Records Schedules; Availability and Request for Comments, 24656-24658 [2016-09544]
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24656
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 80 / Tuesday, April 26, 2016 / Notices
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Copyright Office. 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1).
The Copyright Office deposits the
royalties into the United States Treasury
for later distribution to copyright
owners of the broadcast programming
that the cable systems retransmit. 17
U.S.C. 111(d)(2).
A cable system calculates its royalty
payments in accordance with the
statutory formula described in 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(1). Royalty rates are based upon
a cable system’s gross receipts from
subscribers who receive retransmitted
broadcast signals. For rate calculation
purposes, cable systems are divided into
three tiers based on their gross receipts
(small, medium, and large). 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(1)(B) through (F). Both the
applicable rates and the tiers are subject
to adjustment. 17 U.S.C. 801(b)(2).
Every five years persons with a
significant interest in the royalty rates
may file petitions to initiate a
proceeding to adjust the rates. 17 U.S.C.
804(a) and (b). No person with a
significant interest filed a petition to
initiate a proceeding in 2015.1
Therefore, the Copyright Royalty Judges
(Judges) initiated this rate adjustment
proceeding relating to statutory licenses
for the distant retransmission by cable
systems of over-the-air broadcast radio
and television programming. See 17
U.S.C. 801(b)(2), 803(b)(1), 804(a) and
(b), by notice published in the Federal
Register on June 19, 2015.
The Judges received two joint
Petitions to Participate, one from a
group referring to itself as Phase I
Parties 2 and another from the National
Cable & Telecommunications
Association and the American Cable
Association. The Judges accepted these
petitions and commenced a Voluntary
Negotiation Period (VNP).
On November 23, 2015, the Joint
Sports Claimants 3 filed a ‘‘Petition . . .
to Initiate Cable Royalty Rate
Adjustment Proceedings’’ with a selfstyled caption indicating a proceeding
for cable rate adjustments ‘‘for
1 The cable rates were last adjusted in 2005.
Although the Judges commenced a rate proceeding
relating to the 2010 rate adjustment, the Judges
terminated it when passage of the Satellite
Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010,
Pub. L. 111–175, rendered the proceeding
unnecessary. Order Granting Request to Terminate
Proceeding, Docket No. 2010–1 CRB Cable Rate
(July 13, 2010).
2 The Phase I Parties consist of: Program
Suppliers, Joint Sports Claimants, Public Television
Claimants, Commercial Television Claimants,
Music Claimants, Canadian Claimants Group,
National Public Radio, and Devotional Claimants.
3 The Joint Sports Claimants consist of: The
National Basketball Association, the National
Collegiate Athletic Association, the National
Football League, the National Hockey League, the
Office of the Commissioner of Baseball, and the
Women’s National Basketball Association.
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22:08 Apr 25, 2016
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Retransmission of Certain Sports
Telecasts.’’ On December 15, 2015, at
the conclusion of the VNP, all
participants, including the Joint Sports
Claimants, notified the Judges of a
global settlement and asked that cable
retransmission rates remain unchanged
for the rate period 2015 to 2019,
inclusive. Given the conflicting
positions of the Joint Sports Claimants,
the Judges rejected the proposed global
settlement, without prejudice.
Settling participants have now asked
that the Judges accept the negotiated
settlement as a ‘‘partial settlement’’ and
permit continuing proceedings to
determine whether and to what degree
to make a rate adjustment under section
801(b)(2)(C). Section 801(b)(2)(C)
provides for adjustment proceedings 4 in
the event of an FCC rule change ‘‘with
respect to . . . sports program
exclusivity. . . .’’ The Joint Sports
Claimants base their separate petition
on an FCC rule change, viz., repeal of
the sports exclusivity rule, effective
November 24, 2014.
The Judges give this notice and
opportunity for additional parties to file
a Petition to Participate in the extant
proceeding. The Judges shall continue
the proceeding solely for determination
of what rate adjustment, if any, should
result from the FCC rule change.
According to the Act, any adjustment
resulting from the remainder of this
proceeding shall be limited to those
broadcast signals carried on systems
affected by the FCC rule change. See 17
U.S.C. 801(b)(2)(C).
How To Submit Petitions to Participate
Any party that has filed a Petition to
Participate in the present proceeding
need only file a Notice of Intent to
Participate in the Sports Rule Surcharge
portion of the proceeding. Any other
party wishing to participate in the
proceeding to determine a Sports Rule
Surcharge adjustment to the cable
royalty rate shall submit to the
Copyright Royalty Board the filing fee
(US $150), an original Petition to
Participate, five paper copies, and an
electronic copy on a CD or other
portable memory device in Portable
Document Format (PDF) that contains
searchable, accessible text (not a
scanned image of text). Participants
should conform filed electronic
documents to the Judges’ Guidelines for
Electronic Documents posted online at
www.loc.gov/crb/docs/Guidelinesfor_
Electronic_Documents.pdf. Participants
4 Sports program exclusivity proceedings may be
conducted apart from the quinquennial proceedings
required by § 804 of the Act.
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shall deliver Petitions to Participate to
only one of the following addresses.
U.S. mail: Copyright Royalty Board,
PO Box 70977, Washington, DC 20024–
0977; or
Overnight service (only USPS Express
Mail is acceptable): Copyright Royalty
Board, PO Box 70977, Washington, DC
20024–0977; or
Commercial courier: Address package
to: Copyright Royalty Board, Library of
Congress, James Madison Memorial
Building, LM–403, 101 Independence
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20559–
6000. Deliver to: Congressional Courier
Acceptance Site, 2nd Street NE. and D
Street NE., Washington, DC; or
Hand delivery: Library of Congress,
James Madison Memorial Building, LM–
401, 101 Independence Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20559–6000.
Dated: April 20, 2016.
Suzanne M. Barnett,
Chief Copyright Royalty Judge.
[FR Doc. 2016–09635 Filed 4–25–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–72–P
NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS
ADMINISTRATION
[NARA–2016–027]
Records Schedules; Availability and
Request for Comments
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA).
ACTION: Notice of availability of
proposed records schedules; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA)
publishes notice at least once monthly
of certain Federal agency requests for
records disposition authority (records
schedules). Once approved by NARA,
records schedules provide mandatory
instructions on what happens to records
when no longer needed for current
Government business. They authorize
agencies to preserve records of
continuing value in the National
Archives of the United States and to
destroy, after a specified period, records
lacking administrative, legal, research,
or other value. NARA publishes notice
for records schedules in which agencies
propose to destroy records not
previously authorized for disposal or
reduce the retention period of records
already authorized for disposal. NARA
invites public comments on such
records schedules, as required by 44
U.S.C. 3303a(a).
DATES: NARA must receive requests for
copies in writing by May 26, 2016. Once
NARA completes appraisal of the
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 80 / Tuesday, April 26, 2016 / Notices
records, we will send you a copy of the
schedule you requested. We usually
prepare appraisal memoranda that
contain additional information
concerning the records covered by a
proposed schedule. You may also
request these. If you do, we will also
provide them once we have completed
the appraisal. You have 30 days after we
send these requested documents in
which to submit comments.
ADDRESSES: You may request a copy of
any records schedule identified in this
notice by contacting Records Appraisal
and Agency Assistance (ACRA) using
one of the following means:
Mail: NARA (ACRA); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740–6001.
Email: request.schedule@nara.gov.
Fax: 301–837–3698.
You must cite the control number,
which appears in parentheses after the
name of the agency which submitted the
schedule, and a mailing address. If you
would like an appraisal report, please
include that in your request.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margaret Hawkins, Director, by mail at
Records Appraisal and Agency
Assistance (ACRA); National Archives
and Records Administration; 8601
Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740–
6001, by phone at 301–837–1799, or by
email at request.schedule@nara.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Each year,
Federal agencies create billions of
records on paper, film, magnetic tape,
and other media. To control this
accumulation, agency records managers
prepare schedules proposing retention
periods for records and submit these
schedules for NARA’s approval. These
schedules provide for timely transfer
into the National Archives of
historically valuable records and
authorize the disposal of all other
records after the agency no longer needs
them to conduct its business. Some
schedules are comprehensive and cover
all the records of an agency or one of its
major subdivisions. Most schedules,
however, cover records of only one
office or program or a few series of
records. Many of these update
previously approved schedules, and
some include records proposed as
permanent.
The schedules listed in this notice are
media neutral unless otherwise
specified. An item in a schedule is
media neutral when an agency may
apply the disposition instructions to
records regardless of the medium in
which it has created or maintains the
records. Items included in schedules
submitted to NARA on or after
December 17, 2007, are media neutral
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22:08 Apr 25, 2016
Jkt 238001
unless the item is limited to a specific
medium. (See 36 CFR 1225.12(e).)
No agencies may destroy Federal
records without the approval of the
Archivist of the United States. The
Archivist grants this approval only after
a thorough consideration of the records’
administrative use by the agency of
origin, the rights of the Government and
of private people directly affected by the
Government’s activities, and whether or
not the records have historical or other
value.
In addition to identifying the Federal
agencies and any subdivisions
requesting disposition authority, this
notice lists the organizational unit(s)
accumulating the records or that the
schedule has agency-wide applicability
(in the case of schedules that cover
records that may be accumulated
throughout an agency), provides the
control number assigned to each
schedule, the total number of schedule
items, and the number of temporary
items (the records proposed for
destruction), and includes a brief
description of the temporary records.
The records schedule itself contains a
full description of the records at the file
unit level as well as their disposition. If
NARA staff has prepared an appraisal
memorandum for the schedule, it also
includes information about the records.
You may request additional information
about the disposition process at the
addresses above.
Schedules Pending
1. Department of Agriculture, Farm
Service Agency (DAA–0161–2015–0003,
1 item, 1 temporary item). Commodity
Credit Corporation records consisting of
master files of an electronic information
system used to support the grain
inventory and miscellaneous
commodity inventory.
2. Department of Agriculture, Farm
Service Agency (DAA–0145–2015–0012,
1 item, 1 temporary item). Master files
of an electronic information system
used to track, process, collect, and
report cash receipts.
3. Department of Defense, Defense
Information Systems Agency (DAA–
0371–2014–0006, 3 items, 3 temporary
items). Records related to awards and
assignments for agency personnel.
4. Department of Defense, Defense
Information Systems Agency (DAA–
0371–2014–0008, 3 items, 3 temporary
items). Records relating to the test and
evaluation of electronic information
systems.
5. Department of Defense, Defense
Logistics Agency (DAA–0361–2015–
0005, 9 items, 8 temporary items.)
Administrative records common to all
offices including reference materials,
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24657
meeting and visit records, delegations of
authority, and routine correspondence.
Proposed for permanent retention are
high-level correspondence and
command oversight files.
6. Department of Defense, Defense
Threat Reduction Agency (DAA–0374–
2014–0006, 1 item, 1 temporary item).
Records relating to policy letters on
administrative operations and services.
7. Department of Defense, Defense
Threat Reduction Agency (DAA–0374–
2014–0037, 1 item, 1 temporary item).
Records related to quality control of
system components under agency
oversight.
8. Department of Defense, Defense
Threat Reduction Agency (DAA–0374–
2014–0040, 1 item, 1 temporary item).
Records related to the preparation and
revision of supply standards.
9. Department of Defense, Defense
Threat Reduction Agency (DAA–0374–
2014–0041, 1 item, 1 temporary item).
Records related to agency oversight of
specific Department of Defense
standards including standardization
actions, indexing, plans, and related
records.
10. Department of Energy, Agencywide (DAA–0434–2015–0013, 2 items, 2
temporary items). Records related to
foreign ownership and eligibility
determinations of potential contractors.
11. Department of Health and Human
Services, Administration for Children
and Families (DAA–0292–2016–0006,
12 items, 9 temporary items). Records
related to Federal grant programs,
including penalty determinations and
resolutions, regulation files, briefing
materials, and court case files. Proposed
for permanent retention are final data
reports, policy files, and publications.
12. Department of Health and Human
Services, Administration for Children
and Families (DAA–0292–2016–0009, 2
items, 1 temporary item). Office-level
delegations of authority records.
Proposed for permanent retention are
delegations of authority for senior
management staff.
13. Department of Homeland Security,
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (DAA–0566–
2016–0004, 8 items, 8 temporary items).
Applications, petitions, and requests for
a re-entry permit, refugee travel
document, or advance parole travel
document.
14. Department of Homeland Security,
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (DAA–0566–
2016–0011, 10 items, 10 temporary
items). Applications, petitions, and
supporting materials used by
organizations to apply for authorization
to issue certificates to health care
workers.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 80 / Tuesday, April 26, 2016 / Notices
15. Department of Justice, Federal
Bureau of Investigation (DAA–0065–
2015–0001, 2 items, 1 temporary item).
Records used to prepare briefings for
agency executives. Proposed for
permanent retention are records related
to National Security Council meeting
participation.
16. Department of Justice, Federal
Bureau of Investigation (DAA–0065–
2015–0006, 1 item, 1 temporary item).
Records related to FOIA request
processing and administration that
include general administrative files,
staff training, a sample of 500 FOIA case
files, and records related to a 1978 GAO
audit, and a case litigated before the
Supreme Court.
17. Federal Communications
Commission, International Bureau
(DAA–0173–2015–0009, 2 items, 2
temporary items). Records include
annual reports submitted by service
providers for international services and
statistics derived from those reports.
18. Federal Communications
Commission, Wireline Competition
Bureau (DAA–0173–2016–0009, 1 item,
1 temporary item). Records include
official tariffs and associated documents
submitted by local exchange carriers.
19. National Archives and Records
Administration, Government-wide
(DAA–GRS–2016–0006, 1 item, 1
temporary item). A revision to the
General Records Schedule for general
ethics program records.
20. Peace Corps, Office of Strategic
Partnerships (DAA–0490–2016–0008, 1
item, 1 temporary item). Records of the
Office of Gifts and Grants Management
related to private donations used to
fund volunteer projects.
Laurence Brewer,
Director, Records Management Operations.
[FR Doc. 2016–09544 Filed 4–25–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7515–01–P
NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION
SAFETY BOARD
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National Transportation Safety Board
Forum
The National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB) will hold a 1-day forum
to discuss the risks posed to pedestrians
by highway travel. The event,
‘‘Pedestrian Safety,’’ will be held from 9
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET on May 10, 2016,
in Washington, DC.
While the overall number of highway
deaths has been decreasing in recent
years, the number of pedestrian
fatalities on public roads has increased
19 percent over the past 5 years.
Estimates for 2015 pedestrian fatalities
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22:08 Apr 25, 2016
Jkt 238001
indicate that they may have been 10
percent higher than those in 2014. The
NTSB meeting will provide an overview
of pedestrian fatalities and injuries, and
it will consider what data are needed to
understand and address this growing
safety problem. Unlike many highway
projects that are federally funded and
administered by states, many pedestrian
infrastructure projects are managed at
the urban and local levels. The forum
will consider policy efforts to
implement complete streets designed for
all users. The forum will also consider
highway design countermeasures
intended to improve pedestrian safety.
Vehicle technologies that can enhance
pedestrian safety by mitigating or
avoiding crashes will also be discussed.
The forum will feature presentations
by urban planners, highway engineers,
transportation policy advocates, and
public health interests. Inquiries about
the forum can be directed to
pedestriansafety@ntsb.gov. The event
will be held in the NTSB Board Room
and Conference Center, located at 429
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC.
The forum is free and open to the
public. Those intending to attend
should register at www.ntsb.gov/
pedestriansafety. In addition, the forum
can be viewed via webcast here:
https://ntsb.capitolconnection.org/.
Several days after the conclusion of the
forum, an archived webcast of it will be
posted on the NTSB Web site and will
be available for 90 days.
If you wish to obtain a copy of the
forum webcast, please contact the NTSB
Records Management Division at 202–
314–6551 or 800–877–6799. You may
also request this information from the
NTSB Web site or by writing to the
following address: National
Transportation Safety Board, Records
Management Division (CIO–40), 490
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC
20594.
Individuals requiring reasonable
accommodation and/or wheelchair
access directions should contact
Rochelle Hall at 202–314–6305 or by
email at Rochelle.Hall@ntsb.gov by May
4, 2016.
NTSB Media Contact: Christopher
O’Neil—christopher.oneil@ntsb.gov.
NTSB Forum Manager: Deborah
Bruce—bruced@ntsb.gov.
Dated: April 21, 2016.
Candi R. Bing,
Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2016–09660 Filed 4–25–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. 50–390; NRC–2016–0075]
Completion Date of Cyber Security
Plan Implementation Milestone 8;
Tennessee Valley Authority; Watts Bar
Nuclear Plant, Unit 1; Correction
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: License amendment application;
opportunity to comment, request a
hearing, and petition for leave to
intervene; order; correction.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is correcting a notice
that was published in the Federal
Register (FR) on April 19, 2016,
regarding issuance of an amendment to
Facility Operating License No. NPF–90,
issued to the Tennessee Valley
Authority, for operation of the Watts Bar
Nuclear Plant, Unit 1. This action is
necessary to correct an NRC docket ID
number that was listed incorrectly.
DATES: The correction is effective April
26, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Please refer to Docket ID
NRC–2016–0075 when contacting the
NRC about the availability of
information regarding this document.
You may obtain publicly-available
information related to this document
using any of the following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2016–0075. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol
Gallagher; telephone: 301–415–3463;
email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov. For
technical questions, contact the
individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publiclyavailable documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. To begin the search, select
‘‘ADAMS Public Documents’’ and then
select ‘‘Begin Web-based ADAMS
Search.’’ For problems with ADAMS,
please contact the NRC’s Public
Document Room (PDR) reference staff at
1–800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or by
email to pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
• NRC’s PDR: You may examine and
purchase copies of public documents at
the NRC’s PDR, Room O1–F21, One
White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Schaaf, Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 80 (Tuesday, April 26, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 24656-24658]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-09544]
=======================================================================
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NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION
[NARA-2016-027]
Records Schedules; Availability and Request for Comments
AGENCY: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
ACTION: Notice of availability of proposed records schedules; request
for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
publishes notice at least once monthly of certain Federal agency
requests for records disposition authority (records schedules). Once
approved by NARA, records schedules provide mandatory instructions on
what happens to records when no longer needed for current Government
business. They authorize agencies to preserve records of continuing
value in the National Archives of the United States and to destroy,
after a specified period, records lacking administrative, legal,
research, or other value. NARA publishes notice for records schedules
in which agencies propose to destroy records not previously authorized
for disposal or reduce the retention period of records already
authorized for disposal. NARA invites public comments on such records
schedules, as required by 44 U.S.C. 3303a(a).
DATES: NARA must receive requests for copies in writing by May 26,
2016. Once NARA completes appraisal of the
[[Page 24657]]
records, we will send you a copy of the schedule you requested. We
usually prepare appraisal memoranda that contain additional information
concerning the records covered by a proposed schedule. You may also
request these. If you do, we will also provide them once we have
completed the appraisal. You have 30 days after we send these requested
documents in which to submit comments.
ADDRESSES: You may request a copy of any records schedule identified in
this notice by contacting Records Appraisal and Agency Assistance
(ACRA) using one of the following means:
Mail: NARA (ACRA); 8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001.
Email: request.schedule@nara.gov.
Fax: 301-837-3698.
You must cite the control number, which appears in parentheses
after the name of the agency which submitted the schedule, and a
mailing address. If you would like an appraisal report, please include
that in your request.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Margaret Hawkins, Director, by mail at
Records Appraisal and Agency Assistance (ACRA); National Archives and
Records Administration; 8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001,
by phone at 301-837-1799, or by email at request.schedule@nara.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Each year, Federal agencies create billions
of records on paper, film, magnetic tape, and other media. To control
this accumulation, agency records managers prepare schedules proposing
retention periods for records and submit these schedules for NARA's
approval. These schedules provide for timely transfer into the National
Archives of historically valuable records and authorize the disposal of
all other records after the agency no longer needs them to conduct its
business. Some schedules are comprehensive and cover all the records of
an agency or one of its major subdivisions. Most schedules, however,
cover records of only one office or program or a few series of records.
Many of these update previously approved schedules, and some include
records proposed as permanent.
The schedules listed in this notice are media neutral unless
otherwise specified. An item in a schedule is media neutral when an
agency may apply the disposition instructions to records regardless of
the medium in which it has created or maintains the records. Items
included in schedules submitted to NARA on or after December 17, 2007,
are media neutral unless the item is limited to a specific medium. (See
36 CFR 1225.12(e).)
No agencies may destroy Federal records without the approval of the
Archivist of the United States. The Archivist grants this approval only
after a thorough consideration of the records' administrative use by
the agency of origin, the rights of the Government and of private
people directly affected by the Government's activities, and whether or
not the records have historical or other value.
In addition to identifying the Federal agencies and any
subdivisions requesting disposition authority, this notice lists the
organizational unit(s) accumulating the records or that the schedule
has agency-wide applicability (in the case of schedules that cover
records that may be accumulated throughout an agency), provides the
control number assigned to each schedule, the total number of schedule
items, and the number of temporary items (the records proposed for
destruction), and includes a brief description of the temporary
records. The records schedule itself contains a full description of the
records at the file unit level as well as their disposition. If NARA
staff has prepared an appraisal memorandum for the schedule, it also
includes information about the records. You may request additional
information about the disposition process at the addresses above.
Schedules Pending
1. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency (DAA-0161-2015-
0003, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Commodity Credit Corporation records
consisting of master files of an electronic information system used to
support the grain inventory and miscellaneous commodity inventory.
2. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency (DAA-0145-2015-
0012, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Master files of an electronic
information system used to track, process, collect, and report cash
receipts.
3. Department of Defense, Defense Information Systems Agency (DAA-
0371-2014-0006, 3 items, 3 temporary items). Records related to awards
and assignments for agency personnel.
4. Department of Defense, Defense Information Systems Agency (DAA-
0371-2014-0008, 3 items, 3 temporary items). Records relating to the
test and evaluation of electronic information systems.
5. Department of Defense, Defense Logistics Agency (DAA-0361-2015-
0005, 9 items, 8 temporary items.) Administrative records common to all
offices including reference materials, meeting and visit records,
delegations of authority, and routine correspondence. Proposed for
permanent retention are high-level correspondence and command oversight
files.
6. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DAA-
0374-2014-0006, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records relating to policy
letters on administrative operations and services.
7. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DAA-
0374-2014-0037, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records related to quality
control of system components under agency oversight.
8. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DAA-
0374-2014-0040, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records related to the
preparation and revision of supply standards.
9. Department of Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DAA-
0374-2014-0041, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records related to agency
oversight of specific Department of Defense standards including
standardization actions, indexing, plans, and related records.
10. Department of Energy, Agency-wide (DAA-0434-2015-0013, 2 items,
2 temporary items). Records related to foreign ownership and
eligibility determinations of potential contractors.
11. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for
Children and Families (DAA-0292-2016-0006, 12 items, 9 temporary
items). Records related to Federal grant programs, including penalty
determinations and resolutions, regulation files, briefing materials,
and court case files. Proposed for permanent retention are final data
reports, policy files, and publications.
12. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for
Children and Families (DAA-0292-2016-0009, 2 items, 1 temporary item).
Office-level delegations of authority records. Proposed for permanent
retention are delegations of authority for senior management staff.
13. Department of Homeland Security, United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (DAA-0566-2016-0004, 8 items, 8 temporary items).
Applications, petitions, and requests for a re-entry permit, refugee
travel document, or advance parole travel document.
14. Department of Homeland Security, United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (DAA-0566-2016-0011, 10 items, 10 temporary
items). Applications, petitions, and supporting materials used by
organizations to apply for authorization to issue certificates to
health care workers.
[[Page 24658]]
15. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation (DAA-
0065-2015-0001, 2 items, 1 temporary item). Records used to prepare
briefings for agency executives. Proposed for permanent retention are
records related to National Security Council meeting participation.
16. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation (DAA-
0065-2015-0006, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records related to FOIA
request processing and administration that include general
administrative files, staff training, a sample of 500 FOIA case files,
and records related to a 1978 GAO audit, and a case litigated before
the Supreme Court.
17. Federal Communications Commission, International Bureau (DAA-
0173-2015-0009, 2 items, 2 temporary items). Records include annual
reports submitted by service providers for international services and
statistics derived from those reports.
18. Federal Communications Commission, Wireline Competition Bureau
(DAA-0173-2016-0009, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records include
official tariffs and associated documents submitted by local exchange
carriers.
19. National Archives and Records Administration, Government-wide
(DAA-GRS-2016-0006, 1 item, 1 temporary item). A revision to the
General Records Schedule for general ethics program records.
20. Peace Corps, Office of Strategic Partnerships (DAA-0490-2016-
0008, 1 item, 1 temporary item). Records of the Office of Gifts and
Grants Management related to private donations used to fund volunteer
projects.
Laurence Brewer,
Director, Records Management Operations.
[FR Doc. 2016-09544 Filed 4-25-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7515-01-P