Agency Information Collection Activities: Request for Comments for Periodic Information Collection, 23637-23639 [2015-09852]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 81 / Tuesday, April 28, 2015 / Notices
Issued On: April 23, 2015.
Michael Howell,
Information Collection Officer.
[FR Doc. 2015–09854 Filed 4–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
[Docket No. FHWA–2015–0007]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Request for Comments for
Periodic Information Collection
The FHWA has forwarded the
information collection request described
in this notice to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
approval of a new information
collection. We published a Federal
Register Notice with a 60-day public
comment period on this information
collection on February 19, 2015. We are
required to publish this notice in the
Federal Register by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Please submit comments by May
28, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments
within 30 days to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, 725
17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503,
Attention DOT Desk Officer. You are
asked to comment on any aspect of this
information collection, including: (1)
Whether the proposed collection is
necessary for the FHWA’s performance;
(2) the accuracy of the estimated
burden; (3) ways for the FHWA to
enhance the quality, usefulness, and
clarity of the collected information; and
(4) ways that the burden could be
minimized, including the use of
electronic technology, without reducing
the quality of the collected information.
All comments should include the
Docket number FHWA–2015–0007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Adella Santos, 202–366–5021, NHTS
Program Manager, Federal Highway
Administration, Office of Policy, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Room E83–426,
Washington, DC 20590, Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: 2015 National Household Travel
Survey (NHTS).
Type of Request: New request for
periodic information collection
requirement.
Background: Title 23, United States
Code, section 502 authorizes the
USDOT to carry out advanced research
and transportation research to measure
the performance of the surface
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:18 Apr 27, 2015
Jkt 235001
transportation systems in the US,
including the efficiency, energy use, air
quality, congestion, and safety of the
highway and intermodal transportation
systems. The USDOT is charged with
the overall responsibility to obtain
current information on national patterns
of travel, which establishes a data base
to better understand travel behavior,
evaluate the use of transportation
facilities, and gauge the impact of the
USDOT’s policies and programs.
The NHTS is the USDOT’s
authoritative nationally representative
data source for daily passenger travel.
This inventory of travel behavior
reflects travel mode (e.g., private
vehicles, public transportation, walk
and bike) and trip purpose (e.g., travel
to work, school, recreation, personal/
family trips) by U.S. household
residents. Survey results are used by
federal and state agencies to monitor the
performance and adequacy of current
facilities and infrastructure, and to plan
for future needs.
The collection and analysis of
national transportation data has been of
critical importance for nearly half a
century. Previous surveys were
conducted in 1969, 1977, 1983, 1990,
1995, 2001, and 2009. The current
survey will be the eighth in this series,
and allow researchers, planners, and
officials at the state and federal levels to
monitor travel trends.
Data from the NHTS are widely used
to support research needs within the
USDOT, and State and local agencies, in
addition to responding to queries from
Congress, the research community and
the media on important issues. Current
and recent topics of interest include:
• Travel to work patterns by
transportation mode for infrastructure
improvements and congestion
reduction,
• Access to public transit, paratransit,
and rail services by various
demographic groups,
• Measures of travel by mode to
establish exposure rates for risk
analyses,
• Support for Federal, State, and local
planning activities and policy
evaluation,
• Active transportation by walk and
bike to establish the relationship to
public health issues,
• Vehicle usage for energy
consumption analysis,
• Traffic behavior of specific
demographic group such as Millennials
and the aging population.
Within the USDOT, the Federal
Highway Administration (FHWA) holds
responsibility for technical and funding
coordination. The National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
PO 00000
Frm 00142
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23637
Federal Transit Administration (FTA),
and the Bureau of Transportation
Statistics (BTS) are also primary data
users, and have historically participated
in project planning and financial
support.
Proposed Data Acquisition
Methodology
NHTS data are collected from a
stratified random sample of households
that represent a broad range of
geographic and demographic
characteristics. Letters and a brief
household survey are sent to selected
households requesting some basic
demographic and contact information
and inviting them to participate in the
survey. The recruitment surveys are
returned in business reply envelopes to
the survey contractor.
Participating households are
subsequently sent a package containing
travel logs for each member of the
household age 5 and older. The
household is assigned to record their
travel on a specific day, and asked to
note every trip taken during a 24 hour
period. Based upon their preferences,
the travel information is then reported
either through the use of a survey Web
site, or through a telephone interview.
Reminders are sent periodically to
households who do not respond within
the expected timeframe. Monetary
incentives are included in each
recruitment package, and are provided
in increasing amounts for all
households that complete the survey.
The survey will collect data during an
entire 12 month period so that all 365
days of the year including weekends
and holidays are accounted for. A total
of 26,000 households will comprise the
national sample for the 2015 survey. As
described below, changes in the
establishment of the sampling frame, the
promotion of participation, and in data
retrieval techniques are planned, as
compared to previous surveys, to
improve statistical precision, enhance
response rates, and increase survey
efficiency.
Issues Related to Sampling. In
previous years, the household sample
was identified using random digit
dialing techniques. Today, only 59
percent 1 have a landline telephone in
the home (down from 75% during the
2009 NHTS) while over 80 percent of
U.S. households have access to the
1 Blumberg, S.J., and Luke, J.V. (2014). Wireless
substitution: Early release of estimates from the
National Health Interview Survey, July–December
2013. National Center for Health Statistics.
Available from https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis.htm.
E:\FR\FM\28APN1.SGM
28APN1
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
23638
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 81 / Tuesday, April 28, 2015 / Notices
Internet.2 This survey will leverage this
shift in technology, in particular the
move away from home telephone usage,
to structure a research design that uses
web, mail, and telephone data collection
modes.
The revised methodological approach
starts with a national address-based
sample (ABS), a change from the
telephone-based random digit dialing
(RDD) sample design used in recent
NHTS efforts, while also incorporating
core data elements that have been part
of the NHTS since 1969.
The survey sample will be drawn
from the ABS frame maintained by
Marketing Systems Group (MSG). It
originates from the U.S. Postal Service
(USPS) Computerized Delivery
Sequence file (CDS), and is updated on
a monthly basis. MSG also provides the
ability to match some auxiliary variables
(e.g., race/ethnicity, education,
household income) to a set of sampled
addresses. MSG geocodes their entire
ABS frame, so block-, block group-, and
tract-level characteristics from the
Decennial Census and the American
Community Survey (ACS) may be
appended to addresses and used for
sampling and/or data collection
purposes.
Sample Size. A sample size of 26,000
households will be included in the
national sample. Assuming response
rates of 30 percent for the recruitment
stage, 65 percent for the retrieval stage,
and a residency rate of 89 percent for
sampled addresses, a total of 149,813
sampled addresses will be required to
attain the targeted 26,000 responding
households.
Stratification. This survey produces
state-level estimates as well as national
estimates. Assuming equal costs and
population variances across states, the
most efficient design for national
estimates is one in which the sample is
allocated to the states in proportion to
the size of the civilian,
noninstitutionalized population in each
state, and the most efficient design for
state-level estimates is one in which
equal sample sizes are allocated to all
states. Various allocation options for the
national sample are being considered in
order to arrive at a final allocation for
the NHTS national sample.
With the ABS approach, identifying
targeted areas (e.g., states) that
correspond to those for which estimates
can be developed from the NHTS data
are straightforward. Addresses are
definitively linked to states, so statelevel estimation is routine. Geocoding
2 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population
Survey, Select Years, Internet Release date: January
2014.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:18 Apr 27, 2015
Jkt 235001
and GIS processing can be used to link
addresses to counties in a highly
reliable fashion. There can be some
ambiguity for addresses that are P.O.
boxes or are listed as rural route
addresses. These can be handled in a
routine manner with a set of welldefined rules as such addresses will
represent only a small proportion of a
state’s population. Thus, no important
issues arise in the definition of areas
with an ABS sample design that relies
on mail for data collection, as is the case
with the proposed approach.
Assignments for recording travel data
by sampled households will be equally
distributed across all days to ensure a
balanced day of week distribution. The
sample (of recruitment letters to
households) will be released
periodically through a process that will
control the balance of travel days by
month.
Data Collection Methods
An updated approach to enhancing
survey response has been developed.
This includes providing progressive
monetary incentives, and using a mailout/mail-back recruitment survey. This
recruitment survey is designed to be
relevant, aesthetically pleasing, and
elicit participation by including topics
of importance to the respondent. Upon
returning the completed recruitment
survey, each household member will be
provided with personalized travel logs
by mail, and offered the option of
completing the retrieval survey by web
using a unique personal identification
number (PIN) or telephone interview.
Information Proposed for Collection
Recruitment. The survey will begin
with mailing the sampled households a
short recruitment survey designed to
collect key household information (e.g.
enumeration of household members),
additional contact information (e.g.
email address and telephone number).
This recruitment survey includes some
engaging travel-related opinion or
experience questions considered to be
highly relevant to the survey and
interesting to respondents. The initial
survey will be accompanied by a letter
from the USDOT, and a Business Reply
Envelope.
In the first mail contact, each sampled
address will receive a $2 cash incentive.
The second mail contact will include
the travel log package sent to each
recruited household and a $5 cash
incentive and a promise of an additional
$20 for successfully submitting their
travel logs. The incentives paid will be
tracked at each of the three levels
offered.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
To support the mail recruitment
approach, the survey contractor will
provide a toll-free number on survey
materials and will assist the recruited
participant to provide the required
information by telephone if requested to
do so by the participant. A survey Web
site will be established for potential
respondents who want to check on the
authenticity of the survey or find out
more information. This Web site will
also serve as the portal to the survey.
All returned recruitment surveys will
be processed using commercial off-theshelf software (COTS) technology. All
data collected in the recruitment survey
will be used to populate the household
record in the survey database. As part of
the non-response protocol, nonresponding households may also be
provided the opportunity to recruit by
web. If respondents call the help desk
or use the web to complete, their
responses are collected in the same
survey database.
The mail back recruitment approach
described here has been tested and
found to be successful in several
surveys funded by the Federal
Government (e.g., the National Crime
Victimization Survey); these surveys
have proven this method can be
implemented with large sample sizes
covering vast geographic regions. This
approach has been developed in
response to declining recruitment rates
in recent studies.
Retrieval. The NHTS data will be
collected from respondents either from
self-reporting via the web, or from
professionally trained interviewers
using a computer-assisted telephone
interviewing (CATI) system. Either
approach will be based upon a single
database that allows for sophisticated
branching and skip patterns to enhance
data retrieval by asking only those
questions that are necessary and
appropriate for the individual
participant. Look-up tables are included
to assist with information such as
vehicle makes and models. The Google
map UI is used to assist in identifying
specific place names and locations. The
location data for the participant’s home,
workplace, or school are stored and
automatically inserted in the dataset for
trips after the first report. Household
rostering is a list of all vehicles and
persons in the household that allows a
trip to be reported from one household
member and can include another
household member who travel together
to be inserted into the record for the
second person. This automatic insert of
information reduces the burden of the
second respondent to be queried about
a trip already reported by the initial
respondent.
E:\FR\FM\28APN1.SGM
28APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 81 / Tuesday, April 28, 2015 / Notices
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Data range, consistency and edit
checks are automatically programmed to
reduce reporting error, survey length,
and maintain the flow of information
processing. Data cross checks also help
reduce the burden by ensuring that the
reporting is consistent within each trip.
Data retrieval is based upon materials
provided to participants as shown
below.
Travel Log Materials
Travel Log Packet. The travel log
packet will include a letter, an exemplar
log, and personalized travel logs for
each age eligible person in the
household, and will be sent using first
class postage in a 6″ x 9″ envelope. The
envelopes will be branded to match the
letterhead used for the invitation letter.
The second respondent incentive will
be included with the travel logs. This $5
cash incentive is expected to serve as a
‘‘good faith’’ incentive to encourage
completion of the retrieval survey.
Travel Log Letter. A household letter
will be included in the travel log packet.
The letter will further familiarize the
participants with the travel recording
stage, identify the households’ travel
date and provide details about when
and how to complete the retrieval
survey. The letter will also remind
participants about the final $20
household incentive. Like the invitation
letter, the travel log letter will be
branded.
Travel Logs. A personalized travel log
will be provided for each household
member (ages 5 and older). The logs are
intended to be a memory jogger to guide
accurate data collection and aid in the
reporting of each place visited on the
travel day.
Exemplar Log. Participants will be
provided with an exemplar log with the
instructions for recording the details
about the places visited on the travel
day.
All web and computer assisted
telephone interview (CATI) instruments
will be reviewed for section 508
compliance using the rules specified in
sections 1194.22—‘Web-based intranet
and internet information and
applications’ and 1194.23—
‘Telecommunications products.’ All
materials will be available in both
English and Spanish language forms.
Spanish translations will be developed
using industry standards and will apply
reverse-translation protocols.
Estimated Burden Hours for
Information Collection
Frequency: This collection will be
conducted every 5–7 years.
Respondents. A stratified random
sample of 26,000 households across the
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18:18 Apr 27, 2015
Jkt 235001
50 states and the District of Columbia
will be included in the survey.
Household will include an average of
2.5 members for a total of 65,000
individual respondents to the main
survey.
Estimated Average Burden per
Response. It will take approximately 5
minutes per household member to
complete the recruitment data form, and
20 minutes to complete the retrieval
survey. This results in a total of 25
minutes per household member.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours. It is estimated that a total of
65,000 persons will be included in the
survey. This would result in
approximately 27,083 hours of support
for this data collection effort.
Public Comments Invited
You are asked to comment on any
aspect of this information collection,
including: (1) Whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the USDOT’s performance, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; (2) the data acquisition
methods; (3) the accuracy of the
USDOT’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collection; (4) the
types of data being acquired; (5) ways to
enhance the quality, usefulness, and
clarity of the collected information; and
(6) ways that the burden could be
minimized without reducing the quality
of the collected information. The agency
will summarize and/or include your
comments in the request for OMB’s
clearance of this information collection.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995; 44 U.S.C. chapter 35, as amended;
and 49 CFR 1.48.
Issued on: April 23, 2015.
Michael Howell,
Information Collection Officer, Federal
Highway Administration.
[FR Doc. 2015–09852 Filed 4–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
Designation of One Individual and One
Entity Pursuant to Executive Order
13581, ‘‘Blocking Property of
Transnational Criminal Organizations’’
Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Treasury Department’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control
(‘‘OFAC’’) is publishing the names of
one individual and one entity whose
property and interests in property are
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00144
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23639
blocked pursuant to E.O. 13581 of July
24, 2011, ‘‘Blocking Property of
Transnational Criminal Organizations.’’
DATES: The designations by the Director
of OFAC, pursuant to E.O. 13581, of the
one individual and one entity identified
in this notice were effective on April 21,
2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Assistant Director, Sanctions
Compliance and Evaluation, Office of
Foreign Assets Control, Department of
the Treasury, Washington, DC 20220,
tel.: 202–622–2490.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document and additional
information concerning OFAC are
available from OFAC’s Web site
(www.treas.gov/ofac). Certain general
information pertaining to OFAC’s
sanctions programs is available via
facsimile through a 24-hour fax-ondemand service, tel.: 202–622–0077.
Background
On July 24, 2011, the President issued
E.O. 13581, ‘‘Blocking Property of
Transnational Criminal Organizations’’
(the ‘‘Order’’), pursuant to, inter alia,
the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701–06). The
Order was effective at 12:01 a.m. eastern
daylight time on July 25, 2011. In the
Order, the President declared a national
emergency to deal with the threat that
significant transnational criminal
organizations pose to the national
security, foreign policy, and economy of
the United States.
Section 1 of the Order blocks, with
certain exceptions, all property and
interests in property that are in the
United States, that come within the
United States, or that are or come within
the possession or control of any United
States person, of persons listed in the
Annex to the Order and of persons
determined by the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the
Attorney General and the Secretary of
State, to satisfy certain criteria set forth
in the Order.
On April 21, 2015, the Director of
OFAC, in consultation with the
Attorney General and the Secretary of
State, designated, pursuant to one or
more of the criteria set forth in
subparagraphs (a)(ii)(A) through
(a)(ii)(C) of section 1 of the Order, one
individual and one entity whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to the Order.
The listings for this individual and
this entity on OFAC’s List of Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked
Persons appear as follows:
E:\FR\FM\28APN1.SGM
28APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 81 (Tuesday, April 28, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23637-23639]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-09852]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
[Docket No. FHWA-2015-0007]
Agency Information Collection Activities: Request for Comments
for Periodic Information Collection
SUMMARY: The FHWA has forwarded the information collection request
described in this notice to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
for approval of a new information collection. We published a Federal
Register Notice with a 60-day public comment period on this information
collection on February 19, 2015. We are required to publish this notice
in the Federal Register by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Please submit comments by May 28, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments within 30 days to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget,
725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503, Attention DOT Desk Officer.
You are asked to comment on any aspect of this information collection,
including: (1) Whether the proposed collection is necessary for the
FHWA's performance; (2) the accuracy of the estimated burden; (3) ways
for the FHWA to enhance the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
collected information; and (4) ways that the burden could be minimized,
including the use of electronic technology, without reducing the
quality of the collected information. All comments should include the
Docket number FHWA-2015-0007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Adella Santos, 202-366-5021, NHTS
Program Manager, Federal Highway Administration, Office of Policy, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Room E83-426, Washington, DC 20590, Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: 2015 National Household Travel Survey (NHTS).
Type of Request: New request for periodic information collection
requirement.
Background: Title 23, United States Code, section 502 authorizes
the USDOT to carry out advanced research and transportation research to
measure the performance of the surface transportation systems in the
US, including the efficiency, energy use, air quality, congestion, and
safety of the highway and intermodal transportation systems. The USDOT
is charged with the overall responsibility to obtain current
information on national patterns of travel, which establishes a data
base to better understand travel behavior, evaluate the use of
transportation facilities, and gauge the impact of the USDOT's policies
and programs.
The NHTS is the USDOT's authoritative nationally representative
data source for daily passenger travel. This inventory of travel
behavior reflects travel mode (e.g., private vehicles, public
transportation, walk and bike) and trip purpose (e.g., travel to work,
school, recreation, personal/family trips) by U.S. household residents.
Survey results are used by federal and state agencies to monitor the
performance and adequacy of current facilities and infrastructure, and
to plan for future needs.
The collection and analysis of national transportation data has
been of critical importance for nearly half a century. Previous surveys
were conducted in 1969, 1977, 1983, 1990, 1995, 2001, and 2009. The
current survey will be the eighth in this series, and allow
researchers, planners, and officials at the state and federal levels to
monitor travel trends.
Data from the NHTS are widely used to support research needs within
the USDOT, and State and local agencies, in addition to responding to
queries from Congress, the research community and the media on
important issues. Current and recent topics of interest include:
Travel to work patterns by transportation mode for
infrastructure improvements and congestion reduction,
Access to public transit, paratransit, and rail services
by various demographic groups,
Measures of travel by mode to establish exposure rates for
risk analyses,
Support for Federal, State, and local planning activities
and policy evaluation,
Active transportation by walk and bike to establish the
relationship to public health issues,
Vehicle usage for energy consumption analysis,
Traffic behavior of specific demographic group such as
Millennials and the aging population.
Within the USDOT, the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) holds
responsibility for technical and funding coordination. The National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), Federal Transit
Administration (FTA), and the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS)
are also primary data users, and have historically participated in
project planning and financial support.
Proposed Data Acquisition Methodology
NHTS data are collected from a stratified random sample of
households that represent a broad range of geographic and demographic
characteristics. Letters and a brief household survey are sent to
selected households requesting some basic demographic and contact
information and inviting them to participate in the survey. The
recruitment surveys are returned in business reply envelopes to the
survey contractor.
Participating households are subsequently sent a package containing
travel logs for each member of the household age 5 and older. The
household is assigned to record their travel on a specific day, and
asked to note every trip taken during a 24 hour period. Based upon
their preferences, the travel information is then reported either
through the use of a survey Web site, or through a telephone interview.
Reminders are sent periodically to households who do not respond
within the expected timeframe. Monetary incentives are included in each
recruitment package, and are provided in increasing amounts for all
households that complete the survey.
The survey will collect data during an entire 12 month period so
that all 365 days of the year including weekends and holidays are
accounted for. A total of 26,000 households will comprise the national
sample for the 2015 survey. As described below, changes in the
establishment of the sampling frame, the promotion of participation,
and in data retrieval techniques are planned, as compared to previous
surveys, to improve statistical precision, enhance response rates, and
increase survey efficiency.
Issues Related to Sampling. In previous years, the household sample
was identified using random digit dialing techniques. Today, only 59
percent \1\ have a landline telephone in the home (down from 75% during
the 2009 NHTS) while over 80 percent of U.S. households have access to
the
[[Page 23638]]
Internet.\2\ This survey will leverage this shift in technology, in
particular the move away from home telephone usage, to structure a
research design that uses web, mail, and telephone data collection
modes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Blumberg, S.J., and Luke, J.V. (2014). Wireless
substitution: Early release of estimates from the National Health
Interview Survey, July-December 2013. National Center for Health
Statistics. Available from https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis.htm.
\2\ Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey,
Select Years, Internet Release date: January 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The revised methodological approach starts with a national address-
based sample (ABS), a change from the telephone-based random digit
dialing (RDD) sample design used in recent NHTS efforts, while also
incorporating core data elements that have been part of the NHTS since
1969.
The survey sample will be drawn from the ABS frame maintained by
Marketing Systems Group (MSG). It originates from the U.S. Postal
Service (USPS) Computerized Delivery Sequence file (CDS), and is
updated on a monthly basis. MSG also provides the ability to match some
auxiliary variables (e.g., race/ethnicity, education, household income)
to a set of sampled addresses. MSG geocodes their entire ABS frame, so
block-, block group-, and tract-level characteristics from the
Decennial Census and the American Community Survey (ACS) may be
appended to addresses and used for sampling and/or data collection
purposes.
Sample Size. A sample size of 26,000 households will be included in
the national sample. Assuming response rates of 30 percent for the
recruitment stage, 65 percent for the retrieval stage, and a residency
rate of 89 percent for sampled addresses, a total of 149,813 sampled
addresses will be required to attain the targeted 26,000 responding
households.
Stratification. This survey produces state-level estimates as well
as national estimates. Assuming equal costs and population variances
across states, the most efficient design for national estimates is one
in which the sample is allocated to the states in proportion to the
size of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population in each state,
and the most efficient design for state-level estimates is one in which
equal sample sizes are allocated to all states. Various allocation
options for the national sample are being considered in order to arrive
at a final allocation for the NHTS national sample.
With the ABS approach, identifying targeted areas (e.g., states)
that correspond to those for which estimates can be developed from the
NHTS data are straightforward. Addresses are definitively linked to
states, so state-level estimation is routine. Geocoding and GIS
processing can be used to link addresses to counties in a highly
reliable fashion. There can be some ambiguity for addresses that are
P.O. boxes or are listed as rural route addresses. These can be handled
in a routine manner with a set of well-defined rules as such addresses
will represent only a small proportion of a state's population. Thus,
no important issues arise in the definition of areas with an ABS sample
design that relies on mail for data collection, as is the case with the
proposed approach.
Assignments for recording travel data by sampled households will be
equally distributed across all days to ensure a balanced day of week
distribution. The sample (of recruitment letters to households) will be
released periodically through a process that will control the balance
of travel days by month.
Data Collection Methods
An updated approach to enhancing survey response has been
developed. This includes providing progressive monetary incentives, and
using a mail-out/mail-back recruitment survey. This recruitment survey
is designed to be relevant, aesthetically pleasing, and elicit
participation by including topics of importance to the respondent. Upon
returning the completed recruitment survey, each household member will
be provided with personalized travel logs by mail, and offered the
option of completing the retrieval survey by web using a unique
personal identification number (PIN) or telephone interview.
Information Proposed for Collection
Recruitment. The survey will begin with mailing the sampled
households a short recruitment survey designed to collect key household
information (e.g. enumeration of household members), additional contact
information (e.g. email address and telephone number). This recruitment
survey includes some engaging travel-related opinion or experience
questions considered to be highly relevant to the survey and
interesting to respondents. The initial survey will be accompanied by a
letter from the USDOT, and a Business Reply Envelope.
In the first mail contact, each sampled address will receive a $2
cash incentive. The second mail contact will include the travel log
package sent to each recruited household and a $5 cash incentive and a
promise of an additional $20 for successfully submitting their travel
logs. The incentives paid will be tracked at each of the three levels
offered.
To support the mail recruitment approach, the survey contractor
will provide a toll-free number on survey materials and will assist the
recruited participant to provide the required information by telephone
if requested to do so by the participant. A survey Web site will be
established for potential respondents who want to check on the
authenticity of the survey or find out more information. This Web site
will also serve as the portal to the survey.
All returned recruitment surveys will be processed using commercial
off-the-shelf software (COTS) technology. All data collected in the
recruitment survey will be used to populate the household record in the
survey database. As part of the non-response protocol, non-responding
households may also be provided the opportunity to recruit by web. If
respondents call the help desk or use the web to complete, their
responses are collected in the same survey database.
The mail back recruitment approach described here has been tested
and found to be successful in several surveys funded by the Federal
Government (e.g., the National Crime Victimization Survey); these
surveys have proven this method can be implemented with large sample
sizes covering vast geographic regions. This approach has been
developed in response to declining recruitment rates in recent studies.
Retrieval. The NHTS data will be collected from respondents either
from self-reporting via the web, or from professionally trained
interviewers using a computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI)
system. Either approach will be based upon a single database that
allows for sophisticated branching and skip patterns to enhance data
retrieval by asking only those questions that are necessary and
appropriate for the individual participant. Look-up tables are included
to assist with information such as vehicle makes and models. The Google
map UI is used to assist in identifying specific place names and
locations. The location data for the participant's home, workplace, or
school are stored and automatically inserted in the dataset for trips
after the first report. Household rostering is a list of all vehicles
and persons in the household that allows a trip to be reported from one
household member and can include another household member who travel
together to be inserted into the record for the second person. This
automatic insert of information reduces the burden of the second
respondent to be queried about a trip already reported by the initial
respondent.
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Data range, consistency and edit checks are automatically
programmed to reduce reporting error, survey length, and maintain the
flow of information processing. Data cross checks also help reduce the
burden by ensuring that the reporting is consistent within each trip.
Data retrieval is based upon materials provided to participants as
shown below.
Travel Log Materials
Travel Log Packet. The travel log packet will include a letter, an
exemplar log, and personalized travel logs for each age eligible person
in the household, and will be sent using first class postage in a 6'' x
9'' envelope. The envelopes will be branded to match the letterhead
used for the invitation letter. The second respondent incentive will be
included with the travel logs. This $5 cash incentive is expected to
serve as a ``good faith'' incentive to encourage completion of the
retrieval survey.
Travel Log Letter. A household letter will be included in the
travel log packet. The letter will further familiarize the participants
with the travel recording stage, identify the households' travel date
and provide details about when and how to complete the retrieval
survey. The letter will also remind participants about the final $20
household incentive. Like the invitation letter, the travel log letter
will be branded.
Travel Logs. A personalized travel log will be provided for each
household member (ages 5 and older). The logs are intended to be a
memory jogger to guide accurate data collection and aid in the
reporting of each place visited on the travel day.
Exemplar Log. Participants will be provided with an exemplar log
with the instructions for recording the details about the places
visited on the travel day.
All web and computer assisted telephone interview (CATI)
instruments will be reviewed for section 508 compliance using the rules
specified in sections 1194.22--`Web-based intranet and internet
information and applications' and 1194.23--`Telecommunications
products.' All materials will be available in both English and Spanish
language forms. Spanish translations will be developed using industry
standards and will apply reverse-translation protocols.
Estimated Burden Hours for Information Collection
Frequency: This collection will be conducted every 5-7 years.
Respondents. A stratified random sample of 26,000 households across
the 50 states and the District of Columbia will be included in the
survey. Household will include an average of 2.5 members for a total of
65,000 individual respondents to the main survey.
Estimated Average Burden per Response. It will take approximately 5
minutes per household member to complete the recruitment data form, and
20 minutes to complete the retrieval survey. This results in a total of
25 minutes per household member.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours. It is estimated that a total
of 65,000 persons will be included in the survey. This would result in
approximately 27,083 hours of support for this data collection effort.
Public Comments Invited
You are asked to comment on any aspect of this information
collection, including: (1) Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the USDOT's performance, including whether
the information will have practical utility; (2) the data acquisition
methods; (3) the accuracy of the USDOT's estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collection; (4) the types of data being acquired;
(5) ways to enhance the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
collected information; and (6) ways that the burden could be minimized
without reducing the quality of the collected information. The agency
will summarize and/or include your comments in the request for OMB's
clearance of this information collection.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995; 44 U.S.C.
chapter 35, as amended; and 49 CFR 1.48.
Issued on: April 23, 2015.
Michael Howell,
Information Collection Officer, Federal Highway Administration.
[FR Doc. 2015-09852 Filed 4-27-15; 8:45 am]
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