Improving Government Regulations; Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions, 1850-1851 [2017-28206]
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1850
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Unified Agenda
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
32 CFR Chs. I, V, VI, and VII
33 CFR Ch. II
36 CFR Ch. III
48 CFR Ch. II
Improving Government Regulations;
Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory
and Deregulatory Actions
Department of Defense (DoD).
Semiannual regulatory agenda.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Defense
(DoD) is publishing this semiannual
agenda of regulatory documents,
including those that are procurementrelated, for public information and
comments under Executive Order 12866
‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review.’’
This agenda incorporates the objective
and criteria, when applicable, of the
regulatory reform program under the
Executive order and other regulatory
guidance. It contains DoD regulations
initiated by DoD components that may
have economic and environmental
impact on State, local, or tribal interests
under the criteria of Executive Order
12866. Although most DoD regulations
listed in the agenda are of limited public
impact, their nature may be of public
interest and, therefore, are published to
provide notice of rulemaking and an
opportunity for public participation in
the internal DoD rulemaking process.
Members of the public may submit
comments on individual proposed and
interim final rulemakings at
www.regulations.gov during the
comment period that follows
publication in the Federal Register.
This agenda updates the report
published on August 24, 2017, and
includes regulations expected to be
issued and under review over the next
12 months. The next agenda is
scheduled to be published in the spring
of 2018.
The complete Unified Agenda will be
available online at www.reginfo.gov.
Because publication in the Federal
Register is mandated for the regulatory
flexibility agendas required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
602), the Department of Defense’s
printed agenda entries include only:
(1) Rules that are in the Agency’s
regulatory flexibility agenda, in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, because they are likely
to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities; and
(2) any rules that the Agency has
identified for periodic review under
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS5
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:35 Jan 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act.
Printing of these entries is limited to
fields that contain information required
by the Regulatory Flexibility Act’s
agenda requirements. Additional
information on these entries is in the
Unified Agenda available online.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information concerning the overall DoD
regulatory improvement program and
for general semiannual agenda
information, contact Ms. Patricia
Toppings, telephone 571–372–0485, or
write to Office of the Deputy Chief
Management Officer, Directorate for
Oversight and Compliance, Regulatory
and Advisory Committee Division, 9010
Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC
20301–9010, or email:
patricia.l.toppings.civ@mail.mil.
For questions of a legal nature
concerning the agenda and its statutory
requirements or obligations, write to
Office of the General Counsel, 1600
Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC
20301–1600, or call 703–697–2714.
For general information on Office of
the Secretary regulations, other than
those which are procurement-related,
contact Ms. Morgan Park, telephone
571–372–0489, or write to Office of the
Deputy Chief Management Officer,
Directorate of Oversight and
Compliance, Regulatory and Advisory
Committee Division, 9010 Defense
Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301–9010,
or email: morgan.e.park.civ@mail.mil.
For general information on Office of
the Secretary regulations which are
procurement-related, contact Ms.
Jennifer Hawes, telephone 571–372–
6115, or write to Office of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics, Defense
Procurement and Acquisition Policy,
Defense Acquisition Regulations
System, Room 3B941, 3060 Defense
Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301–3060,
or email: jennifer.l.hawes2.civ@mail.mil.
For general information on
Department of the Army regulations,
contact Ms. Brenda Bowen, telephone
703–428–6173, or write to the U.S.
Army Records Management and
Declassification Agency, ATTN: AAHS–
RDR–C, Casey Building, Room 102,
7701 Telegraph Road, Alexandria,
Virginia 22315–3860, or email:
brenda.s.bowen.civ@mail.mil.
For general information on the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers regulations,
contact Mr. Chip Smith, telephone 703–
693–3644, or write to Office of the
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army
(Policy and Legislation), 108 Army
Pentagon, Room 2E569, Washington, DC
20310–0108, or email:
charles.r.smith567.civ@mail.mil.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
For general information on
Department of the Navy regulations,
contact LCDR Audrey Nichols,
telephone 703–614–7408, or write to
Department of the Navy, Office of the
Judge Advocate General, Administrative
Law Division (Code 13), Washington
Navy Yard, 1322 Patterson Avenue SE,
Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20374–
5066, or email: Audrey.Nichols@
navy.mil.
For general information on
Department of the Air Force regulations,
contact Bao-Anh Trinh, telephone 703–
614–8500, or write the Office of the
Secretary of the Air Force, Chief,
Information Dominance/Chief
Information Officer (SAF CIO/A6), 1800
Air Force Pentagon, Washington, DC
20330–1800, or email:
usaf.pentagon.saf-cio-a6.mbx.af-foia@
mail.mil.
For specific agenda items, contact the
appropriate individual indicated in each
DoD component report.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
edition of the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions is
composed of the regulatory status
reports, including procurement-related
regulatory status reports, from the Office
of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) and
the Military Departments. Included also
is the regulatory status report from the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, whose
civil works functions fall under the
reporting requirements of Executive
Order 12866 and involve water resource
projects and regulation of activities in
waters of the United States.
In addition, this agenda, although
published under the reporting
requirements of Executive Order 12866,
continues to be the DoD single-source
reporting vehicle, which identifies
regulations that are currently applicable
under the various regulatory reform
programs in progress. Therefore, DoD
components will identify those rules
which come under the criteria of the:
a. Regulatory Flexibility Act;
b. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995;
c. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995.
Those DoD regulations, which are
directly applicable under these statutes,
will be identified in the agenda and
their action status indicated. Generally,
the regulatory status reports in this
agenda will contain five sections: (1)
Prerule stage; (2) proposed rule stage; (3)
final rule stage; (4) completed actions;
and (5) long-term actions. Where certain
regulatory actions indicate that small
entities are affected, the effect on these
entities may not necessarily have
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of these entities as
E:\FR\FM\12JAP5.SGM
12JAP5
1851
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 / Unified Agenda
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601(6)).
Comments and recommendations are
invited on the rules reported and should
be addressed to the DoD component
representatives identified in the
regulatory status reports. Although
sensitive to the needs of the public, as
well as regulatory reform, DoD reserves
the right to exercise the exemptions and
flexibility permitted in its rulemaking
process in order to proceed with its
overall defense-oriented mission. The
publishing of this agenda does not
waive the applicability of the military
affairs exemption in section 553 of title
5 U.S.C. and section 3 of Executive
Order 12866.
Dated: September 18, 2017.
David Tillotson III,
Acting Deputy Chief Management Officer.
OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR HEALTH AFFAIRS—FINAL RULE STAGE
Regulation
Identifier No.
Sequence No.
Title
216 ....................
TRICARE; Reimbursement of Long-Term Care Hospitals and Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities ..................
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)
Office of Assistant Secretary for Health
Affairs (DODOASHA)
Final Rule Stage
216. Tricare; Reimbursement of LongTerm Care Hospitals and Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facilities
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS5
E.O. 13771 Designation: Fully or
Partially Exempt.
Legal Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 10
U.S.C. ch. 55
Abstract: The Department of Defense,
Defense Health Agency, is revising its
reimbursement of Long-Term Care
Hospitals (LTCHs) and Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs).
Revisions are in accordance with the
statutory provision at title 10, United
States Code, section 1079(i)(2) that
requires TRICARE payment methods for
institutional care be determined, to the
extent practicable, in accordance with
the same reimbursement rules as apply
to payments to providers of services of
the same type under Medicare. 32 CFR
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:35 Jan 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
199.2 includes a definition for
‘‘Hospital, long-term (tuberculosis,
chronic care, or rehabilitation).’’ This
rule deletes this definition and creates
separate definitions for ‘‘Long Term
Care Hospital’’ and ‘‘Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility’’ in accordance
with Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) classification criteria.
Under TRICARE, LTCHs and IRFs (both
freestanding rehabilitation hospitals and
rehabilitation hospital units) are
currently paid the lower of a negotiated
rate (if they are a network provider) or
billed charges (if they are a non-network
provider). Although Medicare’s
reimbursement methods for LTCHs and
IRFs are different, to the Defense Health
Agency is adopting both the Medicare
LTCH and IRF Prospective Payment
System (PPS) methods simultaneously
to align with our statutory requirement
to reimburse like Medicare. This rule
sets forth the regulation modifications
that are necessary for TRICARE to adopt
Medicare’s LTCH and IRF Prospective
Payment Systems and rates applicable
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
0720–AB47
for inpatient services provided by
LTCHs and IRFs to TRICARE
beneficiaries.
Timetable:
Action
NPRM ..................
NPRM Comment
Period End.
Second NPRM ....
Second NPRM
Comment Period End.
Final Action .........
Date
FR Cite
01/26/15
03/27/15
80 FR 3926
08/31/16
10/31/16
81 FR 59934
02/00/18
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Required: Yes.
Agency Contact: Ann N. Fazzini,
Department of Defense, Office of
Assistant Secretary for Health Affairs,
1200 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC
20301, Phone: 303–676–3803.
RIN: 0720–AB47
[FR Doc. 2017–28206 Filed 1–11–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001–06–P
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12JAP5
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 9 (Friday, January 12, 2018)]
[Unknown Section]
[Pages 1850-1851]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-28206]
[[Page 1849]]
Vol. 83
Friday,
No. 9
January 12, 2018
Part V
Department of Defense
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Semiannual Regulatory Agenda
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 9 / Friday, January 12, 2018 /
Unified Agenda
[[Page 1850]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
32 CFR Chs. I, V, VI, and VII
33 CFR Ch. II
36 CFR Ch. III
48 CFR Ch. II
Improving Government Regulations; Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions
AGENCY: Department of Defense (DoD).
ACTION: Semiannual regulatory agenda.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Defense (DoD) is publishing this semiannual
agenda of regulatory documents, including those that are procurement-
related, for public information and comments under Executive Order
12866 ``Regulatory Planning and Review.'' This agenda incorporates the
objective and criteria, when applicable, of the regulatory reform
program under the Executive order and other regulatory guidance. It
contains DoD regulations initiated by DoD components that may have
economic and environmental impact on State, local, or tribal interests
under the criteria of Executive Order 12866. Although most DoD
regulations listed in the agenda are of limited public impact, their
nature may be of public interest and, therefore, are published to
provide notice of rulemaking and an opportunity for public
participation in the internal DoD rulemaking process. Members of the
public may submit comments on individual proposed and interim final
rulemakings at www.regulations.gov during the comment period that
follows publication in the Federal Register.
This agenda updates the report published on August 24, 2017, and
includes regulations expected to be issued and under review over the
next 12 months. The next agenda is scheduled to be published in the
spring of 2018.
The complete Unified Agenda will be available online at
www.reginfo.gov.
Because publication in the Federal Register is mandated for the
regulatory flexibility agendas required by the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 602), the Department of Defense's printed agenda entries
include only:
(1) Rules that are in the Agency's regulatory flexibility agenda,
in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, because they are
likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities; and
(2) any rules that the Agency has identified for periodic review
under section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Printing of these entries is limited to fields that contain
information required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act's agenda
requirements. Additional information on these entries is in the Unified
Agenda available online.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information concerning the overall
DoD regulatory improvement program and for general semiannual agenda
information, contact Ms. Patricia Toppings, telephone 571-372-0485, or
write to Office of the Deputy Chief Management Officer, Directorate for
Oversight and Compliance, Regulatory and Advisory Committee Division,
9010 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-9010, or email:
[email protected].
For questions of a legal nature concerning the agenda and its
statutory requirements or obligations, write to Office of the General
Counsel, 1600 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-1600, or call 703-
697-2714.
For general information on Office of the Secretary regulations,
other than those which are procurement-related, contact Ms. Morgan
Park, telephone 571-372-0489, or write to Office of the Deputy Chief
Management Officer, Directorate of Oversight and Compliance, Regulatory
and Advisory Committee Division, 9010 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC
20301-9010, or email: [email protected].
For general information on Office of the Secretary regulations
which are procurement-related, contact Ms. Jennifer Hawes, telephone
571-372-6115, or write to Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, Defense Procurement and
Acquisition Policy, Defense Acquisition Regulations System, Room 3B941,
3060 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-3060, or email:
[email protected].
For general information on Department of the Army regulations,
contact Ms. Brenda Bowen, telephone 703-428-6173, or write to the U.S.
Army Records Management and Declassification Agency, ATTN: AAHS-RDR-C,
Casey Building, Room 102, 7701 Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Virginia
22315-3860, or email: [email protected].
For general information on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
regulations, contact Mr. Chip Smith, telephone 703-693-3644, or write
to Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army (Policy and
Legislation), 108 Army Pentagon, Room 2E569, Washington, DC 20310-0108,
or email: [email protected].
For general information on Department of the Navy regulations,
contact LCDR Audrey Nichols, telephone 703-614-7408, or write to
Department of the Navy, Office of the Judge Advocate General,
Administrative Law Division (Code 13), Washington Navy Yard, 1322
Patterson Avenue SE, Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20374-5066, or email:
[email protected].
For general information on Department of the Air Force regulations,
contact Bao-Anh Trinh, telephone 703-614-8500, or write the Office of
the Secretary of the Air Force, Chief, Information Dominance/Chief
Information Officer (SAF CIO/A6), 1800 Air Force Pentagon, Washington,
DC 20330-1800, or email: [email protected].
For specific agenda items, contact the appropriate individual
indicated in each DoD component report.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This edition of the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions is composed of the
regulatory status reports, including procurement-related regulatory
status reports, from the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) and
the Military Departments. Included also is the regulatory status report
from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, whose civil works functions fall
under the reporting requirements of Executive Order 12866 and involve
water resource projects and regulation of activities in waters of the
United States.
In addition, this agenda, although published under the reporting
requirements of Executive Order 12866, continues to be the DoD single-
source reporting vehicle, which identifies regulations that are
currently applicable under the various regulatory reform programs in
progress. Therefore, DoD components will identify those rules which
come under the criteria of the:
a. Regulatory Flexibility Act;
b. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995;
c. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
Those DoD regulations, which are directly applicable under these
statutes, will be identified in the agenda and their action status
indicated. Generally, the regulatory status reports in this agenda will
contain five sections: (1) Prerule stage; (2) proposed rule stage; (3)
final rule stage; (4) completed actions; and (5) long-term actions.
Where certain regulatory actions indicate that small entities are
affected, the effect on these entities may not necessarily have
significant economic impact on a substantial number of these entities
as
[[Page 1851]]
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601(6)).
Comments and recommendations are invited on the rules reported and
should be addressed to the DoD component representatives identified in
the regulatory status reports. Although sensitive to the needs of the
public, as well as regulatory reform, DoD reserves the right to
exercise the exemptions and flexibility permitted in its rulemaking
process in order to proceed with its overall defense-oriented mission.
The publishing of this agenda does not waive the applicability of the
military affairs exemption in section 553 of title 5 U.S.C. and section
3 of Executive Order 12866.
Dated: September 18, 2017.
David Tillotson III,
Acting Deputy Chief Management Officer.
Office of Assistant Secretary for Health Affairs--Final Rule Stage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulation
Sequence No. Title Identifier No.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
216....................... TRICARE; Reimbursement of 0720-AB47
Long-Term Care Hospitals
and Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facilities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)
Office of Assistant Secretary for Health Affairs (DODOASHA)
Final Rule Stage
216. Tricare; Reimbursement of Long-Term Care Hospitals and Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facilities
E.O. 13771 Designation: Fully or Partially Exempt.
Legal Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 10 U.S.C. ch. 55
Abstract: The Department of Defense, Defense Health Agency, is
revising its reimbursement of Long-Term Care Hospitals (LTCHs) and
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs). Revisions are in accordance
with the statutory provision at title 10, United States Code, section
1079(i)(2) that requires TRICARE payment methods for institutional care
be determined, to the extent practicable, in accordance with the same
reimbursement rules as apply to payments to providers of services of
the same type under Medicare. 32 CFR 199.2 includes a definition for
``Hospital, long-term (tuberculosis, chronic care, or
rehabilitation).'' This rule deletes this definition and creates
separate definitions for ``Long Term Care Hospital'' and ``Inpatient
Rehabilitation Facility'' in accordance with Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) classification criteria. Under TRICARE, LTCHs
and IRFs (both freestanding rehabilitation hospitals and rehabilitation
hospital units) are currently paid the lower of a negotiated rate (if
they are a network provider) or billed charges (if they are a non-
network provider). Although Medicare's reimbursement methods for LTCHs
and IRFs are different, to the Defense Health Agency is adopting both
the Medicare LTCH and IRF Prospective Payment System (PPS) methods
simultaneously to align with our statutory requirement to reimburse
like Medicare. This rule sets forth the regulation modifications that
are necessary for TRICARE to adopt Medicare's LTCH and IRF Prospective
Payment Systems and rates applicable for inpatient services provided by
LTCHs and IRFs to TRICARE beneficiaries.
Timetable:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Action Date FR Cite
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NPRM................................ 01/26/15 80 FR 3926
NPRM Comment Period End............. 03/27/15 .......................
Second NPRM......................... 08/31/16 81 FR 59934
Second NPRM Comment Period End...... 10/31/16 .......................
Final Action........................ 02/00/18 .......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Required: Yes.
Agency Contact: Ann N. Fazzini, Department of Defense, Office of
Assistant Secretary for Health Affairs, 1200 Defense Pentagon,
Washington, DC 20301, Phone: 303-676-3803.
RIN: 0720-AB47
[FR Doc. 2017-28206 Filed 1-11-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 5001-06-P