Lower Mississippi Waterway Safety Advisory Committee-Input To Support Regulatory Reform of Coast Guard Regulations-New Task, 32780-32782 [2017-14991]
Download as PDF
32780
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 136 / Tuesday, July 18, 2017 / Proposed Rules
telephone (202) 372–1108, or email
ryan.f.owens@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS
New Task to the Committee
The U.S. Coast Guard is issuing a new
task to NMSAC to provide
recommendations on whether existing
regulations, guidance, and information
collections (that fall within the scope of
the Committee’s charter) should be
repealed, replaced, or modified.
NMSAC will then provide advice and
recommendations on the assigned task
and submit a final recommendation
report to the U.S. Coast Guard.
Background
On January 30, 2017, President Trump
issued Executive Order 13771,
‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs.’’ Under that Executive
Order, for every one new regulation
issued, at least two prior regulations
must be identified for elimination, and
the cost of planned regulations must be
prudently managed and controlled
through a budgeting process. On
February 24, 2017, the President issued
Executive Order 13777, ‘‘Enforcing the
Regulatory Reform Agenda.’’ That
Executive Order directs agencies to take
specific steps to identify and alleviate
unnecessary regulatory burdens placed
on the American people. On March 28,
2017, the President issued Executive
Order 13783, ‘‘Promoting Energy
Independence and Economic Growth.’’
Executive Order 13783 promotes the
clean and safe development of our
Nation’s vast energy resources, while at
the same time avoiding agency actions
that unnecessarily encumber energy
production.
When implementing the regulatory
offsets required by Executive Order
13771, each agency head is directed to
prioritize, to the extent permitted by
law, those regulations that the agency’s
Regulatory Reform Task Force identifies
as outdated, unnecessary, or ineffective
in accordance with Executive Order
13777. As part of this process to comply
with all three Executive Orders, the U.S.
Coast Guard is reaching out through
multiple avenues to interested
individuals to gather their input about
what regulations, guidance, and
information collections, they believe
may need to be repealed, replaced, or
modified. On June 8, 2017, the U.S.
Coast Guard issued a general notice in
the Federal Register requesting
comments from interested individuals
regarding their recommendations, 82 FR
26632. In addition to this general
solicitation, the U.S. Coast Guard also
wants to leverage the expertise of its
Federal Advisory Committees and is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:01 Jul 17, 2017
Jkt 241001
issuing similar tasks to each of its
Committees. A detailed discussion of
each of the Executive orders and
information on where U.S. Coast Guard
regulations, guidance, and information
collections are found is in the June 8th
notice.
The Task
NMSAC is tasked to:
Provide input to the U.S. Coast Guard on
all existing regulations, guidance, and
information collections that fall within the
scope of the Committee’s charter.
1. One or more subcommittees/working
groups, as needed, will be established to
work on this tasking in accordance with the
Committee charter and bylaws. The
subcommittee(s) shall terminate upon the
approval and submission of a final
recommendation to the U.S. Coast Guard
from the parent Committee.
2. Review regulations, guidance, and
information collections and provide
recommendations whether an existing rule,
guidance, or information collection should be
repealed, replaced or modified. If the
Committee recommends modification, please
provide specific recommendations for how
the regulation, guidance, or information
collection should be modified.
Recommendations should include an
explanation on how and to what extent
repeal, replacement or modification will
reduce costs or burdens to industry and the
extent to which risks to health or safety
would likely increase.
a. Identify regulations, guidance, or
information collections that potentially
impose the following types of burden on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing administrative burdens
on the industry.
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing burdens in the
development or use of domestically
produced energy resources. ‘‘Burden,’’ for the
purposes of compliance with Executive
Order 13783, means ‘‘to unnecessarily
obstruct, delay, curtail, or otherwise impose
significant costs on the siting, permitting,
production, utilization, transmission, or
delivery of energy resources.’’
b. Identify regulations, guidance, or
information collections that potentially
impose the following types of costs on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs that are outdated
(such as due to technological advancement),
or are no longer necessary.
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs which are no
longer enforced as written or which are
ineffective.
iii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs tied to reporting
or recordkeeping requirements that impose
burdens that exceed benefits. Explain why
the reporting or recordkeeping requirement is
overly burdensome, unnecessary, or how it
could be modified.
c. Identify regulations, guidance, and
information collections that the Committee
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
believes have led to the elimination of jobs
or inhibits job creation within a particular
industry.
3. All regulations, guidance, and
information collections, or parts thereof,
recommended by the Committee should be
described in sufficient detail (by section,
paragraph, sentence, clause, etc.) so that it
can readily be identified. Data (quantitative
or qualitative) should be provided to support
and illustrate the impact, cost, or burden, as
applicable, for each recommendation. If the
data is not readily available, the Committee
should include information as to how such
information can be obtained either by the
Committee or directly by the Coast Guard.
Public Participation
All meetings associated with this
tasking, both full Committee meetings
and subcommittee/working groups, are
open to the public. A public oral
comment period will be held during the
August 24, 2017, teleconference. Public
comments or questions will be taken at
the discretion of the Designated Federal
Officer; commenters are requested to
limit their comments to 3 minutes.
Please contact the individual listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section, to register as a commenter.
Subcommittee meetings held in
association with this tasking will be
announced as they are scheduled
through notices posted to https://
homeport.uscg.mil/nmsac and uploaded
as supporting documents in the
electronic docket for this action,
[USCG–2017–0663], at Regulations.gov.
Jennifer F. Williams,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Director of
Inspections and Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2017–15046 Filed 7–17–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Chapter I
46 CFR Chapters I and III
49 CFR Chapter IV
[Docket No. USCG–2017–0659]
Lower Mississippi Waterway Safety
Advisory Committee—Input To
Support Regulatory Reform of Coast
Guard Regulations—New Task
U.S. Coast Guard, Department
of Homeland Security.
ACTION: Announcement of new task
assignment for the Lower Mississippi
Waterway Safety Advisory Committee
(LMRWSAC); teleconference meeting.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\18JYP1.SGM
18JYP1
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 136 / Tuesday, July 18, 2017 / Proposed Rules
The U.S. Coast Guard is
issuing a new task to the Lower
Mississippi Waterway Safety Advisory
Committee (LMRWSAC). The U.S. Coast
Guard is asking LMRWSAC to help the
agency identify existing regulations,
guidance, and collections of information
(that fall within the scope of the
Committee’s charter) for possible repeal,
replacement, or modification. This
tasking is in response to the issuance of
Executive Orders 13771, ‘‘Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs; 13777, ‘‘Enforcing the Regulatory
Reform Agenda;’’ and 13783,
‘‘Promoting Energy Independence and
Economic Growth.’’ The full Committee
is scheduled to meet by teleconference
on August 2, 2017, to discuss this
tasking. This teleconference will be
open to the public. The U.S. Coast
Guard will consider LMRWSAC
recommendations as part of the process
of identifying regulations, guidance, and
collections of information to be
repealed, replaced, or modified
pursuant to the three Executive Orders
discussed above.
SUMMARY:
The full Committee is scheduled
to meet by teleconference on August 2,
2017, from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. CST. Please
note that this teleconference may
adjourn early if the Committee has
completed its business.
DATES:
To join the teleconference
or to request special accommodations,
contact the individual listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
no later than 1 p.m. on July 26, 2017.
The number of teleconference lines is
limited and will be available on a firstcome, first-served basis.
Instructions: Submit comments on the
task statement at any time, including
orally at the teleconference, but if you
want Committee members to review
your comments before the
teleconference, please submit your
comments no later than July 26, 2017.
You must include the words
‘‘Department of Homeland Security’’
and the docket number for this action.
Written comments may also be
submitted using the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. If you encounter
technical difficulties with comment
submission, contact the individual
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this notice.
Comments received will be posted
without alteration at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. You
may review Regulations.gov’s Privacy
and Security Notice at https://www.
regulations.gov/privacyNotice.
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:01 Jul 17, 2017
Jkt 241001
Docket Search: For access to the
docket or to read documents or
comments related to this notice, go to
https://www.regulations.gov, insert
‘‘USCG–2017–0659’’ in the Search box,
press Enter, and then click on the item
you wish to view.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lieutenant Brian Porter, Alternate
Designated Federal Officer of the Lower
Mississippi Waterway Advisory
Committee, telephone (504) 365–2375,
or email brian.j.porter@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
New Task to the Committee
The U.S. Coast Guard is issuing a new
task to LMRWSAC to provide
recommendations on whether existing
regulations, guidance, and information
collections (that fall within the scope of
the Committee’s charter) should be
repealed, replaced, or modified.
LMRWSAC will then provide advice
and recommendations on the assigned
task and submit a final recommendation
report to the U.S. Coast Guard.
Background
On January 30, 2017, President Trump
issued Executive Order 13771,
‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs.’’ Under that Executive
Order, for every one new regulation
issued, at least two prior regulations
must be identified for elimination, and
the cost of planned regulations must be
prudently managed and controlled
through a budgeting process. On
February 24, 2017, the President issued
Executive Order 13777, ‘‘Enforcing the
Regulatory Reform Agenda.’’ That
Executive Order directs agencies to take
specific steps to identify and alleviate
unnecessary regulatory burdens placed
on the American people. On March 28,
2017, the President issued Executive
Order 13783, ‘‘Promoting Energy
Independence and Economic Growth.’’
Executive Order 13783 promotes the
clean and safe development of our
Nation’s vast energy resources, while at
the same time avoiding agency actions
that unnecessarily encumber energy
production.
When implementing the regulatory
offsets required by Executive Order
13771, each agency head is directed to
prioritize, to the extent permitted by
law, those regulations that the agency’s
Regulatory Reform Task Force identifies
as outdated, unnecessary, or ineffective
in accordance with Executive Order
13777. As part of this process to comply
with all three Executive Orders, the U.S.
Coast Guard is reaching out through
multiple avenues to interested
individuals to gather their input about
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
32781
what regulations, guidance, and
information collections, they believe
may need to be repealed, replaced, or
modified. On June 8, 2017, the U.S.
Coast Guard issued a general notice in
the Federal Register requesting
comments from interested individuals
regarding their recommendations, 82 FR
26632. In addition to this general
solicitation, the U.S. Coast Guard also
wants to leverage the expertise of its
Federal Advisory Committees and is
issuing similar tasks to each of its
Committees. A detailed discussion of
each of the Executive orders and
information on where U.S. Coast Guard
regulations, guidance, and information
collections are found is in the June 8th
notice.
The Task
LMRWSAC is tasked to:
Provide input to the U.S. Coast Guard on
all existing regulations, guidance, and
information collections that fall within the
scope of the Committee’s charter.
1. One or more subcommittees/working
groups, as needed, will be established to
work on this tasking in accordance with the
Committee charter and bylaws. The
subcommittee(s) shall terminate upon the
approval and submission of a final
recommendation to the U.S. Coast Guard
from the parent Committee.
2. Review regulations, guidance, and
information collections and provide
recommendations whether an existing rule,
guidance, or information collection should be
repealed, replaced or modified. If the
Committee recommends modification, please
provide specific recommendations for how
the regulation, guidance, or information
collection should be modified.
Recommendations should include an
explanation on how and to what extent
repeal, replacement or modification will
reduce costs or burdens to industry and the
extent to which risks to health or safety
would likely increase.
a. Identify regulations, guidance, or
information collections that potentially
impose the following types of burden on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing administrative burdens
on the industry.
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing burdens in the
development or use of domestically
produced energy resources. ‘‘Burden,’’ for the
purposes of compliance with Executive
Order 13783, means ‘‘to unnecessarily
obstruct, delay, curtail, or otherwise impose
significant costs on the siting, permitting,
production, utilization, transmission, or
delivery of energy resources.’’
b. Identify regulations, guidance, or
information collections that potentially
impose the following types of costs on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs that are outdated
(such as due to technological advancement),
or are no longer necessary.
E:\FR\FM\18JYP1.SGM
18JYP1
32782
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 136 / Tuesday, July 18, 2017 / Proposed Rules
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs which are no
longer enforced as written or which are
ineffective.
iii. Regulations, guidance, or information
collections imposing costs tied to reporting
or recordkeeping requirements that impose
burdens that exceed benefits. Explain why
the reporting or recordkeeping requirement is
overly burdensome, unnecessary, or how it
could be modified.
c. Identify regulations, guidance, and
information collections that the Committee
believes have led to the elimination of jobs
or inhibits job creation within a particular
industry.
3. All regulations, guidance, and
information collections, or parts thereof,
recommended by the Committee should be
described in sufficient detail (by section,
paragraph, sentence, clause, etc.) so that it
can readily be identified. Data (quantitative
or qualitative) should be provided to support
and illustrate the impact, cost, or burden, as
applicable, for each recommendation. If the
data is not readily available, the Committee
should include information as to how such
information can be obtained either by the
Committee or directly by the Coast Guard.
Public Participation
All meetings associated with this
tasking, both full Committee meetings
and subcommittee/working groups, are
open to the public. A public oral
comment period will be held during the
August 2, 2017, teleconference. Public
comments or questions will be taken at
the discretion of the Designated Federal
Officer; commenters are requested to
limit their comments to 3 minutes.
Please contact the individual listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section, to register as a commenter.
Subcommittee meetings held in
association with this tasking will be
announced as they are scheduled
through notices posted to https://home
port.uscg.mil/lmrwsac and uploaded as
supporting documents in the electronic
docket for this action, [USCG–2017–
0659], at Regulations.gov.
Jeffrey G. Lantz,
Director of Commercial Regulations and
Standards.
[FR Doc. 2017–14991 Filed 7–17–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R05–OAR–2016–0512; EPA–R05–
2016–0522; EPA–R05–OAR–2017–0322;
FRL–9964–98–Region 5]
Air Plan Approval; Illinois; NAAQS
Updates
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:01 Jul 17, 2017
Jkt 241001
ACTION:
Proposed rule.
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is approving revised rules
submitted by the State of Illinois as
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revisions. The submitted rules update
Illinois’ ambient air quality standards to
include the 2015 primary National
Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS)
for ozone (O3), add EPA-promulgated
monitoring methods for multiple
NAAQS, and address EPA’s revocation
of the 1997 O3 NAAQS. In addition, the
revised rules contain the timing
requirements for the ‘‘flagging of
exceptional events’’ and the submission
of documentation supporting
exceptional events for the initial area
designations for the 2015 primary
annual O3 standard. These SIP revisions
update Illinois air pollution control
regulations to be ‘‘identical-insubstance’’ to EPA rulemakings related
to the NAAQS that occurred between
January 1, 2014 and July 13, 2016.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 17, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2016–0512, EPA–R05–OAR–
2016–0522, or EPA–R05–2017–0322 at
https://www.regulations.gov or via email
to aburano.douglas@epa.gov. For
comments submitted at Regulations.gov,
follow the online instructions for
submitting comments. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed
from Regulations.gov. For either manner
of submission, EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. EPA will generally not consider
comments or comment contents located
outside of the primary submission (i.e.
on the web, cloud, or other file sharing
system). For additional submission
methods, please contact the person
identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the
full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michelle Becker, Life Scientist,
Attainment Planning and Maintenance
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Section, Air Programs Branch (AR–18J),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886–3901,
becker.michelle@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
Final Rules section of this issue of the
Federal Register, EPA is approving the
State’s SIP submittal as a direct final
rule without prior proposal because the
Agency views this as a noncontroversial
submittal and anticipates no adverse
comments. A detailed rationale for the
approval is set forth in the direct final
rule. If no adverse comments are
received in response to this rule, no
further activity is contemplated. If EPA
receives adverse comments, the direct
final rule will be withdrawn and all
public comments received will be
addressed in a subsequent final rule
based on this proposed rule. EPA will
not institute a second comment period.
Any parties interested in commenting
on this action should do so at this time.
Please note that if EPA receives adverse
comment on an amendment, paragraph,
or section of this rule and if that
provision may be severed from the
remainder of the rule, EPA may adopt
as final those provisions of the rule that
are not the subject of an adverse
comment. For additional information,
see the direct final rule which is located
in the Rules section of this issue of the
Federal Register.
Dated: July 6, 2017.
Cheryl L. Newton,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2017–14945 Filed 7–17–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2007–0085; FRL–9965–01–
Region 4]
Air Plan Approval; NC; Open Burning
and Miscellaneous Revisions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve
several revisions to the North Carolina
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
submitted by the State of North
Carolina, through the North Carolina
Department of Environmental Quality
(formerly the North Carolina
Department of Environment and Natural
Resources), Division of Air Quality, on
October 14, 2004, March 24, 2006, and
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\18JYP1.SGM
18JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 136 (Tuesday, July 18, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 32780-32782]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-14991]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Chapter I
46 CFR Chapters I and III
49 CFR Chapter IV
[Docket No. USCG-2017-0659]
Lower Mississippi Waterway Safety Advisory Committee--Input To
Support Regulatory Reform of Coast Guard Regulations--New Task
AGENCY: U.S. Coast Guard, Department of Homeland Security.
ACTION: Announcement of new task assignment for the Lower Mississippi
Waterway Safety Advisory Committee (LMRWSAC); teleconference meeting.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 32781]]
SUMMARY: The U.S. Coast Guard is issuing a new task to the Lower
Mississippi Waterway Safety Advisory Committee (LMRWSAC). The U.S.
Coast Guard is asking LMRWSAC to help the agency identify existing
regulations, guidance, and collections of information (that fall within
the scope of the Committee's charter) for possible repeal, replacement,
or modification. This tasking is in response to the issuance of
Executive Orders 13771, ``Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs; 13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda;''
and 13783, ``Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth.'' The
full Committee is scheduled to meet by teleconference on August 2,
2017, to discuss this tasking. This teleconference will be open to the
public. The U.S. Coast Guard will consider LMRWSAC recommendations as
part of the process of identifying regulations, guidance, and
collections of information to be repealed, replaced, or modified
pursuant to the three Executive Orders discussed above.
DATES: The full Committee is scheduled to meet by teleconference on
August 2, 2017, from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. CST. Please note that this
teleconference may adjourn early if the Committee has completed its
business.
ADDRESSES: To join the teleconference or to request special
accommodations, contact the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section no later than 1 p.m. on July 26, 2017. The
number of teleconference lines is limited and will be available on a
first-come, first-served basis.
Instructions: Submit comments on the task statement at any time,
including orally at the teleconference, but if you want Committee
members to review your comments before the teleconference, please
submit your comments no later than July 26, 2017. You must include the
words ``Department of Homeland Security'' and the docket number for
this action. Written comments may also be submitted using the Federal
e-Rulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. If you encounter
technical difficulties with comment submission, contact the individual
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this notice.
Comments received will be posted without alteration at https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided. You
may review Regulations.gov's Privacy and Security Notice at https://www.regulations.gov/privacyNotice.
Docket Search: For access to the docket or to read documents or
comments related to this notice, go to https://www.regulations.gov,
insert ``USCG-2017-0659'' in the Search box, press Enter, and then
click on the item you wish to view.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lieutenant Brian Porter, Alternate
Designated Federal Officer of the Lower Mississippi Waterway Advisory
Committee, telephone (504) 365-2375, or email brian.j.porter@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
New Task to the Committee
The U.S. Coast Guard is issuing a new task to LMRWSAC to provide
recommendations on whether existing regulations, guidance, and
information collections (that fall within the scope of the Committee's
charter) should be repealed, replaced, or modified. LMRWSAC will then
provide advice and recommendations on the assigned task and submit a
final recommendation report to the U.S. Coast Guard.
Background
On January 30, 2017, President Trump issued Executive Order 13771,
``Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs.'' Under that
Executive Order, for every one new regulation issued, at least two
prior regulations must be identified for elimination, and the cost of
planned regulations must be prudently managed and controlled through a
budgeting process. On February 24, 2017, the President issued Executive
Order 13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda.'' That Executive
Order directs agencies to take specific steps to identify and alleviate
unnecessary regulatory burdens placed on the American people. On March
28, 2017, the President issued Executive Order 13783, ``Promoting
Energy Independence and Economic Growth.'' Executive Order 13783
promotes the clean and safe development of our Nation's vast energy
resources, while at the same time avoiding agency actions that
unnecessarily encumber energy production.
When implementing the regulatory offsets required by Executive
Order 13771, each agency head is directed to prioritize, to the extent
permitted by law, those regulations that the agency's Regulatory Reform
Task Force identifies as outdated, unnecessary, or ineffective in
accordance with Executive Order 13777. As part of this process to
comply with all three Executive Orders, the U.S. Coast Guard is
reaching out through multiple avenues to interested individuals to
gather their input about what regulations, guidance, and information
collections, they believe may need to be repealed, replaced, or
modified. On June 8, 2017, the U.S. Coast Guard issued a general notice
in the Federal Register requesting comments from interested individuals
regarding their recommendations, 82 FR 26632. In addition to this
general solicitation, the U.S. Coast Guard also wants to leverage the
expertise of its Federal Advisory Committees and is issuing similar
tasks to each of its Committees. A detailed discussion of each of the
Executive orders and information on where U.S. Coast Guard regulations,
guidance, and information collections are found is in the June 8th
notice.
The Task
LMRWSAC is tasked to:
Provide input to the U.S. Coast Guard on all existing
regulations, guidance, and information collections that fall within
the scope of the Committee's charter.
1. One or more subcommittees/working groups, as needed, will be
established to work on this tasking in accordance with the Committee
charter and bylaws. The subcommittee(s) shall terminate upon the
approval and submission of a final recommendation to the U.S. Coast
Guard from the parent Committee.
2. Review regulations, guidance, and information collections and
provide recommendations whether an existing rule, guidance, or
information collection should be repealed, replaced or modified. If
the Committee recommends modification, please provide specific
recommendations for how the regulation, guidance, or information
collection should be modified. Recommendations should include an
explanation on how and to what extent repeal, replacement or
modification will reduce costs or burdens to industry and the extent
to which risks to health or safety would likely increase.
a. Identify regulations, guidance, or information collections
that potentially impose the following types of burden on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information collections imposing
administrative burdens on the industry.
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information collections imposing
burdens in the development or use of domestically produced energy
resources. ``Burden,'' for the purposes of compliance with Executive
Order 13783, means ``to unnecessarily obstruct, delay, curtail, or
otherwise impose significant costs on the siting, permitting,
production, utilization, transmission, or delivery of energy
resources.''
b. Identify regulations, guidance, or information collections
that potentially impose the following types of costs on the
industry:
i. Regulations, guidance, or information collections imposing
costs that are outdated (such as due to technological advancement),
or are no longer necessary.
[[Page 32782]]
ii. Regulations, guidance, or information collections imposing
costs which are no longer enforced as written or which are
ineffective.
iii. Regulations, guidance, or information collections imposing
costs tied to reporting or recordkeeping requirements that impose
burdens that exceed benefits. Explain why the reporting or
recordkeeping requirement is overly burdensome, unnecessary, or how
it could be modified.
c. Identify regulations, guidance, and information collections
that the Committee believes have led to the elimination of jobs or
inhibits job creation within a particular industry.
3. All regulations, guidance, and information collections, or
parts thereof, recommended by the Committee should be described in
sufficient detail (by section, paragraph, sentence, clause, etc.) so
that it can readily be identified. Data (quantitative or
qualitative) should be provided to support and illustrate the
impact, cost, or burden, as applicable, for each recommendation. If
the data is not readily available, the Committee should include
information as to how such information can be obtained either by the
Committee or directly by the Coast Guard.
Public Participation
All meetings associated with this tasking, both full Committee
meetings and subcommittee/working groups, are open to the public. A
public oral comment period will be held during the August 2, 2017,
teleconference. Public comments or questions will be taken at the
discretion of the Designated Federal Officer; commenters are requested
to limit their comments to 3 minutes. Please contact the individual
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section, to register as a
commenter. Subcommittee meetings held in association with this tasking
will be announced as they are scheduled through notices posted to
https://homeport.uscg.mil/lmrwsac and uploaded as supporting documents
in the electronic docket for this action, [USCG-2017-0659], at
Regulations.gov.
Jeffrey G. Lantz,
Director of Commercial Regulations and Standards.
[FR Doc. 2017-14991 Filed 7-17-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-04-P