Solicitation of Veterinary Shortage Situation Nominations for the Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP), 88658-88661 [2016-29424]
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88658
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2016 / Notices
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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M. Earl Stewart,
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[FR Doc. 2016–29188 Filed 12–7–16; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture
Solicitation of Veterinary Shortage
Situation Nominations for the
Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment
Program (VMLRP)
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture, USDA.
ACTION: Notice and solicitation for
nominations.
AGENCY:
The National Institute of Food
and Agriculture (NIFA) is soliciting
nominations of veterinary service
shortage situations for the Veterinary
Medicine Loan Repayment Program
(VMLRP) for fiscal year (FY) 2017, as
authorized under the National
Veterinary Medical Services Act
(NVMSA), 7 U.S.C. 3151a. This notice
initiates the nomination period and
prescribes the procedures and criteria to
be used by States, Insular Areas, DC and
Federal Lands to nominate veterinary
shortage situations. Each year all
eligible nominating entities may submit
nominations, up to the maximum
indicated for each entity in this notice.
NIFA is conducting this solicitation of
veterinary shortage situation
nominations under a previously
approved information collection (OMB
Control Number 0524–0046).
DATES: Shortage situation nominations
must be submitted on or before February
8, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submissions must be made
by clicking the submit button on the
Veterinarian Shortage Situation
nomination form provided in the
VMLRP Shortage Situations section at
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
This form is sent as a data file directly
to the Veterinary Medicine Loan
Repayment Program; National Institute
of Food and Agriculture; U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Danielle Tack; Program Coordinator,
Veterinary Science; National Institute of
Food and Agriculture; U.S. Department
of Agriculture; STOP 2220; 1400
Independence Avenue SW.,Washington,
DC 20250–2220; Voice: 202–401–6802;
Fax: 202–401–6156; Email: vmlrp@
nifa.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background and Purpose
Food supply veterinary medicine
embraces a broad array of veterinary
professional activities, specialties and
responsibilities, and is defined as the
full range of veterinary medical
practices contributing to the production
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of a safe and wholesome food supply
and to animal, human, and
environmental health. A series of
studies and reports 1–6 have drawn
attention to maldistributions in the
veterinary workforce leaving some
communities, especially rural areas,
with insufficient access to food supply
veterinary services.
Two programs, born out of this
concern, aim to mitigate the
maldistribution of the veterinary
workforce: The Veterinary Medicine
Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP) and
Veterinary Services Grant Program
(VSGP), both administered by USDA—
NIFA. VMLRP addresses increasing
veterinary school debt by offering
veterinary school debt payments in
exchange for service in shortage
situations, while VSGP addresses other
factors contributing to the
maldistribution of veterinarians serving
the agricultural sector. Specifically, the
VSGP promotes availability and access
to (1) specialized education and training
which will enable veterinarians and
veterinary technicians to provide
services in designated veterinarian
shortage situations, and (2) practiceenhancing equipment and personnel
resources to enable veterinary practices
to expand or improve access to
veterinary services.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
regulations (5 CFR part 1320) that
implement the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), the
information collection and
recordkeeping requirements imposed by
the implementation of these guidelines
have been approved by OMB Control
Number 0524–0046.
1 Government Accountability Office, Veterinary
Workforce: Actions Are Needed to Ensure Sufficient
Capacity for Protecting Public and Animal Health,
GAO–09–178: Feb 18, 2009).
2 National Academies of Science, Workforce
Needs in Veterinary Medicine, 2013.
3 Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Food
Supply Veterinary Medicine Coalition Report:
Estimating FSM Demand and Maintaining the
Availability of Veterinarians in Food Supply
Related Disciplines in the United States and
Canada, 2016. https://www.avma.org/KB/Resources
/Reference/Pages/Food-Supply-VeterinaryMedicine-Coalition-Report.aspx.
4 Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Future
demand, probable shortages and strategies for
creating a better future in food supply veterinary
medicine. 2006, JAVMA 229(1):57–69.
5 Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Attracting
students to careers in food supply veterinary
medicine. 2006, JAVMA 228(1):16931704.
6 Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Job
satisfaction, changes in occupational area and
commitment to a career in food supply veterinary
medicine. 2006, JAVMA 228(12):1884–1893.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2016 / Notices
II. Nomination of Veterinary Shortage
Situations
List of Subjects in Guidelines for
Veterinary Shortage Situation
Nominations
A. General
I. Preface and Authority
II. Nomination of Veterinary Shortage
Situations
A. General
1. Eligible Shortage Situations
2. Authorized Respondents and Use of
Consultation
3. State Allocation of Nominations
4. FY 2017 Shortage Situation Nomination
Process
5. Submission and Due Date
6. Period Covered
7. Definitions
B. Nomination Form
C. NIFA Review of Shortage Situation
Nominations
1. Review Panel Composition and Process
2. Review Criteria
Guidelines for Veterinary Shortage Situation
Nominations
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I. Preface and Authority
In January 2003, the National
Veterinary Medical Service Act
(NVMSA) was passed into law adding
section 1415A to the National
Agricultural Research, Extension, and
Teaching Policy Act of 1997
(NARETPA). This law established a new
Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment
Program (7 U.S.C. 3151a) authorizing
the Secretary of Agriculture to carry out
a program of entering into agreements
with veterinarians under which they
agree to provide veterinary services in
veterinarian shortage situations. In FY
2010, NIFA announced the first funding
opportunity for the VMLRP.
Section 7104 of the 2014 Farm Bill
(Pub. L. 113–79) added section 1415B to
NARETPA, as amended, (7 U.S.C.
3151b) to establish the Veterinary
Services Grant Program (VSGP). This
amendment authorizes the Secretary of
Agriculture to make competitive grants
to qualified entities and individual
veterinarians that carry out programs in
veterinarian shortage situations and for
the purpose of developing,
implementing, and sustaining veterinary
services. Funding for the VSGP was first
appropriated in 2016 through the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016
(Pub. L. 114–113).
Pursuant to the requirements enacted
in the NVMSA of 2004 (as revised), and
the implementing regulation for this
Act, part 3431 subpart A of the VMLRP
Final Rule [75 FR 20239–20248], NIFA
hereby implements guidelines for
authorized State Animal Health
Officials (SAHO) to nominate veterinary
shortage situations for the FY 2017
program cycle.
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1. Eligible Shortage Situations
Section 1415A of NARETPA, as
amended and revised by Section 7105 of
the Food, Conservation and Energy Act,
directs determination of veterinarian
shortage situations for the VMLRP to
consider (1) geographical areas that the
Secretary determines have a shortage of
veterinarians; and (2) areas of veterinary
practice that the Secretary determines
have a shortage of veterinarians, such as
food animal medicine, public health,
epidemiology, and food safety. This
section also added that priority should
be given to agreements with
veterinarians for the practice of food
animal medicine in veterinarian
shortage situations.
While the NVMSA (as amended)
specifies priority be given to food
animal medicine shortage situations,
and that consideration also be given to
specialty areas such as public health,
epidemiology and food safety, the Act
does not identify any areas of veterinary
practice as ineligible. Accordingly, all
nominated veterinary shortage
situations will be considered eligible for
submission. However, assessment of
submitted nominations by the external
review panel convened by NIFA will
reflect that priority be given to certain
types of veterinary service shortage
situations. NIFA therefore anticipates
that the more competitive nominations
will be those directly addressing food
supply veterinary medicine shortage
situations.
A subset of the shortages designated
for VMLRP applicants are also available
to satisfy requirements, as applicable,
for VSGP applicants. In addition, a
shortage situation under the VSGP Rural
Practice Enhancement program area
must also be designated rural as defined
in section 343(a) of the Consolidated
Farm and Rural Development Act (7
U.S.C. 1991(a)).
NIFA adopted definitions for the
practice of veterinary medicine and the
practice of food supply medicine that
are broadly inclusive of the critical roles
veterinarians serve in both public
practice and private practice situations.
Nominations describing either public or
private practice veterinary shortage
situations are eligible for submission.
2. State Respondents and Use of
Consultation
The only authorized respondent on
behalf of each State is the chief SAHO,
as duly authorized by the Governor or
the Governor’s designee in each State.
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The chief SAHO must submit
nominations using the Veterinarian
Shortage Situation Nomination Form
(OMB Control Number 0524–0046),
which is available in the VMLRP
Shortage Situations section on the
VMLRP Web site at www.nifa.usda.gov/
vmlrp. One form must be submitted for
each nominated shortage situation.
When ‘‘SUBMIT’’ is selected on the
form a data file will be sent directly to
NIFA. NIFA strongly encourages the
SAHO to involve leading health animal
experts in the State in the identification
and prioritization of shortage situation
nominations.
3. State Allocation of Nominations
NIFA will accept the number of
nominations equivalent to the
maximum number of designated
shortage areas for each state. For
historical background and more
information on the rationale for capping
nominations and state allocation
method, please visit www.nifa.usda.gov/
vmlrp.
The maximum number of
nominations (and potential
designations) is based on data from the
2012 Agricultural Census conducted by
the USDA National Agricultural
Statistics Service (NASS). Awards from
previous years have no bearing on a
state’s maximum number of allowable
shortage nomination submissions or
designations in any given year, or
number of nominations or designations
allowed for subsequent years. NIFA
reserves the right in the future to
proportionally adjust the maximum
number of designated shortage
situations per state to ensure a balance
between available funds and the
requirement to ensure that priority is
given to mitigating veterinary shortages
corresponding to situations of greatest
need. Nomination Allocation tables for
FY 2017 are available under the VMLRP
Shortage Situations section of the
VMLRP Web site at www.nifa.usda.gov/
vmlrp.
Table I lists the maximum nomination
allocations by state. Table II lists
‘‘Special Consideration Areas’’ which
include any State or Insular Area not
reporting data to NASS, reporting less
than $1,000,000 in annual Livestock and
Livestock Products Total Sales ($), and/
or possessing less than 500,000 acres.
One nomination is allocated to any State
or Insular Area classified as a Special
Consideration Area.
Table III shows the values and
quartile ranks of States for two variables
broadly correlated with demand for food
supply veterinary services: ‘‘Livestock
and Livestock Products Total Sales ($)’’
(LPTS) and ‘‘Land Area (acres)’’ (LA).
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The maximum number of NIFAdesignated shortage situations per state
is based on the sum of quartile rankings
for LPTS and LA for each state and can
be found in Table IV.
While Federal Lands are widely
dispersed within States and Insular
Areas across the country, they constitute
a composite total land area over twice
the size of Alaska. If the 200-mile limit
U.S. coastal waters and associated
fishery areas are included, Federal Land
total acreage would exceed 1 billion.
Both State and Federal Animal Health
officials have responsibilities for matters
relating to terrestrial and aquatic food
animal health on Federal Lands.
Interaction between wildlife and
domestic livestock, such as sheep and
cattle, is particularly common in the
plains states where significant portions
of Federal lands are leased for grazing.
Therefore, both SAHOs and the Chief
Federal Animal Health Officer (Deputy
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service or designee)
may submit nominations to address
shortage situations on or related to
Federal Lands.
NIFA emphasizes that the shortage
nomination allocation is set to broadly
balance the number of designated
shortage situations across states prior to
the nomination and award phases of the
VMLRP and VSGP. Awards will be
made based strictly on the peer review
panels’ assessment according to each
program’s review criteria; thus no state
will be given a preference for placement
of awardees. Additionally, each
designated shortage situation will be
limited to one award per program.
4. FY 2017 Shortage Situation
Nomination Process
For the FY 2017 program cycle, all
eligible submitting entities may: (1)
Request to retain designated status for
any shortage situation successfully
designated in 2016 and/or (2) submit
new nominations. Any shortage from FY
2016 not retained or submitted as a new
nomination will not be considered a
shortage situation in 2017. The total
number of new nominations plus
designated nominations retained
(carried over) may not exceed the
maximum number of nominations each
entity is permitted. ALL nominations,
new and retained, will be evaluated by
the 2017 review panel.
The following process is the
mechanism for retaining a designated
nomination: Each SAHO should review
the map of VMLRP designated shortage
situations for FY 2016 (https://
go.usa.gov/xkFD3) and download a PDF
copy of the nomination form for each
designated area that remains open (not
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awarded) in FY 2016. If the SAHO
wishes to retain (carry over) one or more
designated nomination(s), the SAHO
shall copy and paste the prior year
information into the current year’s
nomination form and select ‘‘SUBMIT.’’
Both new and retained nominations
must be submitted on the Veterinary
Shortage Situation Nomination form
provided in the VMLRP Shortage
Situations section at
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
5. Submission and Due Date
Submissions must be made by
clicking the submit button on the
Veterinarian Shortage Situation
nomination form provided in the
VMLRP Shortage Situations section at
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
This form is sent as a data file directly
to the Veterinary Medicine Loan
Repayment Program; National Institute
of Food and Agriculture; U.S.
Department of Agriculture; Shortage
situation nominations. Both new and
retained (carry-over) nominations must
be submitted on or before February 8,
2017.
7. Period Covered
Each shortage situation is approved
for one program year cycle only.
However, any previously approved
shortage situation not filled in a given
program year may be resubmitted as a
retained (carry-over) nomination.
Retained (carry-over) shortage
nominations will be required to undergo
panel merit review for 2017. Starting in
2018 retained shortages (without any
revisions) will be automatically
approved for up to three years before
requiring another merit review. By
resubmitting a carry-over nomination,
the SAHO is affirming that in his or her
professional judgment the original case
made for shortage status, and the
original description of needs, remain
current and accurate.
8. Definitions
For the purpose of implementing the
solicitation for veterinary shortage
situations, the definitions provided in 7
CFR part 3431 are applicable.
B. Nomination Form
The VMLRP Shortage Nomination
Form must be used to nominate
Veterinarian Shortage Situations. Once
designated as a shortage situation,
VMLRP applicants will use the
information to select shortage situations
they are willing and qualified to fill, and
to guide the preparation of their
applications. NIFA will use the
information to assess contractual
compliance of awardees. The form is
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available in the VMLRP Shortage
Situations section at
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp. The
completed form must be sent to NIFA by
selecting ‘‘SUBMIT’’ on the nomination
form.
Detailed directions for each field can
be found at https://go.usa.gov/xkFDY.
C. NIFA Review of Shortage Situation
Nominations
1. Review Panel Composition and
Process
NIFA will convene a panel of food
supply veterinary medicine experts
from Federal and State agencies, as well
as institutions receiving Animal Health
and Disease Research Program funds
under section 1433 of NARETPA, to
review the nominations and make
recommendations to the NIFA Program
Manager. NIFA will review the panel’s
recommendations and designate the
VMLRP shortage situations. The list of
approved shortage situations will be
made available on the VMLRP Web site
at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
2. Review Criteria
Criteria used by the shortage situation
nomination review panel and NIFA for
certifying a veterinary shortage situation
will be consistent with the information
requested in the shortage situations
nomination form. NIFA understands the
process for defining the risk landscape
associated veterinary service shortages
within a state may require consideration
of many qualitative and quantitative
factors. In addition, each shortage
situation will be characterized by a
different array of subjective and
objective supportive information that
must be developed into a cogent case
identifying, characterizing, and
justifying a given geographic or
disciplinary area as deficient in certain
types of veterinary capacity or service.
To accommodate the uniqueness of each
shortage situation, the nomination form
provides opportunities to present a case
using both supportive metrics and
narrative explanations to define and
explain the proposed need.
While NIFA anticipates some
arguments made in support of a given
shortage situation will be qualitative,
respondents are encouraged to present
verifiable quantitative and qualitative
evidentiary information wherever
possible. Absence of quantitative data
such as animal and veterinarian census
data for the proposed shortage area(s)
may lead the panel to recommend
disapproval of the shortage nomination.
The maximum point value that
panelists may award for each element is
as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 236 / Thursday, December 8, 2016 / Notices
20 points: Describe the objectives of a
veterinarian to meet the needs of the
shortage situation in the community,
area, state/insular area, or position
requested above.
20 points: Describe the activities
required of a veterinarian to meet the
needs of the shortage situation located
in the community, area, state/insular
area, or position requested above.
5 points: Describe any past efforts to
recruit and retain a veterinarian to
achieve the objectives and activities in
the shortage situation identified above.
35 points: Describe the risk of this
veterinarian position not being filled or
retained. Include the risk(s) to the
production of a safe and wholesome
food supply and/or to animal, human,
and environmental health not only in
the community but in the region, state/
insular area, nation, and/or
international community.
An additional 20 points will be used
to evaluate overall merit/quality of the
case made for each nomination.
Done in Washington, DC, this 30th day of
November, 2016.
Sonny Ramaswamy,
Director, National Institute of Food and
Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 2016–29424 Filed 12–7–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
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Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
The Department of Commerce will
submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for clearance the
following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
chapter 35).
Agency: U.S. Census Bureau.
Title: Business Research and
Development and Innovation Survey.
OMB Control Number: 0607–0912.
Form Number(s): BRDI–1, BRDI–1S,
and BRDI–M.
Type of Request: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Number of Respondents: 245,000.
Average Hours Per Response: 43
minutes.
Burden Hours: 176,500.
Needs and Uses: The Census Bureau
requests a revision to the currently
cleared Business R&D and Innovation
Survey (BRDIS) information collection.
This revision adds a form type [BRDI–
M] to collect data on research and
development (R&D) and innovation
activities from small businesses with
fewer than 10 employees.
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In 2004, the National Academy of
Sciences’ Committee on National
Statistics (CNSTAT) reviewed the
National Center for Science and
Engineering Statistics’ (NCSES)
portfolio of R&D surveys and
recommended that NCSES explore ways
to measure firm innovation and
investigate the incidence of R&D
activities in growing sectors, such as
small business enterprises not currently
covered by BRDIS. As a result, Census
plans to expand BRDIS to include very
small businesses or microbusinesses
through the use of the BRDI–M
questionnaire.
The National Science Foundation Act
of 1950 as amended authorizes and
directs the National Science Foundation
(NSF) through the National Center for
Science and Engineering Statistics
(NCSES) ‘‘. . . to provide a central
clearinghouse for the collection,
interpretation, and analysis of data on
scientific and engineering resources and
to provide a source of information for
policy formulation by other agencies of
the Federal government.’’ One of the
methods used by NCSES to fulfill this
mandate is the Business R&D and
Innovation Survey (BRDIS)—the
primary federal source of information
on R&D in the business sector.
BRDIS will continue to collect the
following types of information:
• R&D expense based on accounting
standards.
• Worldwide R&D of domestic
companies.
• Business segment detail.
• R&D related capital expenditures.
• Detailed data about the R&D
workforce.
• R&D strategy and data on the
potential impact of R&D on the market.
• R&D directed to application areas of
particular national interest.
• Data measuring innovation and
intellectual property protection
activities.
In addition to adding the BRDI–M
form, the following changes will be
made to the 2016–2017 BRDIS
compared to the 2015 BRDIS:
• Add item in type-of-cost questions
to collect Royalty and licensing
payments.
• Add questions collecting BasicApplied-Development split of Total
R&D paid for by the company and Total
R&D paid for by others.
• Delete question on intellectual
property protection.
• Add two Yes/No questions to help
separately identify intellectual property
transfer transactions with U.S. persons
and foreign persons.
• Discontinue the pre-survey letter.
This letter was planned to collect
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88661
contact and company status information
(merger, acquisition, etc.) from
approximately 500 of the largest R&D
companies.
The forms used in the BRDIS are:
Form BRDI–M. This form will be
mailed to approximately 200,000 small
businesses with less than 10 employees.
In addition to general business
information—primary business activity
(NAICS code), year business was
formed, and number of employees—this
form would collect data on R&D,
innovation, employment, related
activities (such as sales of significantly
improved goods and services; operating
agreements and licensing activities;
technology transfer; patents and
intellectual property; and sources of
technical knowledge), measures of
entrepreneurial strategies, and
demographic characteristics of the
entrepreneur.
Form BRDI–1. This form will be
mailed to approximately 7,000
companies with a history of significant
R&D and contains the full complement
of BRDIS data items.
Form BRDI–1(S). This form will be
mailed to approximately 38,000
companies and contains only the most
high-level BRDIS data items.
Information from BRDIS will continue
to support the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2010 as well as
other R&D-related initiatives introduced
during the clearance period. Other
initiatives that have used BRDIS
statistics include: The Innovation
Measurement-Tracking the State of
Innovation in the American Economy
(U.S. Department of Commerce);
Science of Science and Innovation
Policy (NSF); and Rising Above the
Gathering Storm (National Research
Council).
Policy officials from many Federal
agencies rely on BRDIS statistics for
essential information. For example, the
Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
now incorporates R&D as fixed
investment in the National Income and
Product Accounts (NIPAs). Businesses
and trade organizations also rely on
BRDIS data to benchmark their
industries’ performance against others.
Each BRDIS data item is intended to
address specific data user needs
identified by NCSES through research,
workshops, and regular interaction with
data users.
In previous years, BRDIS statistics
were limited to companies with five or
more U.S. employees. With the addition
of BRDI–M, all companies with U.S.
employees will be eligible for inclusion
in providing statistics on R&D and
innovation regardless of company size.
Expanding the coverage of the BRDIS
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 236 (Thursday, December 8, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 88658-88661]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-29424]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Solicitation of Veterinary Shortage Situation Nominations for the
Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP)
AGENCY: National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA.
ACTION: Notice and solicitation for nominations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) is
soliciting nominations of veterinary service shortage situations for
the Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP) for fiscal year
(FY) 2017, as authorized under the National Veterinary Medical Services
Act (NVMSA), 7 U.S.C. 3151a. This notice initiates the nomination
period and prescribes the procedures and criteria to be used by States,
Insular Areas, DC and Federal Lands to nominate veterinary shortage
situations. Each year all eligible nominating entities may submit
nominations, up to the maximum indicated for each entity in this
notice. NIFA is conducting this solicitation of veterinary shortage
situation nominations under a previously approved information
collection (OMB Control Number 0524-0046).
DATES: Shortage situation nominations must be submitted on or before
February 8, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submissions must be made by clicking the submit button on
the Veterinarian Shortage Situation nomination form provided in the
VMLRP Shortage Situations section at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
This form is sent as a data file directly to the Veterinary
Medicine Loan Repayment Program; National Institute of Food and
Agriculture; U.S. Department of Agriculture.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Danielle Tack; Program Coordinator,
Veterinary Science; National Institute of Food and Agriculture; U.S.
Department of Agriculture; STOP 2220; 1400 Independence Avenue
SW.,Washington, DC 20250-2220; Voice: 202-401-6802; Fax: 202-401-6156;
Email: vmlrp@nifa.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background and Purpose
Food supply veterinary medicine embraces a broad array of
veterinary professional activities, specialties and responsibilities,
and is defined as the full range of veterinary medical practices
contributing to the production of a safe and wholesome food supply and
to animal, human, and environmental health. A series of studies and
reports 1-6 have drawn attention to maldistributions in the
veterinary workforce leaving some communities, especially rural areas,
with insufficient access to food supply veterinary services.
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\1\ Government Accountability Office, Veterinary Workforce:
Actions Are Needed to Ensure Sufficient Capacity for Protecting
Public and Animal Health, GAO-09-178: Feb 18, 2009).
\2\ National Academies of Science, Workforce Needs in Veterinary
Medicine, 2013.
\3\ Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Food Supply Veterinary
Medicine Coalition Report: Estimating FSM Demand and Maintaining the
Availability of Veterinarians in Food Supply Related Disciplines in
the United States and Canada, 2016. https://www.avma.org/KB/Resources/Reference/Pages/Food-Supply-Veterinary-Medicine-Coalition-Report.aspx.
\4\ Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Future demand, probable
shortages and strategies for creating a better future in food supply
veterinary medicine. 2006, JAVMA 229(1):57-69.
\5\ Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Attracting students to
careers in food supply veterinary medicine. 2006, JAVMA
228(1):16931704.
\6\ Andrus DM, Gwinner KP, Prince, JB. Job satisfaction, changes
in occupational area and commitment to a career in food supply
veterinary medicine. 2006, JAVMA 228(12):1884-1893.
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Two programs, born out of this concern, aim to mitigate the
maldistribution of the veterinary workforce: The Veterinary Medicine
Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP) and Veterinary Services Grant Program
(VSGP), both administered by USDA--NIFA. VMLRP addresses increasing
veterinary school debt by offering veterinary school debt payments in
exchange for service in shortage situations, while VSGP addresses other
factors contributing to the maldistribution of veterinarians serving
the agricultural sector. Specifically, the VSGP promotes availability
and access to (1) specialized education and training which will enable
veterinarians and veterinary technicians to provide services in
designated veterinarian shortage situations, and (2) practice-enhancing
equipment and personnel resources to enable veterinary practices to
expand or improve access to veterinary services.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
regulations (5 CFR part 1320) that implement the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), the information collection and
recordkeeping requirements imposed by the implementation of these
guidelines have been approved by OMB Control Number 0524-0046.
[[Page 88659]]
List of Subjects in Guidelines for Veterinary Shortage Situation
Nominations
I. Preface and Authority
II. Nomination of Veterinary Shortage Situations
A. General
1. Eligible Shortage Situations
2. Authorized Respondents and Use of Consultation
3. State Allocation of Nominations
4. FY 2017 Shortage Situation Nomination Process
5. Submission and Due Date
6. Period Covered
7. Definitions
B. Nomination Form
C. NIFA Review of Shortage Situation Nominations
1. Review Panel Composition and Process
2. Review Criteria
Guidelines for Veterinary Shortage Situation Nominations
I. Preface and Authority
In January 2003, the National Veterinary Medical Service Act
(NVMSA) was passed into law adding section 1415A to the National
Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1997
(NARETPA). This law established a new Veterinary Medicine Loan
Repayment Program (7 U.S.C. 3151a) authorizing the Secretary of
Agriculture to carry out a program of entering into agreements with
veterinarians under which they agree to provide veterinary services in
veterinarian shortage situations. In FY 2010, NIFA announced the first
funding opportunity for the VMLRP.
Section 7104 of the 2014 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 113-79) added section
1415B to NARETPA, as amended, (7 U.S.C. 3151b) to establish the
Veterinary Services Grant Program (VSGP). This amendment authorizes the
Secretary of Agriculture to make competitive grants to qualified
entities and individual veterinarians that carry out programs in
veterinarian shortage situations and for the purpose of developing,
implementing, and sustaining veterinary services. Funding for the VSGP
was first appropriated in 2016 through the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-113).
Pursuant to the requirements enacted in the NVMSA of 2004 (as
revised), and the implementing regulation for this Act, part 3431
subpart A of the VMLRP Final Rule [75 FR 20239-20248], NIFA hereby
implements guidelines for authorized State Animal Health Officials
(SAHO) to nominate veterinary shortage situations for the FY 2017
program cycle.
II. Nomination of Veterinary Shortage Situations
A. General
1. Eligible Shortage Situations
Section 1415A of NARETPA, as amended and revised by Section 7105 of
the Food, Conservation and Energy Act, directs determination of
veterinarian shortage situations for the VMLRP to consider (1)
geographical areas that the Secretary determines have a shortage of
veterinarians; and (2) areas of veterinary practice that the Secretary
determines have a shortage of veterinarians, such as food animal
medicine, public health, epidemiology, and food safety. This section
also added that priority should be given to agreements with
veterinarians for the practice of food animal medicine in veterinarian
shortage situations.
While the NVMSA (as amended) specifies priority be given to food
animal medicine shortage situations, and that consideration also be
given to specialty areas such as public health, epidemiology and food
safety, the Act does not identify any areas of veterinary practice as
ineligible. Accordingly, all nominated veterinary shortage situations
will be considered eligible for submission. However, assessment of
submitted nominations by the external review panel convened by NIFA
will reflect that priority be given to certain types of veterinary
service shortage situations. NIFA therefore anticipates that the more
competitive nominations will be those directly addressing food supply
veterinary medicine shortage situations.
A subset of the shortages designated for VMLRP applicants are also
available to satisfy requirements, as applicable, for VSGP applicants.
In addition, a shortage situation under the VSGP Rural Practice
Enhancement program area must also be designated rural as defined in
section 343(a) of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act (7
U.S.C. 1991(a)).
NIFA adopted definitions for the practice of veterinary medicine
and the practice of food supply medicine that are broadly inclusive of
the critical roles veterinarians serve in both public practice and
private practice situations. Nominations describing either public or
private practice veterinary shortage situations are eligible for
submission.
2. State Respondents and Use of Consultation
The only authorized respondent on behalf of each State is the chief
SAHO, as duly authorized by the Governor or the Governor's designee in
each State. The chief SAHO must submit nominations using the
Veterinarian Shortage Situation Nomination Form (OMB Control Number
0524-0046), which is available in the VMLRP Shortage Situations section
on the VMLRP Web site at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp. One form must be
submitted for each nominated shortage situation. When ``SUBMIT'' is
selected on the form a data file will be sent directly to NIFA. NIFA
strongly encourages the SAHO to involve leading health animal experts
in the State in the identification and prioritization of shortage
situation nominations.
3. State Allocation of Nominations
NIFA will accept the number of nominations equivalent to the
maximum number of designated shortage areas for each state. For
historical background and more information on the rationale for capping
nominations and state allocation method, please visit
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
The maximum number of nominations (and potential designations) is
based on data from the 2012 Agricultural Census conducted by the USDA
National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). Awards from previous
years have no bearing on a state's maximum number of allowable shortage
nomination submissions or designations in any given year, or number of
nominations or designations allowed for subsequent years. NIFA reserves
the right in the future to proportionally adjust the maximum number of
designated shortage situations per state to ensure a balance between
available funds and the requirement to ensure that priority is given to
mitigating veterinary shortages corresponding to situations of greatest
need. Nomination Allocation tables for FY 2017 are available under the
VMLRP Shortage Situations section of the VMLRP Web site at
www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
Table I lists the maximum nomination allocations by state. Table II
lists ``Special Consideration Areas'' which include any State or
Insular Area not reporting data to NASS, reporting less than $1,000,000
in annual Livestock and Livestock Products Total Sales ($), and/or
possessing less than 500,000 acres. One nomination is allocated to any
State or Insular Area classified as a Special Consideration Area.
Table III shows the values and quartile ranks of States for two
variables broadly correlated with demand for food supply veterinary
services: ``Livestock and Livestock Products Total Sales ($)'' (LPTS)
and ``Land Area (acres)'' (LA).
[[Page 88660]]
The maximum number of NIFA-designated shortage situations per state is
based on the sum of quartile rankings for LPTS and LA for each state
and can be found in Table IV.
While Federal Lands are widely dispersed within States and Insular
Areas across the country, they constitute a composite total land area
over twice the size of Alaska. If the 200-mile limit U.S. coastal
waters and associated fishery areas are included, Federal Land total
acreage would exceed 1 billion. Both State and Federal Animal Health
officials have responsibilities for matters relating to terrestrial and
aquatic food animal health on Federal Lands. Interaction between
wildlife and domestic livestock, such as sheep and cattle, is
particularly common in the plains states where significant portions of
Federal lands are leased for grazing. Therefore, both SAHOs and the
Chief Federal Animal Health Officer (Deputy Administrator of the Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service or designee) may submit nominations
to address shortage situations on or related to Federal Lands.
NIFA emphasizes that the shortage nomination allocation is set to
broadly balance the number of designated shortage situations across
states prior to the nomination and award phases of the VMLRP and VSGP.
Awards will be made based strictly on the peer review panels'
assessment according to each program's review criteria; thus no state
will be given a preference for placement of awardees. Additionally,
each designated shortage situation will be limited to one award per
program.
4. FY 2017 Shortage Situation Nomination Process
For the FY 2017 program cycle, all eligible submitting entities
may: (1) Request to retain designated status for any shortage situation
successfully designated in 2016 and/or (2) submit new nominations. Any
shortage from FY 2016 not retained or submitted as a new nomination
will not be considered a shortage situation in 2017. The total number
of new nominations plus designated nominations retained (carried over)
may not exceed the maximum number of nominations each entity is
permitted. ALL nominations, new and retained, will be evaluated by the
2017 review panel.
The following process is the mechanism for retaining a designated
nomination: Each SAHO should review the map of VMLRP designated
shortage situations for FY 2016 (https://go.usa.gov/xkFD3) and download
a PDF copy of the nomination form for each designated area that remains
open (not awarded) in FY 2016. If the SAHO wishes to retain (carry
over) one or more designated nomination(s), the SAHO shall copy and
paste the prior year information into the current year's nomination
form and select ``SUBMIT.''
Both new and retained nominations must be submitted on the
Veterinary Shortage Situation Nomination form provided in the VMLRP
Shortage Situations section at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
5. Submission and Due Date
Submissions must be made by clicking the submit button on the
Veterinarian Shortage Situation nomination form provided in the VMLRP
Shortage Situations section at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
This form is sent as a data file directly to the Veterinary
Medicine Loan Repayment Program; National Institute of Food and
Agriculture; U.S. Department of Agriculture; Shortage situation
nominations. Both new and retained (carry-over) nominations must be
submitted on or before February 8, 2017.
7. Period Covered
Each shortage situation is approved for one program year cycle
only. However, any previously approved shortage situation not filled in
a given program year may be resubmitted as a retained (carry-over)
nomination. Retained (carry-over) shortage nominations will be required
to undergo panel merit review for 2017. Starting in 2018 retained
shortages (without any revisions) will be automatically approved for up
to three years before requiring another merit review. By resubmitting a
carry-over nomination, the SAHO is affirming that in his or her
professional judgment the original case made for shortage status, and
the original description of needs, remain current and accurate.
8. Definitions
For the purpose of implementing the solicitation for veterinary
shortage situations, the definitions provided in 7 CFR part 3431 are
applicable.
B. Nomination Form
The VMLRP Shortage Nomination Form must be used to nominate
Veterinarian Shortage Situations. Once designated as a shortage
situation, VMLRP applicants will use the information to select shortage
situations they are willing and qualified to fill, and to guide the
preparation of their applications. NIFA will use the information to
assess contractual compliance of awardees. The form is available in the
VMLRP Shortage Situations section at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp. The
completed form must be sent to NIFA by selecting ``SUBMIT'' on the
nomination form.
Detailed directions for each field can be found at https://go.usa.gov/xkFDY.
C. NIFA Review of Shortage Situation Nominations
1. Review Panel Composition and Process
NIFA will convene a panel of food supply veterinary medicine
experts from Federal and State agencies, as well as institutions
receiving Animal Health and Disease Research Program funds under
section 1433 of NARETPA, to review the nominations and make
recommendations to the NIFA Program Manager. NIFA will review the
panel's recommendations and designate the VMLRP shortage situations.
The list of approved shortage situations will be made available on the
VMLRP Web site at www.nifa.usda.gov/vmlrp.
2. Review Criteria
Criteria used by the shortage situation nomination review panel and
NIFA for certifying a veterinary shortage situation will be consistent
with the information requested in the shortage situations nomination
form. NIFA understands the process for defining the risk landscape
associated veterinary service shortages within a state may require
consideration of many qualitative and quantitative factors. In
addition, each shortage situation will be characterized by a different
array of subjective and objective supportive information that must be
developed into a cogent case identifying, characterizing, and
justifying a given geographic or disciplinary area as deficient in
certain types of veterinary capacity or service. To accommodate the
uniqueness of each shortage situation, the nomination form provides
opportunities to present a case using both supportive metrics and
narrative explanations to define and explain the proposed need.
While NIFA anticipates some arguments made in support of a given
shortage situation will be qualitative, respondents are encouraged to
present verifiable quantitative and qualitative evidentiary information
wherever possible. Absence of quantitative data such as animal and
veterinarian census data for the proposed shortage area(s) may lead the
panel to recommend disapproval of the shortage nomination.
The maximum point value that panelists may award for each element
is as follows:
[[Page 88661]]
20 points: Describe the objectives of a veterinarian to meet the
needs of the shortage situation in the community, area, state/insular
area, or position requested above.
20 points: Describe the activities required of a veterinarian to
meet the needs of the shortage situation located in the community,
area, state/insular area, or position requested above.
5 points: Describe any past efforts to recruit and retain a
veterinarian to achieve the objectives and activities in the shortage
situation identified above.
35 points: Describe the risk of this veterinarian position not
being filled or retained. Include the risk(s) to the production of a
safe and wholesome food supply and/or to animal, human, and
environmental health not only in the community but in the region,
state/insular area, nation, and/or international community.
An additional 20 points will be used to evaluate overall merit/
quality of the case made for each nomination.
Done in Washington, DC, this 30th day of November, 2016.
Sonny Ramaswamy,
Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 2016-29424 Filed 12-7-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-22-P