Revisions to the Requirements for Authority To Manufacture and Distribute Postage Evidencing Systems; Customized Postage Products, 60117-60119 [2017-27241]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 19, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
Dated: December 14, 2017.
Christopher J. Bisignano,
Supervisory Bridge Management Specialist,
First Coast Guard District.
[FR Doc. 2017–27298 Filed 12–18–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 501
Revisions to the Requirements for
Authority To Manufacture and
Distribute Postage Evidencing
Systems; Customized Postage
Products
Postal Service.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In January, 2017, the Postal
Service proposed to amend its Postage
Evidencing Systems regulations to
standardize requirements for the
authorization to produce Customized
Postage, a Special Service approved by
the Postal Regulatory Commission.
Comments were received by all
authorized providers of Customized
Postage products and the Alliance of
Nonprofit Mailers. The Postal Service
considered these comments and
addresses them below.
Customized Postage products are
provided through authorized Postage
Evidencing System manufacturerdistributors or through companies
affiliated with authorized Postage
Evidencing System manufacturerdistributors and approved by the Postal
Service. During the development of the
Customized Postage program,
requirements for authorization to
produce Customized Postage products
were described in Federal Register
notices and in individual approval
letters issued to providers. These final
rules give regulatory form to the existing
requirements for authorization to
produce Customized Postage products,
and incorporate procedures for the
protection of Postal Service business
interests. Existing providers of
Customized Postage products may
continue provision of Customized
Postage products subject to these final
rules upon their effective date, which
coincides with renewal of the product
year, and any requirements set forth in
individual authorization letters.
DATES: These amendments take effect on
May 15, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christy Noel, Legal Policy & Legislative
Advice, U.S. Postal Service, (202) 268–
3484.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Postal
Reorganization Act authorizes the Postal
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
Service to provide such evidence of
postage payment ‘‘as may be necessary
or desirable.’’ 39 U.S.C. 404(a)(4). The
Postal Service exercises this authority
through 39 CFR part 501, which protects
postal revenues by regulation of
manufacturer-distributors of Postage
Evidencing Systems. Customized
Postage products were developed
through market tests allowing
Authorized Postage Evidencing System
providers to combine evidence of
prepayment of postage with a customerselected or customer-provided graphic
image for printing and fulfillment. See,
70 FR 21821 (April 27, 2005); 71 FR
12718 (March 13, 2006). Subsequently,
Customized Postage was approved as a
Special Service by the Postal Regulatory
Commission. See, 75 FR 11452, 11459
(March 11, 2010). The amendments to
39 CFR part 501 create standardized
definitions, requirements, and
procedures applicable to the
authorization to provide Customized
Postage products, and incorporate
protections for the Postal Service’s legal,
financial, and brand interests.
All comments received in response to
the proposed rules published at 82 FR
1294 (January 5, 2017) requested the
creation of a nonprofit category of
content in addition to the strictly
commercial or limited social categories
of content designated as eligible for
customer-provided or customer-selected
images. All comments claimed that the
inclusion of an eligible nonprofit
content category would increase
program revenues, and the Alliance of
Nonprofit Mailers specifically alleged
that excluding nonprofit content from
the categories of eligible content would
constitute unlawful discrimination
against nonprofit mailers. The Postal
Service disagrees on both counts.
Customized Postage products are not
U.S. stamps; they are a specialized form
of evidence of prepayment of postage
offered through statutory authority
contained in 39 U.S.C. 404(a)(4).
Because they share the function and
appearance of U.S. stamps, however, the
Postal Service must limit eligible private
content to protect its own business and
brand interests against dilution, false
attribution, appearances of
endorsement, and other potential
impacts. The First Amendment requires
that such content- or speaker-based
restrictions be reasonable and
viewpoint-neutral. See, Matal v. Tam,
137 S.Ct. 1744, 1763 (2017). Selective
acceptance of only those nonprofit
causes or organizations that do not
present threats to the Postal Service’s
brand would constitute impermissible
viewpoint discrimination, which would
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
60117
endanger the entire program. Such legal
risks would offset any potential revenue
increases attributable to the eligibility of
nonprofit content. Excluding entire
categories of content altogether to help
avoid unlawful viewpoint
discrimination is an eminently
reasonable limitation made in
accordance with First Amendment
principles. This exclusion does not
constitute unlawful discrimination
against nonprofit mailers, who may
purchase Customized Postage products
subject to the same terms and
conditions as other users of the mail.
Comments from existing providers
argued that Customized Postage
restrictions should be uniformly applied
across other Postal Service programs or
products that allow some degree of
customization. However, tailoring
content restrictions to the unique
context of each of its various
customizable products or programs is
necessary to serve the Postal Service’s
diverse interests and goals and is
consistent with First Amendment forum
analysis.
Comments from Authorized Postage
Evidencing System providers also
requested acceptance of otherwise
eligible images containing incidental
depictions of certain prohibited content.
For alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and
weapons, the Postal Service agrees that
allowing incidental depictions of these
prohibited categories of content
contained within otherwise eligible
images would be consistent with
program purposes while maintaining or
increasing revenues. For example, an
image of toasting wedding celebrants
may remain eligible despite depictions
of alcohol, an image of an armed
services member may remain eligible
despite depictions of weaponry, and so
on. However, for religious, violent, or
political content, the Postal Service does
not agree that incidental depictions of
these prohibited categories of content
contained within otherwise eligible
images would be consistent with
program purposes. Such an expansion
would delegate unduly fine-grained
distinctions to providers and increase
First Amendment and brand liability.
The eligibility of alcoholic beverage
logos in the commercial content
category was requested. Although
allowing incidental depictions of
alcohol in a commercial or social
context, as explained above, is
acceptable under the final rules,
allowing the non-incidental display of
logos promoting alcoholic beverage
sales creates more brand risks, and
arguably opens other commercial
categories that the Postal Service may be
compelled to accept by First
E:\FR\FM\19DER1.SGM
19DER1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
60118
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 19, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
Amendment principles, e.g., logos
promoting tobacco, weapons, or
gambling enterprises.
Comments from Authorized Postage
Evidencing System providers sought
elimination of the ‘‘not suitable for
minors’’ restriction in the proposed
regulations, arguing that the phrase is
too subjective and impractical to apply.
The final rules replace ‘‘not suitable for
minors’’ with ‘‘not suitable for all-ages
audiences’’ and clarify that the phrase
applies to all eligible content. The
Postal Service believes that original
program purposes are better served by
this phrase, which seeks to limit content
to family-friendly images or text that
would not cause concern among
mainstream, multi-generational users of
the mail. To further comport with
program purposes, the Postal Service
intends that the list of specific content
prohibitions (alcohol, tobacco,
gambling, weapons, controlled
substances, politics, religion, sex,
violence, etc.) be read as illustrative and
not exhaustive, making ineligibility the
default presumption for all content
considered under the Eligibility Criteria.
In other words, if proposed content is
not a commercial or social image that is
suitable for all-ages audiences, it is not
eligible, even if not explicitly included
in the list of prohibitions. To emphasize
this restrictive nature, the final rules
include a statement indicating that
content that is not expressly allowed is
presumed to be prohibited.
The Authorized Postage Evidencing
System provider Stamps.com expressed
concern that the regulations as proposed
would require alteration of
Stamps.com’s trademarks. Neither the
proposed nor the final rules require
alteration of provider trademarks. The
requirement that providers disassociate
Customized Postage products from U.S.
stamps is intended to protect official
USPS stamps and philatelic products
and programs from consumer confusion
related to the status of Customized
Postage products, which are a
specialized form of evidence of
prepayment of postage. The final rules
simply require providers not to
‘‘promote’’ Customized Postage
products as being official U.S. postage
stamps.
Authorized Postage Evidencing
System providers argued that violations
of Customized Postage requirements
should not constitute grounds for
suspension or revocation of
authorization to provide Postage
Evidencing Systems. The Postal Service
agrees that Customized Postage is a
Special Service distinct from Postage
Evidencing Systems, and these final
rules separate the procedures for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
suspension or revocation of
authorization accordingly. Furthermore,
because Customized Postage products
have potential to create significant risks
for Postal Service philatelic programs
and brand interests, the final rules allow
for immediate suspension of authority
to provide Customized Postage products
in the event that the Postal Service
determines that unacceptable business
risks are posed by the provider’s
Customized Postage products or
infrastructure.
Additionally, the final rules specify
that providers must publish the USPS
Eligibility Criteria for customers.
Although comments did not raise this
issue, the inconsistency of publicly
available provider content guidelines
has caused confusion over Customized
Postage products. Because these
amendments are intended to
standardize and formalize program
requirements, the final rules clarify that,
in addition to adhering to USPS
Eligibility Criteria, providers must
publish the USPS Eligibility Criteria for
customers.
Finally, existing providers requested
that Customized Postage products be
authorized for Forever status or rates
outside of First Class postage, e.g.,
Marketing or Nonprofit rates. These
issues fall outside the scope of the
current rulemaking, and the Postal
Service does not address them here.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 501
Administrative practice and
procedure.
For the reasons discussed above, the
Postal Service amends 39 CFR part 501
as follows:
PART 501—AUTHORIZATION TO
MANUFACTURE AND DISTRIBUTE
POSTAGE EVIDENCING SYSTEMS
1. The authority citation for 39 CFR
part 501 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a); 39 U.S.C. 101,
401, 403, 404, 410, 2601, 2605, Inspector
General Act of 1978, as amended (Pub. L. 95–
452, as amended); 5 U.S.C. App. 3.
§ 501.7
[Amended]
2. Amend § 501.7(c) introductory text
by adding, after ‘‘The provider must
ensure that’’, the clause ‘‘, with the
exception of Customized Postage
products,’’.
■ 3. Add § 501.21 to read as follows:
■
§ 501.21
Customized Postage products.
(a) Definitions. (1) As used in this
section, a provider is:
(i) A Postage Evidencing System
provider as defined under § 501.1(d)
that is authorized by the Postal Service
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
to produce Customized Postage
products in accordance with this section
and subject to any additional
requirements set forth in individual
approval letters; or
(ii) An entity that is affiliated under
conditions respecting postage revenue
security with a Postage Evidencing
System provider and authorized by the
Postal Service to produce Customized
Postage products in accordance with
this section and subject to any
additional requirements set forth in
individual approval letters.
(2) Customized Postage products are
products combining barcode indicia of
postage payment with digital, graphic,
or pictorial images or text. Customers
select or provide images or text that
meet Eligibility Criteria established by
the Postal Service, and the image or text
is combined with the barcode indicia of
postage payment by providers and
produced under controlled conditions
for mailing to customers.
(3) As used in this section, a customer
is a person or entity seeking to purchase
Customized Postage products from a
provider.
(b) Eligibility Criteria. The Eligibility
Criteria contained in this section restrict
Customized Postage content by
identifying allowable images, text, or
categories of images or text. Any content
not identified by the Eligibility Criteria
is prohibited. To be eligible for use in
Customized Postage products, images
and/or text must meet criteria
established by the Postal Service, which
are:
(1) Images or text must be
‘‘commercial’’ or ‘‘social,’’ as defined
below:
(i) Commercial means intended for no
purpose other than the sale of goods or
services in commerce.
(ii) Social means promoting or
depicting people, animals, items, or
events commonly associated with
community relations or companionship
and likely to generate invitations,
announcements, notices, thank-you
notes, RSVPs, or similar
correspondence.
(2) Acceptable commercial or social
images or text must not contain content
that is unsuitable for all-ages audiences,
including but not limited to:
(i) Any non-incidental depiction of
alcohol, tobacco, gambling, or firearms
or other weapons;
(ii) Any depiction of controlled
substances, including but not limited to
marijuana;
(iii) Any depiction of political,
religious, violent or sexual content; or
(iv) Any depiction of subject matter
prohibited for display under U.S. law.
E:\FR\FM\19DER1.SGM
19DER1
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 19, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
(3) Acceptable commercial or social
images or text must not contain content
that the customer or provider does not
have the right to use either directly or
under license, including but not limited
to images or text that may be the subject
of third party rights such as copyright,
trademarks, or rights of publicity or
privacy.
(4) The Postal Service reserves the
right to determine independently
whether any image, text, or category of
images or text meets any of the
Eligibility Criteria contained in this
section.
(c) Customized Postage provider
authorization is conditioned on the
following requirements:
(1) Publication of Eligibility Criteria.
Providers must make the Eligibility
Criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of this
section available to customers on
provider websites or in any other
medium through which Customized
Postage products are purchased.
(2) Use of Eligibility Criteria in
purchases. Providers must maintain a
process in providing or accepting
images and/or text for Customized
Postage products that uses only the
Eligibility Criteria set forth in paragraph
(b) of this section.
(i) Providers may not use any other
eligibility criteria, represent the use of
any other eligibility criteria to
customers, or otherwise give the
appearance that any eligibility criteria
other than the Eligibility Criteria set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section is
used in providing or accepting images
and/or text for Customized Postage
products.
(ii) In the event that full and good
faith administration of the process
required by this paragraph (c)(2) of this
section fails to determine eligibility of
an individual image, text, or category of
images or text, providers may seek
clarification from the Postal Service.
(3) Use of Eligibility Criteria in
promotional material. Providers must
ensure that any images and/or text used
in providing or promoting Customized
Postage products, for individual sale or
as part of a category of images and/or
text provided or made available for
customer selection, displayed on
provider websites or in any medium,
including without limitation exemplars,
ordering templates, customization
options, or customer correspondence:
(i) Are fully compatible with the
Eligibility Criteria set forth in paragraph
(b) of this section; and
(ii) Do not give the appearance that
images that are not fully compatible
with the Eligibility Criteria set forth in
paragraph (b) of this section are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:00 Dec 18, 2017
Jkt 244001
available or offered for purchase
through providers or otherwise.
(4) Disassociation from U.S. stamps.
Providers must not promote Customized
Postage products as ‘‘U.S. stamps’’ or
make any representations tending to
imply that Customized Postage products
are related in any way to official U.S.
postage stamps or to any aspect of the
Postal Service philatelic program.
(5) Authorization fee and Eligibility
Criteria audit. Providers must pay an
annual authorization fee and participate
in any audit conducted by the Postal
Service to ensure that the customerselected or -provided images or text
displayed on Customized Postage
products or in the promotion in any
medium of Customized Postage
products are in compliance with the
Eligibility Guidelines set forth in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(6) Individual authorization letters.
Additional conditions and requirements
for provider authorization may be set
forth in individual provider
authorization letters.
(7) Suspension and revocation of
Authorization. The Postal Service may
suspend or revoke authorization to
produce Customized Postage products if
the provider engages in any unlawful
scheme or enterprise; fails to comply
with any provision in this part, or any
provision in an individual approval
letter; fails to implement instructions
issued by the Postal Service within its
authority over Customized Postage
products; misrepresents to customers of
the Postal Service any decisions,
actions, or proposed actions of the
Postal Service respecting its regulation
of Customized Postage products; or if
Customized Postage products or
infrastructure of the provider is
determined to constitute an
unacceptable risk to Postal Service
business interests, including legal,
financial, or brand interests.
(8) Correspondence. The Postal
Service office responsible for
administration of this part is the Office
of Brand Marketing or its successor
organization. All correspondence with
the Postal Service required by this part
is to be made to this office in person or
via mail to 475 L’Enfant Plaza SW,
Room 5117, Washington, DC 20260–
0004.
Ruth B. Stevenson,
Attorney, Federal Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2017–27241 Filed 12–18–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–12–P
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
60119
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0332; FRL–9971–76–
Region 9]
Approval of California Air Plan
Revisions, Placer County and Ventura
County Air Pollution Control Districts
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking final action to
approve revisions to the Placer County
Air Pollution Control District (PCAPCD)
and Ventura County Air Pollution
Control District (VCAPCD) portions of
the California State Implementation
Plan (SIP). These revisions concern
emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOX)
from incinerators in the PCAPCD and
previously unregulated types of fuel
burning equipment in the VCAPCD. We
are approving local rules that regulate
these emission sources under the Clean
Air Act (CAA or the Act).
DATES: These rules will be effective on
January 18, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R09–OAR–2017–0332. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov website.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., Confidential Business Information
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available through https://
www.regulations.gov, or please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section for
additional availability information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kevin Gong, EPA Region IX, (415) 972–
3073, Gong.Kevin@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
I. Proposed Action
II. Public Comments and EPA Responses
III. EPA Action
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Proposed Action
On September 12, 2017 in 82 FR
42765, the EPA proposed to approve the
following rules into the California SIP.
E:\FR\FM\19DER1.SGM
19DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 242 (Tuesday, December 19, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 60117-60119]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-27241]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 501
Revisions to the Requirements for Authority To Manufacture and
Distribute Postage Evidencing Systems; Customized Postage Products
AGENCY: Postal Service.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In January, 2017, the Postal Service proposed to amend its
Postage Evidencing Systems regulations to standardize requirements for
the authorization to produce Customized Postage, a Special Service
approved by the Postal Regulatory Commission. Comments were received by
all authorized providers of Customized Postage products and the
Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers. The Postal Service considered these
comments and addresses them below.
Customized Postage products are provided through authorized Postage
Evidencing System manufacturer-distributors or through companies
affiliated with authorized Postage Evidencing System manufacturer-
distributors and approved by the Postal Service. During the development
of the Customized Postage program, requirements for authorization to
produce Customized Postage products were described in Federal Register
notices and in individual approval letters issued to providers. These
final rules give regulatory form to the existing requirements for
authorization to produce Customized Postage products, and incorporate
procedures for the protection of Postal Service business interests.
Existing providers of Customized Postage products may continue
provision of Customized Postage products subject to these final rules
upon their effective date, which coincides with renewal of the product
year, and any requirements set forth in individual authorization
letters.
DATES: These amendments take effect on May 15, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christy Noel, Legal Policy &
Legislative Advice, U.S. Postal Service, (202) 268-3484.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Postal Reorganization Act authorizes the
Postal Service to provide such evidence of postage payment ``as may be
necessary or desirable.'' 39 U.S.C. 404(a)(4). The Postal Service
exercises this authority through 39 CFR part 501, which protects postal
revenues by regulation of manufacturer-distributors of Postage
Evidencing Systems. Customized Postage products were developed through
market tests allowing Authorized Postage Evidencing System providers to
combine evidence of prepayment of postage with a customer-selected or
customer-provided graphic image for printing and fulfillment. See, 70
FR 21821 (April 27, 2005); 71 FR 12718 (March 13, 2006). Subsequently,
Customized Postage was approved as a Special Service by the Postal
Regulatory Commission. See, 75 FR 11452, 11459 (March 11, 2010). The
amendments to 39 CFR part 501 create standardized definitions,
requirements, and procedures applicable to the authorization to provide
Customized Postage products, and incorporate protections for the Postal
Service's legal, financial, and brand interests.
All comments received in response to the proposed rules published
at 82 FR 1294 (January 5, 2017) requested the creation of a nonprofit
category of content in addition to the strictly commercial or limited
social categories of content designated as eligible for customer-
provided or customer-selected images. All comments claimed that the
inclusion of an eligible nonprofit content category would increase
program revenues, and the Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers specifically
alleged that excluding nonprofit content from the categories of
eligible content would constitute unlawful discrimination against
nonprofit mailers. The Postal Service disagrees on both counts.
Customized Postage products are not U.S. stamps; they are a specialized
form of evidence of prepayment of postage offered through statutory
authority contained in 39 U.S.C. 404(a)(4). Because they share the
function and appearance of U.S. stamps, however, the Postal Service
must limit eligible private content to protect its own business and
brand interests against dilution, false attribution, appearances of
endorsement, and other potential impacts. The First Amendment requires
that such content- or speaker-based restrictions be reasonable and
viewpoint-neutral. See, Matal v. Tam, 137 S.Ct. 1744, 1763 (2017).
Selective acceptance of only those nonprofit causes or organizations
that do not present threats to the Postal Service's brand would
constitute impermissible viewpoint discrimination, which would endanger
the entire program. Such legal risks would offset any potential revenue
increases attributable to the eligibility of nonprofit content.
Excluding entire categories of content altogether to help avoid
unlawful viewpoint discrimination is an eminently reasonable limitation
made in accordance with First Amendment principles. This exclusion does
not constitute unlawful discrimination against nonprofit mailers, who
may purchase Customized Postage products subject to the same terms and
conditions as other users of the mail.
Comments from existing providers argued that Customized Postage
restrictions should be uniformly applied across other Postal Service
programs or products that allow some degree of customization. However,
tailoring content restrictions to the unique context of each of its
various customizable products or programs is necessary to serve the
Postal Service's diverse interests and goals and is consistent with
First Amendment forum analysis.
Comments from Authorized Postage Evidencing System providers also
requested acceptance of otherwise eligible images containing incidental
depictions of certain prohibited content. For alcohol, tobacco,
gambling, and weapons, the Postal Service agrees that allowing
incidental depictions of these prohibited categories of content
contained within otherwise eligible images would be consistent with
program purposes while maintaining or increasing revenues. For example,
an image of toasting wedding celebrants may remain eligible despite
depictions of alcohol, an image of an armed services member may remain
eligible despite depictions of weaponry, and so on. However, for
religious, violent, or political content, the Postal Service does not
agree that incidental depictions of these prohibited categories of
content contained within otherwise eligible images would be consistent
with program purposes. Such an expansion would delegate unduly fine-
grained distinctions to providers and increase First Amendment and
brand liability.
The eligibility of alcoholic beverage logos in the commercial
content category was requested. Although allowing incidental depictions
of alcohol in a commercial or social context, as explained above, is
acceptable under the final rules, allowing the non-incidental display
of logos promoting alcoholic beverage sales creates more brand risks,
and arguably opens other commercial categories that the Postal Service
may be compelled to accept by First
[[Page 60118]]
Amendment principles, e.g., logos promoting tobacco, weapons, or
gambling enterprises.
Comments from Authorized Postage Evidencing System providers sought
elimination of the ``not suitable for minors'' restriction in the
proposed regulations, arguing that the phrase is too subjective and
impractical to apply. The final rules replace ``not suitable for
minors'' with ``not suitable for all-ages audiences'' and clarify that
the phrase applies to all eligible content. The Postal Service believes
that original program purposes are better served by this phrase, which
seeks to limit content to family-friendly images or text that would not
cause concern among mainstream, multi-generational users of the mail.
To further comport with program purposes, the Postal Service intends
that the list of specific content prohibitions (alcohol, tobacco,
gambling, weapons, controlled substances, politics, religion, sex,
violence, etc.) be read as illustrative and not exhaustive, making
ineligibility the default presumption for all content considered under
the Eligibility Criteria. In other words, if proposed content is not a
commercial or social image that is suitable for all-ages audiences, it
is not eligible, even if not explicitly included in the list of
prohibitions. To emphasize this restrictive nature, the final rules
include a statement indicating that content that is not expressly
allowed is presumed to be prohibited.
The Authorized Postage Evidencing System provider Stamps.com
expressed concern that the regulations as proposed would require
alteration of Stamps.com's trademarks. Neither the proposed nor the
final rules require alteration of provider trademarks. The requirement
that providers disassociate Customized Postage products from U.S.
stamps is intended to protect official USPS stamps and philatelic
products and programs from consumer confusion related to the status of
Customized Postage products, which are a specialized form of evidence
of prepayment of postage. The final rules simply require providers not
to ``promote'' Customized Postage products as being official U.S.
postage stamps.
Authorized Postage Evidencing System providers argued that
violations of Customized Postage requirements should not constitute
grounds for suspension or revocation of authorization to provide
Postage Evidencing Systems. The Postal Service agrees that Customized
Postage is a Special Service distinct from Postage Evidencing Systems,
and these final rules separate the procedures for suspension or
revocation of authorization accordingly. Furthermore, because
Customized Postage products have potential to create significant risks
for Postal Service philatelic programs and brand interests, the final
rules allow for immediate suspension of authority to provide Customized
Postage products in the event that the Postal Service determines that
unacceptable business risks are posed by the provider's Customized
Postage products or infrastructure.
Additionally, the final rules specify that providers must publish
the USPS Eligibility Criteria for customers. Although comments did not
raise this issue, the inconsistency of publicly available provider
content guidelines has caused confusion over Customized Postage
products. Because these amendments are intended to standardize and
formalize program requirements, the final rules clarify that, in
addition to adhering to USPS Eligibility Criteria, providers must
publish the USPS Eligibility Criteria for customers.
Finally, existing providers requested that Customized Postage
products be authorized for Forever status or rates outside of First
Class postage, e.g., Marketing or Nonprofit rates. These issues fall
outside the scope of the current rulemaking, and the Postal Service
does not address them here.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 501
Administrative practice and procedure.
For the reasons discussed above, the Postal Service amends 39 CFR
part 501 as follows:
PART 501--AUTHORIZATION TO MANUFACTURE AND DISTRIBUTE POSTAGE
EVIDENCING SYSTEMS
0
1. The authority citation for 39 CFR part 501 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a); 39 U.S.C. 101, 401, 403, 404, 410,
2601, 2605, Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended (Pub. L. 95-
452, as amended); 5 U.S.C. App. 3.
Sec. 501.7 [Amended]
0
2. Amend Sec. 501.7(c) introductory text by adding, after ``The
provider must ensure that'', the clause ``, with the exception of
Customized Postage products,''.
0
3. Add Sec. 501.21 to read as follows:
Sec. 501.21 Customized Postage products.
(a) Definitions. (1) As used in this section, a provider is:
(i) A Postage Evidencing System provider as defined under Sec.
501.1(d) that is authorized by the Postal Service to produce Customized
Postage products in accordance with this section and subject to any
additional requirements set forth in individual approval letters; or
(ii) An entity that is affiliated under conditions respecting
postage revenue security with a Postage Evidencing System provider and
authorized by the Postal Service to produce Customized Postage products
in accordance with this section and subject to any additional
requirements set forth in individual approval letters.
(2) Customized Postage products are products combining barcode
indicia of postage payment with digital, graphic, or pictorial images
or text. Customers select or provide images or text that meet
Eligibility Criteria established by the Postal Service, and the image
or text is combined with the barcode indicia of postage payment by
providers and produced under controlled conditions for mailing to
customers.
(3) As used in this section, a customer is a person or entity
seeking to purchase Customized Postage products from a provider.
(b) Eligibility Criteria. The Eligibility Criteria contained in
this section restrict Customized Postage content by identifying
allowable images, text, or categories of images or text. Any content
not identified by the Eligibility Criteria is prohibited. To be
eligible for use in Customized Postage products, images and/or text
must meet criteria established by the Postal Service, which are:
(1) Images or text must be ``commercial'' or ``social,'' as defined
below:
(i) Commercial means intended for no purpose other than the sale of
goods or services in commerce.
(ii) Social means promoting or depicting people, animals, items, or
events commonly associated with community relations or companionship
and likely to generate invitations, announcements, notices, thank-you
notes, RSVPs, or similar correspondence.
(2) Acceptable commercial or social images or text must not contain
content that is unsuitable for all-ages audiences, including but not
limited to:
(i) Any non-incidental depiction of alcohol, tobacco, gambling, or
firearms or other weapons;
(ii) Any depiction of controlled substances, including but not
limited to marijuana;
(iii) Any depiction of political, religious, violent or sexual
content; or
(iv) Any depiction of subject matter prohibited for display under
U.S. law.
[[Page 60119]]
(3) Acceptable commercial or social images or text must not contain
content that the customer or provider does not have the right to use
either directly or under license, including but not limited to images
or text that may be the subject of third party rights such as
copyright, trademarks, or rights of publicity or privacy.
(4) The Postal Service reserves the right to determine
independently whether any image, text, or category of images or text
meets any of the Eligibility Criteria contained in this section.
(c) Customized Postage provider authorization is conditioned on the
following requirements:
(1) Publication of Eligibility Criteria. Providers must make the
Eligibility Criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of this section
available to customers on provider websites or in any other medium
through which Customized Postage products are purchased.
(2) Use of Eligibility Criteria in purchases. Providers must
maintain a process in providing or accepting images and/or text for
Customized Postage products that uses only the Eligibility Criteria set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section.
(i) Providers may not use any other eligibility criteria, represent
the use of any other eligibility criteria to customers, or otherwise
give the appearance that any eligibility criteria other than the
Eligibility Criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of this section is used
in providing or accepting images and/or text for Customized Postage
products.
(ii) In the event that full and good faith administration of the
process required by this paragraph (c)(2) of this section fails to
determine eligibility of an individual image, text, or category of
images or text, providers may seek clarification from the Postal
Service.
(3) Use of Eligibility Criteria in promotional material. Providers
must ensure that any images and/or text used in providing or promoting
Customized Postage products, for individual sale or as part of a
category of images and/or text provided or made available for customer
selection, displayed on provider websites or in any medium, including
without limitation exemplars, ordering templates, customization
options, or customer correspondence:
(i) Are fully compatible with the Eligibility Criteria set forth in
paragraph (b) of this section; and
(ii) Do not give the appearance that images that are not fully
compatible with the Eligibility Criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of
this section are available or offered for purchase through providers or
otherwise.
(4) Disassociation from U.S. stamps. Providers must not promote
Customized Postage products as ``U.S. stamps'' or make any
representations tending to imply that Customized Postage products are
related in any way to official U.S. postage stamps or to any aspect of
the Postal Service philatelic program.
(5) Authorization fee and Eligibility Criteria audit. Providers
must pay an annual authorization fee and participate in any audit
conducted by the Postal Service to ensure that the customer-selected or
-provided images or text displayed on Customized Postage products or in
the promotion in any medium of Customized Postage products are in
compliance with the Eligibility Guidelines set forth in paragraph (b)
of this section.
(6) Individual authorization letters. Additional conditions and
requirements for provider authorization may be set forth in individual
provider authorization letters.
(7) Suspension and revocation of Authorization. The Postal Service
may suspend or revoke authorization to produce Customized Postage
products if the provider engages in any unlawful scheme or enterprise;
fails to comply with any provision in this part, or any provision in an
individual approval letter; fails to implement instructions issued by
the Postal Service within its authority over Customized Postage
products; misrepresents to customers of the Postal Service any
decisions, actions, or proposed actions of the Postal Service
respecting its regulation of Customized Postage products; or if
Customized Postage products or infrastructure of the provider is
determined to constitute an unacceptable risk to Postal Service
business interests, including legal, financial, or brand interests.
(8) Correspondence. The Postal Service office responsible for
administration of this part is the Office of Brand Marketing or its
successor organization. All correspondence with the Postal Service
required by this part is to be made to this office in person or via
mail to 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW, Room 5117, Washington, DC 20260-0004.
Ruth B. Stevenson,
Attorney, Federal Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2017-27241 Filed 12-18-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710-12-P