Notice of Agreements Filed, 72890-72891 [2013-29013]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 4, 2013 / Notices
Commission, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
the accuracy of the Commission’s
burden estimate; ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; ways to minimize
the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and further
ways to reduce the information burden
for small business concerns with fewer
than 25 employees.
The FCC may not conduct or sponsor
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB Control
Number. No person shall be subject to
any penalty for failing to comply with
a collection of information subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) that
does not display a valid Control
Number.
DATES: Written Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) comments should be
submitted on or before February 3, 2014.
If you anticipate that you will be
submitting comments, but find it
difficult to do so within the period of
time allowed by this notice, you should
advise the FCC contact listed below as
soon as possible.
ADDRESSES: Submit your PRA comments
to Leslie F. Smith, Federal
Communications Commission (FCC), via
the Internet at Leslie.Smith@fcc.gov. To
submit your PRA comments by email,
send them to PRA@fcc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
additional information, contact Leslie F.
Smith at (202) 418–0217, or via the
Internet at PRA@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 3060–0056.
Title: Part 68, Connection of Terminal
Equipment to the Telephone Network.
Form Number: N/A.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofits.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 58,310 respondents; 68,077
responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 0.05
hours to 24 hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion
reporting requirement, third party
disclosure requirement, and
recordkeeping requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits. Statutory
authority for this information collection
is contained in 47 U.S.C. sections 151–
154, 201–205 and 303(r).
Total Annual Burden: 21,369 hours.
Total Annual Cost: $1,130,000.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: No
impact(s).
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Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
Part 68 rules do not require respondents
to provide proprietary, trade secret or
other confidential information to the
Commission. If the FCC requests that
respondents submit information which
respondents believe is confidential,
respondents may request confidential
treatment of such information pursuant
to Section 0.459 of the FCC’s rules, 47
CFR Section 0.459.
Needs and Uses: The purpose of 47
CFR part 68 is to protect the telephone
network from certain types of harm and
prevent interference to subscribers. To
demonstrate that terminal equipment
complies with criteria for protecting the
network and to ensure that consumers,
providers of telecommunications, the
Commission and others are able to trace
products to the party responsible for
placing terminal equipment on the
market, it is essential to require
manufacturers or other responsible
parties to provide the information
required by Part 68. In addition,
incumbent local exchange carriers must
provide the information in Part 68 to
warn their subscribers of impending
disconnection of service when
subscriber terminal equipment is
causing telephone network harm.
Federal Communications Commission.
Gloria J. Miles,
Federal Register Liaison, Office of the
Secretary, Office of Managing Director.
[FR Doc. 2013–28999 Filed 12–3–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
Notice of Agreements Filed
The Commission hereby gives notice
of the filing of the following agreements
under the Shipping Act of 1984.
Interested parties may submit comments
on the agreements to the Secretary,
Federal Maritime Commission,
Washington, DC 20573, within ten days
of the date this notice appears in the
Federal Register. Copies of the
agreements are available through the
Commission’s Web site (www.fmc.gov)
or by contacting the Office of
Agreements at (202) 523–5793 or
tradeanalysis@fmc.gov.
Agreement No.: 011931–005.
Title: CMA CGM/Marfret Vessel
Sharing Agreement.
Parties: CMA CGM S.A., CMA CGM
(UK) Limited, and Compagnie Maritime
Marfret S.A.
Filing Party: Draughn B. Arbona, Esq.;
Senior Counsel; CMA CGM (America),
LLC. 5701 Lake Wright Drive, Norfolk,
VA 23502–1868
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Synopsis: The amendment would
decrease the frequency of the service to
fortnightly. The Parties request
Expedited Review.
Agreement No.: 011961–014.
Title: The Maritime Credit Agreement.
Parties Alianca Navegacao e Logistica
Ltda. & Cia.; A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S
trading under the name of Maersk Line;
China Shipping Container Lines Co.,
Ltd.; CMA CGM S.A.; Companhia Libra
de Navegacao; Compania Libra de
Navegacion Uruguay S.A.; Compania
Sud Americana de Vapores, S.A.;
COSCO Container Lines Company
Limited; Dole Ocean Cargo Express;
¨
Hamburg-Sud; Hanjin Shipping Co.,
Ltd.; Hyundai Merchant Marine Co.,
Ltd.; Independent Container Line Ltd.;
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha, Ltd.; Nippon
Yusen Kaisha; Norasia Container Lines
Limited; United Arab Shipping
Company (S.A.G.); Wallenius
Wilhelmsen Logistics AS; Zim
Integrated Shipping Services, Ltd.
Filing Party: Wayne R. Rohde, Esq.;
Cozen O’Connor; 1627 I Street NW.,
Suite 1100; Washington, DC 20006.
Synopsis: The amendment removes
Yang Ming Transport Corp. as party to
the Agreement.
Agreement No.: 012084–003.
Title: HLAG/Maersk Line Gulf-South
America Slot Charter Agreement.
Parties: A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and
Hapag-Lloyd AG.
Filing Party: Joshua P. Stein; Cozen
O´Connor; 1627 I Street NW., Suite
1100; Washington, DC 20006–4007.
Synopsis: The amendment would
increase the slot allocation to Maersk on
Hapah-Lloyd’s service operated under
the agreement.
Agreement No.: 012198–001.
Title: CSCL/UASC Vessel Sharing and
Slot Exchange Agreement.
Parties: China Shipping Container
Lines Co., Ltd. and China Shipping
Container Lines (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd.
(acting as a single party); and United
Arab Shipping Company.
Filing Party: Patricia M. O’Neill;
Blank & Rome LLP; 600 New Hampshire
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20037.
Synopsis: The Amendment eliminates
the AAS2/AWS1 Service from the
Agreement, and eliminates the AWS1/
AAC slot swap.
Agreement No.: 012233.
Title: CSCL/UASC/YMUK Vessel
Sharing and Slot Exchange Agreement—
Asia and U.S. West Coast Services.
Parties: China Shipping Container
Lines Co., Ltd. and China Shipping
Container Lines (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd.
(acting as a single party); United Arab
Shipping Company (S.A.G.); and Yang
Ming (UK) LTD.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 233 / Wednesday, December 4, 2013 / Notices
Filing Party: Patricia M. O’Neill;
Blank & Rome LLP; 600 New Hampshire
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20037.
Synopsis: The Agreement would
authorize the Parties to share space on
a service operating between the U.S.
West Coast on the one hand, and ports
in Asia on the other hand.
By Order of the Federal Maritime
Commission.
Dated: November 29, 2013.
Karen V. Gregory,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013–29013 Filed 12–3–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6730–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
[Document Identifier: HHS–OS–20584–30D]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission to OMB for
Review and Approval; Public Comment
Request
Office of the Secretary, HHS.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In compliance with section
3507(a)(1)(D) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the Office of the
Secretary (OS), Department of Health
and Human Services, has submitted an
Information Collection Request (ICR),
described below, to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval. The ICR is for a
new collection. Comments submitted
during the first public review of this ICR
will be provided to OMB. OMB will
accept further comments from the
public on this ICR during the review
and approval period.
DATES: Comments on the ICR must be
received on or before January 3, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments to
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov or via
facsimile to (202) 395–5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Information Collection Clearance staff,
Information.CollectionClearance@
hhs.gov or (202) 690–6162.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: When
submitting comments or requesting
information, please include the
Information Collection Request Title
and document identifier HHS–OS–
20584–30D for reference.
Information Collection Request Title:
Survey on Long-Term Care Awareness
and Planning.
Abstract: With the aging of the
population, the demand and need for
long-term care is certain to grow, and
EMCDONALD on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
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with it public and private expenditures.
Unlike for medical care, few people
have private long-term care insurance
and Medicare does not cover long-term
care. Many older adults pay for longterm care out of their income and
personal savings until they are poor
enough to qualify for Medicaid, a
means-tested welfare program (Wiener
et al., 2013). Others, in an effort to avoid
exhausting their resources and relying
on Medicaid, depend on unpaid family
support or go without needed services.
To help inform federal policy on longterm care financing and service
delivery, this study, sponsored by HHS/
ASPE, will collect new data on longterm care awareness and how people
plan for retirement through a web-based
survey. The main goals of the survey are
(1) to understand consumer attitudes,
knowledge, and experiences with longterm care, how people plan for the risk
of needing long-term care, and people’s
preferences among public policies on
long-term care financing; and (2) to
examine consumer preferences for
specific features of individual long-term
care insurance policies (e.g., benefit
levels, length of coverage, and
sponsorship). The findings from the
survey will be used to inform federal
policy regarding public and private
long-term care financing. The first part
of the survey addresses the first set of
goals, while a stated preference survey
method, known as a discrete choice
experiment (DCE) or conjoint analysis,
in the second part of the survey
addresses the second set of goals. RTI
has designed and cognitively tested the
survey instrument and will conduct the
analysis; GfK will administer the
survey.
The survey instrument was developed
by RTI in close cooperation with ASPE
and in consultation with a TEP and
other experts on long-term care and
long-term care insurance, and
underwent two distinct rounds of
cognitive testing of nine participants
each. The survey has two components.
The first asks questions on (1) the risk
of needing long-term care; (2)
psychological characteristics,
knowledge, skills, and experience; (3)
beliefs and concerns about long-term
care; (4) retirement and long-term care
planning; (5) information gathering and
decision making about insurance; and
(6) core demographic and
socioeconomic information. The second
component of the survey is a DCE,
which seeks to understand respondents’
preferences about specific long-term
care insurance features. In the DCE,
respondents will complete a series of
comparison questions in which they
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select their most preferred choice
between two alternative insurance
products. Some scenarios will also offer
respondents a third option to not buy
either of the insurance policies; other
scenarios will ‘‘require’’ respondents to
choose between two policies. Both types
of hypothetical comparisons provide
quantitative data on the relative
preferences and importance of different
insurance features, including price.
Potentially sensitive questions
concerning disability status, medical
conditions, and income and assets have
been extensively vetted with ASPE, the
TEP, other experts, and the participants
in the cognitive testing.
Need and Proposed Use of the
Information: Several issues make this
data collection effort necessary. In 2011,
the United States spent $211 billion on
long-term care, approximately 8 percent
of total national health expenditures, of
which two-thirds was public spending,
primarily Medicaid (Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services [CMS],
2012; O’Shaughnessy, 2013). Total longterm care spending is about 1.4 percent
of the gross domestic product; public
spending is about 1 percent of the gross
domestic product (Author’s calculation
based on CMS, 2012). The number of
aging and disabled individuals in the
population is expected to continue to
grow and, with it, the need for
additional public financing. The
Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development (2006) estimates that
public long-term care expenditures for
older people in the United States will
double to triple as a percentage of the
gross domestic product between 2005
and 2050. As a result, the government
has an increased need for information
on the general public’s knowledge about
long-term care and how people plan to
organize and pay for their possible longterm care needs. HHS/ASPE is
particularly interested in the views of
the public on different potential public
policies on long-term care financing and
in what design features of long-term
care insurance are most important.
Once the data are received, RTI will
analyze them. The first set of analyses
will address domains in the first part of
the survey and will include descriptive
and multivariate analyses of the extent
to which respondents plan for long-term
care and their preferences among public
policies for long-term care financing. In
addition to sociodemographic variables
such as financial literacy, the extent to
which respondents are ‘‘planners’’ or
‘‘nonplanners,’’ the experience of
respondents with long-term care, and
risk tolerance will be important
indicator variables. Descriptive analyses
will be conducted to describe the
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 233 (Wednesday, December 4, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 72890-72891]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-29013]
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FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
Notice of Agreements Filed
The Commission hereby gives notice of the filing of the following
agreements under the Shipping Act of 1984. Interested parties may
submit comments on the agreements to the Secretary, Federal Maritime
Commission, Washington, DC 20573, within ten days of the date this
notice appears in the Federal Register. Copies of the agreements are
available through the Commission's Web site (www.fmc.gov) or by
contacting the Office of Agreements at (202) 523-5793 or
tradeanalysis@fmc.gov.
Agreement No.: 011931-005.
Title: CMA CGM/Marfret Vessel Sharing Agreement.
Parties: CMA CGM S.A., CMA CGM (UK) Limited, and Compagnie Maritime
Marfret S.A.
Filing Party: Draughn B. Arbona, Esq.; Senior Counsel; CMA CGM
(America), LLC. 5701 Lake Wright Drive, Norfolk, VA 23502-1868
Synopsis: The amendment would decrease the frequency of the service
to fortnightly. The Parties request Expedited Review.
Agreement No.: 011961-014.
Title: The Maritime Credit Agreement.
Parties Alianca Navegacao e Logistica Ltda. & Cia.; A.P. Moller-
Maersk A/S trading under the name of Maersk Line; China Shipping
Container Lines Co., Ltd.; CMA CGM S.A.; Companhia Libra de Navegacao;
Compania Libra de Navegacion Uruguay S.A.; Compania Sud Americana de
Vapores, S.A.; COSCO Container Lines Company Limited; Dole Ocean Cargo
Express; Hamburg-S[uuml]d; Hanjin Shipping Co., Ltd.; Hyundai Merchant
Marine Co., Ltd.; Independent Container Line Ltd.; Kawasaki Kisen
Kaisha, Ltd.; Nippon Yusen Kaisha; Norasia Container Lines Limited;
United Arab Shipping Company (S.A.G.); Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics
AS; Zim Integrated Shipping Services, Ltd.
Filing Party: Wayne R. Rohde, Esq.; Cozen O'Connor; 1627 I Street
NW., Suite 1100; Washington, DC 20006.
Synopsis: The amendment removes Yang Ming Transport Corp. as party
to the Agreement.
Agreement No.: 012084-003.
Title: HLAG/Maersk Line Gulf-South America Slot Charter Agreement.
Parties: A.P. Moller-Maersk A/S and Hapag-Lloyd AG.
Filing Party: Joshua P. Stein; Cozen O[acute]Connor; 1627 I Street
NW., Suite 1100; Washington, DC 20006-4007.
Synopsis: The amendment would increase the slot allocation to
Maersk on Hapah-Lloyd's service operated under the agreement.
Agreement No.: 012198-001.
Title: CSCL/UASC Vessel Sharing and Slot Exchange Agreement.
Parties: China Shipping Container Lines Co., Ltd. and China
Shipping Container Lines (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd. (acting as a single
party); and United Arab Shipping Company.
Filing Party: Patricia M. O'Neill; Blank & Rome LLP; 600 New
Hampshire Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20037.
Synopsis: The Amendment eliminates the AAS2/AWS1 Service from the
Agreement, and eliminates the AWS1/AAC slot swap.
Agreement No.: 012233.
Title: CSCL/UASC/YMUK Vessel Sharing and Slot Exchange Agreement--
Asia and U.S. West Coast Services.
Parties: China Shipping Container Lines Co., Ltd. and China
Shipping Container Lines (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd. (acting as a single
party); United Arab Shipping Company (S.A.G.); and Yang Ming (UK) LTD.
[[Page 72891]]
Filing Party: Patricia M. O'Neill; Blank & Rome LLP; 600 New
Hampshire Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20037.
Synopsis: The Agreement would authorize the Parties to share space
on a service operating between the U.S. West Coast on the one hand, and
ports in Asia on the other hand.
By Order of the Federal Maritime Commission.
Dated: November 29, 2013.
Karen V. Gregory,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013-29013 Filed 12-3-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6730-01-P