Update of Existing and Addition of New User Fees, 15002-15003 [2016-06241]
Download as PDF
15002
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Dated: March 2, 2016.
James B. Pruett,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Guam.
[FR Doc. 2016–06294 Filed 3–18–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
46 CFR Parts 502, 503, 515, 520, 530,
535, 540, 550, 555, and 560
[Docket No. 16–06]
RIN 3072–AC34
Update of Existing and Addition of
New User Fees
Federal Maritime Commission.
Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Federal Maritime
Commission (Commission) is
considering amending its current user
fees and invites public comment on
whether the Commission should amend
its user fees. Specifically, the
Commission is considering increasing
fees for: Filing complaints and certain
petitions; records searches, document
copying, and admissions to practice;
paper filing of ocean transportation
intermediary (OTI) applications; filing
applications for special permission; and
filing agreements.
The Commission is also considering
lowering fees for: Reviewing Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) requests;
revising clerical errors on service
contracts; revising clerical errors on
non-vessel-operating common carrier
(NVOCC) service agreements; and
Commission services to passenger vessel
operators (PVOs).
In addition, the Commission is
considering repealing four existing fees
for: Adding interested parties to a
specific docket mailing list; the
Regulated Persons Index database;
database reports on Effective Carrier
Agreements; and filing petitions for
rulemaking. The Commission is also
considering adding a new fee for
requests for expedited review of an
agreement filing.
DATES: Comments are due on or before:
April 18, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by the docket number in the
heading of this document, by any of the
following methods:
• Email: secretary@fmc.gov. Include
in the subject line: ‘‘Docket No. 16–06,
Comments on Update of User Fees.’’
Comments should be attached to the
email as a Microsoft Word or textsearchable PDF document. Comments
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:25 Mar 18, 2016
Jkt 238001
containing confidential information
should not be submitted by email.
• Mail: Karen V. Gregory, Secretary,
Federal Maritime Commission, 800
North Capitol Street NW., Washington,
DC 20573–0001. Phone: (202) 523–5725.
Email: secretary@fmc.gov.
• Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to: https://
www.fmc.gov/16-06, select Docket No.
16–06 from the drop-down list next to
‘‘Proceeding or Inquiry Number’’ and
click the ‘‘Search’’ option.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen V. Gregory, Secretary, Federal
Maritime Commission, 800 North
Capitol Street NW., Washington, DC
20573–0001. Phone: (202) 523–5725.
Email: secretary@fmc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission’s current user fees are
based on an assessment of fiscal year
2004 costs and have not been updated
since 2005.1 Consequently, many of the
current user fees no longer represent the
Commission’s actual costs for providing
services. The Commission is seeking
comments on possible adjustments to its
user fees based on fiscal year 2015 costs
assessed through a new methodology for
calculating costs for services provided
by the Commission.
The Independent Offices
Appropriation Act of 1952 (IOAA), 31
U.S.C. 9701, authorizes agencies to
establish charges (user fees) for services
and benefits that it provides to specific
recipients. Under the IOAA, charges
must be fair and based on the costs to
the Government, the value of the service
or thing to the recipient, the public
policy or interest served, and other
relevant facts. The IOAA also provides
that regulations implementing user fees
are subject to policies prescribed by the
President, which are currently set forth
in OMB Circular A–25, User Charges
(revised July 8, 1993).
OMB Circular A–25 requires agencies
to conduct a periodic reassessment of
costs and, if necessary, adjust or
establish new fees. Under OMB Circular
A–25, fees should be established for
Government-provided services that
confer benefits on identifiable recipients
over and above those benefits received
by the general public. OMB Circular A–
25 also provides that agencies should
determine or estimate costs based on the
best available records in the agency, and
that cost computations must cover the
direct and indirect costs to the agency
providing the activity.
1 The Commission established the fee for filing or
updating OTI license applications electronically in
2007.
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Fee Assessment Methodology
Applying the guidance for assessing
fees provided in OMB Circular A–25,
the Commission has revised its
methodology for computing fees to
determine the full costs of providing
services.2 A detailed description of the
methodology, as established by the
Commission’s Office of Budget and
Finance, is available in the docket to
this rulemaking.
The Commission has developed data
on the time and cost involved in
providing particular services to arrive at
the updated direct and indirect labor
costs for those services. As part of its
assessment, the Commission utilized
salaries of Full Time Equivalents (FTEs)
assigned to fee-generating activities to
identify the various direct and indirect
costs associated with providing services.
Direct labor costs include clerical and
professional time expended on an
activity. Indirect labor costs include
labor provided by bureaus and offices
that provide direct support to the feegenerating offices in their efforts to
provide services, and include
managerial and supervisory costs
associated with providing a particular
service. Other indirect costs include
Government overhead costs, such as
fringe benefits and other wage-related
Government contributions contained in
OMB Circular A–76, Performance of
Commercial Activities (revised May 29,
2003) and office general and
administrative expenses.3 The sum of
these indirect cost components gives an
indirect cost factor that is added to the
direct labor costs of an activity to arrive
at the fully distributed cost.
Proposed Fee Adjustments
The adjustments the Commission is
considering would allow some user fees
to remain unchanged; increase, reduce,
or delete other fees; and add one new
fee. The Commission is considering
making upward adjustments of fees to
reflect increases in salary and indirect
(overhead) costs. For some services, an
increase in processing or review time
may account for all or part of increase
2 The revised methodology also satisfies the
recommendations set forth in the Commission’s
Office of Inspector General’s report, Review of
FMC’s User Fee Calculations (May 27, 2010).
3 OMB Circular A–76 lists the following indirect
labor costs: leave and holidays, retirement, worker’s
compensation, awards, health and life insurance,
and Medicare. General and administrative costs are
expressed as a percentage of basic pay. These
include all salaries and overhead such as rent,
utilities, supplies, and equipment allocated to
Commission offices that provide direct support to
fee-generating offices such as the Office of the
Managing Director, Office of Information
Technology, Office of Human Resources, Office of
Budget and Finance, and the Office of Management
Services.
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 54 / Monday, March 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
in the amount of the proposed fees. For
other services, fees may be lower than
current fees due to an overall reduced
cost to provide those services.
The Commission assesses nominal
processing fees for services related to
the filing of complaints and certain
petitions; various public information
services, such as records searches,
document copying, and admissions to
practice; and filing applications for
special permission. Due to an increase
in the processing cost of these services,
the Commission is considering adjusting
upward these administrative fees based
on an assessment of fiscal year 2015
costs. Similarly, the Commission is
considering adjusting upward the user
fees associated with agreements filed
under 46 CFR part 535 because of the
increase in reviewing and analyzing the
agreement filings.
With respect to OTI license
applications, the Commission offers
lower fees for electronic filing of license
applications through its FMC–18
automated filing system. The
Commission first adopted lower fees in
2007 to promote the use of the
electronic filing option by the public
and to facilitate the transfer of OTI
records from a paper-based format to a
more convenient and accessible digital
format.4 As intended, the majority of
OTI applicants are using the automated
system and paying the reduced fees. In
fiscal year 2015, the total number of OTI
applicants using the automated filing
system at the reduced fees was 619, and
the total number of OTI applicants filing
their applications in paper format at the
higher fees was 44. This program has
been successful and the Commission is
considering continuing to offer the
lower fees for electronic filing at the
current fee amounts.5
The Commission is considering
decreasing fees for the Commission’s
services to passenger vessel operators
(PVOs) under 46 CFR part 540. These
services include reviewing and
processing the application for
certification on performance; the
supplemental application on
performance for the addition or
substitution of a vessel; the application
for certification on casualty, and the
4 FMC Docket No. 07–08, Optional Method of
Filing Form FMC–18, Application for a License as
an Ocean Transportation Intermediary, 72 FR
44976, 44977 (Aug. 10, 2007).
5 While the automated filing system allows users
to file their applications electronically, the
automated system for processing the applications is
still under development. The fees for the electronic
filing of OTI applications will be addressed by the
Commission when the entire FMC–18 automated
system is complete and operational, and the costs
of the system and its impact on the review of OTI
applications can be quantified.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:25 Mar 18, 2016
Jkt 238001
supplemental application on casualty
for the addition or substitution of a
vessel.
For reviews of requests filed under
FOIA and requests for revisions of
clerical errors on service contracts, the
Commission is considering lowering the
fees due to the change in grade level of
the professional staff that review FOIA
requests.
The Commission is considering
repealing the user fee for obtaining a
copy of the Regulated Persons Index
given that it is currently available on the
Commission’s Web site. The
Commission is also considering
repealing the current fee assessed for
adding an interested party to a specific
docket mailing list under § 503.50(d),
and the fee assessed under § 535.401(h)
for obtaining a Commission agreement
database report.
In addition, the Commission is
considering repealing the user fee for
filing petitions for rulemaking found in
§ 503.51(a). This would align the
Commission with the practice of other
agencies, the vast majority of which do
not impose a fee to file petitions for
rulemaking. Repealing this user fee
would also enhance access to the
rulemaking process, thereby making it
fairer and more open.
The Commission is also considering
adding a new fee for processing requests
for expedited review of an agreement
under § 535.605, which allows filing
parties to request that the 45-day
waiting period be shortened to meet an
operational urgency. The Commission
believes that a fee for processing such
requests is necessary to recoup the cost
of publishing a separate Federal
Register notice for expedited review.
This new fee would be assessed in
addition to the underlying agreement
filing fee required by § 535.401(g).
The Commission welcomes comments
on its new fee calculation methodology
and possible fee adjustments.
By the Commission.
Karen V. Gregory,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–06241 Filed 3–18–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6731–AA–P
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
15003
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 151211999–6209–01]
RIN 0648–BF62
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the
Northeastern United States; Northeast
Groundfish Fishery; Framework
Adjustment 55
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
This action proposes approval
of, and regulations to implement,
Framework Adjustment 55 to the
Northeast Multispecies Fishery
Management Plan. This rule would set
2016–2018 catch limits for all 20
groundfish stocks, adjust the groundfish
at-sea monitoring program, and adopt
several sector measures. This action is
necessary to respond to updated
scientific information and achieve the
goals and objectives of the Fishery
Management Plan. The proposed
measures are intended to help prevent
overfishing, rebuild overfished stocks,
achieve optimum yield, and ensure that
management measures are based on the
best scientific information available.
DATES: Comments must be received by
April 5, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by NOAA–NMFS–2016–0019,
by either of the following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal.
1. Go to www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20160019;
2. Click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon
and complete the required fields; and
3. Enter or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
John K. Bullard, Regional
Administrator, National Marine
Fisheries Service, 55 Great Republic
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the
outside of the envelope, ‘‘Comments on
the Proposed Rule for Groundfish
Framework Adjustment 55.’’
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by us. All comments
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\21MRP1.SGM
21MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 54 (Monday, March 21, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15002-15003]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-06241]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION
46 CFR Parts 502, 503, 515, 520, 530, 535, 540, 550, 555, and 560
[Docket No. 16-06]
RIN 3072-AC34
Update of Existing and Addition of New User Fees
AGENCY: Federal Maritime Commission.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Maritime Commission (Commission) is considering
amending its current user fees and invites public comment on whether
the Commission should amend its user fees. Specifically, the Commission
is considering increasing fees for: Filing complaints and certain
petitions; records searches, document copying, and admissions to
practice; paper filing of ocean transportation intermediary (OTI)
applications; filing applications for special permission; and filing
agreements.
The Commission is also considering lowering fees for: Reviewing
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests; revising clerical errors on
service contracts; revising clerical errors on non-vessel-operating
common carrier (NVOCC) service agreements; and Commission services to
passenger vessel operators (PVOs).
In addition, the Commission is considering repealing four existing
fees for: Adding interested parties to a specific docket mailing list;
the Regulated Persons Index database; database reports on Effective
Carrier Agreements; and filing petitions for rulemaking. The Commission
is also considering adding a new fee for requests for expedited review
of an agreement filing.
DATES: Comments are due on or before: April 18, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by the docket number in
the heading of this document, by any of the following methods:
Email: secretary@fmc.gov. Include in the subject line:
``Docket No. 16-06, Comments on Update of User Fees.'' Comments should
be attached to the email as a Microsoft Word or text-searchable PDF
document. Comments containing confidential information should not be
submitted by email.
Mail: Karen V. Gregory, Secretary, Federal Maritime
Commission, 800 North Capitol Street NW., Washington, DC 20573-0001.
Phone: (202) 523-5725. Email: secretary@fmc.gov.
Docket: For access to the docket to read
background documents or comments received, go to: https://www.fmc.gov/16-06, select Docket No. 16-06 from the drop-down list next to
``Proceeding or Inquiry Number'' and click the ``Search'' option.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen V. Gregory, Secretary, Federal
Maritime Commission, 800 North Capitol Street NW., Washington, DC
20573-0001. Phone: (202) 523-5725. Email: secretary@fmc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission's current user fees are based
on an assessment of fiscal year 2004 costs and have not been updated
since 2005.\1\ Consequently, many of the current user fees no longer
represent the Commission's actual costs for providing services. The
Commission is seeking comments on possible adjustments to its user fees
based on fiscal year 2015 costs assessed through a new methodology for
calculating costs for services provided by the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Commission established the fee for filing or updating
OTI license applications electronically in 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Independent Offices Appropriation Act of 1952 (IOAA), 31 U.S.C.
9701, authorizes agencies to establish charges (user fees) for services
and benefits that it provides to specific recipients. Under the IOAA,
charges must be fair and based on the costs to the Government, the
value of the service or thing to the recipient, the public policy or
interest served, and other relevant facts. The IOAA also provides that
regulations implementing user fees are subject to policies prescribed
by the President, which are currently set forth in OMB Circular A-25,
User Charges (revised July 8, 1993).
OMB Circular A-25 requires agencies to conduct a periodic
reassessment of costs and, if necessary, adjust or establish new fees.
Under OMB Circular A-25, fees should be established for Government-
provided services that confer benefits on identifiable recipients over
and above those benefits received by the general public. OMB Circular
A-25 also provides that agencies should determine or estimate costs
based on the best available records in the agency, and that cost
computations must cover the direct and indirect costs to the agency
providing the activity.
Fee Assessment Methodology
Applying the guidance for assessing fees provided in OMB Circular
A-25, the Commission has revised its methodology for computing fees to
determine the full costs of providing services.\2\ A detailed
description of the methodology, as established by the Commission's
Office of Budget and Finance, is available in the docket to this
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The revised methodology also satisfies the recommendations
set forth in the Commission's Office of Inspector General's report,
Review of FMC's User Fee Calculations (May 27, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission has developed data on the time and cost involved in
providing particular services to arrive at the updated direct and
indirect labor costs for those services. As part of its assessment, the
Commission utilized salaries of Full Time Equivalents (FTEs) assigned
to fee-generating activities to identify the various direct and
indirect costs associated with providing services. Direct labor costs
include clerical and professional time expended on an activity.
Indirect labor costs include labor provided by bureaus and offices that
provide direct support to the fee-generating offices in their efforts
to provide services, and include managerial and supervisory costs
associated with providing a particular service. Other indirect costs
include Government overhead costs, such as fringe benefits and other
wage-related Government contributions contained in OMB Circular A-76,
Performance of Commercial Activities (revised May 29, 2003) and office
general and administrative expenses.\3\ The sum of these indirect cost
components gives an indirect cost factor that is added to the direct
labor costs of an activity to arrive at the fully distributed cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ OMB Circular A-76 lists the following indirect labor costs:
leave and holidays, retirement, worker's compensation, awards,
health and life insurance, and Medicare. General and administrative
costs are expressed as a percentage of basic pay. These include all
salaries and overhead such as rent, utilities, supplies, and
equipment allocated to Commission offices that provide direct
support to fee-generating offices such as the Office of the Managing
Director, Office of Information Technology, Office of Human
Resources, Office of Budget and Finance, and the Office of
Management Services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Fee Adjustments
The adjustments the Commission is considering would allow some user
fees to remain unchanged; increase, reduce, or delete other fees; and
add one new fee. The Commission is considering making upward
adjustments of fees to reflect increases in salary and indirect
(overhead) costs. For some services, an increase in processing or
review time may account for all or part of increase
[[Page 15003]]
in the amount of the proposed fees. For other services, fees may be
lower than current fees due to an overall reduced cost to provide those
services.
The Commission assesses nominal processing fees for services
related to the filing of complaints and certain petitions; various
public information services, such as records searches, document
copying, and admissions to practice; and filing applications for
special permission. Due to an increase in the processing cost of these
services, the Commission is considering adjusting upward these
administrative fees based on an assessment of fiscal year 2015 costs.
Similarly, the Commission is considering adjusting upward the user fees
associated with agreements filed under 46 CFR part 535 because of the
increase in reviewing and analyzing the agreement filings.
With respect to OTI license applications, the Commission offers
lower fees for electronic filing of license applications through its
FMC-18 automated filing system. The Commission first adopted lower fees
in 2007 to promote the use of the electronic filing option by the
public and to facilitate the transfer of OTI records from a paper-based
format to a more convenient and accessible digital format.\4\ As
intended, the majority of OTI applicants are using the automated system
and paying the reduced fees. In fiscal year 2015, the total number of
OTI applicants using the automated filing system at the reduced fees
was 619, and the total number of OTI applicants filing their
applications in paper format at the higher fees was 44. This program
has been successful and the Commission is considering continuing to
offer the lower fees for electronic filing at the current fee
amounts.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ FMC Docket No. 07-08, Optional Method of Filing Form FMC-18,
Application for a License as an Ocean Transportation Intermediary,
72 FR 44976, 44977 (Aug. 10, 2007).
\5\ While the automated filing system allows users to file their
applications electronically, the automated system for processing the
applications is still under development. The fees for the electronic
filing of OTI applications will be addressed by the Commission when
the entire FMC-18 automated system is complete and operational, and
the costs of the system and its impact on the review of OTI
applications can be quantified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission is considering decreasing fees for the Commission's
services to passenger vessel operators (PVOs) under 46 CFR part 540.
These services include reviewing and processing the application for
certification on performance; the supplemental application on
performance for the addition or substitution of a vessel; the
application for certification on casualty, and the supplemental
application on casualty for the addition or substitution of a vessel.
For reviews of requests filed under FOIA and requests for revisions
of clerical errors on service contracts, the Commission is considering
lowering the fees due to the change in grade level of the professional
staff that review FOIA requests.
The Commission is considering repealing the user fee for obtaining
a copy of the Regulated Persons Index given that it is currently
available on the Commission's Web site. The Commission is also
considering repealing the current fee assessed for adding an interested
party to a specific docket mailing list under Sec. 503.50(d), and the
fee assessed under Sec. 535.401(h) for obtaining a Commission
agreement database report.
In addition, the Commission is considering repealing the user fee
for filing petitions for rulemaking found in Sec. 503.51(a). This
would align the Commission with the practice of other agencies, the
vast majority of which do not impose a fee to file petitions for
rulemaking. Repealing this user fee would also enhance access to the
rulemaking process, thereby making it fairer and more open.
The Commission is also considering adding a new fee for processing
requests for expedited review of an agreement under Sec. 535.605,
which allows filing parties to request that the 45-day waiting period
be shortened to meet an operational urgency. The Commission believes
that a fee for processing such requests is necessary to recoup the cost
of publishing a separate Federal Register notice for expedited review.
This new fee would be assessed in addition to the underlying agreement
filing fee required by Sec. 535.401(g).
The Commission welcomes comments on its new fee calculation
methodology and possible fee adjustments.
By the Commission.
Karen V. Gregory,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-06241 Filed 3-18-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6731-AA-P