Schedule of Fees for Consular Services, Department of State and Overseas Embassies and Consulates-Passport Services Fee Changes, 64088-64092 [2016-22215]
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64088
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 181 / Monday, September 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules
VRDP submissions must be clearly
identified as such by the regulated
entity making the submission. Any
other information received by the FAA
from the regulated entity concerning the
content of a VDRP submission must be
clearly labeled as follows to be eligible
for protection under this designation:
‘‘WARNING: The Information in this
Document is Protected from Disclosure
under 49 U.S.C. 40123 and 14 CFR part
193.’’ If the information is submitted
electronically, the warning notice must
be appropriately embedded in the
electronic submission in a fashion that
assures the visibility of the warning to
any viewer.
Proposed Designation
Accordingly, the FAA proposes to
designate the above-described
information submitted under a VDRP to
be protected under 49 U.S.C. 40123 and
part 193, when obtained by the FAA
pursuant to an accepted VDRP
submission.
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A. Comments Invited
The FAA invites interested persons to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written comments, data, or
views. The most helpful comments
reference a specific portion of the
proposal, explain the reason for any
recommended change, and include
supporting data. Before acting on this
proposal, we will consider all comments
we receive on or before the closing date
for comments. We will consider
comments filed late if it is possible to
do so without incurring expense or
delay. We may change this proposal in
light of the comments we receive.
B. Availability of This Proposed
Designation
An electronic copy of rulemaking
documents may be obtained from the
Internet by—
1. Searching the Federal eRulemaking
Portal (https://www.regulations.gov);
2. Visiting the FAA’s Regulations and
Policies Web page at https://
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies or
3. Accessing the Government Printing
Office’s Web page at https://
www.gpo.gov/fdsys/.
Copies may also be obtained by
sending a request to the Federal
Aviation Administration, Aircraft
Certification Office, AIR–1, 800
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20591, or by calling
(202) 267–8235. Commenters must
identify the docket or notice number of
this rulemaking.
All documents the FAA considered in
developing this proposed rule may be
18:18 Sep 16, 2016
Issued under authority provided by 49
U.S.C. 106(f) and 40123 in Washington, DC,
on September 7, 2016.
David W. Hempe,
Deputy Director, Aircraft Certification
Service, AIR–1.
[FR Doc. 2016–21966 Filed 9–16–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
Department may not be able to consider
your comment. After the conclusion of
the comment period, the Department
will publish a Final Rule (in which it
will address relevant comments) as
expeditiously as possible.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James McDaniel, Management Analyst,
Office of the Comptroller, Bureau of
Consular Affairs, Department of State;
phone: 202–485–6694, telefax: 202–
485–6826; email: fees@state.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Background
22 CFR Part 22
The proposed rule makes a change to
the Schedule of Fees. The Department
sets and collects its fees based on the
concept of full cost recovery. The
Department completed its most recent
review of current consular fees and will
implement a change to the Schedule of
Fees based on the costs of services
calculated by the Fiscal Year 2014
update to the Cost of Service Model.
[Public Notice: 9520]
RIN 1400–AD81
Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services, Department of State and
Overseas Embassies and
Consulates—Passport Services Fee
Changes
Department of State.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
V. Additional information
VerDate Sep<11>2014
accessed from the Internet through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal referenced
in item (1) above.
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What is the authority for this action?
ACTION:
The Department of State derives the
general authority to set fees based on the
cost of the consular services it provides,
and to charge those fees, from the
general user charges statute, 31 U.S.C.
9701. See, e.g., 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A)
(‘‘The head of each agency . . . may
prescribe regulations establishing the
charge for a service or thing of value
provided by the agency . . . based on
. . . the costs to the government.’’). As
implemented through Executive Order
10718 of June 27, 1957, 22 U.S.C. 4219
further authorizes the Department to
establish fees to be charged for official
services provided by U.S. embassies and
consulates.
Several statutes address specific fees
relating to passports. For instance, 22
U.S.C. 214(a) authorizes the Secretary of
State to set the passport execution fee by
regulation, and to authorize state and
local government officials and the U.S.
Postal Service to collect and retain the
execution fee for each application for a
passport accepted by such officials or
the U.S. Postal Service.
Certain people are exempted by law
or regulation from paying specific fees.
They include, for instance, exemptions
from the passport execution and
application fees for officers or
employees of the U.S. government
proceeding abroad in the discharge of
official duties and exemption from the
passport execution fee if those officers
or employees execute their application
before a federal official. See 22 U.S.C.
214(a); 22 CFR 22.1; 22 CFR 51.52(b).
The Department last changed fees for
passport services in an interim final rule
The Department of State
proposes an adjustment to the Schedule
of Fees for Consular Services of the
Department of State’s Bureau of
Consular Affairs (‘‘Schedule of Fees’’ or
‘‘Schedule’’) for the execution fee for
passport books and cards. The
Department is adjusting this fee in light
of the findings of the most recent annual
update to the Cost of Service Model to
better align the fees for consular services
with the costs of providing those
services.
SUMMARY:
The Department of State will
accept comments on this proposed rule
until November 18, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may
submit comments to the Department by
any of the following methods:
• Visit the Regulations.gov Web site
at: https://www.regulations.gov and
search for the Regulatory Information
Number (RIN) 1400–AD81 or docket
number DOS–2016–0029.
• Mail paper document: U.S.
Department of State, Office of the
Comptroller, Bureau of Consular Affairs
(CA/C), SA–17, 8th Floor, Washington,
DC 20522–1707.
• Email: fees@state.gov. You must
include the RIN (1400–AD81) in the
subject line of your message.
• All comments should include the
commenter’s name, the organization the
commenter represents, if applicable,
and the commenter’s address. If the
Department is unable to read your
comment for any reason, and cannot
contact you for clarification, the
DATES:
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dated September 8, 2015. See
Department of State Schedule of Fees
for Consular Services, Department of
State and Overseas Embassies and
Consulates, 22 CFR part 22 (80 FR
53704). Those changes to the Schedule
went into effect September 26, 2015. A
final rule regarding those fees has not
yet been published.
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Why is the Department adjusting fees at
this time?
With certain exceptions—such as the
reciprocal nonimmigrant visa issuance
fee—the Department of State generally
sets consular fees at an amount
calculated to achieve recovery of the
costs to the U.S. government of
providing the consular service, in a
manner consistent with general user
charges principles, regardless of the
specific statutory authority under which
the fees are authorized. As set forth in
OMB Circular A–25, as a general policy,
each recipient should pay a reasonable
user charge for government services,
resources, or goods from which he or
she derives a special benefit, at an
amount sufficient for the U.S.
government to recover the full costs to
it of providing the service, resource, or
good. See OMB Circular No. A–25, sec.
6(a)(2)(a). The OMB guidance covers all
Federal Executive Branch activities that
convey special benefits to recipients
beyond those that accrue to the general
public. See id., sections 4(a), 6(a)(1).
The Department reviews consular fees
through an annual update to its Cost of
Service Model to determine the
appropriateness of each fee in light of
OMB guidance. The Department
proposes to make the change set forth
below in the Schedule of Fees
accordingly. The Cost of Service Model
is an activity-based costing model that
determines the current direct and
indirect costs to the U.S. government
associated with each consular good and
service the Department provides. The
model update identified the direct and
indirect cost of the passport execution
fee, and the update’s results formed the
basis of the change herein proposed to
the Schedule.
Activity-Based Costing
To set fees in accordance with the
general user charges principles, the
Department must determine the true
cost of providing consular services.
Following guidance provided in
‘‘Managerial Cost Accounting Concepts
and Standards for the Federal
Government,’’ OMB’s Statement #4 of
Federal Accounting Standards (SFFAS
#4), available at https://www.fasab.gov/
pdffiles/sffas-4.pdf, the Department
chose to develop and use an activity-
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based costing (ABC) model to determine
the true cost of each of its consular
services.
The Government Accountability
Office (GAO) defines activity-based
costing as a ‘‘set of accounting methods
used to identify and describe costs and
required resources for activities within
processes.’’ Because an organization can
use the same staff and resources
(computer equipment, production
facilities, etc.) to produce multiple
products or services, ABC models seek
to identify and assign costs to processes
and activities, and then to individual
products and services through the
identification of key cost drivers
referred to as ‘‘resource drivers’’ and
‘‘activity drivers.’’ ABC models also
seek to identify the amount of time an
organization’s personnel spend on each
service and how much overhead cost
(rent, utilities, facilities maintenance,
etc.) is associated with delivering each
service. ABC models require financial
and accounting analysis, and modeling
skills combined with a detailed
understanding of an organization’s
business processes. ABC models require
an organization to identify all activities
required to produce a particular product
or service (‘‘activities’’) and all
resources consumed (costs) in the
course of producing that product or
service. An organization also must
measure the quantity of resources
consumed (‘‘resource driver’’); and the
frequency and intensity of demand
placed on activities to produce services
(‘‘activity driver’’). SFFAS Statement #4
provides a detailed discussion of the use
of cost accounting by the U.S.
government.
The Department’s Cost of Service Model
The Department conducted periodic
Cost of Service Studies using ABC
methods to determine the costs of its
consular services through 2009. In 2010,
the Department moved to adopt an
annually updated Cost of Service Model
(CoSM) that measures all of its consular
operations and costs, including all of
the activities needed to provide
consular services, whether fee-based or
not. This provides a comprehensive and
detailed look at all consular services
and all services that the Department
performs for other agencies in
connection with its consular operations.
The CoSM now includes approximately
80 distinct activities, and enables the
Department to model its consularrelated costs with a high degree of
precision.
The Department uses three methods
outlined in SFFAS Statement #4
(paragraph 149(2)) to assign resource
costs to activities: (a) Direct tracing; (b)
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estimation based on surveys, interviews,
or statistical sampling; and (c)
allocations. The Department uses direct
tracing to assign the cost of, for
example, a physical passport book or
the visa foil placed in a visa applicant’s
passport. Assigning costs to activities
such as adjudicating a passport or visa
application requires estimation based on
surveys, interviews, or statistical
sampling to determine who performs an
activity and how long it takes. Indirect
costs (overhead) in the CoSM are
allocated according to the level of effort
needed for a particular activity. Where
possible, the model uses overhead cost
pools to assign indirect costs only to
related activities. For instance, the cost
of rent for domestic passport agencies is
assigned only to passport costs, not to
visas or other services the Department
provides only overseas. The Department
allocates indirect support costs to each
consular service by the portion of each
cost attributable to consular activities.
For example, the model allocates a
portion of the cost of the Department’s
Bureau of Human Resources to consular
services. The total amount of this
allocation is based on the number of
Bureau of Human Resources staff
members who support Bureau of
Consular Affairs personnel. In turn, this
amount is allocated among the different
consular services by the level of effort
to provide them.
To assign labor costs, the Department
relies on a variety of industry-standard
estimation methodologies. To document
how consular staff divide their time
overseas, the Department conducts the
Consular Overseas Data Collection
(CODaC) survey of a representative
sample of posts each year. The
Department uses CODaC survey data in
conjunction with volume data from
more than 200 individual consular
sections in consulates and embassies
worldwide, to develop resource drivers
to assign labor costs to activities. For
consular activities that take place in the
United States, the Department collects
volume data from periodic workload
reports, including Passport Agency Task
Reports pulled from management
databases that include Passport’s
Management Information System.
Financial information is gathered from
reports by the Bureau of Consular
Affairs’ Office of the Comptroller. The
Department converts the cost and
workload data it collects into resource
drivers and activity drivers for each
resource and activity.
Because approximately 70 percent of
the workforce involved in providing
consular services are full-time Federal
employees, if demand for a service falls
precipitously, the Department cannot
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shed employees as quickly as the
private sector. Likewise, should demand
rise precipitously, the Department
cannot add employees quickly, because
delivering the majority of consular
services requires specially trained
employees who cannot begin their
training until they have completed the
Federal hiring process and obtained a
security clearance. Additionally, given
government procurement rules and
security requirements, the Department
must commit to many of its facilities
and infrastructure costs years before a
facility becomes available. In spite of
changes in demand, the Department is
obligated to cover these costs. Given
these and other constraints on altering
the Department’s cost structure in the
short term, changes in service volumes
can have dramatic effects on whether a
fee is self-sustaining. Therefore, the
CoSM includes two years of predictive
data and three years of actual data.
Predictive workloads are based on
projections by the Office of Visa
Services, the Office of Passport Services,
and other parts of the Bureau of
Consular Affairs that are consistent with
Department budget documents prepared
for Congress.
The costs the Department enters into
the CoSM include every line item of
costs, including items such as physical
material for making passports and visas,
salaries, rent, supplies, and IT hardware
and software. The Department then
determines a resource driver (from, for
example, the responses to the CODaC
survey) for each of these costs, as
discussed above and enters the resource
drivers and assignments into the model.
The Department then selects an activity
driver, such as the volume data
discussed above, for each activity, in
order to assign these costs to each
service type. This process allows the
model to calculate a total cost for each
of the Schedule of Fees’ line items for
visa services, passport services, and
overseas citizens services, and services
for other government agencies and nofee services. The model then divides
this total cost by the total volume of the
service or product in question in order
to determine a final unit cost for the
service or product. Projected costs for
predictive years also are included to
take account of changes in the size of
consular staff, workload, and similar
factors. The resulting database
constitutes the CoSM. The Department
continues to refine and update the
CoSM in order to set fees commensurate
with the cost of providing consular
services. Because the CoSM is a
complex series of iterative computer
processes incorporating more than a
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million calculations, it is not reducible
to a tangible form such as a document.
Inputs are formatted in spreadsheets for
entry into the ABC software package.
The ABC software package itself is an
industry standard commercial off-theshelf product, SAP Business Objects.
The software’s output includes
spreadsheets with raw unit costs,
validation reports, and management
reports.
A number of fees are set at levels
other than cost. These include passport
fees for minors, which are set below cost
as a longstanding matter of policy, and
the reduced Border Crossing Card Fee
for Mexican Minors, which is set by
law. The true cost of these services must
be offset by other fees. These offsets are
calculated on additional spreadsheets
outside the model software. Final unit
costs incorporate these offsets.
Schedule of Fees Updates
The last broad set of amendments to
the Schedule of Fees occurred in 2014,
though the Department has made some
specific amendments to it since that
time. Some fees, including the
Immigrant Visa petition and the
Immigrant Visa ineligibility waiver
(items 31(a) and 35(c) respectively), are
set by the Department of Homeland
Security and were most recently
updated by that agency on November
23, 2010. The change to the current
Schedule of Fees is discussed below.
The CoSM estimate discussed below is
based on projected workload for Fiscal
Year 2016, and the proposed fee has
been rounded to make it easier to
collect.
Passport Execution Fee
The Department proposes to increase
the execution fee for passport books and
cards from $25 to $35, excepting those
persons who are exempted statutorily
from paying the passport execution fee.
The passport execution fee is applicable
to all first-time passport applicants and
certain other applicants who must apply
in person, such as minors under the age
of 16. Applicants apply in-person at
post offices and other acceptance
facilities, such as local clerks of court,
and at the Department’s passport offices.
The passport execution fee includes the
costs associated with accepting passport
applications and fees in-person,
including salaries, benefits, and an
allocated portion of overhead including,
but not limited to, rent, utilities,
supplies, and equipment. The
Department’s CoSM showed that these
costs were more than $33. The U.S.
Postal Service—the acceptance agent for
the majority of passport applications—
regularly conducts a similar study and
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found that these costs were more than
$34. See 22 U.S.C. 214(a); 22 CFR
51.51(b).
The $10 increase in the passport
execution fee will result in a $10
increase to the cost to first-time passport
applicants and certain applicants who
must appear at post offices and other
acceptance facilities such as local clerks
of court. Individuals who apply for a
passport renewal by mail will not see a
fee increase.
Regulatory Findings
Administrative Procedure Act
The Department is publishing this
rule as a proposed rule, with a 60-day
provision for public comments.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department reviewed this
proposed rule and, by approving it,
certifies that it will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
This proposed rule will not result in
the expenditure by state, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, of $100 million or
more in any year, and it will not
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. Therefore, no actions were
deemed necessary under the provisions
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1501–1504.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996
This proposed rule is a major rule as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Order 12866
The Department has reviewed this
proposed rule to ensure its consistency
with the regulatory philosophy and
principles set forth in the Executive
Orders. OMB determined that this rule
is significant under Executive Order
12866, and the Department confirmed
that it is economically significant as
defined by the Executive Order.
This proposed rule is necessary in
light of the Department of State’s CoSM
finding that the cost of executing firsttime passports is higher than the current
fee. The Department is setting the fees
in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 9701 and
other applicable authority, as described
in more detail above. See, e.g., 31 U.S.C.
9701(b)(2)(A) (‘‘The head of each agency
. . . may prescribe regulations
establishing the charge for a service or
thing of value provided by the agency
. . . based on . . . the costs to the
Government.’’). This regulation
generally sets the fee for passport
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executions at the amount required to
recover the costs associated with
providing this service.
Item No.
Details of the proposed fee change are
as follows:
Proposed fee
Current fee
Change in fee
Percentage
increase
Estimated
annual
number of
applications 1
Estimated
change in
annual fees
collected 1
SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PASSPORT AND CITIZENSHIP SERVICES
1. Passport Book or Card Execution: Required for first-time applicants and others who must apply in person ...............
$35
$25
$10
40%
11,763,831
$117,638,310
Total ...................................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
$117,638,310
*
1 Based
*
*
*
*
*
on projected FY 2016 workload.
The Department of State does not
anticipate that demand for passport
services affected by this proposed rule
will change significantly because of
these fee changes, and welcomes public
comment on that expectation.
The Department does not believe that
passport application fees are a
significant determining factor when U.S.
citizens decide to travel internationally.
The price of a passport book or card
remains minor in comparison with other
costs associated with foreign travel,
given that taxes and surcharges alone on
an international airfare can easily
surpass $100. As a result, the
Department does not believe passport
demand will be significantly affected by
increases of the size proposed.
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*
Executive Orders 12372 and 13132
This regulation will not have
substantial direct effects on the states,
on the relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in
accordance with section 6 of Executive
Order 13132, it is determined that this
rule does not have sufficient federalism
implications to require consultations or
warrant the preparation of a federalism
summary impact statement. The
regulations implementing Executive
Order 12372 regarding
intergovernmental consultation on
federal programs and activities do not
apply to this regulation.
Executive Order 13175
The Department determined that this
proposed rulemaking will not have
tribal implications, will not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
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Indian tribal governments, and will not
preempt tribal law. Accordingly, the
requirements of Executive Order 13175
do not apply to this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This information collection contained
in this proposed rule is pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35. Information Collection
1405–0004, form DS–11 is related to this
proposed rule. The Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking proposes an increase in the
passport execution fee, from $25 to $35,
based on the result of the Department
CoSM, which found that the
government’s cost of executing a firsttime passport is higher than the fee that
the Department was charging an
individual applicant. The CoSM is an
activity-based costing model that
determines the current direct and
indirect costs to the U.S. government
associated with each consular good and
service the Department provides.
This information collection was
renewed on August 30, 2016, with an
expiration date of August 31, 2019. This
notice request comments as it pertains
to the proposed fee increase from $25 to
$35.
(1) Title of Information Collection:
Application for a U.S. Passport.
(2) OMB Control Number: 1405–0004.
(3) Type of Request: Revision of a
Currently Approved Collection.
(4) Form Number: DS–11.
(5) Respondents: Individuals or
Households.
(6) Estimated Number of Respondents:
11,763,831.
(7) Estimated Number of Responses:
11,763,831.
(8) Average Time per Response: 85
Minutes.
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(9) Total Estimated Burden Time:
16,665,427 hours.
(10) Frequency: On occasion.
(11) Obligation to Respond: Required to
Obtain a Benefit.
(12) Submit comments to OMB by the
following methods:
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB):
• Direct comments to the Department
of State Desk Officer in the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs at
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). You may submit comments by
the following methods:
• Email: oira_submission@
omb.eop.gov. You must include the DS
form number, information collection
title, and the OMB control number in
the subject line of your message.
Fax: 202–395–5806. Attention: Desk
Officer for Department of State.
Abstract of Proposed Collection
The DS–11 solicits data necessary for
Passport Services to issue a U.S.
passport (book and/or card format)
pursuant to authorities granted to the
Secretary of State by 22 U.S.C. 211a et
seq. and Executive Order (E.O.) 11295
(August 5, 1966) for the issuance of
passports to U.S. nationals.
The issuance of U.S. passports
requires the determination of identity,
nationality, and entitlement with
reference to the provisions of Title III of
the Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA) (8 U.S.C. 1401–1504), the 14th
Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States, other applicable treaties
and laws, and implementing regulations
at 22 CFR parts 50 and 51. The specific
regulations pertaining to the
Application for a U.S. passport are at 22
CFR 51.20 through 51.28.
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Methodology
The information collected on the DS–
11 is used to facilitate the issuance of
passports to U.S. citizens and nationals.
The primary purpose of soliciting the
information is to establish citizenship,
identity, and entitlement to the issuance
of the U.S. passport or related service,
and to properly administer and enforce
the laws pertaining to the issuance
thereof.
Passport Services collects information
from U.S. citizens and non-citizen
nationals when they complete and
submit the Application for a U.S.
passport. Passport applicants can either
download the DS–11 from the Internet
or obtain one from an Acceptance
Facility/Passport Agency. The form
must be completed and executed at an
acceptance facility or passport agency,
and submitted with evidence of
citizenship and identity.
List of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 22
Consular services, Fees, Passports.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in
the preamble, 22 CFR part 22 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 22—SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR
CONSULAR SERVICES—
DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND
FOREIGN SERVICE
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 note, 1153 note,
1183a note, 1351, 1351 note, 1714, 1714 note;
10 U.S.C. 2602(c); 11 U.S.C. 1157 note; 22
U.S.C. 214, 214 note, 1475e, 2504(a), 2651a,
4201, 4206, 4215, 4219, 6551; 31 U.S.C. 9701;
Exec. Order 10,718, 22 FR 4632 (1957); Exec.
Order 11,295, 31 FR 10603 (1966).
2. Revise item 1 in the table
‘‘Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services’’ in § 22.1 to read as follows:
■
§ 22.1
*
Schedule of fees.
*
*
*
*
1. The authority citation for part 22 is
revised to read as follows:
■
SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES
Item No.
Fee
Passport and Citizenship Services
1. Passport Book or Card Execution: Required for first-time applicants and others who must apply in person (Applicants applying for both the book and card simultaneously on the same application pay only one execution fee.) .............................
*
*
*
Dated: July 31, 2016.
Patrick F. Kennedy,
Under Secretary for Management.
[FR Doc. 2016–22215 Filed 9–16–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
28 CFR Part 16
[CPCLO Order No. 008–2016]
Privacy Act of 1974; Implementation
Federal Bureau of
Investigation, United States Department
of Justice.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
Elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI), a component of the
United States Department of Justice
(‘‘Department’’ or ‘‘DOJ’’), has published
a notice of a new Privacy Act system of
records, ‘‘FBI Insider Threat Program
Records (ITPR),’’ JUSTICE/FBI–023. In
this notice of proposed rulemaking, the
FBI proposes to exempt this system
from certain provisions of the Privacy
Act in order to avoid interference with
efforts to detect, deter, and/or mitigate
insider threats to national security or to
the FBI and its personnel, facilities,
resources, and activities. For the reasons
provided below, the Department
proposes to amend its Privacy Act
regulations by establishing an
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:18 Sep 16, 2016
Jkt 238001
*
*
exemption for records in this system
from certain provisions of the Privacy
Act pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j) and (k).
Public comment is invited.
DATES: Comments must be received by
October 19, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Address all comments to
the U.S. Department of Justice, ATTN:
Privacy Analyst, Office of Privacy and
Civil Liberties, National Place Building,
1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Suite
1000, Washington, DC 20530–0001 or
facsimile 202–307–0693. To ensure
proper handling, please reference the
CPCLO Order No. on your
correspondence. You may review an
electronic version of the proposed rule
at https://www.regulations.gov, and you
may also comment by using that Web
site’s comment form for this regulation.
When submitting comments
electronically, you must include the
CPCLO Order No. in the subject box.
Please note that the Department is
requesting that electronic comments be
submitted before midnight Eastern
Daylight Savings Time on the day the
comment period closes because https://
www.regulations.gov terminates the
public’s ability to submit comments at
that time. Commenters in time zones
other than Eastern Time may want to
consider this so that their electronic
comments are received. All comments
sent via regular or express mail will be
considered timely if postmarked on the
day the comment period closes.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
*
$35
*
Posting of Public Comments: Please
note that all comments received are
considered part of the public record and
made available for public inspection
online at https://www.regulations.gov
and in the Department’s public docket.
Such information includes personally
identifying information (such as your
name, address, etc.) voluntarily
submitted by the commenter.
If you want to submit personally
identifying information (such as your
name, address, etc.) as part of your
comment, but do not want it to be
posted online or made available in the
public docket, you must include the
phrase ‘‘PERSONALLY IDENTIFYING
INFORMATION’’ in the first paragraph
of your comment. You must also place
all personally identifying information
you do not want posted online or made
available in the public docket in the first
paragraph of your comment and identify
what information you want redacted.
If you want to submit confidential
business information as part of your
comment, but do not want it to be
posted online or made available in the
public docket, you must include the
phrase ‘‘CONFIDENTIAL BUSINESS
INFORMATION’’ in the first paragraph
of your comment. You must also
prominently identify confidential
business information to be redacted
within the comment. If a comment has
so much confidential business
information that it cannot be effectively
redacted, all or part of that comment
E:\FR\FM\19SEP1.SGM
19SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 181 (Monday, September 19, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 64088-64092]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-22215]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
22 CFR Part 22
[Public Notice: 9520]
RIN 1400-AD81
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services, Department of State and
Overseas Embassies and Consulates--Passport Services Fee Changes
AGENCY: Department of State.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of State proposes an adjustment to the Schedule
of Fees for Consular Services of the Department of State's Bureau of
Consular Affairs (``Schedule of Fees'' or ``Schedule'') for the
execution fee for passport books and cards. The Department is adjusting
this fee in light of the findings of the most recent annual update to
the Cost of Service Model to better align the fees for consular
services with the costs of providing those services.
DATES: The Department of State will accept comments on this proposed
rule until November 18, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may submit comments to the Department by
any of the following methods:
Visit the Regulations.gov Web site at: https://www.regulations.gov and search for the Regulatory Information Number
(RIN) 1400-AD81 or docket number DOS-2016-0029.
Mail paper document: U.S. Department of State, Office of
the Comptroller, Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA/C), SA-17, 8th Floor,
Washington, DC 20522-1707.
Email: fees@state.gov. You must include the RIN (1400-
AD81) in the subject line of your message.
All comments should include the commenter's name, the
organization the commenter represents, if applicable, and the
commenter's address. If the Department is unable to read your comment
for any reason, and cannot contact you for clarification, the
Department may not be able to consider your comment. After the
conclusion of the comment period, the Department will publish a Final
Rule (in which it will address relevant comments) as expeditiously as
possible.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James McDaniel, Management Analyst,
Office of the Comptroller, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Department of
State; phone: 202-485-6694, telefax: 202-485-6826; email:
fees@state.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The proposed rule makes a change to the Schedule of Fees. The
Department sets and collects its fees based on the concept of full cost
recovery. The Department completed its most recent review of current
consular fees and will implement a change to the Schedule of Fees based
on the costs of services calculated by the Fiscal Year 2014 update to
the Cost of Service Model.
What is the authority for this action?
The Department of State derives the general authority to set fees
based on the cost of the consular services it provides, and to charge
those fees, from the general user charges statute, 31 U.S.C. 9701. See,
e.g., 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A) (``The head of each agency . . . may
prescribe regulations establishing the charge for a service or thing of
value provided by the agency . . . based on . . . the costs to the
government.''). As implemented through Executive Order 10718 of June
27, 1957, 22 U.S.C. 4219 further authorizes the Department to establish
fees to be charged for official services provided by U.S. embassies and
consulates.
Several statutes address specific fees relating to passports. For
instance, 22 U.S.C. 214(a) authorizes the Secretary of State to set the
passport execution fee by regulation, and to authorize state and local
government officials and the U.S. Postal Service to collect and retain
the execution fee for each application for a passport accepted by such
officials or the U.S. Postal Service.
Certain people are exempted by law or regulation from paying
specific fees. They include, for instance, exemptions from the passport
execution and application fees for officers or employees of the U.S.
government proceeding abroad in the discharge of official duties and
exemption from the passport execution fee if those officers or
employees execute their application before a federal official. See 22
U.S.C. 214(a); 22 CFR 22.1; 22 CFR 51.52(b).
The Department last changed fees for passport services in an
interim final rule
[[Page 64089]]
dated September 8, 2015. See Department of State Schedule of Fees for
Consular Services, Department of State and Overseas Embassies and
Consulates, 22 CFR part 22 (80 FR 53704). Those changes to the Schedule
went into effect September 26, 2015. A final rule regarding those fees
has not yet been published.
Why is the Department adjusting fees at this time?
With certain exceptions--such as the reciprocal nonimmigrant visa
issuance fee--the Department of State generally sets consular fees at
an amount calculated to achieve recovery of the costs to the U.S.
government of providing the consular service, in a manner consistent
with general user charges principles, regardless of the specific
statutory authority under which the fees are authorized. As set forth
in OMB Circular A-25, as a general policy, each recipient should pay a
reasonable user charge for government services, resources, or goods
from which he or she derives a special benefit, at an amount sufficient
for the U.S. government to recover the full costs to it of providing
the service, resource, or good. See OMB Circular No. A-25, sec.
6(a)(2)(a). The OMB guidance covers all Federal Executive Branch
activities that convey special benefits to recipients beyond those that
accrue to the general public. See id., sections 4(a), 6(a)(1).
The Department reviews consular fees through an annual update to
its Cost of Service Model to determine the appropriateness of each fee
in light of OMB guidance. The Department proposes to make the change
set forth below in the Schedule of Fees accordingly. The Cost of
Service Model is an activity-based costing model that determines the
current direct and indirect costs to the U.S. government associated
with each consular good and service the Department provides. The model
update identified the direct and indirect cost of the passport
execution fee, and the update's results formed the basis of the change
herein proposed to the Schedule.
Activity-Based Costing
To set fees in accordance with the general user charges principles,
the Department must determine the true cost of providing consular
services. Following guidance provided in ``Managerial Cost Accounting
Concepts and Standards for the Federal Government,'' OMB's Statement #4
of Federal Accounting Standards (SFFAS #4), available at https://www.fasab.gov/pdffiles/sffas-4.pdf, the Department chose to develop and
use an activity-based costing (ABC) model to determine the true cost of
each of its consular services.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) defines activity-based
costing as a ``set of accounting methods used to identify and describe
costs and required resources for activities within processes.'' Because
an organization can use the same staff and resources (computer
equipment, production facilities, etc.) to produce multiple products or
services, ABC models seek to identify and assign costs to processes and
activities, and then to individual products and services through the
identification of key cost drivers referred to as ``resource drivers''
and ``activity drivers.'' ABC models also seek to identify the amount
of time an organization's personnel spend on each service and how much
overhead cost (rent, utilities, facilities maintenance, etc.) is
associated with delivering each service. ABC models require financial
and accounting analysis, and modeling skills combined with a detailed
understanding of an organization's business processes. ABC models
require an organization to identify all activities required to produce
a particular product or service (``activities'') and all resources
consumed (costs) in the course of producing that product or service. An
organization also must measure the quantity of resources consumed
(``resource driver''); and the frequency and intensity of demand placed
on activities to produce services (``activity driver''). SFFAS
Statement #4 provides a detailed discussion of the use of cost
accounting by the U.S. government.
The Department's Cost of Service Model
The Department conducted periodic Cost of Service Studies using ABC
methods to determine the costs of its consular services through 2009.
In 2010, the Department moved to adopt an annually updated Cost of
Service Model (CoSM) that measures all of its consular operations and
costs, including all of the activities needed to provide consular
services, whether fee-based or not. This provides a comprehensive and
detailed look at all consular services and all services that the
Department performs for other agencies in connection with its consular
operations. The CoSM now includes approximately 80 distinct activities,
and enables the Department to model its consular-related costs with a
high degree of precision.
The Department uses three methods outlined in SFFAS Statement #4
(paragraph 149(2)) to assign resource costs to activities: (a) Direct
tracing; (b) estimation based on surveys, interviews, or statistical
sampling; and (c) allocations. The Department uses direct tracing to
assign the cost of, for example, a physical passport book or the visa
foil placed in a visa applicant's passport. Assigning costs to
activities such as adjudicating a passport or visa application requires
estimation based on surveys, interviews, or statistical sampling to
determine who performs an activity and how long it takes. Indirect
costs (overhead) in the CoSM are allocated according to the level of
effort needed for a particular activity. Where possible, the model uses
overhead cost pools to assign indirect costs only to related
activities. For instance, the cost of rent for domestic passport
agencies is assigned only to passport costs, not to visas or other
services the Department provides only overseas. The Department
allocates indirect support costs to each consular service by the
portion of each cost attributable to consular activities. For example,
the model allocates a portion of the cost of the Department's Bureau of
Human Resources to consular services. The total amount of this
allocation is based on the number of Bureau of Human Resources staff
members who support Bureau of Consular Affairs personnel. In turn, this
amount is allocated among the different consular services by the level
of effort to provide them.
To assign labor costs, the Department relies on a variety of
industry-standard estimation methodologies. To document how consular
staff divide their time overseas, the Department conducts the Consular
Overseas Data Collection (CODaC) survey of a representative sample of
posts each year. The Department uses CODaC survey data in conjunction
with volume data from more than 200 individual consular sections in
consulates and embassies worldwide, to develop resource drivers to
assign labor costs to activities. For consular activities that take
place in the United States, the Department collects volume data from
periodic workload reports, including Passport Agency Task Reports
pulled from management databases that include Passport's Management
Information System. Financial information is gathered from reports by
the Bureau of Consular Affairs' Office of the Comptroller. The
Department converts the cost and workload data it collects into
resource drivers and activity drivers for each resource and activity.
Because approximately 70 percent of the workforce involved in
providing consular services are full-time Federal employees, if demand
for a service falls precipitously, the Department cannot
[[Page 64090]]
shed employees as quickly as the private sector. Likewise, should
demand rise precipitously, the Department cannot add employees quickly,
because delivering the majority of consular services requires specially
trained employees who cannot begin their training until they have
completed the Federal hiring process and obtained a security clearance.
Additionally, given government procurement rules and security
requirements, the Department must commit to many of its facilities and
infrastructure costs years before a facility becomes available. In
spite of changes in demand, the Department is obligated to cover these
costs. Given these and other constraints on altering the Department's
cost structure in the short term, changes in service volumes can have
dramatic effects on whether a fee is self-sustaining. Therefore, the
CoSM includes two years of predictive data and three years of actual
data. Predictive workloads are based on projections by the Office of
Visa Services, the Office of Passport Services, and other parts of the
Bureau of Consular Affairs that are consistent with Department budget
documents prepared for Congress.
The costs the Department enters into the CoSM include every line
item of costs, including items such as physical material for making
passports and visas, salaries, rent, supplies, and IT hardware and
software. The Department then determines a resource driver (from, for
example, the responses to the CODaC survey) for each of these costs, as
discussed above and enters the resource drivers and assignments into
the model. The Department then selects an activity driver, such as the
volume data discussed above, for each activity, in order to assign
these costs to each service type. This process allows the model to
calculate a total cost for each of the Schedule of Fees' line items for
visa services, passport services, and overseas citizens services, and
services for other government agencies and no-fee services. The model
then divides this total cost by the total volume of the service or
product in question in order to determine a final unit cost for the
service or product. Projected costs for predictive years also are
included to take account of changes in the size of consular staff,
workload, and similar factors. The resulting database constitutes the
CoSM. The Department continues to refine and update the CoSM in order
to set fees commensurate with the cost of providing consular services.
Because the CoSM is a complex series of iterative computer processes
incorporating more than a million calculations, it is not reducible to
a tangible form such as a document. Inputs are formatted in
spreadsheets for entry into the ABC software package. The ABC software
package itself is an industry standard commercial off-the-shelf
product, SAP Business Objects. The software's output includes
spreadsheets with raw unit costs, validation reports, and management
reports.
A number of fees are set at levels other than cost. These include
passport fees for minors, which are set below cost as a longstanding
matter of policy, and the reduced Border Crossing Card Fee for Mexican
Minors, which is set by law. The true cost of these services must be
offset by other fees. These offsets are calculated on additional
spreadsheets outside the model software. Final unit costs incorporate
these offsets.
Schedule of Fees Updates
The last broad set of amendments to the Schedule of Fees occurred
in 2014, though the Department has made some specific amendments to it
since that time. Some fees, including the Immigrant Visa petition and
the Immigrant Visa ineligibility waiver (items 31(a) and 35(c)
respectively), are set by the Department of Homeland Security and were
most recently updated by that agency on November 23, 2010. The change
to the current Schedule of Fees is discussed below. The CoSM estimate
discussed below is based on projected workload for Fiscal Year 2016,
and the proposed fee has been rounded to make it easier to collect.
Passport Execution Fee
The Department proposes to increase the execution fee for passport
books and cards from $25 to $35, excepting those persons who are
exempted statutorily from paying the passport execution fee. The
passport execution fee is applicable to all first-time passport
applicants and certain other applicants who must apply in person, such
as minors under the age of 16. Applicants apply in-person at post
offices and other acceptance facilities, such as local clerks of court,
and at the Department's passport offices. The passport execution fee
includes the costs associated with accepting passport applications and
fees in-person, including salaries, benefits, and an allocated portion
of overhead including, but not limited to, rent, utilities, supplies,
and equipment. The Department's CoSM showed that these costs were more
than $33. The U.S. Postal Service--the acceptance agent for the
majority of passport applications--regularly conducts a similar study
and found that these costs were more than $34. See 22 U.S.C. 214(a); 22
CFR 51.51(b).
The $10 increase in the passport execution fee will result in a $10
increase to the cost to first-time passport applicants and certain
applicants who must appear at post offices and other acceptance
facilities such as local clerks of court. Individuals who apply for a
passport renewal by mail will not see a fee increase.
Regulatory Findings
Administrative Procedure Act
The Department is publishing this rule as a proposed rule, with a
60-day provision for public comments.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department reviewed this proposed rule and, by approving it,
certifies that it will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
This proposed rule will not result in the expenditure by state,
local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million or more in any year, and it will not
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no
actions were deemed necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1501-1504.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
This proposed rule is a major rule as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Order 12866
The Department has reviewed this proposed rule to ensure its
consistency with the regulatory philosophy and principles set forth in
the Executive Orders. OMB determined that this rule is significant
under Executive Order 12866, and the Department confirmed that it is
economically significant as defined by the Executive Order.
This proposed rule is necessary in light of the Department of
State's CoSM finding that the cost of executing first-time passports is
higher than the current fee. The Department is setting the fees in
accordance with 31 U.S.C. 9701 and other applicable authority, as
described in more detail above. See, e.g., 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A)
(``The head of each agency . . . may prescribe regulations establishing
the charge for a service or thing of value provided by the agency . . .
based on . . . the costs to the Government.''). This regulation
generally sets the fee for passport
[[Page 64091]]
executions at the amount required to recover the costs associated with
providing this service.
Details of the proposed fee change are as follows:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
annual number Estimated
Item No. Proposed fee Current fee Change in fee Percentage of change in
increase applications annual fees
\1\ collected \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PASSPORT AND CITIZENSHIP SERVICES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Passport Book or Card Execution: Required for first- $35 $25 $10 40% 11,763,831 $117,638,310
time applicants and others who must apply in person....
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................................... .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. $117,638,310
* * * * * * *
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Based on projected FY 2016 workload.
The Department of State does not anticipate that demand for
passport services affected by this proposed rule will change
significantly because of these fee changes, and welcomes public comment
on that expectation.
The Department does not believe that passport application fees are
a significant determining factor when U.S. citizens decide to travel
internationally. The price of a passport book or card remains minor in
comparison with other costs associated with foreign travel, given that
taxes and surcharges alone on an international airfare can easily
surpass $100. As a result, the Department does not believe passport
demand will be significantly affected by increases of the size
proposed.
Executive Orders 12372 and 13132
This regulation will not have substantial direct effects on the
states, on the relationship between the national government and the
states, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with section 6
of Executive Order 13132, it is determined that this rule does not have
sufficient federalism implications to require consultations or warrant
the preparation of a federalism summary impact statement. The
regulations implementing Executive Order 12372 regarding
intergovernmental consultation on federal programs and activities do
not apply to this regulation.
Executive Order 13175
The Department determined that this proposed rulemaking will not
have tribal implications, will not impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian tribal governments, and will not preempt tribal law.
Accordingly, the requirements of Executive Order 13175 do not apply to
this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This information collection contained in this proposed rule is
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35.
Information Collection 1405-0004, form DS-11 is related to this
proposed rule. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposes an increase
in the passport execution fee, from $25 to $35, based on the result of
the Department CoSM, which found that the government's cost of
executing a first-time passport is higher than the fee that the
Department was charging an individual applicant. The CoSM is an
activity-based costing model that determines the current direct and
indirect costs to the U.S. government associated with each consular
good and service the Department provides.
This information collection was renewed on August 30, 2016, with an
expiration date of August 31, 2019. This notice request comments as it
pertains to the proposed fee increase from $25 to $35.
(1) Title of Information Collection: Application for a U.S. Passport.
(2) OMB Control Number: 1405-0004.
(3) Type of Request: Revision of a Currently Approved Collection.
(4) Form Number: DS-11.
(5) Respondents: Individuals or Households.
(6) Estimated Number of Respondents: 11,763,831.
(7) Estimated Number of Responses: 11,763,831.
(8) Average Time per Response: 85 Minutes.
(9) Total Estimated Burden Time: 16,665,427 hours.
(10) Frequency: On occasion.
(11) Obligation to Respond: Required to Obtain a Benefit.
(12) Submit comments to OMB by the following methods:
Office of Management and Budget (OMB):
Direct comments to the Department of State Desk Officer in
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs at the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). You may submit comments by the following
methods:
Email: oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. You must include the
DS form number, information collection title, and the OMB control
number in the subject line of your message.
Fax: 202-395-5806. Attention: Desk Officer for Department of State.
Abstract of Proposed Collection
The DS-11 solicits data necessary for Passport Services to issue a
U.S. passport (book and/or card format) pursuant to authorities granted
to the Secretary of State by 22 U.S.C. 211a et seq. and Executive Order
(E.O.) 11295 (August 5, 1966) for the issuance of passports to U.S.
nationals.
The issuance of U.S. passports requires the determination of
identity, nationality, and entitlement with reference to the provisions
of Title III of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) (8 U.S.C.
1401-1504), the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, other applicable treaties and laws, and implementing
regulations at 22 CFR parts 50 and 51. The specific regulations
pertaining to the Application for a U.S. passport are at 22 CFR 51.20
through 51.28.
[[Page 64092]]
Methodology
The information collected on the DS-11 is used to facilitate the
issuance of passports to U.S. citizens and nationals. The primary
purpose of soliciting the information is to establish citizenship,
identity, and entitlement to the issuance of the U.S. passport or
related service, and to properly administer and enforce the laws
pertaining to the issuance thereof.
Passport Services collects information from U.S. citizens and non-
citizen nationals when they complete and submit the Application for a
U.S. passport. Passport applicants can either download the DS-11 from
the Internet or obtain one from an Acceptance Facility/Passport Agency.
The form must be completed and executed at an acceptance facility or
passport agency, and submitted with evidence of citizenship and
identity.
List of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 22
Consular services, Fees, Passports.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in the preamble, 22 CFR part 22
is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 22--SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES--DEPARTMENT OF
STATE AND FOREIGN SERVICE
0
1. The authority citation for part 22 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 note, 1153 note, 1183a note, 1351,
1351 note, 1714, 1714 note; 10 U.S.C. 2602(c); 11 U.S.C. 1157 note;
22 U.S.C. 214, 214 note, 1475e, 2504(a), 2651a, 4201, 4206, 4215,
4219, 6551; 31 U.S.C. 9701; Exec. Order 10,718, 22 FR 4632 (1957);
Exec. Order 11,295, 31 FR 10603 (1966).
0
2. Revise item 1 in the table ``Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services'' in Sec. 22.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 22.1 Schedule of fees.
* * * * *
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Item No. Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Passport and Citizenship Services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Passport Book or Card Execution: Required for $35
first-time applicants and others who must apply in
person (Applicants applying for both the book and
card simultaneously on the same application pay
only one execution fee.)..........................
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dated: July 31, 2016.
Patrick F. Kennedy,
Under Secretary for Management.
[FR Doc. 2016-22215 Filed 9-16-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-13-P