Soybean Promotion, Research, and Consumer Information; Beef Promotion and Research; Amendments To Allow Redirection of State Assessments to the National Program; Technical Amendments, 45984-45992 [2016-16698]
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45984
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 81, No. 136
Friday, July 15, 2016
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Parts 1220 and 1260
[No. AMS–LPS–13–0083]
RIN 0581–AD49
Soybean Promotion, Research, and
Consumer Information; Beef
Promotion and Research;
Amendments To Allow Redirection of
State Assessments to the National
Program; Technical Amendments
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
amend the Soybean Promotion,
Research, and Consumer Information
Order (Soybean Order) and the Beef
Promotion and Research Order (Beef
Order) to add provisions allowing
soybean and beef producers to request,
under certain circumstances, that their
assessments paid to a State board or
council authorized under their
respective statutes, be redirected to the
national program. The proposed rule
also would make technical amendments
to the Beef Order.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by September 13, 2016.
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act, comments on the information
collection burden that would result
from this proposal must be received by
September 13, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit written comments on
the Internet at www.regulations.gov or to
Kevin Studer; Research and Promotion
Division; Livestock, Poultry, and Seed
Program; Agricultural Marketing
Service, USDA, Room 2608–S, STOP
0249, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0249; or fax to
(202) 720–1125. All comments should
reference the docket number, the date,
and the page number of this issue of the
Federal Register and will be available
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SUMMARY:
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for public inspection at the above office
during regular business hours.
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA), send comments regarding the
accuracy of the burden estimate, ways to
minimize the burden, including the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
or any other aspect of this collection of
information to the above address.
Comments concerning the information
collection under the PRA should also be
sent to the Desk Officer for Agriculture,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Washington, DC 20503.
Please be advised that all comments
submitted in response to this notice will
be included in the record and will be
made available to the public on the
Internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
Also, the identity of the individuals or
entities submitting the comments will
be made public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kevin Studer, Research and Promotion
Division, at (202) 253–2380, fax (202)
720–1125, or by email at Kevinj.Studer@
ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has waived the review process
required by Executive Order 12866 for
this action.
Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. It is not intended to
have retroactive effect.
Executive Order 13175
The Agricultural Marketing Service
(AMS) has assessed the impact of this
proposed rule on Indian tribes and
determined that this rule would not, to
our knowledge, have tribal implications
that require tribal consultation under
Executive Order 13175. If a Tribe
requests consultation, AMS will work
with the Department of Agriculture’s
(USDA) Office of Tribal Relations to
ensure meaningful consultation is
provided where changes, additions, and
modifications are identified in this
proposed rule.
Soybean Order
The Soybean Promotion, Research,
and Consumer Information Act
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(Soybean Act) (7 U.S.C. 6301–6311)
provides that administrative
proceedings must be exhausted before
parties may file suit in court. Under
section 1971 of the Soybean Act, a
person subject to the Soybean Order
may file a petition with USDA stating
that the Soybean Order, any provision of
the Soybean Order, or any obligation
imposed in connection with the
Soybean Order, is not in accordance
with the law and request a modification
of the Soybean Order or an exemption
from the Soybean Order. The petitioner
is afforded the opportunity for a hearing
on the petition. After a hearing, USDA
would rule on the petition. The Soybean
Act provides that district courts of the
United States in any district in which
such person is an inhabitant, or has
their principal place of business, has
jurisdiction to review USDA’s ruling on
the petition, if a complaint for this
purpose is filed within 20 days after the
date of the entry of the ruling.
Further, section 1974 of the Soybean
Act provides, with certain exceptions,
that nothing in the Soybean Act may be
construed to preempt or supersede any
other program relating to soybean
promotion, research, consumer
information, or industry information
organized under the laws of the United
States or any State. One exception in the
Soybean Act concerns assessments
collected by Qualified State Soybean
Boards (QSSBs). The exception provides
that to ensure adequate funding of the
operations of QSSBs under the Soybean
Act, no State law or regulation may
limit or have the effect of limiting the
full amount of assessments that a QSSB
in that State may collect, and which is
authorized to be credited under the
Soybean Act. Another exception
concerns certain referenda conducted
during specified periods by a State
relating to the continuation of a QSSB
or State soybean assessment.
Beef Order
Section 11 of the Beef Research and
Promotion Act of 1985 (Beef Act) (7
U.S.C. 2901–2911) provides that nothing
in the Beef Act may be construed to
preempt or supersede any other program
relating to beef promotion organized
and operated under the laws of the
United States or any State.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Background and Proposed Action
Soybean Order Amendments
The Soybean Act and the Soybean
Order issued thereunder authorize the
collection of an assessment from
soybean producers of one-half of one
percent (0.5 percent) of the net market
value of soybeans, processed soybeans,
or soybean products. In most cases,
these assessments are collected by
QSSBs that retain up to half of the
assessments as authorized by the
Soybean Act. The QSSBs as defined
under Section 1967 (14) of the Soybean
Act will forward the remainder to the
United Soybean Board (Soybean Board),
which administers the national soybean
checkoff program.1
The original Soybean Order, which
became effective July 9, 1991, mandated
that all producers marketing soybeans
pay an assessment of one-half of one
percent (0.5 percent) of the net market
price of the market price of soybeans
sold. The original Soybean Order
contained a provision in
§ 1220.228(b)(5)(i), which required
QSSBs that were authorized or required
to pay refunds to producers to certify to
the Soybean Board that they would
honor any request from a producer for
a refund from the QSSB by forwarding
to the Soybean Board those
contributions for which the producer
received a credit, pursuant to
§ 1220.223(a)(3). In other words, this
section implicitly authorized refunds by
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1 Section
1967(14) of the Soybean Act states:
(14) QUALIFIED STATE SOYBEAN BOARD. The
term ‘‘qualified State soybean board’’ means a State
soybean promotion entity that is authorized by
State law. If no such entity exists in a State, the
term ‘‘qualified State soybean board’’ means a
soybean producer-governed entity)—(A) that is
organized and operating within a State; (B) that
receives voluntary contributions and conducts
soybean promotion, research, consumer
information, or industry information programs; and
(C) that meets criteria established by the Board as
approved by the Secretary relating to the
qualifications of such entity to perform duties
under the order and is recognized by the Board as
the soybean promotion and research entity within
the State.
Likewise, 7 CFR 1220.122 of the Soybean Order
states:
The term Qualified State Soybean Board means
a State soybean promotion entity that is authorized
by State law and elects to be the Qualified State
Soybean Board for the State in which it operates
pursuant to § 1220.228(a)(1). If no such entity exists
in a State, the term Qualified State Soybean Board
means a soybean producer-governed entity—
(a) That is organized and operating within a State;
(b) That receives voluntary contributions and
conducts soybean promotion, research, consumer
information, or industry information programs; and
(c) That meets the criteria, established by the Board
and approved by the Secretary, relating to the
qualifications of such entity to perform its duties
under this part as determined by the Board, and is
certified by the Board under § 1220.228(a)(2), with
the approval of the Secretary.
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the QSSB if State law allowed or
required the QSSB to pay refunds; it
further directed that the producer
receive a credit for those refunds, with
the amount sent to the Soybean Board.
Refunds under the soybean program
were discontinued on October 1, 1995,
after the Secretary determined through a
producer poll that continuation of
refunds was not favored by a majority of
producers. In late 1995, 7 CFR
1220.228(b)(5)(i) was removed as part of
rulemaking to eliminate obsolete
regulatory language. However, this
action had an unintended effect of
inadvertently allowing QSSBs to retain
a portion of the assessment even if not
required by State law, under any
circumstances.
In States where payments to a QSSB
are not required by State law, the
opportunity for producers to choose to
direct the full federal assessment to the
Soybean Board is already AMS’ current
policy; this rule is intended to formalize
the policy. Therefore, AMS proposes
adding provisions that remedy the
removal of the original refund language.
A new provision would be added to the
Soybean Order to (i) require producers
in States where refunds are authorized
to forward that refund to the Soybean
Board and (ii) provide an opportunity
for a refund if the QSSB is not
authorized by State statute but is
organized and operating within a State
and is certified by the Soybean Board,
as provided by § 1220.228(a)(2). AMS
proposes to require that the form must
be postmarked by the 30th day of the
month following the month the
soybeans were sold. Assessments would
not be able to be retroactively redirected
from the QSSB to the Soybean Board.
Likewise, AMS proposes to require that
the QSSB must respond by the last day
of the month following the month in
which the OMB-approved QSSB–1 form
was received.
Regardless of a State’s requirements or
refunding provisions, a producer is
required by the Soybean Act to pay an
assessment of one-half of one percent
(0.5 percent) of the net market value of
soybeans, processed soybeans, or
soybean products. Several States have
additional producer assessments,
mandated by State statutes that are
collected in addition to the assessment
required by the Soybean Act as set forth
in the chart provided. If a QSSB offers
a producer refund under a State statute,
the QSSB can only refund to the
producer any State assessment collected
in excess of the assessment that the
producer is required to pay under the
Soybean Act. AMS proposes that the
portion of the assessment compelled by
the Soybean Act that the QSSB would
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45985
normally keep can be redirected to the
national program by the producer if
State law allows.
Examples
• A soybean producer in California
pays an assessment for a soybean sale.
The assessment is collected by a
certified Western Region Soybean
Board, which keeps 50% and forwards
the remaining 50% to the Soybean
Board. California has no State law
requiring a California assessment, so the
California producer may request that the
50% of the assessment amount retained
by the Western Region Soybean Board
be redirected to the Soybean Board.
• A soybean producer in Iowa pays
an assessment for a soybean sale. The
assessment is collected by Iowa Soybean
Promotion Board, which keeps 50% and
forwards the remaining 50% to the
Soybean Board. Iowa has a State law
with a refund provision, so the Iowa
producer may request that the 50% of
the assessment amount retained by the
Iowa Soybean Promotion Board be
redirected to the Soybean Board.
• A soybean producer in Virginia
pays an assessment for a soybean sale.
The assessment is collected by the
Virginia Soybean Board which keeps
50% and forwards the remaining 50% to
the Soybean Board. Virginia has a State
law with no refund provision, so the
Virginia soybean producer may not
request that the 50% of the assessment
amount retained by the Virginia
Soybean Board be redirected to the
Soybean Board.
Beef Order Amendments
Similarly, the Beef Promotion and
Research Act of 1985 (Beef Act) and the
Beef Promotion and Research Order
(Beef Order) issued thereunder
authorize the collection of an
assessment from cattle producers of
$1.00 per head of cattle sold. In most
cases, these assessments are collected by
Qualified State Beef Councils (QSBCs)
that retain up to one-half of the
assessments as authorized by the Beef
Act. The QSBCs, as defined under
Section 3(14) of the Beef Act, are
required to forward the remainder to the
Cattlemen’s Beef Promotion and
Research Board (Beef Board), which
administers the national beef checkoff
program.2
2 Section 3(14) of the Beef Act states that ‘‘the
term ‘‘qualified State beef council’’ means a beef
promotion entity that is authorized by State statute
or is organized and operating within a State, that
receives voluntary contributions and conducts beef
promotion, research, and consumer information
programs, and that is recognized by the Board as the
beef promotion entity within such State.’’ Likewise,
7 CFR 1260.115 of the Beef Order states ‘‘Qualified
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
The original Beef Order, which
became effective July 18, 1986,
mandated that all producers owning and
marketing cattle pay an assessment of
$1.00 per head of cattle, to be collected
each time cattle are sold. The original
Beef Order contained a provision in
§ 1260.181(b)(5), which required QSBCs
that were authorized or required by
State law to pay refunds to producers to
certify to the Beef Board that they would
honor any request from a producer for
a refund from the QSBC by forwarding
to the Beef Board those contributions for
which the producer received a credit,
pursuant to § 1260.172(a)(3). In other
words, this section authorized refunds
by the QSBC if State law allowed or
required the QSBC to pay refunds; it
further directed that the producer
receive a credit for those refunds, with
the amount redirected to the Beef Board.
In a May 10, 1988, referendum
conducted by the Secretary, cattle
producers and importers voted to
institute mandatory assessments. In late
1995, 7 CFR 1260.181(b)(5) was
removed as part of rulemaking to
eliminate obsolete regulatory language.
However, this action had an unintended
effect of inadvertently allowing QSBCs
to retain a portion of the $1.00-per-head
assessment even if not required by State
law, under any circumstances.
Therefore, AMS proposes adding
provisions that would remedy the
removal of the original language in
§ 1260.181(b)(5).
Furthermore, while the Beef Act and
Beef Order authorize QSBCs to retain up
to 50 cents per head of cattle assessed,
neither the Beef Act nor the Beef Order
require producers to contribute a
portion of the $1.00-per-head
assessment to a QSBC. Thus, unless
State statutes require the collection of
the $1.00-per-head assessment set forth
in the Beef Act (the federal assessment)
or require producers to contribute a
portion of the $1.00-per-head federal
assessment to the State beef council,
producers may be able to choose not to
contribute up to 50 cents per head of the
federal assessment to their QSBC. While
the original Beef Order did not address
the specific situation that allows
producers to choose not to contribute up
to 50 cents per head of the federal
assessment to a QSBC, AMS proposes to
address this in the new language. A new
provision would be added to the Beef
Order to (i) require QSBCs in States
where refunds to producers of the $1.00per-head assessment collected per the
Beef Act and Beef Order are authorized
by State statute to forward that refund
to the Beef Board, and (ii) provide an
opportunity for producers to choose to
direct the full $1.00-per-head federal
assessment to the Beef Board in States
where State law does not require the
collection of the $1.00-per-head
assessment set forth in the Beef Act (the
federal assessment) or in States where
State statutes do not require producers
to contribute a portion of the $1.00-per
head federal assessment to the State beef
council. In States where payments to a
QSBC are not required by State law, the
opportunity for producers to choose to
direct the full $1.00-per-head federal
assessment to the Beef Board is already
AMS’ current policy; this rule is
intended to formalize the policy. As
QSBCs are responsible for collecting
assessments on cattle sold in or
originating in their State
(§ 1260.172(a)(5) and § 1260.181(b)(3)),
producers who are allowed refunds
under State statutes and choose to
redirect the full $1.00-per-head
assessment to Beef Board must submit
to the QSBC a written request on an
approved request form. AMS proposes
to require that the form must be
postmarked by the 15th day of the
month following the month the cattle
were sold. Assessments would not be
able to be retroactively redirected from
the QSBC to the Beef Board, and QSBCs
would be required to respond to such
requests within 60 days.
Regardless of a State’s requirements or
refunding provisions, a producer is
required by the Beef Act to pay an
assessment of $1.00 on each head of
cattle sold. Several States have
additional producer assessments,
mandated by State statutes, that are
collected in addition to the $1.00-perhead assessment required by the Beef
Act. If a QSBC offers a producer refund
under a State statute, the QSBC can only
refund to the producer any State
assessment collected in addition to the
$1.00-per-head assessment that the
producer is required to pay under the
Beef Act. AMS proposes that the portion
of the $1.00-per-head federal assessment
that the QSBC would normally keep
under § 1260.181(b)(4) can be redirected
to the national program by the producer
if State law allows.
State beef council means a beef promotion entity
that is authorized by State statute or a beef
promotion entity organized and operating within a
State that receives voluntary assessments or
contributions; conducts beef promotion, research,
and consumer and industry information programs;
and that is certified by the Board pursuant to this
subpart as the beef promotion entity in such State.’’
Examples
• A producer in Kansas pays the
$1.00 federal assessment for a cattle
sale. The Kansas Beef Council collects
$1.00, keeps $0.50, and forwards $0.50
to the Beef Board. Since there is no
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Kansas law compelling producers to
contribute to the Kansas Beef Council,
the producer may request that the $0.50
of the original $1.00 assessment be
redirected to the Beef Board.
• A producer in Colorado pays $1.00
in assessments for a cattle sale. The
Colorado Beef Council collects $1.00,
keeps $0.50, and forwards $0.50 to the
Beef Board. Colorado State law requires
an assessment but allows a refund. The
producer may request that the $0.50
cents of the original $1.00 assessment be
redirected to the Beef Board.
• A producer in California pays $1.00
in assessments for a cattle sale. The
California Beef Council collects $1.00,
keeps $0.50, and forwards $0.50 to the
Beef Board. California law compels the
collection of the $1.00-per-head
assessment and does not provide for a
refund. The producer may not request
the California Beef Council to redirect
any portion of the $0.50 to the Beef
Board.
• A producer in Idaho pays the $1.00per-head federal assessment plus the
$0.50-per-head State-mandated
assessment for a cattle sale. The Idaho
Beef Council collects $1.50, keeps $1.00,
and forwards $0.50 to the Beef Board.
The producer requests a refund of all
funds paid to the Idaho Beef Council.
The Idaho Beef Council may refund the
$0.50-per-head State assessment to the
producer, but the producer is required
to pay $1.00 under the Beef Act. Since
Idaho State law only compels an
assessment of $0.50, which is
refundable, the producer may request
the Idaho Beef Council to redirect the
remaining $0.50 of the $1.00 retained
from the original $1.00-per-head federal
assessment to the Beef Board.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the requirements set forth
in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(5 U.S.C. 601–612), the Administrator of
the AMS has considered the economic
effect of this action on small entities and
has determined that this proposed rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The purpose of RFA is to fit
regulatory actions to the scale of
businesses subject to such actions in
order that small businesses will not be
unduly burdened.
Soybean Industry
USDA’s Farm Service Agency
estimates that there are 569,998 soybean
producers subject to the Soybean Order.
This estimate comes from including all
soybean producers engaged in the
production of soybeans in the previous
2 years. The majority of producers
subject to the Soybean Order are small
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
businesses under the criteria established
by the Small Business Administration
(SBA) [13 CFR 121.201]. SBA defines
small agricultural producers as those
having annual receipts of less than
$750,000.
This proposed rule imposes no new
burden on the soybean industry. It
would provide soybean producers,
under certain circumstances, the option
of requesting that their assessments paid
to a State board be directed to the
national program.
45987
However, the proposed rule could
result in decreased assessment funds for
some QSSBs, depending on whether a
State statute is in place, whether refund
provisions are included, and whether
the producer chooses to exercise the
refund provision.
POTENTIAL FINANCIAL IMPACT ON QSSBS BY STATE
[Current as of 05/01/2016]
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
(50% of
assessments
due under
Soybean Act) 2
(FY 2015)
State 1
State law requirement
Refund option
Alabama .....................
Statute establishes $0.02 per bushel maximum assessment;
regulations establish $0.01 per bushel maximum assessment.
5% of the annual gross sales dollar value maximum annual assessment.
$0.02 per bushel; 0.25% of net market price during continuance of federal program.
None ............................................................................................
None ............................................................................................
None ............................................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
Yes ............................................
$445,917
No .............................................
................................
Yes, on both .............................
3,946,583
Not applicable ...........................
Not applicable ...........................
Not applicable ...........................
Yes (under general promotion
statute).
No .............................................
Not applicable ...........................
Yes ............................................
................................
................................
................................
245,921
195,398
................................
13,941,988
Yes ............................................
Yes ............................................
7,855,049
12,788,353
Yes, provided refund amount is
$5 or more.
3,415,025
Yes ............................................
2,148,849
Yes ............................................
No .............................................
Yes ............................................
Not applicable ...........................
Yes, for funds left over at close
of marketing season.
Yes ............................................
2,131,537
................................
588,195
................................
2,329,254
Yes ............................................
Yes ............................................
No .............................................
No .............................................
Not applicable ...........................
Not applicable ...........................
No .............................................
No .............................................
Yes, but left to discretion of
commissioner.
Yes, if assessment enacted .....
No .............................................
Yes ............................................
2,955,549
6,419,003
................................
6,952,254
................................
................................
110,113
................................
254,297
Yes ............................................
No .............................................
No .............................................
Not applicable ...........................
Yes ............................................
Yes ............................................
Yes ............................................
Yes ............................................
No .............................................
279,962
................................
618,190
................................
367,307
5,185,112
1,985,565
117,588
................................
Arizona 4 .....................
Arkansas ....................
California 4 ..................
Colorado 4 ..................
Connecticut 3 ..............
Delaware ....................
Georgia ......................
Idaho 4 ........................
Illinois .........................
Indiana .......................
Iowa ............................
Kansas .......................
Kentucky ....................
Louisiana ....................
Maine 3 .......................
Maryland ....................
Massachusetts 3 .........
Michigan .....................
Minnesota ...................
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Mississippi ..................
Missouri ......................
Montana 4 ...................
Nebraska ....................
Nevada 4 .....................
New Hampshire 3 .......
New Jersey ................
New Mexico 4 .............
New York ...................
North Carolina ............
North Dakota ..............
Ohio ............................
Oklahoma ...................
Oregon 4 .....................
Pennsylvania ..............
Rhode Island 3 ............
South Carolina ...........
South Dakota .............
Tennessee .................
Texas .........................
Utah 4 .........................
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0.05 per bushel ............................................................................
None ............................................................................................
Statute establishes 1⁄2 of 1% of the net market price of soybeans produced and sold.
None beyond federal ...................................................................
If national assessment collection, 0.25% of net market price; if
not, 0.5% of net market price.
Statute sets maximum at 0.5% of net market price while federal
program effective; regulation sets assessment at 20 mills
($0.02) per bushel as State default assessment.
0.25% of net market price per bushel on all soybeans marketed
within Kentucky.
0.01 per bushel on all soybeans grown in Louisiana ..................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None ............................................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
General statute sets maximum at 1% of the market value of the
year’s production of participating producers; MN Soybean
and Research and Promotion Council sets assessment at
0.5%.
0.01 per bushel ............................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None ............................................................................................
None ............................................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
0.5% of sale value .......................................................................
None beyond federal; capped at 2 cents per bushel if assessment enacted.
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None ............................................................................................
0.005 per bushel ..........................................................................
0.5% of value of the net market price .........................................
0.01 per bushel ............................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
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E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
8,151,802
1,768,352
4,913,972
6,575,663
45988
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
POTENTIAL FINANCIAL IMPACT ON QSSBS BY STATE—Continued
[Current as of 05/01/2016]
State 1
State law requirement
Refund option
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
(50% of
assessments
due under
Soybean Act) 2
(FY 2015)
Vermont 3 ...................
Virginia .......................
None beyond federal ...................................................................
Statute allows $0.02 per bushel; regulation specifies $0.01 per
bushel.
None beyond federal ...................................................................
None ............................................................................................
Capped by statute at $0.02 per bushel; actual assessment determined annual by board.
None beyond federal ...................................................................
......................................................................................................
......................................................................................................
No .............................................
No .............................................
................................
645,754
No .............................................
Not applicable ...........................
Yes ............................................
................................
................................
1,838,960
No .............................................
...................................................
...................................................
................................
48,391
17,121
Washington 4 ..............
West Virginia 3 ............
Wisconsin ...................
Wyoming 4 ..................
Eastern Region 5 ..
Western Region 6 .......
1 There
are 31 QSSBs. Two represent multiple States.
includes 50 percent of the national assessment that the State retains; does not include State assessment revenue derived from an independent State assessment. In addition, the notation—indicates that the amount of national assessment retained by the state is a de minimis
amount.
3 Covered by Eastern Region.
4 Covered by Western Region.
5 Eastern Region includes Connecticut, Florida, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia.
6 ‘‘Western Region includes Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
2 Only
The information collection
requirements on QSSBs are minimal.
QSSBs are already required to remit
assessments to the national programs.
We have not identified any relevant
Federal rules that duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with this rule.
Accordingly, the Administrator of
AMS has conducted this Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and has
determined that this proposed rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
soybean entities. However, we invite
comments concerning potential effects
of this proposed rule.
Beef Industry
In the February 2013, publication of
‘‘Farms, Land in Farms, and Livestock
Operations,’’ USDA’s National
Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS)
estimates that the number of operations
in the United States with cattle in 2012
totaled approximately 915,000, down
from 950,000 in 2009. The majority of
these operations that are subject to the
Beef Order may be classified as small
entities. According to the NASS Web
site ‘‘Farms, Land in Farms, and
Livestock Operations,’’ the issues
released between 2005 and 2013
included ‘‘Livestock Operations’’ in the
title. Beginning in 2014, livestock
operations data will be available in the
Census of Agriculture and most recent
data can be referenced from Census
data. This proposed rule imposes no
new burden on the beef industry. It
would provide beef producers, under
certain circumstances, the option of
requesting that their assessments paid to
a State council be directed to the
national program.
However, the proposed rule could
result in decreased assessment funds for
some QSBCs, depending on whether a
State statute is in place, whether refund
provisions are included, and whether
the producer chooses to exercise the
refund provision. Currently, a number
of States are in various stages of
establishing or amending State laws
regarding beef checkoff requirements, so
this information is likely to change.
POTENTIAL FINANCIAL IMPACT ON QSBCS BY STATE
[Current as of 05/06/2016]
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
State 1
State law requirement 2
State refund option?
Alabama .....................
Arizona .......................
Arkansas ....................
California ....................
Colorado .....................
Delaware ....................
Florida ........................
Georgia ......................
Hawaii ........................
Idaho ..........................
$1.00 per head beyond federal ..........................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
1.00 beyond federal ...........................................
None ...................................................................
0.50 per head beyond federal ............................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Not applicable ....................................................
Yes .....................................................................
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
(50% of
assessments
due under
Beef Act) 3
(FY 2015)
$308,618
326,251
366,702
1,810,135
1,364,278
4,325
3,340,762
270,011
15,623
830,548
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
45989
POTENTIAL FINANCIAL IMPACT ON QSBCS BY STATE—Continued
[Current as of 05/06/2016]
State 1
State law requirement 2
State refund option?
Illinois .........................
Indiana .......................
Iowa ............................
Kansas .......................
Kentucky ....................
Louisiana ....................
Maine .........................
Maryland ....................
Michigan .....................
Minnesota ...................
Mississippi ..................
Missouri ......................
Montana .....................
Nebraska ....................
Nevada .......................
New Jersey ................
New Mexico ...............
New York ...................
North Carolina ............
North Dakota ..............
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None ...................................................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
0.50 per head beyond federal ............................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None ...................................................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
Ohio ............................
Oklahoma ...................
Oregon .......................
Pennsylvania ..............
South Carolina ...........
South Dakota .............
Tennessee .................
Texas .........................
Utah ............................
Vermont ......................
Virginia .......................
Washington ................
Wisconsin ...................
Wyoming ....................
1.00 beyond federal ...........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
0.50 beyond federal ...........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None ...................................................................
0.50 beyond federal ...........................................
1.00 beyond federal, effective 10/1/14 ..............
0.50 beyond federal ...........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
0.50 beyond federal ...........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
None beyond federal ..........................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
If State assessment collected, refund available
Not applicable ....................................................
Yes .....................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
Not applicable ....................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
No .......................................................................
Yes, when ND Attorney General certifies federal law does not preclude.
Yes .....................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
Yes, for ‘‘incorrect’’ assessments ......................
No .......................................................................
Yes, at discretion of Commission ......................
Not applicable ....................................................
Yes .....................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
Yes .....................................................................
No .......................................................................
No .......................................................................
No .......................................................................
No .......................................................................
No .......................................................................
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
(50% of
assessments
due under
Beef Act) 3
(FY 2015)
296,718
215,364
1,636,842
3,385,185
624,147
189,751
1,914
43,891
284,914
685,484
222,968
1,160,733
866,981
3,468,679
112,784
4,771
491,527
326,982
162,782
534,462
308,689
1,548,338
427,685
372,275
79,772
1,422,366
405,046
4,620,761
264,339
50,235
366,879
513,601
696,796
428,350
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
1 There are seven States without a QSBC. They are Alaska, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and West
Virginia. In these seven States, the Beef Board collects assessments directly.
2 Per head of cattle sold.
3 Only includes 50 percent of the national assessment that the State retains; does not include State assessment revenue derived from an independent State assessment.
The information collection
requirements on QSBCs are minimal.
QSBCs are already required to remit
assessments to the national programs.
We have not identified any relevant
Federal rules that duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with this rule.
Accordingly, the Administrator of
AMS has conducted this Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and has
determined that this proposed rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small cattle
or beef entities. However, we invite
comments concerning potential effects
of this proposed rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection and
recordkeeping requirements that are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:59 Jul 14, 2016
Jkt 238001
imposed by the Soybean and Beef
Orders have been approved previously
under OMB control number 0581–0093.
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), this proposed rule also
announces that AMS is seeking
emergency approval for a new
information collection request allowing
soybean and beef producers, under
certain circumstances, to request that
assessments paid to a QSSB or QSBC be
redirected to the Soybean Board or Beef
Board, respectively. The additional
burden is optional and is only imposed
if a producer wants to divert
assessments to the national program.
According to the Beef Board, there have
been very few requests from producers
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
seeking redirection of assessments to the
Beef Board. Additionally, the Soybean
Board has not reported any requests
from producers seeking redirection of
assessments to the Soybean Board.
Therefore, we estimate that annually a
small number of soybean producers and
beef producers might submit such a
request and estimate that it would take
an average of 5 minutes per person,
resulting in an additional burden of 0.83
hour for the soybean program and 1.67
hours for the beef program.
AMS is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act, to promote the
use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
45990
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
services, and for other purposes. As
with all Federal promotion programs,
reports and forms are periodically
reviewed to reduce information
requirements and duplication by
industry and public sector agencies.
Title: Redirection of State Soybean
and Beef Assessments to the National
Program.
OMB Number: 0581–NEW.
Type of Request: New collection.
Abstract: The information collection
requirements are essential to carry out
this rule.
The Soybean Act and Order and the
Beef Act and Order authorize the
collection of assessments from soybean
and beef producers. In most cases, these
assessments are collected by QSSBs or
QSBCs that retain up to half of the
assessments. The QSSBs and QSBCs
forward the remainder to the Soybean
Board and Beef Board, which administer
the national soybean and beef checkoff
programs.
The original Soybean and Beef Orders
contained provisions directing QSSBs
and QSBCs, if authorized or required by
State law to pay refunds to producers,
to honor producer refund requests by
forwarding to the national Board that
portion of such refunds equal to the
amount of credit received by the
producer for contributions to the State
entities. Amendments to the Soybean
and Beef Orders in 1995 to remove
obsolete language concerning refunds
had an unintended consequence,
inadvertently allowing QSSBs and
QSBCs to retain a portion of the
assessment even if not required by State
law, under certain circumstances.
Therefore, we propose adding
provisions that would remedy the
removal of the original language. New
provisions would be added to both
Orders to (i) require QSSBs and QSBCs
in States where refunds to producers are
authorized by State statutes to forward
such requested refunds to the national
board and (ii) provide an opportunity
for producers, in States where the State
entity is not authorized by State statute
or State statutes allow, to choose to
direct the full federal assessment to the
national Board.
An estimated 10 soybean respondents
and 20 beef respondents will provide
information to a QSSB or QSBC to
request redirection of assessments. The
estimated cost of providing the
information to the QSSB or QSBC by
respondents would be $82.17. This total
has been estimated by multiplying 2.49
total hours required for reporting by
$33.00, the average mean hourly
earnings of various occupations
involved in keeping this information.
Data for computation of this hourly rate
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:59 Jul 14, 2016
Jkt 238001
was obtained from the U.S. Department
of Labor Statistics.
In turn, QSSBs or QSBCs will respond
to those producers with the decision
and will forward the assessments and
records to the Soybean Board or Beef
Board. The estimated cost of the QSSB
or QSBC providing the information to
producers and the Soybean Board or
Beef Board would be $82.17. This total
has been estimated by multiplying 2.49
total hours required for reporting by
$33.00, the average mean hourly
earnings of various occupations
involved in keeping this information.
Data for computation of this hourly rate
was obtained from the U.S. Department
of Labor Statistics.
The design of the forms has been
carefully reviewed, and every effort has
been made to minimize any unnecessary
recordkeeping costs or requirements,
including efforts to utilize information
already submitted under other soybean
and beef programs administered by the
USDA and other State programs. In fact,
the forms to be used by the QSSBs and
QSBCs were designed to serve a dual
purpose, both for informing producers
of the outcome of their requests and for
forwarding assessments and information
to the Soybean Board and Beef Board.
AMS has determined that there is no
practical method for collecting the
required information without the use of
these forms. The forms would be
available from the national boards,
QSSBs, and QSBCs. The information
collection would be used only by
authorized QSSB, QSBC, Soybean
Board, and Beef Board employees and
representatives of USDA, including
AMS staff. Authorized QSSB, QSBC,
Soybean Board, and Beef Board
employees will be the primary users of
the information, and AMS will be the
secondary user.
The forms require the minimum
information necessary to effectively
carry out producers’ wishes to redirect
to the national boards the portion of the
assessments that the State entities
would otherwise retain. Such
information can be supplied without
data processing equipment or outside
technical expertise. In addition, there
are no additional training requirements
for individuals filling out the forms and
remitting assessments to the QSSBs and
QSBCs. The forms will be simple, easy
to understand, and place as small a
burden as possible on the person filing
the form. The forms are entirely
voluntary for producers, and QSSBs and
QSBCs will only complete their forms as
a result of producers’ requests.
The form may be submitted at any
time, though within the prescribed
deadlines, so as to meet the needs of the
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
industry while minimizing the amount
of work necessary to complete the
forms. In addition, the information to be
included on these forms is not available
from other sources because such
information relates specifically to
individual producers who are subject to
the provisions of the Soybean or Beef
Acts and because there is a need to
ensure that producers are paying the full
assessment required by law.
Therefore, there is no practical
method for collecting the information
without the use of these forms.
The request for approval of the new
information collection is as follows:
(1) Form QSSB–1, Notification to
Qualified State Soybean Board of intent
to redirect assessments to the United
Soybean Board.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated to average 5 minutes per
soybean producer.
Respondents: Soybean producers in
certain States.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
10.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent per Year: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on
Respondents: 0.83 hours.
(2) Form QSBC–1, Notification to
Qualified State Beef Council of intent to
redirect assessments to the Cattlemen’s
Beef Promotion and Research Board.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated to average 5 minutes per
cattle producer.
Respondents: Beef producers in
certain States.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
20.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent per Year: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on
Respondents: 1.66 hours.
Comments: Comments are invited on:
(1) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden of the collection of
information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(3) ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on those who are to respond, including
the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques of
other forms of information technology.
A 60-day period is provided to
comment on the information collection
E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
burden. Comments should reference
OMB No. 0581–NEW and be sent to
Kevin Studer; Research and Promotion
Division; Livestock, Poultry, and Seed
Program; Agricultural Marketing
Service, USDA, Room 2608–S, STOP
0249, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0249; or fax to
(202) 720–1125. All comments received
will be available for public inspection.
All responses to this proposed rule will
be summarized and included in the
request for OMB approval. All
comments will become a matter of
public record.
Comments concerning the
information collection under the PRA
should also be sent to the Desk Officer
for Agriculture, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, Washington,
DC 20503.
Beef Technical Amendments
In addition, several technical
amendments are proposed to update
information in the Beef Promotion and
Research Order and rules and
regulations:
Section 1260.181 (b)(4) currently
requires QSBCs to remit assessments to
the Beef Board by the last day of the
month in which the QSBC received the
assessment ‘‘unless the Board
determines a different date.’’ The Beef
Board’s practice has been to require
QSBCs to remit assessments by the 15th
of the following month. This section
would be updated to reflect actual
practice.
Section 1260.315 would be amended
to reflect the current QSBCs.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 1260
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1220.228
Boards.
Qualified State Soybean
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(5) If the entity is authorized or
required to pay refunds to producers,
certify to the Board that any requests
from producers for such refunds for
contributions to it by the producer will
be honored by forwarding to the Board
that portion of such refunds equal to the
amount of credit received by the
producer for contributions pursuant to
§ 1220.223(a)(3). Entities not authorized
by State statute but organized and
operating within a State and certified by
the Board pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
of this section must provide producers
an opportunity for a State refund and
must forward that refunded portion to
the Board. Producers receiving a refund
from a State entity are required to remit
that refunded portion to the Board in
the manner and form required by the
Secretary.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1260—BEEF PROMOTION AND
RESEARCH
3. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 1260 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2901–2911 and 7
U.S.C. 7401.
4. In § 1260.181, revise paragraph
(b)(4) and add paragraph (b)(5) to read
as follows:
■
Qualified State Beef Councils.
*
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Marketing agreements,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Soybeans and soybean
products.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Imports, Marketing agreement,
Meat and meat products, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For reasons set forth in the preamble,
it is proposed that 7 CFR parts 1220 and
1260 be amended as follows:
PART 1220—SOYBEAN PROMOTION,
RESEARCH, AND CONSUMER
INFORMATION
1. The authority citation for part 1220
continues to read as follows:
■
16:59 Jul 14, 2016
2. In § 1220.228, add a new paragraph
(b)(5) to read as follows:
■
§ 1260.181
7 CFR Part 1220
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6301–6311 and 7
U.S.C. 7401.
Jkt 238001
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Certify to the Board that such
organization shall remit to the Board
assessments paid and remitted to the
council, minus authorized credits
issued to producers pursuant to
§ 1260.172(a)(3), by the 15th day of the
month following the month in which
the assessment was remitted to the
qualified State beef council unless the
Board determines a different date for
remittance of assessments.
(5) Redirection of assessments.
Qualified State beef councils which are
authorized or required by State statutes
to pay refunds to producers must certify
to the Board that any requests from
producers for refunds from the council
for contributions to such council by the
producer will be honored by redirecting
to the Board that portion of such
refunds equal to the amount of credit
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
45991
received by the qualified State beef
councils. In States where State law does
not require the collection of the $1.00per-head assessment set forth in the Act
(the federal assessment) or in States
where State statutes do not require
producers to contribute a portion of the
$1.00-per head federal assessment to the
State beef council, qualified State beef
councils must provide an opportunity
for producers to choose to direct the full
$1.00-per-head federal assessment to the
Board. The request to redirect funds to
the Board must be submitted on the
appropriate form and postmarked by the
15th day of the month following the
month the cattle were sold. Requests
may not be retroactive. Requests to
redirect funds must be submitted by the
producer who paid the assessment.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 1260.312, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 1260.312 Remittance to the Cattlemen’s
Board or Qualified State Beef Council.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Remittances. The remitting person
shall remit all assessments to the
qualified State beef council or its
designee, or, if there is no qualified
State beef council, to the Cattlemen’s
Board at an address designated by the
Board, with the report required in
paragraph (a) of this section not later
than the 15th day of the following
month. All remittances sent to a
qualified State beef council or the
Cattlemen’s Board by the remitting
persons shall be by check or money
order payable to the order of the
qualified State beef council or the
Cattlemen’s Board. All remittances shall
be received subject to collection and
payment at par.
■ 6. Revise § 1260.315 to read as
follows:
§ 1260.315
Qualified State Beef Councils.
The following State beef promotion
entities have been certified by the Board
as qualified State beef councils:
Alabama Cattlemen’s Association
Arizona Beef Council
Arkansas Beef Council
California Beef Council
Colorado Beef Council
Delaware Beef Advisory Board
Florida Beef Council, Inc.
Georgia Beef Board, Inc.
Hawaii Beef Industry Council
Idaho Beef Council
Illinois Beef Council
Indiana Beef Council
Iowa Beef Cattle Producers Association
Kansas Beef Council
Kentucky Beef Cattle Association
Louisiana Beef Industry Council
Maryland Beef Industry Council
E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
45992
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Michigan Beef Industry Commission
Minnesota Beef Council
Mississippi Beef Council, Inc.
Missouri Beef Industry Council, Inc.
Montana Beef Council
Nebraska Beef Council
New Jersey Beef Industry Council
Nevada Beef Council
New Mexico Beef Council
New York Beef Industry Council
North Carolina Cattlemen’s Association
North Dakota Beef Commission
Ohio Beef Council
Oklahoma Beef Council
Oregon Beef Council
Pennsylvania Beef Council, Inc.
South Carolina Beef Council
South Dakota Beef Industry Council
Tennessee Beef Industry Council
Texas Beef Council
Utah Beef Council
Vermont Beef Industry Council
Virginia Beef Industry Council
Washington State Beef Commission
Wisconsin Beef Council, Inc.
Wyoming Beef Council
Dated: July 11, 2016.
Elanor Starmer,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. 2016–16698 Filed 7–14–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2016–7427; Directorate
Identifier 2016–NM–041–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Bombardier,
Inc. Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
We propose to supersede
Airworthiness Directive (AD) 2013–02–
08, for all Bombardier, Inc. Model CL–
600–2B19 (Regional Jet Series 100 &
440) airplanes. AD 2013–02–08
currently requires inspecting the
trunnions and upper and lower pins of
the horizontal stabilizer trim actuator
(HSTA), and replacement or reidentification if necessary; and revising
the maintenance program to include
safe life limits and inspection
requirements for the HSTA. Since we
issued AD 2013–02–08, we determined
that not all affected attachment pins and
trunnions were included in the required
inspections. In addition, for certain
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:59 Jul 14, 2016
Jkt 238001
airplanes on which the replacement in
AD 2013–02–08 was done, incorrect
attachment hardware may have been
used. This proposed AD would require
measuring the diameter of certain bolts
and attach holes, and, as applicable,
measuring the diameter of the attach
holes in the trunnions and pins, doing
detailed visual inspections of the
trunnions, pins, and spacers, doing
corrective actions, and re-identifying
trunnions and pins. This proposed AD
also requires revising the maintenance
or inspection program. This proposed
AD also removes certain airplanes from
the applicability. We are proposing this
AD to prevent failure of the attachment
pins and trunnions of the HSTA. This
condition could result in separation of
the horizontal stabilizer, and
consequent loss of control of the
airplane.
We must receive comments on
this proposed AD by August 29, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this NPRM, contact Bombardier, Inc.,
ˆ
400 Cote-Vertu Road West, Dorval,
´
Quebec H4S 1Y9, Canada; telephone
514–855–5000; fax 514–855–7401; email
thd.crj@aero.bombardier.com; Internet
https://www.bombardier.com. You may
view this referenced service information
at the FAA, Transport Airplane
Directorate, 1601 Lind Avenue SW.,
Renton, WA. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA,
call 425–227–1221.
DATES:
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2016–
7427; or in person at the Docket
Management Facility between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this proposed AD, the
regulatory evaluation, any comments
received, and other information. The
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
street address for the Docket Operations
office (telephone 800–647–5527) is in
the ADDRESSES section. Comments will
be available in the AD docket shortly
after receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Cesar Gomez, Aerospace Engineer,
Airframe and Mechanical Systems
Branch, ANE–171, FAA, New York
Aircraft Certification Office, 1600
Stewart Avenue, Suite 410, Westbury,
New York 11590; telephone (516) 228–
7318; fax (516) 794–5531.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments about
this proposed AD. Send your comments
to an address listed under the
ADDRESSES section. Include ‘‘Docket No.
FAA–2016–7427; Directorate Identifier
2016–NM–041–AD’’ at the beginning of
your comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of this proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend this
proposed AD based on those comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact we receive
about this proposed AD.
Discussion
On, January 16, 2013, we issued AD
2013–02–08, Amendment 39–17329 (78
FR 7647, February 4, 2013) (‘‘AD 2013–
02–08’’). AD 2013–02–08 requires
actions intended to address an unsafe
condition on all Bombardier, Inc. Model
CL–600–2B19 (Regional Jet Series 100 &
440) airplanes.
Since we issued AD 2013–02–08, we
have determined that not all affected
attachment pins and trunnions were
included in the required inspections of
AD 2013–02–08. In addition, for
airplanes on which certain service
information was incorporated, incorrect
attachment hardware may have been
used to re-install the HSTA attachment
pins and trunnions.
Transport Canada Civil Aviation
(TCCA), which is the aviation authority
for Canada, has issued Canadian
Airworthiness Directive CF–2016–08,
dated March 30, 2016 (referred to after
this as the Mandatory Continuing
Airworthiness Information, or ‘‘the
MCAI’’), to correct an unsafe condition
for certain Bombardier, Inc. Model CL–
600–2B19 (Regional Jet Series 100 &
440) airplanes. The MCAI states:
E:\FR\FM\15JYP1.SGM
15JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 136 (Friday, July 15, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 45984-45992]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-16698]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 136 / Friday, July 15, 2016 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 45984]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Parts 1220 and 1260
[No. AMS-LPS-13-0083]
RIN 0581-AD49
Soybean Promotion, Research, and Consumer Information; Beef
Promotion and Research; Amendments To Allow Redirection of State
Assessments to the National Program; Technical Amendments
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would amend the Soybean Promotion,
Research, and Consumer Information Order (Soybean Order) and the Beef
Promotion and Research Order (Beef Order) to add provisions allowing
soybean and beef producers to request, under certain circumstances,
that their assessments paid to a State board or council authorized
under their respective statutes, be redirected to the national program.
The proposed rule also would make technical amendments to the Beef
Order.
DATES: Written comments must be received by September 13, 2016.
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act, comments on the information
collection burden that would result from this proposal must be received
by September 13, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on
the Internet at www.regulations.gov or to Kevin Studer; Research and
Promotion Division; Livestock, Poultry, and Seed Program; Agricultural
Marketing Service, USDA, Room 2608-S, STOP 0249, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250-0249; or fax to (202) 720-1125. All
comments should reference the docket number, the date, and the page
number of this issue of the Federal Register and will be available for
public inspection at the above office during regular business hours.
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), send comments
regarding the accuracy of the burden estimate, ways to minimize the
burden, including the use of automated collection techniques or other
forms of information technology, or any other aspect of this collection
of information to the above address. Comments concerning the
information collection under the PRA should also be sent to the Desk
Officer for Agriculture, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503.
Please be advised that all comments submitted in response to this
notice will be included in the record and will be made available to the
public on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov. Also, the
identity of the individuals or entities submitting the comments will be
made public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kevin Studer, Research and Promotion
Division, at (202) 253-2380, fax (202) 720-1125, or by email at
Kevinj.Studer@ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has waived the review
process required by Executive Order 12866 for this action.
Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. It is not intended to have retroactive effect.
Executive Order 13175
The Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) has assessed the impact of
this proposed rule on Indian tribes and determined that this rule would
not, to our knowledge, have tribal implications that require tribal
consultation under Executive Order 13175. If a Tribe requests
consultation, AMS will work with the Department of Agriculture's (USDA)
Office of Tribal Relations to ensure meaningful consultation is
provided where changes, additions, and modifications are identified in
this proposed rule.
Soybean Order
The Soybean Promotion, Research, and Consumer Information Act
(Soybean Act) (7 U.S.C. 6301-6311) provides that administrative
proceedings must be exhausted before parties may file suit in court.
Under section 1971 of the Soybean Act, a person subject to the Soybean
Order may file a petition with USDA stating that the Soybean Order, any
provision of the Soybean Order, or any obligation imposed in connection
with the Soybean Order, is not in accordance with the law and request a
modification of the Soybean Order or an exemption from the Soybean
Order. The petitioner is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on the
petition. After a hearing, USDA would rule on the petition. The Soybean
Act provides that district courts of the United States in any district
in which such person is an inhabitant, or has their principal place of
business, has jurisdiction to review USDA's ruling on the petition, if
a complaint for this purpose is filed within 20 days after the date of
the entry of the ruling.
Further, section 1974 of the Soybean Act provides, with certain
exceptions, that nothing in the Soybean Act may be construed to preempt
or supersede any other program relating to soybean promotion, research,
consumer information, or industry information organized under the laws
of the United States or any State. One exception in the Soybean Act
concerns assessments collected by Qualified State Soybean Boards
(QSSBs). The exception provides that to ensure adequate funding of the
operations of QSSBs under the Soybean Act, no State law or regulation
may limit or have the effect of limiting the full amount of assessments
that a QSSB in that State may collect, and which is authorized to be
credited under the Soybean Act. Another exception concerns certain
referenda conducted during specified periods by a State relating to the
continuation of a QSSB or State soybean assessment.
Beef Order
Section 11 of the Beef Research and Promotion Act of 1985 (Beef
Act) (7 U.S.C. 2901-2911) provides that nothing in the Beef Act may be
construed to preempt or supersede any other program relating to beef
promotion organized and operated under the laws of the United States or
any State.
[[Page 45985]]
Background and Proposed Action
Soybean Order Amendments
The Soybean Act and the Soybean Order issued thereunder authorize
the collection of an assessment from soybean producers of one-half of
one percent (0.5 percent) of the net market value of soybeans,
processed soybeans, or soybean products. In most cases, these
assessments are collected by QSSBs that retain up to half of the
assessments as authorized by the Soybean Act. The QSSBs as defined
under Section 1967 (14) of the Soybean Act will forward the remainder
to the United Soybean Board (Soybean Board), which administers the
national soybean checkoff program.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 1967(14) of the Soybean Act states:
(14) QUALIFIED STATE SOYBEAN BOARD. The term ``qualified State
soybean board'' means a State soybean promotion entity that is
authorized by State law. If no such entity exists in a State, the
term ``qualified State soybean board'' means a soybean producer-
governed entity)--(A) that is organized and operating within a
State; (B) that receives voluntary contributions and conducts
soybean promotion, research, consumer information, or industry
information programs; and (C) that meets criteria established by the
Board as approved by the Secretary relating to the qualifications of
such entity to perform duties under the order and is recognized by
the Board as the soybean promotion and research entity within the
State.
Likewise, 7 CFR 1220.122 of the Soybean Order states:
The term Qualified State Soybean Board means a State soybean
promotion entity that is authorized by State law and elects to be
the Qualified State Soybean Board for the State in which it operates
pursuant to Sec. 1220.228(a)(1). If no such entity exists in a
State, the term Qualified State Soybean Board means a soybean
producer-governed entity--
(a) That is organized and operating within a State; (b) That
receives voluntary contributions and conducts soybean promotion,
research, consumer information, or industry information programs;
and (c) That meets the criteria, established by the Board and
approved by the Secretary, relating to the qualifications of such
entity to perform its duties under this part as determined by the
Board, and is certified by the Board under Sec. 1220.228(a)(2),
with the approval of the Secretary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The original Soybean Order, which became effective July 9, 1991,
mandated that all producers marketing soybeans pay an assessment of
one-half of one percent (0.5 percent) of the net market price of the
market price of soybeans sold. The original Soybean Order contained a
provision in Sec. 1220.228(b)(5)(i), which required QSSBs that were
authorized or required to pay refunds to producers to certify to the
Soybean Board that they would honor any request from a producer for a
refund from the QSSB by forwarding to the Soybean Board those
contributions for which the producer received a credit, pursuant to
Sec. 1220.223(a)(3). In other words, this section implicitly
authorized refunds by the QSSB if State law allowed or required the
QSSB to pay refunds; it further directed that the producer receive a
credit for those refunds, with the amount sent to the Soybean Board.
Refunds under the soybean program were discontinued on October 1,
1995, after the Secretary determined through a producer poll that
continuation of refunds was not favored by a majority of producers. In
late 1995, 7 CFR 1220.228(b)(5)(i) was removed as part of rulemaking to
eliminate obsolete regulatory language. However, this action had an
unintended effect of inadvertently allowing QSSBs to retain a portion
of the assessment even if not required by State law, under any
circumstances.
In States where payments to a QSSB are not required by State law,
the opportunity for producers to choose to direct the full federal
assessment to the Soybean Board is already AMS' current policy; this
rule is intended to formalize the policy. Therefore, AMS proposes
adding provisions that remedy the removal of the original refund
language. A new provision would be added to the Soybean Order to (i)
require producers in States where refunds are authorized to forward
that refund to the Soybean Board and (ii) provide an opportunity for a
refund if the QSSB is not authorized by State statute but is organized
and operating within a State and is certified by the Soybean Board, as
provided by Sec. 1220.228(a)(2). AMS proposes to require that the form
must be postmarked by the 30th day of the month following the month the
soybeans were sold. Assessments would not be able to be retroactively
redirected from the QSSB to the Soybean Board. Likewise, AMS proposes
to require that the QSSB must respond by the last day of the month
following the month in which the OMB-approved QSSB-1 form was received.
Regardless of a State's requirements or refunding provisions, a
producer is required by the Soybean Act to pay an assessment of one-
half of one percent (0.5 percent) of the net market value of soybeans,
processed soybeans, or soybean products. Several States have additional
producer assessments, mandated by State statutes that are collected in
addition to the assessment required by the Soybean Act as set forth in
the chart provided. If a QSSB offers a producer refund under a State
statute, the QSSB can only refund to the producer any State assessment
collected in excess of the assessment that the producer is required to
pay under the Soybean Act. AMS proposes that the portion of the
assessment compelled by the Soybean Act that the QSSB would normally
keep can be redirected to the national program by the producer if State
law allows.
Examples
A soybean producer in California pays an assessment for a
soybean sale. The assessment is collected by a certified Western Region
Soybean Board, which keeps 50% and forwards the remaining 50% to the
Soybean Board. California has no State law requiring a California
assessment, so the California producer may request that the 50% of the
assessment amount retained by the Western Region Soybean Board be
redirected to the Soybean Board.
A soybean producer in Iowa pays an assessment for a
soybean sale. The assessment is collected by Iowa Soybean Promotion
Board, which keeps 50% and forwards the remaining 50% to the Soybean
Board. Iowa has a State law with a refund provision, so the Iowa
producer may request that the 50% of the assessment amount retained by
the Iowa Soybean Promotion Board be redirected to the Soybean Board.
A soybean producer in Virginia pays an assessment for a
soybean sale. The assessment is collected by the Virginia Soybean Board
which keeps 50% and forwards the remaining 50% to the Soybean Board.
Virginia has a State law with no refund provision, so the Virginia
soybean producer may not request that the 50% of the assessment amount
retained by the Virginia Soybean Board be redirected to the Soybean
Board.
Beef Order Amendments
Similarly, the Beef Promotion and Research Act of 1985 (Beef Act)
and the Beef Promotion and Research Order (Beef Order) issued
thereunder authorize the collection of an assessment from cattle
producers of $1.00 per head of cattle sold. In most cases, these
assessments are collected by Qualified State Beef Councils (QSBCs) that
retain up to one-half of the assessments as authorized by the Beef Act.
The QSBCs, as defined under Section 3(14) of the Beef Act, are required
to forward the remainder to the Cattlemen's Beef Promotion and Research
Board (Beef Board), which administers the national beef checkoff
program.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Section 3(14) of the Beef Act states that ``the term
``qualified State beef council'' means a beef promotion entity that
is authorized by State statute or is organized and operating within
a State, that receives voluntary contributions and conducts beef
promotion, research, and consumer information programs, and that is
recognized by the Board as the beef promotion entity within such
State.'' Likewise, 7 CFR 1260.115 of the Beef Order states
``Qualified State beef council means a beef promotion entity that is
authorized by State statute or a beef promotion entity organized and
operating within a State that receives voluntary assessments or
contributions; conducts beef promotion, research, and consumer and
industry information programs; and that is certified by the Board
pursuant to this subpart as the beef promotion entity in such
State.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 45986]]
The original Beef Order, which became effective July 18, 1986,
mandated that all producers owning and marketing cattle pay an
assessment of $1.00 per head of cattle, to be collected each time
cattle are sold. The original Beef Order contained a provision in Sec.
1260.181(b)(5), which required QSBCs that were authorized or required
by State law to pay refunds to producers to certify to the Beef Board
that they would honor any request from a producer for a refund from the
QSBC by forwarding to the Beef Board those contributions for which the
producer received a credit, pursuant to Sec. 1260.172(a)(3). In other
words, this section authorized refunds by the QSBC if State law allowed
or required the QSBC to pay refunds; it further directed that the
producer receive a credit for those refunds, with the amount redirected
to the Beef Board.
In a May 10, 1988, referendum conducted by the Secretary, cattle
producers and importers voted to institute mandatory assessments. In
late 1995, 7 CFR 1260.181(b)(5) was removed as part of rulemaking to
eliminate obsolete regulatory language. However, this action had an
unintended effect of inadvertently allowing QSBCs to retain a portion
of the $1.00-per-head assessment even if not required by State law,
under any circumstances. Therefore, AMS proposes adding provisions that
would remedy the removal of the original language in Sec.
1260.181(b)(5).
Furthermore, while the Beef Act and Beef Order authorize QSBCs to
retain up to 50 cents per head of cattle assessed, neither the Beef Act
nor the Beef Order require producers to contribute a portion of the
$1.00-per-head assessment to a QSBC. Thus, unless State statutes
require the collection of the $1.00-per-head assessment set forth in
the Beef Act (the federal assessment) or require producers to
contribute a portion of the $1.00-per-head federal assessment to the
State beef council, producers may be able to choose not to contribute
up to 50 cents per head of the federal assessment to their QSBC. While
the original Beef Order did not address the specific situation that
allows producers to choose not to contribute up to 50 cents per head of
the federal assessment to a QSBC, AMS proposes to address this in the
new language. A new provision would be added to the Beef Order to (i)
require QSBCs in States where refunds to producers of the $1.00-per-
head assessment collected per the Beef Act and Beef Order are
authorized by State statute to forward that refund to the Beef Board,
and (ii) provide an opportunity for producers to choose to direct the
full $1.00-per-head federal assessment to the Beef Board in States
where State law does not require the collection of the $1.00-per-head
assessment set forth in the Beef Act (the federal assessment) or in
States where State statutes do not require producers to contribute a
portion of the $1.00-per head federal assessment to the State beef
council. In States where payments to a QSBC are not required by State
law, the opportunity for producers to choose to direct the full $1.00-
per-head federal assessment to the Beef Board is already AMS' current
policy; this rule is intended to formalize the policy. As QSBCs are
responsible for collecting assessments on cattle sold in or originating
in their State (Sec. 1260.172(a)(5) and Sec. 1260.181(b)(3)),
producers who are allowed refunds under State statutes and choose to
redirect the full $1.00-per-head assessment to Beef Board must submit
to the QSBC a written request on an approved request form. AMS proposes
to require that the form must be postmarked by the 15th day of the
month following the month the cattle were sold. Assessments would not
be able to be retroactively redirected from the QSBC to the Beef Board,
and QSBCs would be required to respond to such requests within 60 days.
Regardless of a State's requirements or refunding provisions, a
producer is required by the Beef Act to pay an assessment of $1.00 on
each head of cattle sold. Several States have additional producer
assessments, mandated by State statutes, that are collected in addition
to the $1.00-per-head assessment required by the Beef Act. If a QSBC
offers a producer refund under a State statute, the QSBC can only
refund to the producer any State assessment collected in addition to
the $1.00-per-head assessment that the producer is required to pay
under the Beef Act. AMS proposes that the portion of the $1.00-per-head
federal assessment that the QSBC would normally keep under Sec.
1260.181(b)(4) can be redirected to the national program by the
producer if State law allows.
Examples
A producer in Kansas pays the $1.00 federal assessment for
a cattle sale. The Kansas Beef Council collects $1.00, keeps $0.50, and
forwards $0.50 to the Beef Board. Since there is no Kansas law
compelling producers to contribute to the Kansas Beef Council, the
producer may request that the $0.50 of the original $1.00 assessment be
redirected to the Beef Board.
A producer in Colorado pays $1.00 in assessments for a
cattle sale. The Colorado Beef Council collects $1.00, keeps $0.50, and
forwards $0.50 to the Beef Board. Colorado State law requires an
assessment but allows a refund. The producer may request that the $0.50
cents of the original $1.00 assessment be redirected to the Beef Board.
A producer in California pays $1.00 in assessments for a
cattle sale. The California Beef Council collects $1.00, keeps $0.50,
and forwards $0.50 to the Beef Board. California law compels the
collection of the $1.00-per-head assessment and does not provide for a
refund. The producer may not request the California Beef Council to
redirect any portion of the $0.50 to the Beef Board.
A producer in Idaho pays the $1.00-per-head federal
assessment plus the $0.50-per-head State-mandated assessment for a
cattle sale. The Idaho Beef Council collects $1.50, keeps $1.00, and
forwards $0.50 to the Beef Board. The producer requests a refund of all
funds paid to the Idaho Beef Council. The Idaho Beef Council may refund
the $0.50-per-head State assessment to the producer, but the producer
is required to pay $1.00 under the Beef Act. Since Idaho State law only
compels an assessment of $0.50, which is refundable, the producer may
request the Idaho Beef Council to redirect the remaining $0.50 of the
$1.00 retained from the original $1.00-per-head federal assessment to
the Beef Board.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the requirements set forth in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601-612), the Administrator of the AMS
has considered the economic effect of this action on small entities and
has determined that this proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The purpose
of RFA is to fit regulatory actions to the scale of businesses subject
to such actions in order that small businesses will not be unduly
burdened.
Soybean Industry
USDA's Farm Service Agency estimates that there are 569,998 soybean
producers subject to the Soybean Order. This estimate comes from
including all soybean producers engaged in the production of soybeans
in the previous 2 years. The majority of producers subject to the
Soybean Order are small
[[Page 45987]]
businesses under the criteria established by the Small Business
Administration (SBA) [13 CFR 121.201]. SBA defines small agricultural
producers as those having annual receipts of less than $750,000.
This proposed rule imposes no new burden on the soybean industry.
It would provide soybean producers, under certain circumstances, the
option of requesting that their assessments paid to a State board be
directed to the national program.
However, the proposed rule could result in decreased assessment
funds for some QSSBs, depending on whether a State statute is in place,
whether refund provisions are included, and whether the producer
chooses to exercise the refund provision.
Potential Financial Impact on QSSBs by State
[Current as of 05/01/2016]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
State \1\ State law requirement Refund option (50% of
assessments due
under Soybean Act)
\2\ (FY 2015)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama............................ Statute establishes $0.02 per Yes..................... $445,917
bushel maximum assessment;
regulations establish $0.01
per bushel maximum
assessment.
Arizona \4\........................ 5% of the annual gross sales No...................... ..................
dollar value maximum annual
assessment.
Arkansas........................... $0.02 per bushel; 0.25% of Yes, on both............ 3,946,583
net market price during
continuance of federal
program.
California \4\..................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Colorado \4\....................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Connecticut \3\.................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Delaware........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes (under general 245,921
promotion statute).
Georgia............................ 0.05 per bushel.............. No...................... 195,398
Idaho \4\.......................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Illinois........................... Statute establishes \1/2\ of Yes..................... 13,941,988
1% of the net market price
of soybeans produced and
sold.
Indiana............................ None beyond federal.......... Yes..................... 7,855,049
Iowa............................... If national assessment Yes..................... 12,788,353
collection, 0.25% of net
market price; if not, 0.5%
of net market price.
Kansas............................. Statute sets maximum at 0.5% Yes, provided refund 3,415,025
of net market price while amount is $5 or more.
federal program effective;
regulation sets assessment
at 20 mills ($0.02) per
bushel as State default
assessment.
Kentucky........................... 0.25% of net market price per Yes..................... 2,148,849
bushel on all soybeans
marketed within Kentucky.
Louisiana.......................... 0.01 per bushel on all Yes..................... 2,131,537
soybeans grown in Louisiana.
Maine \3\.......................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
Maryland........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes..................... 588,195
Massachusetts \3\.................. None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Michigan........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes, for funds left over 2,329,254
at close of marketing
season.
Minnesota.......................... General statute sets maximum Yes..................... 8,151,802
at 1% of the market value of
the year's production of
participating producers; MN
Soybean and Research and
Promotion Council sets
assessment at 0.5%.
Mississippi........................ 0.01 per bushel.............. Yes..................... 2,955,549
Missouri........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes..................... 6,419,003
Montana \4\........................ None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
Nebraska........................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... 6,952,254
Nevada \4\......................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
New Hampshire \3\.................. None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
New Jersey......................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... 110,113
New Mexico \4\..................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
New York........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes, but left to 254,297
discretion of
commissioner.
North Carolina..................... None beyond federal.......... Yes, if assessment 1,768,352
enacted.
North Dakota....................... 0.5% of sale value........... No...................... 4,913,972
Ohio............................... None beyond federal; capped Yes..................... 6,575,663
at 2 cents per bushel if
assessment enacted.
Oklahoma........................... None beyond federal.......... Yes..................... 279,962
Oregon \4\......................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
Pennsylvania....................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... 618,190
Rhode Island \3\................... None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
South Carolina..................... 0.005 per bushel............. Yes..................... 367,307
South Dakota....................... 0.5% of value of the net Yes..................... 5,185,112
market price.
Tennessee.......................... 0.01 per bushel.............. Yes..................... 1,985,565
Texas.............................. None beyond federal.......... Yes..................... 117,588
Utah \4\........................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
[[Page 45988]]
Vermont \3\........................ None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
Virginia........................... Statute allows $0.02 per No...................... 645,754
bushel; regulation specifies
$0.01 per bushel.
Washington \4\..................... None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
West Virginia \3\.................. None......................... Not applicable.......... ..................
Wisconsin.......................... Capped by statute at $0.02 Yes..................... 1,838,960
per bushel; actual
assessment determined annual
by board.
Wyoming \4\........................ None beyond federal.......... No...................... ..................
Eastern Region \ 5\................ ............................. ........................ 48,391
Western Region \6\................. ............................. ........................ 17,121
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are 31 QSSBs. Two represent multiple States.
\2\ Only includes 50 percent of the national assessment that the State retains; does not include State
assessment revenue derived from an independent State assessment. In addition, the notation--indicates that the
amount of national assessment retained by the state is a de minimis amount.
\3\ Covered by Eastern Region.
\4\ Covered by Western Region.
\5\ Eastern Region includes Connecticut, Florida, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont,
and West Virginia.
\6\ ``Western Region includes Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah,
Washington, and Wyoming.
The information collection requirements on QSSBs are minimal. QSSBs
are already required to remit assessments to the national programs. We
have not identified any relevant Federal rules that duplicate, overlap,
or conflict with this rule.
Accordingly, the Administrator of AMS has conducted this Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and has determined that this proposed
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small soybean entities. However, we invite comments
concerning potential effects of this proposed rule.
Beef Industry
In the February 2013, publication of ``Farms, Land in Farms, and
Livestock Operations,'' USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service
(NASS) estimates that the number of operations in the United States
with cattle in 2012 totaled approximately 915,000, down from 950,000 in
2009. The majority of these operations that are subject to the Beef
Order may be classified as small entities. According to the NASS Web
site ``Farms, Land in Farms, and Livestock Operations,'' the issues
released between 2005 and 2013 included ``Livestock Operations'' in the
title. Beginning in 2014, livestock operations data will be available
in the Census of Agriculture and most recent data can be referenced
from Census data. This proposed rule imposes no new burden on the beef
industry. It would provide beef producers, under certain circumstances,
the option of requesting that their assessments paid to a State council
be directed to the national program.
However, the proposed rule could result in decreased assessment
funds for some QSBCs, depending on whether a State statute is in place,
whether refund provisions are included, and whether the producer
chooses to exercise the refund provision. Currently, a number of States
are in various stages of establishing or amending State laws regarding
beef checkoff requirements, so this information is likely to change.
Potential Financial Impact on QSBCs by State
[Current as of 05/06/2016]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amount of national
assessment
retained by state
State \1\ State law requirement \2\ State refund option? (50% of
assessments due
under Beef Act)
\3\ (FY 2015)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama.............................. $1.00 per head beyond Yes...................... $308,618
federal.
Arizona.............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 326,251
Arkansas............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 366,702
California........................... None beyond federal....... No....................... 1,810,135
Colorado............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 1,364,278
Delaware............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 4,325
Florida.............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 3,340,762
Georgia.............................. 1.00 beyond federal....... No....................... 270,011
Hawaii............................... None...................... Not applicable........... 15,623
Idaho................................ 0.50 per head beyond Yes...................... 830,548
federal.
[[Page 45989]]
Illinois............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 296,718
Indiana.............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 215,364
Iowa................................. None beyond federal....... If State assessment 1,636,842
collected, refund
available.
Kansas............................... None...................... Not applicable........... 3,385,185
Kentucky............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 624,147
Louisiana............................ 0.50 per head beyond Yes...................... 189,751
federal.
Maine................................ None beyond federal....... No....................... 1,914
Maryland............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 43,891
Michigan............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 284,914
Minnesota............................ None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 685,484
Mississippi.......................... None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 222,968
Missouri............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 1,160,733
Montana.............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 866,981
Nebraska............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 3,468,679
Nevada............................... None...................... Not applicable........... 112,784
New Jersey........................... None beyond federal....... No....................... 4,771
New Mexico........................... None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 491,527
New York............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 326,982
North Carolina....................... None beyond federal....... No....................... 162,782
North Dakota......................... None beyond federal....... Yes, when ND Attorney 534,462
General certifies
federal law does not
preclude.
Ohio................................. 1.00 beyond federal....... Yes...................... 308,689
Oklahoma............................. None beyond federal....... Yes...................... 1,548,338
Oregon............................... 0.50 beyond federal....... Yes, for ``incorrect'' 427,685
assessments.
Pennsylvania......................... None beyond federal....... No....................... 372,275
South Carolina....................... None beyond federal....... Yes, at discretion of 79,772
Commission.
South Dakota......................... None...................... Not applicable........... 1,422,366
Tennessee............................ 0.50 beyond federal....... Yes...................... 405,046
Texas................................ 1.00 beyond federal, Yes...................... 4,620,761
effective 10/1/14.
Utah................................. 0.50 beyond federal....... Yes...................... 264,339
Vermont.............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 50,235
Virginia............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 366,879
Washington........................... 0.50 beyond federal....... No....................... 513,601
Wisconsin............................ None beyond federal....... No....................... 696,796
Wyoming.............................. None beyond federal....... No....................... 428,350
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are seven States without a QSBC. They are Alaska, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, and West Virginia. In these seven States, the Beef Board collects assessments directly.
\2\ Per head of cattle sold.
\3\ Only includes 50 percent of the national assessment that the State retains; does not include State
assessment revenue derived from an independent State assessment.
The information collection requirements on QSBCs are minimal. QSBCs
are already required to remit assessments to the national programs. We
have not identified any relevant Federal rules that duplicate, overlap,
or conflict with this rule.
Accordingly, the Administrator of AMS has conducted this Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and has determined that this proposed
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small cattle or beef entities. However, we invite comments
concerning potential effects of this proposed rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection and recordkeeping requirements that are
imposed by the Soybean and Beef Orders have been approved previously
under OMB control number 0581-0093. In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), this proposed rule also
announces that AMS is seeking emergency approval for a new information
collection request allowing soybean and beef producers, under certain
circumstances, to request that assessments paid to a QSSB or QSBC be
redirected to the Soybean Board or Beef Board, respectively. The
additional burden is optional and is only imposed if a producer wants
to divert assessments to the national program. According to the Beef
Board, there have been very few requests from producers seeking
redirection of assessments to the Beef Board. Additionally, the Soybean
Board has not reported any requests from producers seeking redirection
of assessments to the Soybean Board. Therefore, we estimate that
annually a small number of soybean producers and beef producers might
submit such a request and estimate that it would take an average of 5
minutes per person, resulting in an additional burden of 0.83 hour for
the soybean program and 1.67 hours for the beef program.
AMS is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to promote
the use of the Internet and other information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen access to Government information
and
[[Page 45990]]
services, and for other purposes. As with all Federal promotion
programs, reports and forms are periodically reviewed to reduce
information requirements and duplication by industry and public sector
agencies.
Title: Redirection of State Soybean and Beef Assessments to the
National Program.
OMB Number: 0581-NEW.
Type of Request: New collection.
Abstract: The information collection requirements are essential to
carry out this rule.
The Soybean Act and Order and the Beef Act and Order authorize the
collection of assessments from soybean and beef producers. In most
cases, these assessments are collected by QSSBs or QSBCs that retain up
to half of the assessments. The QSSBs and QSBCs forward the remainder
to the Soybean Board and Beef Board, which administer the national
soybean and beef checkoff programs.
The original Soybean and Beef Orders contained provisions directing
QSSBs and QSBCs, if authorized or required by State law to pay refunds
to producers, to honor producer refund requests by forwarding to the
national Board that portion of such refunds equal to the amount of
credit received by the producer for contributions to the State
entities. Amendments to the Soybean and Beef Orders in 1995 to remove
obsolete language concerning refunds had an unintended consequence,
inadvertently allowing QSSBs and QSBCs to retain a portion of the
assessment even if not required by State law, under certain
circumstances. Therefore, we propose adding provisions that would
remedy the removal of the original language. New provisions would be
added to both Orders to (i) require QSSBs and QSBCs in States where
refunds to producers are authorized by State statutes to forward such
requested refunds to the national board and (ii) provide an opportunity
for producers, in States where the State entity is not authorized by
State statute or State statutes allow, to choose to direct the full
federal assessment to the national Board.
An estimated 10 soybean respondents and 20 beef respondents will
provide information to a QSSB or QSBC to request redirection of
assessments. The estimated cost of providing the information to the
QSSB or QSBC by respondents would be $82.17. This total has been
estimated by multiplying 2.49 total hours required for reporting by
$33.00, the average mean hourly earnings of various occupations
involved in keeping this information. Data for computation of this
hourly rate was obtained from the U.S. Department of Labor Statistics.
In turn, QSSBs or QSBCs will respond to those producers with the
decision and will forward the assessments and records to the Soybean
Board or Beef Board. The estimated cost of the QSSB or QSBC providing
the information to producers and the Soybean Board or Beef Board would
be $82.17. This total has been estimated by multiplying 2.49 total
hours required for reporting by $33.00, the average mean hourly
earnings of various occupations involved in keeping this information.
Data for computation of this hourly rate was obtained from the U.S.
Department of Labor Statistics.
The design of the forms has been carefully reviewed, and every
effort has been made to minimize any unnecessary recordkeeping costs or
requirements, including efforts to utilize information already
submitted under other soybean and beef programs administered by the
USDA and other State programs. In fact, the forms to be used by the
QSSBs and QSBCs were designed to serve a dual purpose, both for
informing producers of the outcome of their requests and for forwarding
assessments and information to the Soybean Board and Beef Board. AMS
has determined that there is no practical method for collecting the
required information without the use of these forms. The forms would be
available from the national boards, QSSBs, and QSBCs. The information
collection would be used only by authorized QSSB, QSBC, Soybean Board,
and Beef Board employees and representatives of USDA, including AMS
staff. Authorized QSSB, QSBC, Soybean Board, and Beef Board employees
will be the primary users of the information, and AMS will be the
secondary user.
The forms require the minimum information necessary to effectively
carry out producers' wishes to redirect to the national boards the
portion of the assessments that the State entities would otherwise
retain. Such information can be supplied without data processing
equipment or outside technical expertise. In addition, there are no
additional training requirements for individuals filling out the forms
and remitting assessments to the QSSBs and QSBCs. The forms will be
simple, easy to understand, and place as small a burden as possible on
the person filing the form. The forms are entirely voluntary for
producers, and QSSBs and QSBCs will only complete their forms as a
result of producers' requests.
The form may be submitted at any time, though within the prescribed
deadlines, so as to meet the needs of the industry while minimizing the
amount of work necessary to complete the forms. In addition, the
information to be included on these forms is not available from other
sources because such information relates specifically to individual
producers who are subject to the provisions of the Soybean or Beef Acts
and because there is a need to ensure that producers are paying the
full assessment required by law.
Therefore, there is no practical method for collecting the
information without the use of these forms.
The request for approval of the new information collection is as
follows:
(1) Form QSSB-1, Notification to Qualified State Soybean Board of
intent to redirect assessments to the United Soybean Board.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to average 5 minutes per soybean producer.
Respondents: Soybean producers in certain States.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 10.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent per Year: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on Respondents: 0.83 hours.
(2) Form QSBC-1, Notification to Qualified State Beef Council of
intent to redirect assessments to the Cattlemen's Beef Promotion and
Research Board.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to average 5 minutes per cattle producer.
Respondents: Beef producers in certain States.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 20.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent per Year: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on Respondents: 1.66 hours.
Comments: Comments are invited on: (1) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the information will have practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of the
collection of information, including the validity of the methodology
and assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected; and (4) ways to minimize
the burden of the collection of information on those who are to
respond, including the use of appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques of other forms
of information technology.
A 60-day period is provided to comment on the information
collection
[[Page 45991]]
burden. Comments should reference OMB No. 0581-NEW and be sent to Kevin
Studer; Research and Promotion Division; Livestock, Poultry, and Seed
Program; Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA, Room 2608-S, STOP 0249,
1400 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250-0249; or fax to
(202) 720-1125. All comments received will be available for public
inspection. All responses to this proposed rule will be summarized and
included in the request for OMB approval. All comments will become a
matter of public record.
Comments concerning the information collection under the PRA should
also be sent to the Desk Officer for Agriculture, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC
20503.
Beef Technical Amendments
In addition, several technical amendments are proposed to update
information in the Beef Promotion and Research Order and rules and
regulations:
Section 1260.181 (b)(4) currently requires QSBCs to remit
assessments to the Beef Board by the last day of the month in which the
QSBC received the assessment ``unless the Board determines a different
date.'' The Beef Board's practice has been to require QSBCs to remit
assessments by the 15th of the following month. This section would be
updated to reflect actual practice.
Section 1260.315 would be amended to reflect the current QSBCs.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 1220
Administrative practice and procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Marketing agreements, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Soybeans and soybean products.
7 CFR Part 1260
Administrative practice and procedure, Advertising, Agricultural
research, Imports, Marketing agreement, Meat and meat products,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For reasons set forth in the preamble, it is proposed that 7 CFR
parts 1220 and 1260 be amended as follows:
PART 1220--SOYBEAN PROMOTION, RESEARCH, AND CONSUMER INFORMATION
0
1. The authority citation for part 1220 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6301-6311 and 7 U.S.C. 7401.
0
2. In Sec. 1220.228, add a new paragraph (b)(5) to read as follows:
Sec. 1220.228 Qualified State Soybean Boards.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
* * * * *
(5) If the entity is authorized or required to pay refunds to
producers, certify to the Board that any requests from producers for
such refunds for contributions to it by the producer will be honored by
forwarding to the Board that portion of such refunds equal to the
amount of credit received by the producer for contributions pursuant to
Sec. 1220.223(a)(3). Entities not authorized by State statute but
organized and operating within a State and certified by the Board
pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section must provide producers an
opportunity for a State refund and must forward that refunded portion
to the Board. Producers receiving a refund from a State entity are
required to remit that refunded portion to the Board in the manner and
form required by the Secretary.
* * * * *
PART 1260--BEEF PROMOTION AND RESEARCH
0
3. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 1260 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 2901-2911 and 7 U.S.C. 7401.
0
4. In Sec. 1260.181, revise paragraph (b)(4) and add paragraph (b)(5)
to read as follows:
Sec. 1260.181 Qualified State Beef Councils.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
* * * * *
(4) Certify to the Board that such organization shall remit to the
Board assessments paid and remitted to the council, minus authorized
credits issued to producers pursuant to Sec. 1260.172(a)(3), by the
15th day of the month following the month in which the assessment was
remitted to the qualified State beef council unless the Board
determines a different date for remittance of assessments.
(5) Redirection of assessments. Qualified State beef councils which
are authorized or required by State statutes to pay refunds to
producers must certify to the Board that any requests from producers
for refunds from the council for contributions to such council by the
producer will be honored by redirecting to the Board that portion of
such refunds equal to the amount of credit received by the qualified
State beef councils. In States where State law does not require the
collection of the $1.00-per-head assessment set forth in the Act (the
federal assessment) or in States where State statutes do not require
producers to contribute a portion of the $1.00-per head federal
assessment to the State beef council, qualified State beef councils
must provide an opportunity for producers to choose to direct the full
$1.00-per-head federal assessment to the Board. The request to redirect
funds to the Board must be submitted on the appropriate form and
postmarked by the 15th day of the month following the month the cattle
were sold. Requests may not be retroactive. Requests to redirect funds
must be submitted by the producer who paid the assessment.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 1260.312, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 1260.312 Remittance to the Cattlemen's Board or Qualified State
Beef Council.
* * * * *
(c) Remittances. The remitting person shall remit all assessments
to the qualified State beef council or its designee, or, if there is no
qualified State beef council, to the Cattlemen's Board at an address
designated by the Board, with the report required in paragraph (a) of
this section not later than the 15th day of the following month. All
remittances sent to a qualified State beef council or the Cattlemen's
Board by the remitting persons shall be by check or money order payable
to the order of the qualified State beef council or the Cattlemen's
Board. All remittances shall be received subject to collection and
payment at par.
0
6. Revise Sec. 1260.315 to read as follows:
Sec. 1260.315 Qualified State Beef Councils.
The following State beef promotion entities have been certified by
the Board as qualified State beef councils:
Alabama Cattlemen's Association
Arizona Beef Council
Arkansas Beef Council
California Beef Council
Colorado Beef Council
Delaware Beef Advisory Board
Florida Beef Council, Inc.
Georgia Beef Board, Inc.
Hawaii Beef Industry Council
Idaho Beef Council
Illinois Beef Council
Indiana Beef Council
Iowa Beef Cattle Producers Association
Kansas Beef Council
Kentucky Beef Cattle Association
Louisiana Beef Industry Council
Maryland Beef Industry Council
[[Page 45992]]
Michigan Beef Industry Commission
Minnesota Beef Council
Mississippi Beef Council, Inc.
Missouri Beef Industry Council, Inc.
Montana Beef Council
Nebraska Beef Council
New Jersey Beef Industry Council
Nevada Beef Council
New Mexico Beef Council
New York Beef Industry Council
North Carolina Cattlemen's Association
North Dakota Beef Commission
Ohio Beef Council
Oklahoma Beef Council
Oregon Beef Council
Pennsylvania Beef Council, Inc.
South Carolina Beef Council
South Dakota Beef Industry Council
Tennessee Beef Industry Council
Texas Beef Council
Utah Beef Council
Vermont Beef Industry Council
Virginia Beef Industry Council
Washington State Beef Commission
Wisconsin Beef Council, Inc.
Wyoming Beef Council
Dated: July 11, 2016.
Elanor Starmer,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. 2016-16698 Filed 7-14-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-02-P