Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection Comments Requested; New Collection: Death in Custody Reporting Act Collection, 91948-91952 [2016-30396]
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91948
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Notices
factors, including system and
technology acquisition, expected useful
life of capital equipment, discount
rate(s), and the period over which you
incur costs. Capital and startup costs
include, among other items, computers
and software you purchase to prepare
for collecting information, monitoring,
and record storage facilities. You should
not include estimates for equipment or
services purchased: (a) Before October 1,
1995; (b) to comply with requirements
not associated with the information
collection; (c) for reasons other than to
provide information or keep records for
the Government; or (d) as part of
customary and usual business or private
practices. We will summarize written
responses to this notice and address
them in our submission for OMB
approval. Please note that the comments
submitted in response to this notice are
a matter of public record. We will
include or summarize each comment in
our request to OMB to approve this IC.
As a result of your comments, we will
make any necessary adjustments to the
burden in our submission to OMB.
Public Disclosure Statement: OMB
regulations at 5 CFR part 1320, which
implement provisions of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501–3521,
require that interested members of the
public and affected agencies be given an
opportunity to comment on information
collection and recordkeeping activities
(see 5 CFR 1320.8 (d) and 1320.12(a)).
This notice identifies an information
collection that the BOEM plans to
submit to OMB for approval. The
Paperwork Reduction Act provides that
an agency may not conduct or sponsor
a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number. Until OMB approves a
collection of information, you are not
obligated to respond.
Public Availability of Comments:
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Dated: December 9, 2016.
Deanna Meyer-Pietruszka,
Chief, Office of Policy, Regulation, and
Analysis.
[FR Doc. 2016–30353 Filed 12–16–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MR–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. DEA–392]
Bulk Manufacturer of Controlled
Substances Application: Research
Triangle Institute
ACTION:
Notice of application.
Registered bulk manufacturers of
the affected basic classes, and
DATES:
applicants therefore, may file written
comments on or objections to the
issuance of the proposed registration in
accordance with 21 CFR 1301.33(a) on
or before February 17, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be sent to: Drug Enforcement
Administration, Attention: DEA Federal
Register Representative/DRW, 8701
Morrissette Drive, Springfield, Virginia
22152.
The
Attorney General has delegated her
authority under the Controlled
Substances Act to the Administrator of
the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA), 28 CFR 0.100(b). Authority to
exercise all necessary functions with
respect to the promulgation and
implementation of 21 CFR part 1301,
incident to the registration of
manufacturers, distributors, dispensers,
importers, and exporters of controlled
substances (other than final orders in
connection with suspension, denial, or
revocation of registration) has been
redelegated to the Assistant
Administrator of the DEA Diversion
Control Division (‘‘Assistant
Administrator’’) pursuant to section 7 of
28 CFR part 0, appendix to subpart R.
In accordance with 21 CFR
1301.33(a), this is notice that on March
13, 2015, Research Triangle Institute,
Kenneth S. Rehder, Hermann Building,
East Institute Drive, P.O. Box 12194,
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
27709–2194 applied to be registered as
a bulk manufacturer of the following
basic classes of controlled substances:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Controlled substance
Drug code
Marihuana ................................................................................................................................................................
Tetrahydrocannabinols ............................................................................................................................................
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The company will manufacture
marihuana (7360) and
tetrahydrocannabinols (7370) for use by
their researchers under the above-listed
controlled substances as Active
Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) for
clinical trials.
In reference to drug code (7370) the
company plans to bulk manufacture a
synthetic tetrahydrocannabinol. No
other activity for this drug code is
authorized for this registration.
Dated: December 3, 2016.
Louis J. Milione,
Assistant Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016–30368 Filed 12–16–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
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Comments are encouraged and
will be accepted for 60 days until
February 17, 2017.
[OMB Number 1121—NEW]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed Collection
Comments Requested; New Collection:
Death in Custody Reporting Act
Collection
Bureau of Justice Assistance,
Department of Justice.
ACTION: 60-day notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice
(DOJ), Bureau of Justice Assistance will
be submitting the following information
collection request to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
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I
I
DATES:
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
SUMMARY:
7360
7370
Schedule
If
you have additional comments
especially on the estimated public
burden or associated response time,
suggestions, or need a copy of the
proposed information collection
instrument with instructions or
additional information, please contact
Chris Casto, Bureau of Justice
Assistance, 810 Seventh Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20531 (email:
DICRAComments@usdoj.gov; telephone:
202–616–6500).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Written
comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning
the proposed collection of information
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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are encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
points:
—Evaluate the accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
—Evaluate whether the proposed
collection will result in the collection
of timely, accurate, complete, and
reliable information;
—Evaluate whether and, if so, how the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected can be
enhanced;
—Evaluate the extent to which the
information to be collected should be
made publicly available; and
—Evaluate whether the burden of the
collection of information on those
who are to respond can be minimized
and, if so, how, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information
technology.
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Overview of This Information
Collection
(1) Type of Information Collection:
New collection.
(2) The Title of the Form/Collection:
Death in Custody Reporting Act
Collection
(3) The agency form number, if any,
and the applicable component of the
Department sponsoring the collection:
This collection includes the following
newly-developed forms to respond to
the Death in Custody Reporting Act (the
DCRA), which respondents will be
asked to complete through an online,
web-based portal:
• Form DCR–1: Quarterly Summary.
This summary form requires States to
either (1) identify all reportable deaths
that occurred in their jurisdiction
during the corresponding quarter and
provide basic information about the
circumstances of the death, or (2) affirm
that no reportable death occurred in the
State during the reporting period.
• Form DCR–1A: Incident Report,
Law Enforcement. This incident report
form requires States to provide
additional information for each
reportable death identified in the
Quarterly Summary that occurred
during interactions with law
enforcement personnel or while in their
custody. The required information
includes the circumstances surrounding
the death and additional characteristics
of the decedent.
• Form DCR–1B: Incident Report,
Corrections. This incident report form
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requires States to provide additional
information for each reportable death
identified in the Quarterly Summary
that occurred while the decedent was in
the custody of a jail, prison, or similar
detention facility. The required
information includes the circumstances
surrounding the death and additional
characteristics of the decedent.
• Form DCR–2: Open Source
Summary. This summary form requires
States to confirm whether the deaths
identified through DOJ’s open source
review are qualifying reportable deaths
and were already reported in the
Quarterly Summary (Form DCR–1). For
reportable deaths that were not included
in the Quarterly Summary, the
respondent is required to submit the
corresponding Incident Report (Form
DCR–1A or DCR–1B).
• State Data Collection Plan. By the
beginning of each fiscal year, each State
is required to submit its plan—or an
update to an existing plan—on how it
will collect the information that the
DCRA requires the State to report on a
quarterly basis that achieves maximum
timeliness, accuracy, and completeness.
The applicable component of the
Department of Justice sponsoring this
collection is the Office of Justice
Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract: In order to comply with the
mandate of the DCRA, the Department
of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance,
is proposing a new data collection for
State Administering Agencies to collect
and submit information regarding the
death of any person who is detained,
under arrest, or is in the process of
being arrested, is en route to be
incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a
municipal or county jail, State prison,
State-run boot camp prison, boot camp
prison that is contracted out by the
State, any State or local contract facility,
or other local or State correctional
facility (including any juvenile facility).
For purposes of this collection, the
term ‘‘State’’ includes any State of the
United States, the District of Columbia,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam,
and the Northern Mariana Islands. Thus,
the affected public that will be asked to
respond on a quarterly basis each
federal fiscal year include 56 State
actors. Indirectly, these States will be
requesting information from
approximately 19,450 State and local
law enforcement agencies (LEAs), 50
State departments of corrections, and
2,800 local adult jail jurisdictions.
DOJ previously published a notice in
the Federal Register on August 4, 2016,
describing a plan to collect DCRA
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information in Fiscal Years (FYs) 2016
and 2017. Based on comments received
from the public, DOJ has amended its
plan which is described more fully
below.
Background
The Death in Custody Reporting Act
(DCRA) requires states and federal law
enforcement agencies to report certain
information to the Attorney General
regarding the death of any person
occurring during interactions with law
enforcement officers or while in
custody. See 42 U.S.C. 13727(a) & (b),
13727a(a) & (b). It further requires the
Attorney General and the Department of
Justice (Department) to collect the
information, establish guidelines on
how it should be reported, annually
determine whether each state has
complied with the reporting
requirements, and address any state’s
noncompliance.
The DCRA, which Congress enacted
in December 2014, builds on an earlier
law, also called the Death in Custody
Reporting Act, enacted in 2000 (P.L.
106–247). The 2000 law required States
to report ‘‘information regarding the
death of any person who is in the
process of arrest, is en route to be
incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a
municipal or county jail, State prison, or
other local or State correctional facility
(including any juvenile facility) . . .’’ In
response, the Department of Justice
through the Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS) of the Office of Justice Programs
developed a Deaths in Custody
Reporting Program (DCRP), which had
two parts. First, BJS collected data on
deaths that occurred while the decedent
was in the custody of local jails or State
prisons. Second, BJS collected
information on deaths that occurred
during the process of arrest (arrestrelated deaths, or ARDs). The DCRP
collected information on deaths
regardless of the manner of death,
including those that resulted from
accidents, suicides, natural causes, law
enforcement homicides, and other
homicides.
Although the 2000 law expired in
2006, BJS continued to collect data on
deaths in jails and prisons. The most
recent reports based on the prison and
jails data collection can be found at
https://www.bjs.gov/
index.cfm?ty=tp&tid=19. BJS continued
the ARD program as well, but it was
suspended in 2014 due to an assessment
which revealed that variations in data
collection methodology and coverage
among States resulted in an insufficient
census of arrest-related deaths. BJS then
tested a new methodology. Instead of
relying solely on States to affirmatively
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submit information on reportable ARDs,
BJS piloted a mixed method approach
using open sources to identify eligible
cases, followed by data requests to law
enforcement, medical examiners, and/or
coroner offices for incident-specific
information about the decedent and
circumstances surrounding the event.
During the follow-up, BJS also would
request information on other ARDs that
had not been identified through open
sources. The results of the redesigned
‘‘open source review’’ approach, which
are available at https://www.bjs.gov,
showed substantial improvements in
data coverage and quality.
In enacting the current DCRA,
Congress maintained the reporting
structure that places the primary
responsibility of reporting DCRA
information on States and added new
provisions that were not in the 2000
law—namely that the Attorney General
was granted authority to establish
guidelines and to determine whether
States are in compliance with those
standards. A noncompliant State is
subject, at the discretion of the Attorney
General, to a 10% reduction of its Byrne
Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne JAG),
and the amount of any reduction is to
be reallocated to States that are found to
be in compliance. Because the new
provisions envision the data collected to
be used to determine compliance and
potentially assess penalties on Byrne
JAG grantees, the Department’s plan
described below shifts the responsibility
of DCRA data collection from BJS,
which may collect data only for
statistical and research purposes, to the
Bureau of Justice Assistance. Thus, BJS
in 2018 will suspend the current DCRP
data collection efforts in jails and
prisons and will not pursue a revised
ARD program.
Collection Process
DOJ proposes the following plan to
collect DCRA information in fiscal year
2017 and beyond (and also describes
below a plan to collect DCRA
information for fiscal year 2016). The
plan, which constitutes ‘‘guidelines
established by the Attorney General’’
pursuant to section 2(a) of the DCRA,
combines elements of past approaches
shown to increase data quality and
coverage of reportable deaths with
elements with provisions specifically
required by the statute.
For purposes of this notice, the term
‘‘reportable death’’ means any death that
the DCRA or the Department’s
guidelines require States to report.
Generally, these are deaths that
occurred during interactions with law
enforcement personnel or while the
decedent was in their custody or in the
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custody, under the supervision, or
under the jurisdiction of a State or local
law enforcement or correctional agency,
such as a jail or prison. Specifically, the
DCRA requires States to report
information regarding ‘‘the death of any
person who is detained, under arrest, or
is in the process of being arrested, is en
route to be incarcerated, or is
incarcerated at a municipal or county
jail, State prison, State-run boot camp
prison, boot camp prison that is
contracted out by the State, any State or
local contract facility, or other local or
State correctional facility (including any
juvenile facility).’’ 42 U.S.C. 13727(a).
The Department interprets the Act’s list
of circumstances to include any deaths
that occurred:
• Due to any use of force by law
enforcement personnel (e.g., officerinvolved shootings and deaths caused
by law enforcement weapons or tactics).
• While the decedent’s freedom to
leave was restricted by law enforcement
prior to, during, or following an arrest—
including during detention for
questioning or investigation (e.g., a
Terry stop); during the process of
apprehension (e.g., the pursuit of a
criminal suspect, or a standoff with law
enforcement); while in the custody of,
or shortly after restraint by, law
enforcement personnel (even if the
decedent was not formally under arrest);
or while in transit by law enforcement
personnel.
• During an interaction with law
enforcement personnel responding to
medical or mental health assistance
(e.g., in response to suicidal persons).
• While the decedent was confined in
a correctional or detention facility,
including a prison, jail, boot camp,
lockup, or booking center.
• While the decedent was under the
jurisdiction or supervision of a law
enforcement agency or correctional or
detention facility but located elsewhere,
such as special jail facilities (e.g.,
medical/treatment/release centers,
halfway houses, or work farms), or in
transit.
Please note that the DCRA
information that States submit to the
Department must originate from official
government records, documents, or
personnel.
The DCRA requires quarterly
reporting. Because these data collection
guidelines will not be finalized before
the 2nd quarter of FY 2017, quarterly
reporting will begin with the 3rd and
4th quarters of FY 2017 and continue
quarterly thereafter. Reporting for the
3rd and 4th quarters of FY 2017 will
include only reportable deaths
occurring during interactions with law
enforcement personnel or while in their
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custody (i.e., deaths reportable on Form
DCR–1A), and not deaths occurring in
the jail, prison, or detention settings.
Deaths in prisons and jails occurring
during 2016 and 2017 will be captured
by BJS through its existing data
collection program on deaths in prisons
and jails. Beginning with FY 2018,
quarterly DCRA reporting will include
all reportable deaths—deaths occurring
during interactions with law
enforcement personnel or while in their
custody and deaths in jail, prison, or
detention settings.
Please note that the Department will
not make any compliance determination
based on a State’s FY 2017 data
reporting. States are expected to begin
reporting pursuant to the DCRA during
the 3rd and 4th Quarters of FY 2017, but
the Department will not find a State to
be in noncompliance or reduce a State’s
grant funding for noncompliance
because of reporting failures during FY
2017. This grace period for FY 2017 is
necessary to allow States time to
develop and implement their data
collection and reporting plans. It will be
important for States to report during FY
2017, however, so that they have an
opportunity to test their abilities to
report the data effectively, to identify
and correct any flaws in their data
collection and reporting systems before
reporting for FY 2018 begins, and to
develop the data collection plans that
they will use for FY 2018. The
Department will assess states’
compliance with their reporting
obligations over FY 2018, and States
that fail to comply during FY 2018 will
be subject to a reduction of their grant
funding, pursuant to the DCRA.
States will be required to complete
the following four steps in order to be
in compliance with DCRA requirements:
(1) Quarterly Summary. For each
quarter in a fiscal year, a State must
complete the Quarterly Summary (Form
DCR–1) and submit it by the reporting
deadline. The Quarterly Summary is a
list of all reportable deaths that occurred
in the State during the corresponding
quarter with basic information about the
circumstances of each death. If a State
did not have a reportable death during
the quarter, the State must so indicate
on the Quarterly Summary. The
reporting deadline to submit the
Quarterly Summary is the last day of the
month following the close of the
quarter. For each quarter, DOJ will send
two reminders prior to the reporting
deadline.
Example. The second quarter of a fiscal
year is January 1–March 31. The deadline to
submit the second quarter Quarterly
Summary is April 30. DOJ will send a
reminder to States on March 31 and April 15.
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(2) Incident Reports. For each
reportable death identified in the
Quarterly Summary, a State must
complete and submit by the same
reporting deadline an Incident Report
(Form DCR–1A or DCR–1B depending
on the agency involved or that had
custody of the defendant at the time of
death), which contains specific
information on the circumstances of the
death and additional characteristics of
the decedent. These include:
• The decedent’s name, date of birth,
gender, and other demographic
information.
• The date, time, and location of the
death.
• The law enforcement or
correctional agency involved.
• Precipitating events and reason for
law enforcement personnel’s initial
contact with the decedent (e.g., whether
the decedent committed or allegedly
committed any crimes).
• The decedent’s behavior during the
incident (e.g., whether the decedent
threatened or assaulted anyone;
exhibited mental health or substance
abuse issues; or possessed or appeared
to possess a weapon).
• Law enforcement actions during the
incident (e.g., engaged in pursuit or
restraint tactics; used force; discharged
a firearm, and if so, how many shots
were fired; the number of officers
responding to the incident).
• Manner of death.
States must answer all questions on
the Incident Report before it can submit
the form. If information about a death is
unavailable due to an ongoing criminal
or internal affairs investigation, the
State may select the ‘‘unavailable,
pending investigation’’ answer, if
available. The State then must identify
the type of investigation, which agency
is conducting the investigation, and
when the investigation is expected to be
completed. If the State does not have
sufficient information to complete one
of the questions, then the State may
select the ‘‘unknown’’ answer, if
available, and then identify when the
information is anticipated to be
obtained. An ‘‘unknown’’ response is
valid only if the State has contacted the
law enforcement or correctional agency
involved in the death and the
information is not known to that agency.
For ‘‘under investigation’’ or
‘‘unknown’’ responses, States are
expected to provide that information
when it becomes available, and DOJ will
follow up with States in subsequent
reporting periods to update previous
entries.
(3) Open Source Summary. Within 15
days after each reporting deadline, DOJ
will send to each State an Open Source
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Summary (Form DCR–2) with a
prepopulated list of deaths identified
through the open source review for the
relevant quarter. States will have until
the following quarter’s reporting
deadline to submit an Incident Report
(Form DCR–1A or DCR–1B) for any
reportable death identified on the Open
Source Summary that was NOT reported
by the State on the Quarterly Summary
(Form DCR–1). If a death identified in
the Open Source Summary is
determined by the State to not be
reportable under the DCRA, the State
must so indicate, also by the following
quarter’s reporting deadline.
Example. A State submits its second
quarter Quarterly Summary (Form DCR–1)
and corresponding Incident Reports by the
reporting deadline—April 30. By May 15,
DOJ will send to the State the Open Source
Summary (Form DCR–2) that lists second
quarter reportable deaths identified through
the open source review. The State will have
until the third quarter reporting deadline—
July 31—to submit an Incident Report for any
deaths on the Open Source Summary for
which an Incident Report was not previously
submitted.
(4) State Data Collection Plan. By the
first day of each fiscal year, each State
must submit to DOJ its plan for
collecting the required information on
reportable deaths on a quarterly basis
that achieves maximum timeliness,
accuracy, and completeness. The State
Data Collection Plan should include, at
a minimum, a description of how the
State will communicate with relevant
law enforcement and correctional
agencies within its jurisdiction, receive
accurate and complete information on
reportable deaths, and conduct
appropriate follow up to ensure
reliability of the information
transmitted. Each State must also
identify a point of contact responsible
for submitting the information to DOJ.
On an annual basis, the State must
review its plan and update it as
necessary. States will not be required to
submit its Data Collection Plans for FY
2017, but will be required to submit one
for FY 2018 and update it thereafter.
Information on State Data Collection
Plans will aid DOJ in assisting States
that are seeking to improve their
collection plans and help DOJ evaluate
the reliability of all data collected. DOJ
will make each State Data Collection
Plan available to the public but will not
assess the merits of the plan for
compliance purposes.
Compliance Determination
Beginning with FY 2018, DOJ will
determine on an annual basis whether
States have complied with the DCRA by
completing the four requirements listed
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91951
above. A State found to be not in
compliance with all of the DCRA
reporting requirements will be subject to
a penalty of 10% of its Byrne JAG
award, consistent with the statutory
language of the DCRA. This penalty, if
applied, would reduce the State’s Byrne
JAG award for the following fiscal year.
The penalty will be applied to the
portion of the Byrne JAG award that is
allocated to and controlled by the State,
and not to amounts allocated to
localities. The noncompliant State’s
penalty amount will be reallocated in
accordance with Byrne JAG formula
calculations to States that have been
found to be in compliance for the
corresponding fiscal year.
A noncompliant State, however, will
have the opportunity, in lieu of the
imposition of a 10% penalty, to elect to
redirect a portion of its Byrne JAG
award to use within the State to assess
and improve its DCRA collection. The
amount a State can voluntarily redirect
internally under this ‘‘pre-penalty’’
option is as follows: for the first two
noncompliance determinations, 5% of
the State portion of its Byrne JAG
award; for any subsequent
noncompliance determinations, 10%.
There is no limit to the number of times
a State may choose the ‘‘pre-penalty’’
option.
Example. State X fails to submit two
Quarterly Summaries in fiscal year 2019 and
is thus found to be not in compliance.
Instead of being penalized for
noncompliance, State X may choose the prepenalty option and use 5% of its fiscal year
2020 Byrne JAG award allocated to the State
to improve its DICRA collection efforts. If
State X does not choose the pre-penalty
option, the State portion of its fiscal year
2020 Byrne JAG award is reduced by 10%
and reallocated to States that were found to
be in compliance for fiscal year 2019.
Should a State encounter an
extraordinary circumstance preventing
it from completing any of the DCRA
requirements (e.g., a natural disaster
that compromises a State’s data
collection and reporting infrastructure),
the State may submit a letter to DOJ
signed by its Governor certifying the
reason for noncompliance and
requesting specific relief. In considering
such requests, DOJ will be guided by
analyzing, among other things, the
severity of the described extenuating
circumstances, past history, if any, of
the State’s compliance with DCRA
requirements, and the State’s
description of how it plans to modify its
processes to address the extenuating
circumstance.
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Collection of Data From FY 2016 and
the First Two Quarters of FY 2017
To collect data from FY 2016 and the
1st and 2nd Quarters of FY 2017, DOJ
will send an Open Source Summary to
States, which will contain all reportable
deaths identified though the open
source review as occurring during that
timeframe and that did not occur in or
under the jurisdiction of jails, prisons,
or other correctional facilities. DOJ will
send the Open Source Summary by May
31, 2017. DOJ will request States to
submit Incident Reports for each of the
identified deaths by November 30, 2017.
Reportable deaths that occurred in jails,
prisons, or other correctional facilities
during 2016 and 2017 will be captured
through BJS’ existing jails and prisons
collections. DOJ will not be making any
compliance determinations or assessing
penalties on States based on States’
reporting of FY 2016 or FY 2017 data.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Publicly Available Information
To advance DCRA’s aims of
transparency and evidence-based policy
development, DOJ will release certain
information to the public each fiscal
year, including the State plans, the
number of deaths reported for each
agency and facility, and data on the
circumstances surrounding those
deaths. The information released would
otherwise be subject to public
disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act. The release will be
consistent with Department policies and
any applicable federal laws, including
federal privacy laws, and will not
contain personally identifiable
information.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: For purposes of this burden
calculation, it is estimated that for each
fiscal year there will be a total of 1900
reportable deaths by 1,060 LEAs, 1,053
reportable deaths by 600 jails, and 3,483
reportable deaths by prisons.
For FY 2016, the total projected
respondent burden is 2,124.00 hours.
For States to review and complete the
Open Source Summary (DCR–2) at 4.00
hours per Summary and to complete the
corresponding Incident Reports (DCR–
1A) at 0.25 hours per Report, the total
estimated burden is 475.00 hours. For
LEAs, the estimated burden to assist
States in completing Incident Reports is
0.75 hours per Report for a total of
1,425.00 hours.
For FY 2017, the total projected
respondent burden is 14,172 hours.
States will need an estimated 4.00 hours
to complete each Quarterly Summary
for a total of 2,240.00 hours, 0.25 hours
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:55 Dec 16, 2016
Jkt 241001
to complete each corresponding
Incident Reports (DCR–1A) for a total of
475.00 hours, and 4.00 hours for the
Open Source Summaries (DCR–2) for a
total of 224.00 hours. Additionally,
States must develop the State Data
Collection Plan in FY2017 to meet the
October 1, 2017, deadline. The
estimated burden is 160.00 hours for a
total of 8,960.00 hours. For LEAs in FY
2017, the estimated burden to assist
States in completing the Quarterly
Summaries is 0.40 hours per Report for
a total of 848.00 hours, and a total of
1,425.00 hours, at 0.75 hours for each
corresponding Incident Report.
For FY2018, the total projected
respondent burden is 14,428.49 hours.
The increase over FY 2017 is due to
requiring reportable deaths from jails
and prisons in addition to arrest-related
deaths but is offset by the need for each
State to devote approximately
significantly less time—approximately
8.00 hours, for a total of 448.00 hours—
to update instead of develop its State
Data Collection Plan. Additionally,
based on the same per report estimates
described for FY 2017, the projected
aggregate burden for States is 4,480.00
hours to complete the Quarterly
Summaries (DCR–1), 1,713.49 hours to
complete the corresponding Incident
Reports (DCR–1A and DCR–1B), and
224.00 hours to complete the Open
Source Summaries (DCR–2).
For LEAs in FY 2018, the estimated
burden to assist States in completing the
Quarterly Summaries is a total of
1,696.00 hours, while the total to assist
States in completing Incident Reports
remains 1,425.00 hours. The estimated
burden for jails is a total of 960.00 hours
to assist States in completing the
Quarterly Summaries and 789.75 hours
in completing Incident Reports. Finally,
the estimated burden for prisons to
assist States in completing the Quarterly
Summaries is a total of 80.00 hours, and
a total of 2,612.25 hours to assist States
in completing Incident Reports.
If additional information is required
contact: Jerri Murray, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Two Constitution
Square, 145 N Street NE., 3E.405B,
Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: December 13, 2016.
Jerri Murray,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2016–30396 Filed 12–16–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4703
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
Notice of Intent To Renew the Advisory
Committee on Apprenticeship (ACA)
Charter
Employment and Training
Administration (ETA), Labor.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Secretary of Labor has
determined that the renewal of the
Advisory Committee on Apprenticeship
is necessary and in the public interest.
The Department of Labor intends to
renew the ACA Charter with revisions.
The revisions are not intended to
change the purpose or the Committee’s
original intent. The revisions are a
routine updating of the Charter to
ensure closer alignment with the
Department’s current apprenticeship
expansion goals.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
Designated Federal Officer, Mr. Daniel
Villao, Deputy Administrator for
National Office Policy, Office of
Apprenticeship, Employment and
Training Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Room C–5321,
Washington, DC 20210, Telephone:
(202) 693–2796 (this is not a toll-free
number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Registered
Apprenticeship is a unique public
private partnership that is highly
dependent on the engagement and
involvement of its stakeholders and
partners for its ongoing operational
effectiveness. Apart from the ACA, there
is no single organization or group with
the broad representation of labor,
employers, and the public available to
consider the complexities and
relationship of apprenticeship activities
to other training efforts or to provide
advice on such matters to the Secretary.
It is particularly important to have such
considerations at this time in light of the
current national interest in
apprenticeship and the Department of
Labor’s goal to double the number of
apprentices across the country, in the
next five years by expanding into a
variety of non-traditional industries.
The ACA’s insight and
recommendations on the best ways to
grow apprenticeship to meet the
emerging skill needs of employers is
critical. For these reasons, the Secretary
of Labor has determined that the
renewal of a national advisory
committee on apprenticeship is
necessary and in the public interest. The
ACA Charter is being renewed to
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\19DEN1.SGM
19DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 243 (Monday, December 19, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 91948-91952]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-30396]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[OMB Number 1121--NEW]
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection
Comments Requested; New Collection: Death in Custody Reporting Act
Collection
AGENCY: Bureau of Justice Assistance, Department of Justice.
ACTION: 60-day notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Justice (DOJ), Bureau of Justice Assistance
will be submitting the following information collection request to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Comments are encouraged and will be accepted for 60 days until
February 17, 2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have additional comments
especially on the estimated public burden or associated response time,
suggestions, or need a copy of the proposed information collection
instrument with instructions or additional information, please contact
Chris Casto, Bureau of Justice Assistance, 810 Seventh Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20531 (email: DICRAComments@usdoj.gov; telephone: 202-
616-6500).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Written comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning the proposed collection of
information
[[Page 91949]]
are encouraged. Your comments should address one or more of the
following points:
--Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
--Evaluate whether the proposed collection will result in the
collection of timely, accurate, complete, and reliable information;
--Evaluate whether and, if so, how the quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected can be enhanced;
--Evaluate the extent to which the information to be collected should
be made publicly available; and
--Evaluate whether the burden of the collection of information on those
who are to respond can be minimized and, if so, how, including through
the use of appropriate automated, electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or other forms of information
technology.
Overview of This Information Collection
(1) Type of Information Collection: New collection.
(2) The Title of the Form/Collection: Death in Custody Reporting
Act Collection
(3) The agency form number, if any, and the applicable component of
the Department sponsoring the collection: This collection includes the
following newly-developed forms to respond to the Death in Custody
Reporting Act (the DCRA), which respondents will be asked to complete
through an online, web-based portal:
Form DCR-1: Quarterly Summary. This summary form requires
States to either (1) identify all reportable deaths that occurred in
their jurisdiction during the corresponding quarter and provide basic
information about the circumstances of the death, or (2) affirm that no
reportable death occurred in the State during the reporting period.
Form DCR-1A: Incident Report, Law Enforcement. This
incident report form requires States to provide additional information
for each reportable death identified in the Quarterly Summary that
occurred during interactions with law enforcement personnel or while in
their custody. The required information includes the circumstances
surrounding the death and additional characteristics of the decedent.
Form DCR-1B: Incident Report, Corrections. This incident
report form requires States to provide additional information for each
reportable death identified in the Quarterly Summary that occurred
while the decedent was in the custody of a jail, prison, or similar
detention facility. The required information includes the circumstances
surrounding the death and additional characteristics of the decedent.
Form DCR-2: Open Source Summary. This summary form
requires States to confirm whether the deaths identified through DOJ's
open source review are qualifying reportable deaths and were already
reported in the Quarterly Summary (Form DCR-1). For reportable deaths
that were not included in the Quarterly Summary, the respondent is
required to submit the corresponding Incident Report (Form DCR-1A or
DCR-1B).
State Data Collection Plan. By the beginning of each
fiscal year, each State is required to submit its plan--or an update to
an existing plan--on how it will collect the information that the DCRA
requires the State to report on a quarterly basis that achieves maximum
timeliness, accuracy, and completeness.
The applicable component of the Department of Justice sponsoring
this collection is the Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice
Assistance.
(4) Affected public who will be asked or required to respond, as
well as a brief abstract: In order to comply with the mandate of the
DCRA, the Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance, is
proposing a new data collection for State Administering Agencies to
collect and submit information regarding the death of any person who is
detained, under arrest, or is in the process of being arrested, is en
route to be incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a municipal or county
jail, State prison, State-run boot camp prison, boot camp prison that
is contracted out by the State, any State or local contract facility,
or other local or State correctional facility (including any juvenile
facility).
For purposes of this collection, the term ``State'' includes any
State of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam, and the
Northern Mariana Islands. Thus, the affected public that will be asked
to respond on a quarterly basis each federal fiscal year include 56
State actors. Indirectly, these States will be requesting information
from approximately 19,450 State and local law enforcement agencies
(LEAs), 50 State departments of corrections, and 2,800 local adult jail
jurisdictions.
DOJ previously published a notice in the Federal Register on August
4, 2016, describing a plan to collect DCRA information in Fiscal Years
(FYs) 2016 and 2017. Based on comments received from the public, DOJ
has amended its plan which is described more fully below.
Background
The Death in Custody Reporting Act (DCRA) requires states and
federal law enforcement agencies to report certain information to the
Attorney General regarding the death of any person occurring during
interactions with law enforcement officers or while in custody. See 42
U.S.C. 13727(a) & (b), 13727a(a) & (b). It further requires the
Attorney General and the Department of Justice (Department) to collect
the information, establish guidelines on how it should be reported,
annually determine whether each state has complied with the reporting
requirements, and address any state's noncompliance.
The DCRA, which Congress enacted in December 2014, builds on an
earlier law, also called the Death in Custody Reporting Act, enacted in
2000 (P.L. 106-247). The 2000 law required States to report
``information regarding the death of any person who is in the process
of arrest, is en route to be incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a
municipal or county jail, State prison, or other local or State
correctional facility (including any juvenile facility) . . .'' In
response, the Department of Justice through the Bureau of Justice
Statistics (BJS) of the Office of Justice Programs developed a Deaths
in Custody Reporting Program (DCRP), which had two parts. First, BJS
collected data on deaths that occurred while the decedent was in the
custody of local jails or State prisons. Second, BJS collected
information on deaths that occurred during the process of arrest
(arrest-related deaths, or ARDs). The DCRP collected information on
deaths regardless of the manner of death, including those that resulted
from accidents, suicides, natural causes, law enforcement homicides,
and other homicides.
Although the 2000 law expired in 2006, BJS continued to collect
data on deaths in jails and prisons. The most recent reports based on
the prison and jails data collection can be found at https://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=tp&tid=19. BJS continued the ARD program as
well, but it was suspended in 2014 due to an assessment which revealed
that variations in data collection methodology and coverage among
States resulted in an insufficient census of arrest-related deaths. BJS
then tested a new methodology. Instead of relying solely on States to
affirmatively
[[Page 91950]]
submit information on reportable ARDs, BJS piloted a mixed method
approach using open sources to identify eligible cases, followed by
data requests to law enforcement, medical examiners, and/or coroner
offices for incident-specific information about the decedent and
circumstances surrounding the event. During the follow-up, BJS also
would request information on other ARDs that had not been identified
through open sources. The results of the redesigned ``open source
review'' approach, which are available at https://www.bjs.gov, showed
substantial improvements in data coverage and quality.
In enacting the current DCRA, Congress maintained the reporting
structure that places the primary responsibility of reporting DCRA
information on States and added new provisions that were not in the
2000 law--namely that the Attorney General was granted authority to
establish guidelines and to determine whether States are in compliance
with those standards. A noncompliant State is subject, at the
discretion of the Attorney General, to a 10% reduction of its Byrne
Justice Assistance Grant (Byrne JAG), and the amount of any reduction
is to be reallocated to States that are found to be in compliance.
Because the new provisions envision the data collected to be used to
determine compliance and potentially assess penalties on Byrne JAG
grantees, the Department's plan described below shifts the
responsibility of DCRA data collection from BJS, which may collect data
only for statistical and research purposes, to the Bureau of Justice
Assistance. Thus, BJS in 2018 will suspend the current DCRP data
collection efforts in jails and prisons and will not pursue a revised
ARD program.
Collection Process
DOJ proposes the following plan to collect DCRA information in
fiscal year 2017 and beyond (and also describes below a plan to collect
DCRA information for fiscal year 2016). The plan, which constitutes
``guidelines established by the Attorney General'' pursuant to section
2(a) of the DCRA, combines elements of past approaches shown to
increase data quality and coverage of reportable deaths with elements
with provisions specifically required by the statute.
For purposes of this notice, the term ``reportable death'' means
any death that the DCRA or the Department's guidelines require States
to report. Generally, these are deaths that occurred during
interactions with law enforcement personnel or while the decedent was
in their custody or in the custody, under the supervision, or under the
jurisdiction of a State or local law enforcement or correctional
agency, such as a jail or prison. Specifically, the DCRA requires
States to report information regarding ``the death of any person who is
detained, under arrest, or is in the process of being arrested, is en
route to be incarcerated, or is incarcerated at a municipal or county
jail, State prison, State-run boot camp prison, boot camp prison that
is contracted out by the State, any State or local contract facility,
or other local or State correctional facility (including any juvenile
facility).'' 42 U.S.C. 13727(a). The Department interprets the Act's
list of circumstances to include any deaths that occurred:
Due to any use of force by law enforcement personnel
(e.g., officer-involved shootings and deaths caused by law enforcement
weapons or tactics).
While the decedent's freedom to leave was restricted by
law enforcement prior to, during, or following an arrest--including
during detention for questioning or investigation (e.g., a Terry stop);
during the process of apprehension (e.g., the pursuit of a criminal
suspect, or a standoff with law enforcement); while in the custody of,
or shortly after restraint by, law enforcement personnel (even if the
decedent was not formally under arrest); or while in transit by law
enforcement personnel.
During an interaction with law enforcement personnel
responding to medical or mental health assistance (e.g., in response to
suicidal persons).
While the decedent was confined in a correctional or
detention facility, including a prison, jail, boot camp, lockup, or
booking center.
While the decedent was under the jurisdiction or
supervision of a law enforcement agency or correctional or detention
facility but located elsewhere, such as special jail facilities (e.g.,
medical/treatment/release centers, halfway houses, or work farms), or
in transit.
Please note that the DCRA information that States submit to the
Department must originate from official government records, documents,
or personnel.
The DCRA requires quarterly reporting. Because these data
collection guidelines will not be finalized before the 2nd quarter of
FY 2017, quarterly reporting will begin with the 3rd and 4th quarters
of FY 2017 and continue quarterly thereafter. Reporting for the 3rd and
4th quarters of FY 2017 will include only reportable deaths occurring
during interactions with law enforcement personnel or while in their
custody (i.e., deaths reportable on Form DCR-1A), and not deaths
occurring in the jail, prison, or detention settings. Deaths in prisons
and jails occurring during 2016 and 2017 will be captured by BJS
through its existing data collection program on deaths in prisons and
jails. Beginning with FY 2018, quarterly DCRA reporting will include
all reportable deaths--deaths occurring during interactions with law
enforcement personnel or while in their custody and deaths in jail,
prison, or detention settings.
Please note that the Department will not make any compliance
determination based on a State's FY 2017 data reporting. States are
expected to begin reporting pursuant to the DCRA during the 3rd and 4th
Quarters of FY 2017, but the Department will not find a State to be in
noncompliance or reduce a State's grant funding for noncompliance
because of reporting failures during FY 2017. This grace period for FY
2017 is necessary to allow States time to develop and implement their
data collection and reporting plans. It will be important for States to
report during FY 2017, however, so that they have an opportunity to
test their abilities to report the data effectively, to identify and
correct any flaws in their data collection and reporting systems before
reporting for FY 2018 begins, and to develop the data collection plans
that they will use for FY 2018. The Department will assess states'
compliance with their reporting obligations over FY 2018, and States
that fail to comply during FY 2018 will be subject to a reduction of
their grant funding, pursuant to the DCRA.
States will be required to complete the following four steps in
order to be in compliance with DCRA requirements:
(1) Quarterly Summary. For each quarter in a fiscal year, a State
must complete the Quarterly Summary (Form DCR-1) and submit it by the
reporting deadline. The Quarterly Summary is a list of all reportable
deaths that occurred in the State during the corresponding quarter with
basic information about the circumstances of each death. If a State did
not have a reportable death during the quarter, the State must so
indicate on the Quarterly Summary. The reporting deadline to submit the
Quarterly Summary is the last day of the month following the close of
the quarter. For each quarter, DOJ will send two reminders prior to the
reporting deadline.
Example. The second quarter of a fiscal year is January 1-March
31. The deadline to submit the second quarter Quarterly Summary is
April 30. DOJ will send a reminder to States on March 31 and April
15.
[[Page 91951]]
(2) Incident Reports. For each reportable death identified in the
Quarterly Summary, a State must complete and submit by the same
reporting deadline an Incident Report (Form DCR-1A or DCR-1B depending
on the agency involved or that had custody of the defendant at the time
of death), which contains specific information on the circumstances of
the death and additional characteristics of the decedent. These
include:
The decedent's name, date of birth, gender, and other
demographic information.
The date, time, and location of the death.
The law enforcement or correctional agency involved.
Precipitating events and reason for law enforcement
personnel's initial contact with the decedent (e.g., whether the
decedent committed or allegedly committed any crimes).
The decedent's behavior during the incident (e.g., whether
the decedent threatened or assaulted anyone; exhibited mental health or
substance abuse issues; or possessed or appeared to possess a weapon).
Law enforcement actions during the incident (e.g., engaged
in pursuit or restraint tactics; used force; discharged a firearm, and
if so, how many shots were fired; the number of officers responding to
the incident).
Manner of death.
States must answer all questions on the Incident Report before it
can submit the form. If information about a death is unavailable due to
an ongoing criminal or internal affairs investigation, the State may
select the ``unavailable, pending investigation'' answer, if available.
The State then must identify the type of investigation, which agency is
conducting the investigation, and when the investigation is expected to
be completed. If the State does not have sufficient information to
complete one of the questions, then the State may select the
``unknown'' answer, if available, and then identify when the
information is anticipated to be obtained. An ``unknown'' response is
valid only if the State has contacted the law enforcement or
correctional agency involved in the death and the information is not
known to that agency. For ``under investigation'' or ``unknown''
responses, States are expected to provide that information when it
becomes available, and DOJ will follow up with States in subsequent
reporting periods to update previous entries.
(3) Open Source Summary. Within 15 days after each reporting
deadline, DOJ will send to each State an Open Source Summary (Form DCR-
2) with a prepopulated list of deaths identified through the open
source review for the relevant quarter. States will have until the
following quarter's reporting deadline to submit an Incident Report
(Form DCR-1A or DCR-1B) for any reportable death identified on the Open
Source Summary that was NOT reported by the State on the Quarterly
Summary (Form DCR-1). If a death identified in the Open Source Summary
is determined by the State to not be reportable under the DCRA, the
State must so indicate, also by the following quarter's reporting
deadline.
Example. A State submits its second quarter Quarterly Summary
(Form DCR-1) and corresponding Incident Reports by the reporting
deadline--April 30. By May 15, DOJ will send to the State the Open
Source Summary (Form DCR-2) that lists second quarter reportable
deaths identified through the open source review. The State will
have until the third quarter reporting deadline--July 31--to submit
an Incident Report for any deaths on the Open Source Summary for
which an Incident Report was not previously submitted.
(4) State Data Collection Plan. By the first day of each fiscal
year, each State must submit to DOJ its plan for collecting the
required information on reportable deaths on a quarterly basis that
achieves maximum timeliness, accuracy, and completeness. The State Data
Collection Plan should include, at a minimum, a description of how the
State will communicate with relevant law enforcement and correctional
agencies within its jurisdiction, receive accurate and complete
information on reportable deaths, and conduct appropriate follow up to
ensure reliability of the information transmitted. Each State must also
identify a point of contact responsible for submitting the information
to DOJ. On an annual basis, the State must review its plan and update
it as necessary. States will not be required to submit its Data
Collection Plans for FY 2017, but will be required to submit one for FY
2018 and update it thereafter. Information on State Data Collection
Plans will aid DOJ in assisting States that are seeking to improve
their collection plans and help DOJ evaluate the reliability of all
data collected. DOJ will make each State Data Collection Plan available
to the public but will not assess the merits of the plan for compliance
purposes.
Compliance Determination
Beginning with FY 2018, DOJ will determine on an annual basis
whether States have complied with the DCRA by completing the four
requirements listed above. A State found to be not in compliance with
all of the DCRA reporting requirements will be subject to a penalty of
10% of its Byrne JAG award, consistent with the statutory language of
the DCRA. This penalty, if applied, would reduce the State's Byrne JAG
award for the following fiscal year. The penalty will be applied to the
portion of the Byrne JAG award that is allocated to and controlled by
the State, and not to amounts allocated to localities. The noncompliant
State's penalty amount will be reallocated in accordance with Byrne JAG
formula calculations to States that have been found to be in compliance
for the corresponding fiscal year.
A noncompliant State, however, will have the opportunity, in lieu
of the imposition of a 10% penalty, to elect to redirect a portion of
its Byrne JAG award to use within the State to assess and improve its
DCRA collection. The amount a State can voluntarily redirect internally
under this ``pre-penalty'' option is as follows: for the first two
noncompliance determinations, 5% of the State portion of its Byrne JAG
award; for any subsequent noncompliance determinations, 10%. There is
no limit to the number of times a State may choose the ``pre-penalty''
option.
Example. State X fails to submit two Quarterly Summaries in
fiscal year 2019 and is thus found to be not in compliance. Instead
of being penalized for noncompliance, State X may choose the pre-
penalty option and use 5% of its fiscal year 2020 Byrne JAG award
allocated to the State to improve its DICRA collection efforts. If
State X does not choose the pre-penalty option, the State portion of
its fiscal year 2020 Byrne JAG award is reduced by 10% and
reallocated to States that were found to be in compliance for fiscal
year 2019.
Should a State encounter an extraordinary circumstance preventing
it from completing any of the DCRA requirements (e.g., a natural
disaster that compromises a State's data collection and reporting
infrastructure), the State may submit a letter to DOJ signed by its
Governor certifying the reason for noncompliance and requesting
specific relief. In considering such requests, DOJ will be guided by
analyzing, among other things, the severity of the described
extenuating circumstances, past history, if any, of the State's
compliance with DCRA requirements, and the State's description of how
it plans to modify its processes to address the extenuating
circumstance.
[[Page 91952]]
Collection of Data From FY 2016 and the First Two Quarters of FY 2017
To collect data from FY 2016 and the 1st and 2nd Quarters of FY
2017, DOJ will send an Open Source Summary to States, which will
contain all reportable deaths identified though the open source review
as occurring during that timeframe and that did not occur in or under
the jurisdiction of jails, prisons, or other correctional facilities.
DOJ will send the Open Source Summary by May 31, 2017. DOJ will request
States to submit Incident Reports for each of the identified deaths by
November 30, 2017. Reportable deaths that occurred in jails, prisons,
or other correctional facilities during 2016 and 2017 will be captured
through BJS' existing jails and prisons collections. DOJ will not be
making any compliance determinations or assessing penalties on States
based on States' reporting of FY 2016 or FY 2017 data.
Publicly Available Information
To advance DCRA's aims of transparency and evidence-based policy
development, DOJ will release certain information to the public each
fiscal year, including the State plans, the number of deaths reported
for each agency and facility, and data on the circumstances surrounding
those deaths. The information released would otherwise be subject to
public disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. The release
will be consistent with Department policies and any applicable federal
laws, including federal privacy laws, and will not contain personally
identifiable information.
(5) An estimate of the total number of respondents and the amount
of time estimated for an average respondent to respond: For purposes of
this burden calculation, it is estimated that for each fiscal year
there will be a total of 1900 reportable deaths by 1,060 LEAs, 1,053
reportable deaths by 600 jails, and 3,483 reportable deaths by prisons.
For FY 2016, the total projected respondent burden is 2,124.00
hours. For States to review and complete the Open Source Summary (DCR-
2) at 4.00 hours per Summary and to complete the corresponding Incident
Reports (DCR-1A) at 0.25 hours per Report, the total estimated burden
is 475.00 hours. For LEAs, the estimated burden to assist States in
completing Incident Reports is 0.75 hours per Report for a total of
1,425.00 hours.
For FY 2017, the total projected respondent burden is 14,172 hours.
States will need an estimated 4.00 hours to complete each Quarterly
Summary for a total of 2,240.00 hours, 0.25 hours to complete each
corresponding Incident Reports (DCR-1A) for a total of 475.00 hours,
and 4.00 hours for the Open Source Summaries (DCR-2) for a total of
224.00 hours. Additionally, States must develop the State Data
Collection Plan in FY2017 to meet the October 1, 2017, deadline. The
estimated burden is 160.00 hours for a total of 8,960.00 hours. For
LEAs in FY 2017, the estimated burden to assist States in completing
the Quarterly Summaries is 0.40 hours per Report for a total of 848.00
hours, and a total of 1,425.00 hours, at 0.75 hours for each
corresponding Incident Report.
For FY2018, the total projected respondent burden is 14,428.49
hours. The increase over FY 2017 is due to requiring reportable deaths
from jails and prisons in addition to arrest-related deaths but is
offset by the need for each State to devote approximately significantly
less time--approximately 8.00 hours, for a total of 448.00 hours--to
update instead of develop its State Data Collection Plan. Additionally,
based on the same per report estimates described for FY 2017, the
projected aggregate burden for States is 4,480.00 hours to complete the
Quarterly Summaries (DCR-1), 1,713.49 hours to complete the
corresponding Incident Reports (DCR-1A and DCR-1B), and 224.00 hours to
complete the Open Source Summaries (DCR-2).
For LEAs in FY 2018, the estimated burden to assist States in
completing the Quarterly Summaries is a total of 1,696.00 hours, while
the total to assist States in completing Incident Reports remains
1,425.00 hours. The estimated burden for jails is a total of 960.00
hours to assist States in completing the Quarterly Summaries and 789.75
hours in completing Incident Reports. Finally, the estimated burden for
prisons to assist States in completing the Quarterly Summaries is a
total of 80.00 hours, and a total of 2,612.25 hours to assist States in
completing Incident Reports.
If additional information is required contact: Jerri Murray,
Department Clearance Officer, United States Department of Justice,
Justice Management Division, Policy and Planning Staff, Two
Constitution Square, 145 N Street NE., 3E.405B, Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: December 13, 2016.
Jerri Murray,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S. Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2016-30396 Filed 12-16-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-18-P