the proper
language of incorporation with the written request (See Sec. 51.9);
and
(4) Ensuring that a copy of the publication is on file at the
Office of the Federal Register.
(c) Agencies may consult with the Office of the Federal Register at
any time with respect to the requirements of this part.
0
4. In Sec. 51.7, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 51.7 What publications are eligible?
(a) A publication is eligible for incorporation by reference under
5 U.S.C. 552(a) if it--
(1) Conforms to the policy stated in Sec. 51.1;
(2) Either:
(i) Is published data, criteria, standards, specifications,
techniques, illustrations, or similar material; or
(ii) Substantially reduces the volume of material published in the
Federal Register; and
(3) Is reasonably available to and usable by the class of persons
affected by the publication. In determining whether a publication is
usable, the Director will consider--
(i) The completeness and ease of handling of the publication; and
(ii) Whether it is bound, numbered, and organized.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 51.9, revise paragraphs (a) and (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 51.9 What is the proper language of incorporation?
(a) The language incorporating a publication by reference must be
precise, complete, and clearly state that the incorporation by
reference is intended and completed by the final rule document in which
it appears.
* * * * *
(c) If the Director approves a publication for incorporation by
reference in a final rule, the agency must include--
(1) The following language under the DATES caption of the preamble
to the final rule document (See 1 CFR 18.12):
The incorporation by reference of certain publications listed in
the regulations is approved by the Director of the Federal Register as
of ------------ .
(2) The preamble requirements set out in Sec. 51.5(b).
(3) The term ``incorporation by reference'' in the list of index
terms (See 1 CFR 18.20 Identification of subjects in agency
regulations).
[[Page 60798]]
Dated: September 30, 2013.
Charles A. Barth,
Director, Office of the Federal Register.
[FR Doc. 2013-24217 Filed 9-30-13; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 1505-02-P