Federal Acquisition Regulation; Submission for OMB Review; Rights in Data and Copyrights, 3591-3593 [2014-01098]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 14 / Wednesday, January 22, 2014 / Notices
On behalf of the Commission.
Dated: January 15, 2014.
Lee E. Goodman,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
By order of the Federal Open Market
Committee. January 9, 2014.
William B. English,
Secretary, Federal Open Market Committee.
[FR Doc. 2014–00846 Filed 1–21–14; 8:45 am]
[FR Doc. 2014–01094 Filed 1–21–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Open Market Committee;
Domestic Policy Directive of December
17–18, 2013
In accordance with Section 271.25 of
its rules regarding availability of
information (12 CFR part 271), there is
set forth below the domestic policy
directive issued by the Federal Open
Market Committee at its meeting held
on December 17–18, 2013.1
Consistent with its statutory mandate,
the Federal Open Market Committee
seeks monetary and financial conditions
that will foster maximum employment
and price stability. In particular, the
Committee seeks conditions in reserve
markets consistent with federal funds
trading in a range from 0 to 1⁄4 percent.
The Committee directs the Desk to
undertake open market operations as
necessary to maintain such conditions.
Beginning in January, the Desk is
directed to purchase longer-term
Treasury securities at a pace of about
$40 billion per month and to purchase
agency mortgage-backed securities at a
pace of about $35 billion per month.
The Committee also directs the Desk to
engage in dollar roll and coupon swap
transactions as necessary to facilitate
settlement of the Federal Reserve’s
agency mortgage-backed securities
transactions. The Committee directs the
Desk to maintain its policy of rolling
over maturing Treasury securities into
new issues and its policy of reinvesting
principal payments on all agency debt
and agency mortgage-backed securities
in agency mortgage-backed securities.
The System Open Market Account
Manager and the Secretary will keep the
Committee informed of ongoing
developments regarding the System’s
balance sheet that could affect the
attainment over time of the Committee’s
objectives of maximum employment
and price stability.
1 Copies of the Minutes of the Federal Open
Market Committee at its meeting held on December
17–18, 2013, which includes the domestic policy
directive issued at the meeting, are available upon
request to the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551. The
minutes are published in the Federal Reserve
Bulletin and in the Board’s Annual Report.
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GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[OMB Control No. 9000–0090: Docket No.
2012–0076; Sequence No. 71]
Federal Acquisition Regulation;
Submission for OMB Review; Rights in
Data and Copyrights
Department of Defense (DOD),
General Services Administration (GSA),
and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Notice of request for public
comments regarding an extension to an
existing OMB clearance.
AGENCIES:
Under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act, the
Regulatory Secretariat will be
submitting to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) a request to review
and approve an extension of a
previously approved information
collection requirement concerning
rights in data and copyrights. A notice
was published in the Federal Register at
78 FR 45196 on July 26, 2013. No
comments were received.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
February 21, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments
identified by Information Collection
9000–0090, Rights in Data and
Copyrights, by any of the following
methods:
• Regulations.gov: https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit comments
via the Federal eRulemaking portal by
searching the OMB control number.
Select the link ‘‘Submit a Comment’’
that corresponds with ‘‘Information
Collection 9000–0090, Rights in Data
and Copyrights’’. Follow the
instructions provided at the ‘‘Submit a
Comment’’ screen. Please include your
name, company name (if any), and
‘‘Information Collection 9000–0090,
Rights in Data and Copyrights’’ on your
attached document.
• Fax: 202–501–4067.
• Mail: General Services
Administration, Regulatory Secretariat
(MVCB), 1800 F Street NW., 2nd Floor,
Washington, DC 20405–0001. ATTN:
SUMMARY:
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Hada Flowers/IC 9000–0090, Rights in
Data and Copyrights.
Instructions: Please submit comments
only and cite Information Collection
9000–0090, Rights in Data and
Copyrights, in all correspondence
related to this collection. All comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal and/or business
confidential information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Marissa Petrusek, Procurement Analyst,
at 202–501–0136. For information
pertaining to status or publication
schedules, contact the Regulatory
Secretariat at 202–501–4755.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Purpose
Subpart 27.4, Rights in Data and
Copyrights is a regulation which
concerns the rights of the Government
and contractors with whom the
Government contracts, regarding the
use, reproduction, and disclosure of
information developed under such
contracts. The delineation of such rights
is necessary in order to protect the
contractor’s rights to not disclose
proprietary data and to ensure that data
developed with public funds is
available to the public. The specific
clauses associated with this information
collection are as follows:
(1) FAR 52.227–15, Representation of
Limited Rights Data and Restricted
Computer Software. This clauses is
included in solicitations if the
contracting officer requires an offeror to
state whether limited rights data or
restricted computer software are likely
to be used in meeting the requirements.
FAR 52.227–15 requires the contractor
to identify whether data proposed for
fulfilling the requirements is limited to
data rights or restricted software. If the
government does not receive unlimited
rights, the contractor must provide a list
of the data not covered. This
information is submitted with a
contractor’s proposal to the
Government. The Government uses the
information to identify when there are
only limited data rights or restricted
software rights.
(2) FAR 52.227–16, Additional Data
Requirements. This clause is included
in all contracts for experimental,
developmental, research, or
demonstration work (other than basic or
applied research to be performed solely
by a university or college where the
contract amount will be $500,000 or
less). The clause requires that the
contractor keep all data first produced
in the performance of the contract for a
period of three years from the final
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acceptance of all items delivered under
the contract.
FAR 52.227–16 allows the
Government to require delivery of data
not initially asked for at anytime during
the contract and up to three years after
completion. All data covered by this
clause is paid for by the Government.
FAR 52.227–16 also requires a recordkeeping burden from the contractor to
maintain data first produced or
specifically used in performance of the
contract within three years after
acceptance of all items delivered under
the contract. Much of this data will be
in the form of the deliverables provided
to the Government under the contract
(final report, drawings, specifications,
etc.). Some data, however, will be in the
form of computations, preliminary data,
records of experiments, etc., and these
will be the data that will be required to
be kept over and above the deliverables.
The purpose of such recordkeeping
requirements is to ensure that the
Government can fully evaluate the
research in order to ascertain future
activities and to ensure that the research
was completed and fully reported, as
well as to give the public an opportunity
to assess the research results and secure
any additional information.
When FAR 52.227–16 was first
proposed, comments were received from
educational institutions, which stated
that requiring their investigators to keep
records of unlimited rights data for three
years after acceptance of deliverables
was unreasonable because investigators
do not segregate their research by
contract, but rather combine it with
other data to continue their research. In
light of this, a $500,000 threshold was
adopted after surveying the major
civilian R&D agencies, whose data
suggested that the average value of an
R&D contract ranged between $250,000
to $300,000; commensurate with other
clause thresholds (e.g., small business
subcontracting). Thus, for most R&D
contracts with universities, no
recordkeeping is required.
(3) FAR 52.227–17, Rights in DataSpecial Works. This clause is included
in solicitations and contracts primarily
for production or compilation of data.
FAR 52.227–17 is used in rare and
exceptional circumstances to permit the
Government to limit the Contractor’s
rights in data by preventing the release,
distribution and publication of any data
first produced in the performance of the
contract. This clause may also be
limited to particular items and not the
entire contract.
(4) FAR 52.227–18, Rights in DataExisting Works. This clause is included
in contracts for audiovisual or similar
works. FAR 52.227–18 is used when the
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Government is acquiring existing
audiovisual or similar works, such as
books, without modification. This
clause requires contractors to grant
license for the Government to
reproduce, prepare derivative works,
and perform or display the materials
publically.
(5) FAR 52.227–19, Commercial
Computer Software License. This clause
is used in contracts and purchase orders
for the acquisition of commercial
software. FAR 52.227–19 requires the
Government to set forth the minimum
data rights it requires above and beyond
what is set forth in the contractor’s
standard commercial license. The
contractor is responsible for affixing a
notice on any commercial software
delivered under the contract that
provides notice that the Government’s
rights regarding the data are set forth in
the contract.
(6) FAR 52.227–20, Rights in Data—
SBIR Program. This clause is only
required for small business innovation
research (SBIR) contracts and it limits
the Government’s rights to disclose data
first produced under the contract.
(7) FAR 52.227–21, Technical Data
Declaration, Revisions and Withholding
of Payment—Major Systems. This clause
requires the contractor to certify that the
data delivered under the contract is
complete, accurate and compliant with
the requirements of the contract.
(8) FAR 52.227–22 Major Systems–
Minimum Rights. This clause is used in
Civilian Agency Contracts, except for
NASA and Coast Guard, providing the
Government unlimited rights in any
technical data, other than computer
software, developed in the performance
of the contract and related to a major
system or supplies for a major system.
As this provision is for major systems
only, and few civilian agencies have
such major systems, only about 30
contracts will require this certification.
(9) FAR 52.227–23, Rights to Proposal
Data (technical). This clause allows the
Government to identify pages of a
proposal that, as a condition of contact
award, would be subject to unlimited
rights in the technical data.
(10) FAR 52.227–14, Rights in Data—
General. Paragraph (d) outlines a
procedure whereby a contracting officer
can challenge restrictive markings on
data delivered. Under civilian agency
contracts, limited rights data or
restricted computer software is rarely, if
ever, delivered to the Government.
Therefore, there will rarely be any
challenges. Thus, there is no burden on
the public and no information collection
associated with this clause.
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B. Annual Reporting Burden
A reassessment of the rights in data
and copyright provisions was
performed. Based on the comprehensive
reassessment performed, this
information collection requirement
represents a decrease from what was
published in the Federal Register at 75
FR 27782 on May 18, 2010. The
decrease is most likely a result of
increased use of Governmentwide
contracts including the GSA Federal
Supply Schedule contracts, an increased
use of commercial products since the
inception of the clauses, and budget
constraints over the last several years
that have reduced research and
development budgets and the ability to
purchase costly data rights.
There is no centralized database in
the Federal Government that maintains
information regarding the use of rights
in data and copyright clauses. Subject
matter experts in the intellectual
property law field were consulted to
obtain additional information that
helped in estimating the revised public
burden. FedBizOpps was searched to
determine the use of these clauses in
competitive contract solicitations
throughout the Government. The
Federal Procurement Data System
(FPDS) was used to determine the likely
contracts that would contain rights in
data and copyright provisions. An
assumption was made that sole source
contracts citing the existence of limited
rights in data, patent rights, copyrights
or secret processes would contain the
rights in data and copyright clauses, and
were used as the basis for this
information collection. Consequently,
the FPDS data formed the basis for the
estimated number of respondents per
year based on the likely contracts
awarded that would include the
applicable clauses associated with this
collection (52.227–15 through 52.227–
23). The estimated number of contracts
was then totaled to determine the
overall number of respondents
associated with this collection.
Estimates were based on the total
number of unique contractors awarded
a sole source contract based on the
existence of limited rights in data,
patent rights, copyrights or secret
processes. Similarly, FPDS data was
used to estimate the number of
responses per respondent for this
collection. The estimate was based on
the average number of actions per
contractor and rounded to the nearest
whole number. The estimates were then
averaged to determine the overall
number of responses per respondent
associated with this collection. One
burden hour was estimated per response
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 14 / Wednesday, January 22, 2014 / Notices
to read and prepare the information. No
public comments were received in prior
years that have challenged the validity
of the Government’s estimate.
Respondents: 419.
Responses per Respondent: 2.76.
Annual Responses: 1,156.
Hours per Response: 1.
Total Burden Hours: 1,156.
B. Annual Recordkeeping Burden
The annual recordkeeping burden is
estimated as follows:
Recordkeepers: 446.
Responses: 5.
Annual Response: 2,230.
Hours per Recordkeeper: 2.
Total Recordkeeping Burden Hours:
4,460.
Obtaining Copies of Proposals:
Requesters may obtain a copy of the
information collection documents from
the General Services Administration,
Regulatory Secretariat (MVCB), 9000–
0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights,
telephone 202–501–4755. Please cite
OMB Control No. 9000–0090, Rights in
Data and Copyrights, in all
correspondence.
Dated: January 15, 2014.
Karlos Morgan,
Acting Director, Federal Acquisition Policy
Division, Office of Government-wide
Acquisition Policy, Office of Acquisition
Policy, Office of Government-wide Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014–01098 Filed 1–21–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–EP–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
Annual Update of the HHS Poverty
Guidelines
Department of Health and
Human Services.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice provides an
update of the Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) poverty
guidelines to account for last calendar
year’s increase in prices as measured by
the Consumer Price Index.
DATES: Effective Date: Date of
publication, unless an office
administering a program using the
guidelines specifies a different effective
date for that particular program.
ADDRESSES: Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Planning and Evaluation,
Room 404E, Humphrey Building,
Department of Health and Human
Services, Washington, DC 20201.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information about how the guidelines
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SUMMARY:
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16:00 Jan 21, 2014
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are used or how income is defined in a
particular program, contact the Federal,
state, or local office that is responsible
for that program. For information about
poverty figures for immigration forms,
the Hill-Burton Uncompensated
Services Program, and the number of
people in poverty, use the specific
telephone numbers and addresses given
below.
For general questions about the
poverty guidelines themselves, contact
Kendall Swenson, Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation, Room 404E, Humphrey
Building, Department of Health and
Human Services, Washington, DC
20201—telephone: (202) 690–7507—or
visit https://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/.
For information about the percentage
multiple of the poverty guidelines to be
used on immigration forms such as
USCIS Form I–864, Affidavit of Support,
contact U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services at 1–800–375–
5283.
For information about the Hill-Burton
Uncompensated Services Program (free
or reduced-fee health care services at
certain hospitals and other facilities for
persons meeting eligibility criteria
involving the poverty guidelines),
contact the Office of the Director,
Division of Health Facilities, Health
Resources and Services Administration,
HHS, Room 10–105, Parklawn Building,
5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Maryland
20857. To speak to a staff member,
please call (301) 443–5656. To receive a
Hill-Burton information package, call 1–
800–638–0742 (for callers outside
Maryland) or 1–800–492–0359 (for
callers in Maryland). You also may visit
https://www.hrsa.gov/gethealthcare/
affordable/hillburton/.
For information about the number of
people in poverty, visit the Poverty
section of the Census Bureau’s Web site
at https://www.census.gov/hhes/www/
poverty/poverty.html or contact the
Census Bureau’s Customer Service
Center at 1–800–923–8282 (toll-free) or
visit https://ask.census.gov for further
information.
number of other Federal programs. The
poverty guidelines issued here are a
simplified version of the poverty
thresholds that the Census Bureau uses
to prepare its estimates of the number of
individuals and families in poverty.
As required by law, this update is
accomplished by increasing the latest
published Census Bureau poverty
thresholds by the relevant percentage
change in the Consumer Price Index for
All Urban Consumers (CPI–U). The
guidelines in this 2014 notice reflect the
1.5 percent price increase between
calendar years 2012 and 2013. After this
inflation adjustment, the guidelines are
rounded and adjusted to standardize the
differences between family sizes. The
same calculation procedure was used
this year as in previous years. (Note that
these 2014 guidelines are roughly equal
to the poverty thresholds for calendar
year 2013 which the Census Bureau
expects to publish in final form in
September 2014.)
The poverty guidelines continue to be
derived from the Census Bureau’s
current official poverty thresholds; they
are not derived from the Census
Bureau’s new Supplemental Poverty
Measure (SPM).
The following guideline figures
represent annual income.
2014 POVERTY GUIDELINES FOR THE
48 CONTIGUOUS STATES AND THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Persons in family/household
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act (OBRA) of 1981 (42
U.S.C. 9902(2)) requires the Secretary of
the Department of Health and Human
Services to update the poverty
guidelines at least annually, adjusting
them on the basis of the Consumer Price
Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI–U).
The poverty guidelines are used as an
eligibility criterion by the Community
Services Block Grant program and a
Fmt 4703
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$11,670
15,730
19,790
23,850
27,910
31,970
36,030
40,090
2014 POVERTY GUIDELINES FOR
ALASKA
Background
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Poverty
guideline
For families/households with more
than 8 persons, add $4,060 for each
additional person.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
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Persons in family/household
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
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22JAN1
Poverty
guideline
$14,580
19,660
24,740
29,820
34,900
39,980
45,060
50,140
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 14 (Wednesday, January 22, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3591-3593]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-01098]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[OMB Control No. 9000-0090: Docket No. 2012-0076; Sequence No. 71]
Federal Acquisition Regulation; Submission for OMB Review; Rights
in Data and Copyrights
AGENCIES: Department of Defense (DOD), General Services Administration
(GSA), and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Notice of request for public comments regarding an extension to
an existing OMB clearance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Under the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, the
Regulatory Secretariat will be submitting to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) a request to review and approve an extension of a
previously approved information collection requirement concerning
rights in data and copyrights. A notice was published in the Federal
Register at 78 FR 45196 on July 26, 2013. No comments were received.
DATES: Submit comments on or before February 21, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments identified by Information Collection 9000-
0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights, by any of the following methods:
Regulations.gov: https://www.regulations.gov. Submit
comments via the Federal eRulemaking portal by searching the OMB
control number. Select the link ``Submit a Comment'' that corresponds
with ``Information Collection 9000-0090, Rights in Data and
Copyrights''. Follow the instructions provided at the ``Submit a
Comment'' screen. Please include your name, company name (if any), and
``Information Collection 9000-0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights'' on
your attached document.
Fax: 202-501-4067.
Mail: General Services Administration, Regulatory
Secretariat (MVCB), 1800 F Street NW., 2nd Floor, Washington, DC 20405-
0001. ATTN: Hada Flowers/IC 9000-0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights.
Instructions: Please submit comments only and cite Information
Collection 9000-0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights, in all
correspondence related to this collection. All comments received will
be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any
personal and/or business confidential information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Marissa Petrusek, Procurement
Analyst, at 202-501-0136. For information pertaining to status or
publication schedules, contact the Regulatory Secretariat at 202-501-
4755.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Purpose
Subpart 27.4, Rights in Data and Copyrights is a regulation which
concerns the rights of the Government and contractors with whom the
Government contracts, regarding the use, reproduction, and disclosure
of information developed under such contracts. The delineation of such
rights is necessary in order to protect the contractor's rights to not
disclose proprietary data and to ensure that data developed with public
funds is available to the public. The specific clauses associated with
this information collection are as follows:
(1) FAR 52.227-15, Representation of Limited Rights Data and
Restricted Computer Software. This clauses is included in solicitations
if the contracting officer requires an offeror to state whether limited
rights data or restricted computer software are likely to be used in
meeting the requirements. FAR 52.227-15 requires the contractor to
identify whether data proposed for fulfilling the requirements is
limited to data rights or restricted software. If the government does
not receive unlimited rights, the contractor must provide a list of the
data not covered. This information is submitted with a contractor's
proposal to the Government. The Government uses the information to
identify when there are only limited data rights or restricted software
rights.
(2) FAR 52.227-16, Additional Data Requirements. This clause is
included in all contracts for experimental, developmental, research, or
demonstration work (other than basic or applied research to be
performed solely by a university or college where the contract amount
will be $500,000 or less). The clause requires that the contractor keep
all data first produced in the performance of the contract for a period
of three years from the final
[[Page 3592]]
acceptance of all items delivered under the contract.
FAR 52.227-16 allows the Government to require delivery of data not
initially asked for at anytime during the contract and up to three
years after completion. All data covered by this clause is paid for by
the Government. FAR 52.227-16 also requires a record-keeping burden
from the contractor to maintain data first produced or specifically
used in performance of the contract within three years after acceptance
of all items delivered under the contract. Much of this data will be in
the form of the deliverables provided to the Government under the
contract (final report, drawings, specifications, etc.). Some data,
however, will be in the form of computations, preliminary data, records
of experiments, etc., and these will be the data that will be required
to be kept over and above the deliverables. The purpose of such
recordkeeping requirements is to ensure that the Government can fully
evaluate the research in order to ascertain future activities and to
ensure that the research was completed and fully reported, as well as
to give the public an opportunity to assess the research results and
secure any additional information.
When FAR 52.227-16 was first proposed, comments were received from
educational institutions, which stated that requiring their
investigators to keep records of unlimited rights data for three years
after acceptance of deliverables was unreasonable because investigators
do not segregate their research by contract, but rather combine it with
other data to continue their research. In light of this, a $500,000
threshold was adopted after surveying the major civilian R&D agencies,
whose data suggested that the average value of an R&D contract ranged
between $250,000 to $300,000; commensurate with other clause thresholds
(e.g., small business subcontracting). Thus, for most R&D contracts
with universities, no recordkeeping is required.
(3) FAR 52.227-17, Rights in Data-Special Works. This clause is
included in solicitations and contracts primarily for production or
compilation of data. FAR 52.227-17 is used in rare and exceptional
circumstances to permit the Government to limit the Contractor's rights
in data by preventing the release, distribution and publication of any
data first produced in the performance of the contract. This clause may
also be limited to particular items and not the entire contract.
(4) FAR 52.227-18, Rights in Data-Existing Works. This clause is
included in contracts for audiovisual or similar works. FAR 52.227-18
is used when the Government is acquiring existing audiovisual or
similar works, such as books, without modification. This clause
requires contractors to grant license for the Government to reproduce,
prepare derivative works, and perform or display the materials
publically.
(5) FAR 52.227-19, Commercial Computer Software License. This
clause is used in contracts and purchase orders for the acquisition of
commercial software. FAR 52.227-19 requires the Government to set forth
the minimum data rights it requires above and beyond what is set forth
in the contractor's standard commercial license. The contractor is
responsible for affixing a notice on any commercial software delivered
under the contract that provides notice that the Government's rights
regarding the data are set forth in the contract.
(6) FAR 52.227-20, Rights in Data--SBIR Program. This clause is
only required for small business innovation research (SBIR) contracts
and it limits the Government's rights to disclose data first produced
under the contract.
(7) FAR 52.227-21, Technical Data Declaration, Revisions and
Withholding of Payment--Major Systems. This clause requires the
contractor to certify that the data delivered under the contract is
complete, accurate and compliant with the requirements of the contract.
(8) FAR 52.227-22 Major Systems-Minimum Rights. This clause is used
in Civilian Agency Contracts, except for NASA and Coast Guard,
providing the Government unlimited rights in any technical data, other
than computer software, developed in the performance of the contract
and related to a major system or supplies for a major system. As this
provision is for major systems only, and few civilian agencies have
such major systems, only about 30 contracts will require this
certification.
(9) FAR 52.227-23, Rights to Proposal Data (technical). This clause
allows the Government to identify pages of a proposal that, as a
condition of contact award, would be subject to unlimited rights in the
technical data.
(10) FAR 52.227-14, Rights in Data--General. Paragraph (d) outlines
a procedure whereby a contracting officer can challenge restrictive
markings on data delivered. Under civilian agency contracts, limited
rights data or restricted computer software is rarely, if ever,
delivered to the Government. Therefore, there will rarely be any
challenges. Thus, there is no burden on the public and no information
collection associated with this clause.
B. Annual Reporting Burden
A reassessment of the rights in data and copyright provisions was
performed. Based on the comprehensive reassessment performed, this
information collection requirement represents a decrease from what was
published in the Federal Register at 75 FR 27782 on May 18, 2010. The
decrease is most likely a result of increased use of Governmentwide
contracts including the GSA Federal Supply Schedule contracts, an
increased use of commercial products since the inception of the
clauses, and budget constraints over the last several years that have
reduced research and development budgets and the ability to purchase
costly data rights.
There is no centralized database in the Federal Government that
maintains information regarding the use of rights in data and copyright
clauses. Subject matter experts in the intellectual property law field
were consulted to obtain additional information that helped in
estimating the revised public burden. FedBizOpps was searched to
determine the use of these clauses in competitive contract
solicitations throughout the Government. The Federal Procurement Data
System (FPDS) was used to determine the likely contracts that would
contain rights in data and copyright provisions. An assumption was made
that sole source contracts citing the existence of limited rights in
data, patent rights, copyrights or secret processes would contain the
rights in data and copyright clauses, and were used as the basis for
this information collection. Consequently, the FPDS data formed the
basis for the estimated number of respondents per year based on the
likely contracts awarded that would include the applicable clauses
associated with this collection (52.227-15 through 52.227-23). The
estimated number of contracts was then totaled to determine the overall
number of respondents associated with this collection. Estimates were
based on the total number of unique contractors awarded a sole source
contract based on the existence of limited rights in data, patent
rights, copyrights or secret processes. Similarly, FPDS data was used
to estimate the number of responses per respondent for this collection.
The estimate was based on the average number of actions per contractor
and rounded to the nearest whole number. The estimates were then
averaged to determine the overall number of responses per respondent
associated with this collection. One burden hour was estimated per
response
[[Page 3593]]
to read and prepare the information. No public comments were received
in prior years that have challenged the validity of the Government's
estimate.
Respondents: 419.
Responses per Respondent: 2.76.
Annual Responses: 1,156.
Hours per Response: 1.
Total Burden Hours: 1,156.
B. Annual Recordkeeping Burden
The annual recordkeeping burden is estimated as follows:
Recordkeepers: 446.
Responses: 5.
Annual Response: 2,230.
Hours per Recordkeeper: 2.
Total Recordkeeping Burden Hours: 4,460.
Obtaining Copies of Proposals: Requesters may obtain a copy of the
information collection documents from the General Services
Administration, Regulatory Secretariat (MVCB), 9000-0090, Rights in
Data and Copyrights, telephone 202-501-4755. Please cite OMB Control
No. 9000-0090, Rights in Data and Copyrights, in all correspondence.
Dated: January 15, 2014.
Karlos Morgan,
Acting Director, Federal Acquisition Policy Division, Office of
Government-wide Acquisition Policy, Office of Acquisition Policy,
Office of Government-wide Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014-01098 Filed 1-21-14; 8:45 am]
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