Restructuring of Regulations on the Importation of Plants for Planting, 11845-11867 [2018-05424]
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11845
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 83, No. 53
Monday, March 19, 2018
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
7 CFR Parts 318, 319, 330, 340, 360,
and 361
[Docket No. APHIS–2008–0011]
RIN 0579–AD75
Restructuring of Regulations on the
Importation of Plants for Planting
Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We are restructuring the
regulations governing the importation of
plants for planting. In the new structure,
restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting will
no longer be found in the regulations,
but instead will be found in the Plants
for Planting Manual. We will make
changes to the restrictions in the manual
after taking public comment through
notices published in the Federal
Register. As part of this restructuring,
we are grouping together restrictions in
the plants for planting regulations that
apply to the importation of most or all
plants for planting, and we are adding
general requirements for the
development of integrated pest risk
management measures that we may use
to mitigate the risk associated with the
importation of a specific type of plants
for planting. We are also amending our
foreign quarantine regulations to remove
various provisions regarding the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting that are not currently
subject to the general plants for planting
regulations; these provisions will also
be found in the Plants for Planting
Manual. This action does not make any
major changes to the restrictions that
currently apply to the importation of
plants for planting. These changes will
make restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting
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SUMMARY:
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easier for readers to find and less
cumbersome for us to change.
DATES: Effective April 18, 2018.
Dr.
Shailaja Rabindran, Assistant Director,
Plants for Planting Policy, PPQ, APHIS,
4700 River Road, Unit 133, Riverdale,
MD 20737; (301) 851–2167.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Background
Under the Plant Protection Act (7
U.S.C. 7701 et seq.), the Secretary of
Agriculture is authorized to take such
actions as may be necessary to prevent
the introduction and spread of plant
pests and noxious weeds within the
United States. The Secretary has
delegated this authority to the
Administrator of the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS).
The regulations in 7 CFR part 319
prohibit or restrict the importation of
plants and plant products into the
United States to prevent the
introduction of plant pests that are not
already established in the United States
or plant pests that may be established
but are under the official control of an
eradication or containment program.
The regulations in ‘‘Subpart—Plants
for Planting,’’ §§ 319.37 through 319.37–
14 (referred to below as the regulations),
restrict the importation of plants for
planting. The term plants for planting is
defined in § 319.37–1 as ‘‘plants
intended to remain planted, to be
planted or replanted.’’ Plant is defined
in that section as ‘‘any plant (including
any plant part) capable of propagation,
including a tree, a tissue culture, a
plantlet culture, pollen, a shrub, a vine,
a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb,
a root, and a seed.’’
On April 25, 2013, we published in
the Federal Register (78 FR 24634–
24663, Docket No. APHIS–2008–0011) a
proposal 1 to revise the plants for
planting regulations and make several
related changes to the foreign
quarantine notices in 7 CFR part 319.
Briefly, we proposed to do the
following:
• Remove provisions from other
subparts in 7 CFR part 319 that regulate
the importation of plants for planting
and thus consolidate the requirements
1 To view the proposed rule, extensions of
comment period, supporting document, and the
comments we received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS2008-0011.
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for importation of all plants for planting
under the plants for planting
regulations.
• Add most of the plants for planting
that are listed as prohibited in § 319.37–
2(a) to the list of plants for planting
whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis (NAPPRA) in
accordance with current § 319.37–2a.
We proposed to characterize the other
prohibitions as restrictions, rather than
prohibitions, and to list them as such in
the Plants for Planting Manual. This
manual is currently used by importers
and inspectors as a reference regarding
restrictions on the importation of plants
for planting.
• Within the plants for planting
regulations, group together the
requirements that apply to the
importation of all or most plants for
planting.
• Move restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting from the regulations to the
Plants for Planting Manual. We
proposed to revise how we change these
restrictions. We proposed to publish a
notice in the Federal Register
announcing our determination that it is
necessary to add, change, or remove
restrictions on the importation of a
specific type of plants for planting and
make available a document describing
those restrictions and why they are
necessary. We would allow for public
comment on the notice and the
document it makes available. We would
then respond to any comments we
receive in a second notice published in
the Federal Register, and implement the
restrictions if our determination remains
unchanged.
• Remove several lists of approved
items (for example, the lists of approved
growing media, packing materials, and
ports of entry) from the regulations and
instead provide these lists to the public
in the Plants for Planting Manual. We
proposed to update these lists, when
necessary, using the same double-notice
process we are proposing to use to
update restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting.
• Establish a framework for the use of
integrated pest risk management
measures (IPRMM) in the production of
specific types of plants for planting for
importation into the United States,
when the pest risk associated with the
importation of a type of plants for
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planting can only be addressed through
the use of integrated measures.
• Make several minor changes to the
regulations to improve their clarity and
reflect current program operations.
We did not propose to make major
changes to the restrictions that currently
apply to the importation of plants for
planting. The proposal was directed
towards making the regulations easier to
use and to implement.
Comments on the proposed rule were
required to be received on or before June
24, 2013. We reopened and extended
the deadline for comments until
September 10, 2013, in a document
published in the Federal Register on
July 12, 2013 (78 FR 41866–41867,
Docket No. APHIS–2008–0011). We
reopened and extended the deadline for
comments a second time, until January
30, 2014, in a document published in
the Federal Register on December 31,
2013 (78 FR 79636–79637, Docket No.
APHIS–2008–0011). In the latter
document, we asked specifically for
comments regarding whether to base the
framework for the use of IPRMM on
regional or international standards. We
also asked for specific comments
regarding the risk posed when plant
brokers purchase and move plants for
planting after they leave their place of
production and before they are exported
to the United States.
We received 17 comments by the
January 30, 2014, close of the comment
period. They were from producer
organizations, State departments of
agriculture, a foreign national plant
protection organization, an
environmental protection organization,
and private citizens. They are discussed
below by topic.
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Scope of the Proposed Rule
Two commenters expressed concern
about the length and complexity of the
proposed rule, stating that it should
have been broken into separate, smaller
regulatory actions.
Many of the changes in the proposed
rule were dependent on each other, and
making one or two at a time would have
left the regulations in an unsettled state.
In addition, proposing the changes in
separate chunks would have made the
overall process of restructuring the
regulations take much longer.
Plants for Planting Manual
One commenter stated that the
updated Plants for Planting Manual
should be made available for review
prior to the publication of the final rule.
We will make the updated manual
available upon the effective date of the
final rule. Making it available earlier,
when the final rule is not effective and
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the current version of the manual is still
in use, could create confusion.
Another commenter stated that
navigation of and access to the manual
should be as open and easy as possible,
and that stakeholders should be notified
of changes.
We agree. As part of this regulatory
process, we have undertaken a
wholesale revision of the Plants for
Planting Manual to make it easier to use.
The new version of the manual will be
maintained at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/
plants/manuals/ports/downloads/
plants_for_planting.pdf. Stakeholders
can keep abreast of updates to the Plants
for Planting Manual through the APHIS
Stakeholder Registry; interested parties
can sign up for email notifications at
https://public.govdelivery.com/
accounts/USDAAPHIS/subscriber/new.
Finally, whenever we determine that we
need to add, change, or remove
phytosanitary restrictions in the Plants
for Planting Manual to address the risk
posed by imported plants for planting,
we will publish a notice in the Federal
Register requesting public comment.
Consolidation of Plants for Planting
Provisions
We proposed to move provisions from
other subparts in 7 CFR part 319 that
regulate the importation of plants for
planting and consolidate all
requirements for importation of plants
for planting in a single location.
One commenter requested
clarification on whether we were
limiting the plants for planting
regulations to cover only some plants
for planting, or whether we were
clarifying that plants for planting rules
do not apply to plants not for planting.
We are neither limiting the plants for
planting regulations nor clarifying as the
commenter suggests, but rather making
sure that all plants for planting are
imported in accordance with the plants
for planting regulations. Subparts of 7
CFR part 319 not specifically about
plants for planting had contained some
provisions regulating plants for
planting. For example, the sugarcane
regulations in § 319.15 regulate the
importation of all sugarcane plants and
plant parts, whether they are for
planting or not.
We proposed to remove provisions in
those other subparts that applied to
plants for planting and put them in the
Plants for Planting Manual or to change
those subparts to explicitly indicate that
they did not apply to plants for
planting, when applicable. For example,
we proposed to amend the subpart
regulating the importation of cut flowers
in 7 CFR part 319 to explicitly indicate
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that such flowers must not be for
planting.
One commenter stated that inspectors
should keep the possibility of planting
in mind when conducting inspections.
We agree. The definition of plant in
this final rule includes any plant or
plant part that is capable of propagation.
This definition affords our inspectors
discretion to determine whether a plant
or plant part that is capable of
propagation and offered for importation
should be considered a plant for
planting.
Definitions
We proposed to retain many of the
current definitions in § 319.37–1 and
add a few new ones. We received
comments on three of these definitions.
The definition of from specifies that
an article is considered to be ‘‘from’’ any
country or locality where it was grown,
with exceptions for articles imported to
Canada and subsequently re-exported to
the United States under certain
conditions. These conditions are
specified in subparagraphs (1) through
(4) of the definition. We proposed to
change the terminology in the definition
to reflect the proposal but did not
propose any substantive modifications.
One commenter asked that we further
clarify current subparagraph (3) in the
definition of from. Under this
subparagraph, to be considered from
Canada, an article must not have been
grown in a country or locality which
would subject it to postentry quarantine
in the United States, unless it was
grown in Canada under equivalent
postentry quarantine conditions. The
commenter understood this provision to
mean that such articles would be subject
to two post-entry quarantines, one in
Canada following importation from the
country in which it was grown, the
other in the United States following
importation from Canada. The
commenter stated that if Canada and the
United States fully harmonize their
postentry quarantine requirements, the
article should be allowed to be imported
directly from Canada into the United
States, without a second postentry
quarantine.
We agree. Should such harmonization
occur, we will initiate rulemaking
accordingly.
With respect to current paragraph (4)
in the definition of from, which requires
plants for planting to not be imported in
growing media in order to be considered
‘‘from’’ Canada, another commenter
stated that we should allow the
importation of plants for planting
produced in APHIS programs for the
importation of plants in growing media
but imported into Canada before
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movement to the United States to be
considered ‘‘from’’ Canada.
We understand the commenter to be
referring to plants in growing media that
are produced in one of two manners:
Either (1), the plants have been grown
in the United States, exported to Canada
for finishing, then subsequently offered
for importation back into the United
States, or (2), the plants have been
produced in a third country under
conditions that would make the articles
eligible for importation into the United
States, exported to Canada, then
subsequently offered for importation
into the United States. With regard to
the first class of articles, we are
currently in discussions with the
national plant protection organization
(NPPO) of Canada regarding the
importation of such articles into the
United States, and will take appropriate
follow-up action based on this dialogue.
With regard to the second class of
articles, our evaluation will be on a
case-by-case basis based on the
safeguards applied to the articles within
Canada.
We proposed to establish a new
definition of the term place of
production. The proposed definition
indicated that the term may include ‘‘a
production site that is separately
managed for phytosanitary purposes.’’
One commenter stated that we should
modify this definition to be consistent
with the definition in International
Plant Protection Convention’s (IPPC)
Glossary of Phytosanitary Terms,2
which refers to multiple production
sites.
We based our proposed definition on
the IPPC definition; the inconsistency
was inadvertent. We have corrected the
definition in this final rule.
We proposed to define plants for
planting as: ‘‘Regulated plants
(including any plant parts) that are for
planting or capable of being planted.’’
This proposed definition differs from
the IPPC definition of that term. One
commenter suggested that IPPC
signatories, such as the United States,
should use the IPPC definitions, or
submit proposed revisions to those
definitions to the IPPC.
Although we intended to use a
version of the definition of plants for
planting not substantively different from
the IPPC’s, the definition in our
proposed rule did not include the
intended use of the article. After
reviewing our proposed definition in
light of the commenter’s concerns, we
2 International Standard for Phytosanitary
Measures (ISPM) No. 5. To view this and other
ISPMs on the internet, go to https://www.ippc.int/
and click on the ‘‘Adopted Standards’’ link under
the ‘‘Core activities’’ heading.
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determined that the IPPC definition,
‘‘plants intended to remain planted, to
be planted, or replanted,’’ emphasizes
the intended use of the article, and that
this is an important distinction.
Intended use has long played a role in
our determining whether a specific
article is a plant for planting; for
example, it is our basis for determining
whether to regulate a commercial
consignment of potato tubers, which are
articles capable of propagation, as plants
for planting. Accordingly, in this final
rule, we have decided to use the IPPC
definition of plants for planting, which
had been in the previous regulations.
Moving Prohibited Taxa to the NAPPRA
Category
In § 319.37–2 of the regulations,
paragraphs (a) and (b) currently list
several taxa of plants for planting as
prohibited. We proposed to remove
these lists from the regulations and add
most of these taxa to the NAPPRA lists.
One commenter asked for clarification
on what plants or groups of prohibited
plants would not be added to the
NAPPRA lists.
The NAPPRA category lists taxa of
plants for planting that are not
authorized for importation pending pest
risk analysis, as well as the parts of
those plants that are subject to
NAPPRA. We proposed to add those
taxa listed in § 319.37–2 as prohibited
articles to the NAPPRA list if they were
listed in § 319.37–2 without any
additional conditions. Some of the
prohibited taxa in § 319.37–2 had
additional conditions regarding their
prohibited status, e.g., the articles were
prohibited importation only if they were
a certain size or age, or only if they were
imported in pulp. Those prohibitions
can more accurately be characterized as
restrictions on the importation of plants
for planting, rather than outright
prohibitions. Accordingly, we are
characterizing them as such and moving
the restrictions to the Plants for Planting
Manual.
One commenter asked how the
proposal to add the prohibited taxa to
the NAPPRA list would affect any pest
risk analyses (PRAs) that had been done
for the taxa. Another asked why we
chose to add the prohibited taxa to the
NAPPRA category given that PRAs have
presumably already been done for these
plants, and their pest risk considered
such that we prohibited their
importation into the United States.
To answer the former commenter, any
new PRAs conducted regarding taxa on
the NAPPRA list supersede previously
conducted PRAs.
To answer the latter commenter,
although pest risk information led us to
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prohibit the importation of the taxa
listed in § 319.37–2, this information
may change. For example, a foreign
country may undertake eradication
efforts to combat a particular pest, or
new measures may become available to
mitigate the risk associated with the
pest. Additionally, the quarantine
significance of a particular pest may be
reevaluated based on new scientific
information, or the introduction and
dissemination of that pest within the
United States. Adding the prohibited
taxa to the NAPPRA category allows us
to reexamine the risk in light of these
possible changes.
Rather than simply add the current
prohibited taxa to the NAPPRA
category, one commenter asked that we
propose to add the taxa to the NAPPRA
category through an additional
regulatory action and opportunity for
public comment.
We do not believe it would be
appropriate or necessary to request
additional public comment on the
addition of prohibited taxa to the
NAPPRA list. When we added those
taxa to the prohibited list based on their
quarantine pest risk, we took public
comment through the rulemaking
process. Additionally, we afforded the
public an opportunity to comment on
the addition of the taxa to the NAPPRA
list during the comment period
associated with the proposed rule.
One commenter asked where
information about the taxa of plants for
planting that are NAPPRA would be
found. Specifically, the commenter
asked whether the information would be
maintained both on the Plants for
Planting website and in the Plants for
Planting Manual.
The information will be maintained
solely in the Plants for Planting Manual;
the Plants for Planting website will
indicate this and link to the manual.
Maintaining the list in two different
places could result in discrepancies
between the two lists. We have
reformatted the lists based on this
decision to move them to the Plants for
Planting Manual.
Previously, we had maintained two
NAPPRA lists on the internet, one of
taxa that we have determined to be
quarantine pests and another of taxa
that we have determined to be hosts of
a quarantine pest. In adding the
NAPPRA taxa to the Plants for Planting
Manual, however, we discovered that a
clearer and more user-friendly format
was simply to list all NAPPRA taxa
alphabetically in one list. As such, we
have made a slight change to proposed
paragraph (a) of § 319.37–4. The
paragraph had stated that there are two
lists of NAPPRA plants for planting. It
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now indicates that there are two
categories of NAPPRA plants for
planting.
Permits
We proposed to move the current
permit requirements from § 319.37–3 to
§ 319.37–5 and make a few changes.
One of the changes we proposed was to
change how the current permit
requirements are presented. Rather than
indicate which lots of plants for
planting must be imported with a
permit, we proposed to indicate that all
lots of plants for planting must be
imported with a permit, with exceptions
listed in the Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter stated that the new
proposal appeared to require permits for
all plants, while the previous
regulations exempted lots of 13 or fewer
plants. The commenter requested
further explanation and the opportunity
for public comment on this change.
Another commenter supported what the
commenter believed was our proposal to
require permits for lots containing 12 or
fewer plants. The regulations exempted,
among other things, lots of 13 or more
plants from the permit requirement if
they are composed of seeds of
herbaceous plants, precleared bulbs of a
taxon approved by APHIS for
preclearance, or sterile cultures of
orchid plants. One commenter stated
that bulbs should not be required to be
accompanied by a permit, and asked us
to confirm that existing bulb import
programs (which do not involve the
issuance of permits) would remain in
place.
We did not propose to remove or
otherwise alter any exemptions from
permitting for plants for planting. We
merely proposed to move the
exemptions from the regulations to the
Plants for Planting Manual. We believe
the Plants for Planting Manual affords
us an opportunity to present the
exemptions more clearly, and in a
manner that is more accessible to the
general public.
The requirement that lots of 13 or
more plants be accompanied by a permit
also exempted lots of any size if they
were from Canada. One commenter
asked whether we should continue to
allow plants to be imported from
Canada without a permit, as this could
leave a substantial gap in our
information about what plants we
import and where they are from. The
commenter noted that 95 percent of
imported woody shrubs and trees come
from Canada.
The exemption is long-standing and
has not resulted in the introduction of
quarantine plant pests into the United
States. Removing it in the absence of
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demonstrable quarantine plant pest risk
is not justified.
One commenter stated that the new
regulations should reflect the adoption
of controlled import permits (CIP).
We agree. After the proposed rule to
revise the plants for planting regulations
was published, we published a final
rule on May 2, 2013 (78 FR 25565–
25572, Docket No. APHIS–2008–0055)
establishing provisions in a new § 319.6
for the issuance of CIPs for articles
otherwise prohibited or restricted from
importation, including plants for
planting. The May 2013 final rule made
several changes to the plants for
planting regulations as part of
establishing the CIP provisions. We are
incorporating most of those changes into
the revision of the plants for planting
regulations in this final rule, and have
made corresponding changes to
proposed §§ 319.37–1, 319.37–4,
319.37–5, and 319.37–23.
We are not incorporating one
provision of the final rule that
implemented CIPs, which required
plants for planting imported into
postentry quarantine to be accompanied
by a CIP. When we implemented that
final rule, we discovered that it had
inadvertently changed the regulatory
status of plants for planting that are
subject to postentry quarantine from
restricted articles to prohibited articles.
This caused significant confusion
among stakeholders, and had the
unintended effect of significantly
restructuring our postentry quarantine
programs by exempting plants for
planting intended for postentry
quarantine from the general
requirements of the regulations. As a
result, operationally, we have not
required CIPs for plants for planting
intended for postentry quarantine for
several years.
One commenter made the general
comment that permits should only be
required when the importation of the
plant is prohibited or allowed under
certain prescribed conditions. For other
plants for planting that are allowed
entry, import requirements should be
communicated in a general manner to
exporting countries to allow NPPOs to
process and distribute the information
to their inspectors as well as their
stakeholders.
When we consider the plant pest risk
associated with the importation of
plants for planting, we must consider
both the risk posed by the articles and
the risk posed by the person importing
the articles. Requiring prospective
importers to apply for a permit allows
us to deny or revoke permits to
applicants who have failed to honor
APHIS plant import regulations in the
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past or who otherwise appear to pose a
risk of noncompliance. We discuss this
at greater length in a final rule that we
published in the Federal Register (79
FR 19805–19812, Docket No. APHIS–
2011–0085) on April 10, 2014. That rule
amended, among other things, the
conditions under which plants for
planting permit applications are denied
within APHIS.
On a related matter, the April 2014
rule also amended the conditions under
which plants for planting permits are
revoked within APHIS. Those amended
conditions are retained in this final rule.
Phytosanitary Certificates
We proposed to move the
requirements for phytosanitary
certificates from § 319.37–4 to § 319.37–
6. In moving them, we proposed to
remove three paragraphs in current
§ 319.37–4 that describe programs under
which a phytosanitary certificate is not
required, and replace them with general
standards that encompass these three
current programs and allow for the
development of future programs.
Specifically, we proposed to state that
that the Administrator may authorize
the importation of some types of plants
for planting without a phytosanitary
certificate if the plants for planting are
accompanied by equivalent
documentation agreed upon by the
Administrator and the NPPO of the
exporting country as sufficient to
establish the origin, identity, and
quarantine pest status of the plants.
One commenter stated that the
requirement to identify place of origin
on documentation that substitutes for a
phytosanitary certificate would be
unworkable in the context of the
Canadian greenhouse certification
program, which had been set out in
paragraph (c) of § 319.37–4. The
commenter pointed out that, under that
program, Canadian producers were not
currently required to document the
origin of the plants exported under this
program. Implementing this change, the
commenter stated, would create a new
administrative burden for program
participants.
It was not our intention to create new
burdens for participants in this program,
but rather to put in place general
language that could encompass all the
current and future programs under
which phytosanitary certificates are not
required.
In this final rule, we are changing
proposed § 319.37–6 to indicate that the
Administrator may authorize the
importation of types of plants for
planting without a phytosanitary
certificate if the plants for planting are
accompanied by equivalent
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documentation agreed upon by the
Administrator and the NPPO of the
exporting country as sufficient to
establish the eligibility of the plants for
importation into the United States. We
believe this will accommodate the
Canadian greenhouse-grown plant
program and address the commenter’s
concern.
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Marking and Identity
We proposed to move § 319.37–10,
which contained requirements for
marking and identity of imported plants
for planting, to proposed § 319.37–7 and
make minor changes to it.
One commenter noted that proposed
§ 319.37–7(a) would require any
imported plants for planting to be
marked with the number of the written
permit authorizing the importation, if
one was required. The commenter stated
that it was unclear whether every
individual plant would have to be
marked or if the mark applied to the
whole consignment of plants. The
commenter expressed concern about the
administrative burden that would result
if each individual plant were required to
be marked, and asked for clarification.
We intend for each consignment of
plants for planting to be marked with
the permit number, not each individual
plant. We have changed the text of
§ 319.37–7 to reflect this.
One commenter stated that some
requirements in the section appeared to
be new. The commenter recommended
that the requirements be moved to the
Plants for Planting Manual, since they
are modified by the ports from time to
time, in recognition of changing trade
and shipping patterns and to improve
the inspection process.
Except for some terminology changes,
the requirements in proposed § 319.37–
7 were identical to current § 319.37–10,
which has been in place for decades. We
are not aware of these requirements
being modified at the ports of entry;
they represent a minimum amount of
information that should be conveyed
about every consignment of plants for
planting for the purposes of
identification and, if a pest is found at
port-of-entry inspection, for traceback.
Ports of Entry
The regulations governing ports of
entry for imported plants for planting
were found in § 319.37–14. We
proposed to move them to § 319.37–8
and make some changes. The
regulations had stated that any regulated
article required to be imported under a
written permit pursuant to § 319.37–
3(a)(1) through (6) must be imported or
offered for importation at a U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) plant
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inspection station. We proposed to
indicate instead that any plants for
planting required to be imported under
a written permit pursuant to proposed
§ 319.37–5(a), if not precleared, may be
imported or offered for importation only
at a USDA plant inspection station
listed in the Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter noted that the
proposed provision did not precisely
parallel the previous regulations, in that
the current language only requires
certain plants for planting that must be
imported under a written permit to
enter at a USDA plant inspection
station, while the proposed language
would have required all plants for
planting that must be accompanied by a
permit to enter at a USDA plant
inspection station. The commenter
stated that the revised regulations
should be consistent with the previous
regulations.
We agree with the commenter. We
had intended to propose language
substantively identical to the scope of
the previous requirements, which had
required plants for planting that must be
imported under a written permit, if not
precleared, to be imported or offered for
importation only at a plant inspection
station, with limited exceptions. Our
intent was not to remove any of these
exceptions.
Accordingly, we have revised the
proposed language to state that any
plants for planting required to be
imported under a written permit in
accordance with § 319.37–5(a), if not
precleared, must be imported or offered
for importation only at a plant
inspection station, unless the Plants for
Planting Manual indicates otherwise.
The Plants for Planting Manual will list
the conditions under which an imported
plant for planting does not have to be
offered for importation at a plant
inspection station. This change will
preserve the status quo while allowing
more flexibility to change these
conditions in the future should a change
be warranted.
Growing Media
Proposed § 319.37–10 set out
requirements for the importation of
plants for planting in growing media. It
was based on previous § 319.37–8, but
we proposed to revise the current
regulations to move restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting from the regulations to the
Plants for Planting Manual and to add
a notice-based process for updating the
list of approved growing media.
One commenter expressed concern
that our proposed regulations did not
specifically allow the importation of
plants for planting grown in agar or
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agar-like tissue culture medium. The
commenter asked us to confirm that no
new restrictions are part of this revision
with respect to plants for planting that
are currently allowed into the United
States in agar or agar-like growing
media.
We did not propose to make any
changes to the current provisions
regarding the importation of plants for
planting in agar or agar-like growing
media; we simply proposed to move
them to the Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter asked that we change
the current restrictions to allow the
importation of tissue culture plants that
have been produced in completely
sterile conditions but are contained in
sterile peat, rather than in transparent
agar or other tissue culture media.
As we did not propose to make any
changes to the current restrictions on
the importation of plants for planting in
growing media, making such a change
would be outside the scope of this final
rule. However, the changes we are
making in this final rule will allow for
more timely addition of this exemption
to the Plants for Planting Manual,
should we determine that the requested
change is warranted.
Streamlined Process for Changes To
Import Restrictions
Several commenters had questions
about the streamlined process we
proposed in § 319.37–20 for making
changes to the Plants for Planting
Manual.
One commenter asked to confirm that
the process will apply to requests from
foreign trading partners seeking to
export new types of plants for planting
in growing media to the United States.
The process will be used to make all
changes to the restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting, including importation of
any specific type of plants for planting
in growing media.
One commenter expressed concern
regarding whether changes to the Plants
for Planting Manual would be readily
evident to stakeholders. The commenter
also asked that sufficient time be
provided for comments from
stakeholders, and inquired whether
there will be additional notification
through the PPQ Stakeholder Registry to
advise stakeholders of changes. Another
commenter stated that it is the
commenter’s understanding that the
comment period will typically be 60
days.
The second commenter is correct. We
will typically provide for a comment
period of 60 days on notices to change
restrictions in the Plants for Planting
Manual, and we have the option of
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extending the comment period upon
request. We will provide notice of all
changes we propose and all changes we
make to the Plants for Planting Manual
through the Stakeholder Registry.
One commenter expressed concern
that making it easier to propose to
change the requirements for importing
specific types of plants for planting
could result in a very large number of
proposals being posted at one time,
overwhelming a stakeholder’s resources
to respond by posted deadlines. The
commenter asked how the process will
be managed to facilitate stakeholder
input.
Stakeholders will still have the
opportunity to submit comments on
proposed changes. Making the
restrictions on the importation of
planting for planting easier to update
may result in more updates, but we
hope that they will also be smaller in
scope than our periodic amendments to
the regulations have been. Wherever
possible, we will avoid requesting
comment on many actions at once. We
also have the option of extending
comment periods if stakeholders
indicate they are unable to provide
input on any changes within the initial
comment period.
Integrated Pest Risk Management
Measures
We proposed to set out a framework
for the development of integrated pest
risk management measures (IPRMM) for
the importation of plants for planting in
§ 319.37–21. The framework covered
pest management and traceability at the
place of production; administration of
the program by APHIS and the NPPO of
the supporting country; the
responsibilities of plant brokers; audits
of the program; and actions to take in
case of noncompliance.
In the past, we have referred to these
programs as ‘‘systems approaches.’’ We
stated in the proposed rule that the term
‘‘integrated pest risk management
measures’’ in the plants for planting
regulations is consistent with the North
American Plant Protection
Organization’s (NAPPO) Regional
Standard for Phytosanitary Measures
(RSPM) No. 24 and ISPM No. 36 and
industry terminology. The term also
emphasizes the fact that such programs
involve multiple measures, each of
which plays a necessary part for a
comprehensive approach to managing
pest risk.
One commenter stated that IPRMM
were not defined as being composed of
multiple separate measures that act
synergistically to mitigate plant pest
risk. The commenter stated that the
elements of separate action and
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synergistic effects have long been a
foundational principle of systems
approaches. The commenter asked that
we state explicitly in the regulations
that the agency will incorporate the
elements of separate action and
synergistic effects into its requirements
for integrated pest risk management
programs.
In an IPRMM, every measure may be
necessary to prevent the plants from
being infested by a particular pest,
rather than the measures having
separate, synergistic effects as in a
classic systems approach. The program
for production of Pelargonium and
Solanum spp. free of Ralstonia
solanacearum race 3 biovar 2, which
had been specified in § 319.37–5(r)(3) of
the plants for planting regulations, is an
example of an IPRMM; each of the
production practices in the paragraph
must be followed or there will be a
significant risk of introduction of the
pathogen into the production site.
Therefore, although some IPRMM are
likely to incorporate the effects of
separate action and synergistic effects, it
would be inappropriate to state that we
will incorporate these into every
IPRMM. However, where we can
achieve such effects, we will consider
them as we design our programs.
The proposed rule stated that we
would require plants for planting to be
imported in accordance with IPRMM
when appropriate. Several commenters
asked for further information about
when we might consider IPRMM
appropriate for the importation of plants
for planting and whether we would
require them for every type of imported
plants for planting, or if there would be
exceptions. One commenter asked
whether certain host/pest associations
would be subject to IPRMM, and stated
that they seemed to be most valuable for
asymptomatic, cryptic, or seasonally
symptomatic pests and pathogens.
Other commenters made
recommendations about when we
should employ such measures. One
stated that they should be employed for
all plants for planting to maintain a high
level of protection. Two commenters
stated that other mitigation strategies
may be appropriate, depending on the
circumstances.
We did not intend that IPRMM would
be used for all imported plants for
planting. Such measures, properly
implemented, can provide a high level
of protection against pests that are
otherwise difficult to detect or that pose
a high risk. However, an IPRMM
approach is not necessary for all types
of imported plants for planting. For
plants for planting covered by the
inspection and certification program
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that had been found in § 319.37–5(a), for
example, a simple inspection is
sufficient to assure freedom from
quarantine pests.
Our goal is to establish the least
restrictive measures for the importation
of plants for planting that will prevent
the introduction of quarantine pests into
the United States. The IPRMM
framework described in proposed
§ 319.37–21 is a means to achieve that
goal, but it will not be the only means
we use.
In response to these comments, we
have changed the introductory text of
proposed § 319.37–21 to indicate that
IPRMM will be developed when such
measures are necessary to mitigate risk.
We stated in the proposed rule that
our IPRMM framework was based on
RSPM No. 24 and was consistent with
the IPPC’s ISPM No. 36, both of which
address plants for planting.
One commenter supported basing our
proposed measures on RSPM No. 24.
Other commenters stated that they
should be based on ISPM No. 36. Those
commenters stated that using the
international standard would make it
easier for growers and exporters to
adopt and meet a single standard that is
applied globally. They also favored the
approach of ISPM No. 36, which
incorporates some general baseline
measures for growing plants for planting
and offers the ability to develop pestspecific measures should they prove
necessary. One of these commenters
stated that the RSPM is far more specific
in its requirements than the ISPM, and
that the specificity is not appropriate
and will not encourage participation.
The minimal components that are part
of the general standards in the ISPM,
this commenter stated, would encourage
producers to adopt the measures; the
RSPM has the potential to be complex
and burdensome on growers.
We believe that some of these
comments may have arisen from
confusion about the applicability of
IPRMM. We would only require plants
for planting to be imported under these
measures if the risk warrants it; these
will not be general requirements for
exporting plants for planting to the
United States.
In that sense, our regulatory approach
is similar to that of ISPM No. 36. As
revised by this final rule, the regulations
will contain general standards for the
importation of plants for planting, and
restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting will
be found in the Plants for Planting
Manual. The framework in § 319.37–21
is simply one way we plan to address
the risks associated with specific types
of imported plants for planting.
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One commenter noted that the
NAPPO Plants for Planting Panel that
authored RSPM No. 24 subsequently
compared the NAPPO and IPPC
standards and recommended the
following: ‘‘In light of the many
similarities with ISPM 36, maintaining
RSPM 24 may well cause confusion for
NAPPO countries trying to implement
both standards and [we recommend]
that RSPM 24 not be maintained.’’
The quote provided by the commenter
is correct. However, the comparison
document was not the final word from
NAPPO but was intended to be the
subject of further discussion. In fact,
NAPPO made the decision to maintain
RSPM No. 24, incorporating references
to ISPM No. 36.3 The RSPM was most
recently revised in August 2013. As the
document noted, the two standards are
very similar, but the NAPPO Plants for
Planting Panel concluded that the
differences were significant enough to
maintain two separate standards.
One commenter stated that we should
pilot ISPM No. 36 with high-volume
plants for planting trading partners as
the first step in reducing the largely
unmitigated risks of such trade.
As stated earlier, we only intend to
require IPRMM in response to an
identified pest risk. However, we
believe the general practices in ISPM
No. 36 are baseline practices for anyone
who wishes to maintain a successful
plants for planting production facility.
One commenter stated that we should
indicate in the regulations that we will
rely on the Annex to ISPM No. 36 when
evaluating pest risk and on section
2.2.1.2 and Appendix 1 to the standard
in developing mitigation measures.
We do not believe specific references
in the regulations to these sections of
ISPM No. 36 are necessary. As a
signatory to the IPPC, we are committed
to taking actions that are consistent with
any relevant ISPMs. In addition, the
specific sections of the ISPM may
change or be removed, meaning we
would have to change our regulations to
reflect that. One goal of this rulemaking
is to reduce the number of changes we
have to make to keep the regulations
current so including references to
specific sections of the ISPM would be
counterproductive.
One commenter noted two differences
between ISPM No. 36 and RSPM No. 24:
• ISPM No. 36 does not exclude
plants as pests, while RSPM No. 24
does.
• ISPM No. 36 excludes seeds from
consideration, while RSPM No. 24 does
not.
3 See https://www.nappo.org/files/3414/3895/
8942/RSPM24-Revision-01-08-13-e.pdf for a
discussion.
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The commenter expressed openness
to including plants as pests in IPRMM,
and felt that seeds should be excluded.
The aim of IPRMM is to prevent the
introduction of quarantine pests via the
importation of plants for planting. A
plant that was itself a quarantine pest
could not have measures applied to it to
prevent it from being a quarantine pest,
meaning that it is appropriate to exclude
pest plants from IPRMM. However, if
we identify a seed-borne pathogen as a
pest, we may need to develop IPRMM
to ensure that the pathogen is not
present in imported seed. Therefore, we
are making no changes in response to
these comments.
One commenter encouraged us to
implement IPRMM so that any enterable
type of plants for planting grown under
those measures will also be allowed
entry into the United States in approved
growing media. The commenter pointed
out that it is currently our policy to
conduct pest risk assessments each time
a country requests authorization to
import a taxon of plants for planting in
approved growing media into the
United States, even if the same taxon is
already authorized importation into the
United States, if it is bare-rooted. The
commenter stated that, after the final
rule has been published, a pest risk
assessment for every new plant and
growing media combination should not
be a mandatory requirement anymore,
and that instead an approved IPRMM
system will allow a currently enterable
plant to be imported in growing media.
As plants in growing media pose
different risks than plants not in
growing media, we will continue to
consider the risk they pose separately.
We would need to identify the pests that
could be introduced in growing media
and develop separate mitigations for
them, as we do now. However, we are
open to the possibility of IPRMM for
plants in growing media that could
address all types of quarantine pests
that could be associated with a type of
plants for planting.
One commenter asked us to establish
clear criteria for the approval of IPRMM
so that the NPPO of an exporting
country, along with the NPPO’s
stakeholders, can evaluate whether a
proposed use of IPRMM will be feasible.
The commenter noted that the proposed
rule did not specify a timeframe for the
approval process for IPRMM.
We will develop IPRMM in
consultation with foreign NPPOs that
desire to export plants for planting to
the United States. We do not want to
put in place requirements that an
exporting country cannot meet; where
difficulties arise, we will work with
exporting countries to find equivalent
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mitigations. The framework for IPRMM
is open to the use of any means to
effectively mitigate the pest risk, as it
allows places of production and NPPOs
to come up with pest management plans
for their facilities.
As with our other programs for
importation of plants and plant
products, the time necessary to develop
and approve a set of IPRMM will vary
with the number of pests that must be
mitigated and the complexity of the
mitigations that are necessary.
One commenter stated that the
current regulations for importation of
plants in growing media in § 319.37–8
require that APHIS and the NPPO of the
exporting country establish a written
agreement for enforcement of the
regulations, which is reflected through a
bilateral workplan. The commenter
asked whether the workplans would be
replaced by IPRMM or would continue
to exist in parallel with such measures.
We are not making any changes to our
existing use of workplans to help
implement the plants for planting
regulations. When we develop IPRMM,
it is likely that a workplan will be
necessary to implement them.
Paragraph (a) of proposed § 319.37–21
describes the responsibilities of the
place of production. It refers to
documentation required under proposed
paragraph (a)(5), which required
documentation of program procedures
being maintained by the place of
production and available to the NPPO of
the exporting country and APHIS upon
request.
One commenter suggested that this
reference should be to proposed
paragraph (a)(6), which requires
recordkeeping, rather than (a)(5).
We believe the documentation of
program procedures maintained by
places of production should be available
to the NPPO of the exporting country
and APHIS, but so should records
required under paragraph (a)(6), as the
commenter suggests. In this final rule,
the reference includes both paragraphs.
Paragraph (a)(4) of proposed § 319.37–
21 set out requirements for approved
places of production to maintain
traceability. We proposed that the
system would at a minimum have to
account for:
• The origin and pest status of mother
stock;
• The year of propagation and the
place of production of all plant parts
that make up the plants for planting
intended for export;
• Geographic location of the place of
production;
• Location of plants for planting
within the place of production;
• The plant taxon; and
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• The purchaser’s identity.
One commenter stated that the
requirements for traceability in RSPM
No. 24 are far too prescriptive, often
beyond the capacity of a grower. The
commenter stated that it is impossible,
for many faster-growing crops, to keep
records on the location of plants for
planting within the place of production.
Within greenhouse production, the
commenter stated that the limitations of
space, timing of turns, and modern
production practices would make it
nearly impossible and certainly too
costly to accomplish this level of
traceability. The commenter added that
in nursery production there are often
multiple growing operations involved
with producing a marketable crop,
typically many iterations away from
mother stock. In the commenter’s
opinion, the reality of pest and pathogen
dispersal make it overwhelmingly
unlikely that information connecting a
plant to mother stock would be of any
value and would be costly far beyond its
utility. The commenter stated that the
same general concern about being overly
specific applies to many of the
prescriptive elements in this section.
We disagree with the commenter that
these requirements are unrealistic.
Knowing where in the production
facility plants are located, for example,
is not only necessary to maintain
phytosanitary security but also to fulfill
orders. Records of the mother stock used
to produce plants allows for tracking
which stock is most successful, as well
as providing traceability in the event of
a pest outbreak. A well-maintained
place of production will keep these
records as a means to ensure that its
plants grow well so that orders can be
fulfilled safely and efficiently.
ISPM No. 36 supports our judgment.
The standard indicates in section 2.1.1
that the following conditions (among
others) should be included in the
approval process for producers seeking
to use the general integrated measures:
• Maintaining an updated plan of the
place of production as well as keeping
records of when, where and how plants
for planting were produced, treated,
stored or prepared for movement from
the place of production (including
information on all plant species at the
place of production and the type of
plant material such as cuttings, in vitro
cultures, bare root plants).
• Keeping records for a period
determined by the NPPO of the
exporting country that verify where and
how plants for planting were purchased,
stored, produced, distributed and any
other relevant information on their plant
health status.
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These are substantively identical to
the traceability requirements in
proposed paragraph (a)(4).
However, we have reviewed the
proposed traceability requirements and
determined that they may not all need
to be in place for every set of IPRMM.
Different pests will require different
levels and types of traceability.
Therefore, this final rule indicates that,
depending on the nature of the
quarantine pest, the system may need to
include those traceability elements. This
change will ensure that our traceability
requirements in IPRMM are not
unnecessarily restrictive.
Paragraph (c)(1) of proposed § 319.37–
21 required the NPPO of the exporting
country to provide APHIS with
information about, among other things,
the pests associated with the plant,
including prevalence, distribution, and
damage potential. One commenter asked
how the exporting country can assess
the potential damage that might occur in
the United States.
If the exporting country has
information about the damage a plant
pest causes in that country, we can use
it to inform our assessment of the
potential damage the pest can cause in
the United States. Requesting such
information is consistent with the
requirements for requests to change the
general requirements for importing a
plant or plant product into the United
States in § 319.5.
Paragraph (d) of proposed § 319.37–21
addressed the responsibilities of plant
brokers trading in plants for planting for
export that are produced in accordance
with IPRMM. We proposed to require
plant brokers to be approved by the
NPPO of the exporting country or its
designee. Under the proposed rule,
plant brokers would have to ensure the
traceability of consignments from an
approved place of production or
production site and maintain the
phytosanitary status of the plants in a
manner equivalent to an approved place
of production from purchase, storage,
and transportation to the export
destination. Brokers would also have to
document their processes for verifying
status and maintaining traceability.
We received several comments on
these provisions. One commenter
opposed the proposed requirements for
plant brokers, stating that they were
overly restrictive and should be
rewritten in consultation with industry.
The commenter specifically opposed the
requirements that brokers maintain the
phytosanitary status and traceability of
their plants, stating that brokers are
likely commingling material from
several places of production. The
commenter supported the approach of
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ISPM No. 36, which limits integrated
measures to the place of production.
Five commenters supported the
proposed provisions. One stated that
brokers play an extremely important
role in ensuring the integrity of the
proposed measures and that
consignments of plants that have been
produced under different IPRMM or
outside any such measures cannot be
allowed to be mixed because such
mixing would undermine the system.
Another stated that, in the commenter’s
experience, sales demands or lack of
inventory lead to substitutions by
brokers, especially if untrained
employees are responsible for fulfilling
orders, and supported the requirements
as an effort to ensure that careful
consideration is given to the role and
responsibilities of brokers in the
importation process.
We are retaining the proposed
provisions for plant brokers in this final
rule. We agree with the latter
commenters that the step of the export
chain after the plants leave the place of
production and before they are exported
is crucial to ensuring the success of
IPRMM. For example, if a plant was
produced in accordance with measures
designed to exclude an insect pest, it
would need to be secured to prevent
infestation after it left the production
site. In particular, commingling the
plants for planting with plants for
planting not produced in accordance
with IPRMM could result in infested
plants being exported to the United
States. Brokers have a responsibility to
maintain such security.
One commenter stated that we should
prohibit plant brokers from
commingling plants from various
sources.
The requirement that plant brokers
maintain the phytosanitary status of
their plants will prevent plant brokers
from commingling plants for planting
produced in accordance with IPRMM
and plants not produced in accordance
with such measures. However, there is
no phytosanitary risk-based reason to
prohibit plant brokers from
commingling plants for planting
produced in accordance with IPRMM
from different places of production. The
places of production with commingled
plants assume a risk that, if a pest is
detected at the port of entry, and,
depending on the biology of the pest, it
is necessary to destroy, treat, or reexport the shipment, all the plants in
the shipment would be affected.
One commenter asked whether plant
brokers are considered plant exporters.
Another asked whether brokers who
take possession of plants for planting at
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U.S. ports would be covered by
proposed paragraph (d).
We do not know the distinction the
first commenter intends between the
terms ‘‘plant broker’’ and ‘‘plant
exporter.’’ In response to the second
comment, brokers who take possession
of plants for planting at U.S. ports
would not be covered by the IPRMM.
However, these two comments indicate
to us that we need to define the term
‘‘plant broker’’ more clearly. RSPM No.
24 includes a definition that reads as
follows: ‘‘An entity that purchases or
takes possession of plants for planting
from an approved place of production
for the purpose of exporting those plants
without further growing beyond
maintaining the plants until export.’’ In
this final rule, we are adding this
definition of plant broker to § 319.37–2
to provide further clarity.
One commenter asked about the
rationale for requiring plant brokers to
be officially approved, noting that such
a requirement does not exist currently
when exporting plants for planting to
the United States. The commenter stated
that such a requirement could be a
barrier to trade, preventing brokers from
taking advantage of export
opportunities. The commenter
recommended that certification of
traceability be left to the NPPO of the
exporting country.
As discussed earlier, we will only use
IPRMM when the pest risk warrants
doing so. Pests for which such measures
will be developed will likely be highrisk, difficult or impossible to detect
through visual inspection, or both. In
such cases, we believe plant brokers
must be approved by the NPPO of the
exporting country. This will ensure
additional accountability in the context
of the IPRMM. As noted later in the
framework, a plant broker could be
suspended from participating in an
IPRMM program if he or she was found
to have failed to meet the program
requirements. In order to be suspended,
the plant broker must first be approved.
It is important to note again that
approval of plant brokers by the NPPO
of the exporting country will not be a
general requirement for the importation
of all plants for planting, just those
whose importation will be subject to
IPRMM. Plant brokers who, for
whatever reason, cannot or do not want
to get approval from their NPPO to act
as plant brokers in IPRMM programs
will be able to participate in the export
of other plants. To make this clear, this
final rule modifies proposed paragraph
(d) to indicate that the requirements for
plant brokers only apply when they
trade in plants for planting produced in
accordance with IPRMM.
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One commenter asked how traceback
would affect plant brokers and approved
production sites or places of production
if a pest was detected at the port of entry
in a consignment of plants for planting
produced in accordance with IPRMM.
The commenter asked how traceback
would function to decide at which point
the system failed, and whether the place
of production or the broker would be
held responsible. The commenter also
asked what remedies would be applied
if the broker was not approved.
Under our current regulations and in
accordance with international
standards, when a pest is detected at the
port of entry in exported plants for
planting, the NPPO of the exporting
country conducts traceback to
determine where phytosanitary security
may have been compromised. This
would continue to be the case for any
plants for planting produced in
accordance with IPRMM. Responsibility
would be determined based on the
investigation. Any place of production
or plant broker not meeting the
conditions of the IPRMM would be
suspended. If a broker is not approved
to participate in the IPRMM program,
APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting
country would work together to
determine whether tighter controls
should be applied.
As noted earlier, the proposed plant
broker requirements included a
requirement that the brokers maintain
the phytosanitary status of the plants in
a manner equivalent to an approved
place of production from purchase,
storage, and transportation to the export
destination. We also proposed to require
plant brokers to document their process
for verifying status.
One commenter asked how a broker
would write up a ‘‘place of production’’
manual and audit it.
We believe the wording of the
proposed requirement may have created
some confusion. We do not intend for
plant brokers to maintain the
phytosanitary status of plants exactly as
a place of production would, but rather
to ensure that the plants remain free of
the pests of concern after they leave the
place of production. For example, if the
pest of concern is an insect pest, the
place of production may be required to
have double-entry doors, trapping and
monitoring, or other such mitigations.
The plant broker may be able to secure
the plants simply by keeping them in a
sealed container or making sure they are
covered with insect-proof mesh at all
times. To make this clear, we are
removing the words ‘‘in a manner’’ from
the proposed text, so that the broker is
required to maintain the phytosanitary
status of the plants after they leave the
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11853
place of production but not necessarily
to use the same methods as the place of
production to do so.
Paragraph (e) of proposed § 319.37–21
set out requirements for external audits
of IPRMM. Paragraph (e)(1) set out
provisions for APHIS audits.
One commenter stated that it is
considered the responsibility of the
NPPO of the exporting country to verify
compliance, not the importing country,
under the IPPC. The commenter also
objected to the idea that APHIS would
audit the performance of the NPPO of
the exporting country.
We agree with the commenter. The
proposed requirements indicated that
APHIS or its designee will periodically
audit the system to ensure that it
continues to meet the stated objectives,
but the performance of the NPPO will
not be audited. In the proposed rule, we
indicated that post-approval audits will
include inspection of imported plants
for planting, site visits, and review of
the IPRMM and internal audit processes
of both the place of production and the
NPPO of the exporting country. We are
indicating in this final rule that such
audits may include those things, as we
so require, to allow for more leeway to
choose the appropriate level of auditing.
Paragraph (f) of proposed § 319.37–21
set out a framework for determining
actions in case of noncompliance. It
stated that regulatory responses to
program failures will be based on
existing bilateral agreements and that
APHIS will specify the consequences of
noncompliance to the NPPO of the
exporting country.
One commenter stated that we should
incorporate the strongest penalties listed
in ISPM No. 36, RSPM No. 24, and the
proposal, wherever they may happen to
be found, into the final regulations.
We understand the commenter’s
concerns about the potential
consequences of noncompliance.
However, as different IPRMM will
necessarily have different points of
concern and potential noncompliance,
we believe it will be simpler and more
flexible to determine the actions we take
in case of noncompliance within the
individual IPRMM.
Postentry Quarantine
We proposed to set out requirements
for postentry quarantine in § 319.37–23.
Under current § 319.37–7, certain taxa
of plants for planting are required to be
grown in postentry quarantine in order
to determine whether they are infested
with quarantine pests, typically
pathogens. Section 319.37–7 also
provides a framework of requirements
under which postentry quarantine must
be conducted and completed. We
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proposed to move the lists of taxa that
must be grown in postentry quarantine
that are currently found in paragraphs
(a) and (b) of § 319.37–7 to the Plants for
Planting Manual and update them with
the streamlined process.
One commenter expressed concerns
about the use of postentry quarantine.
The commenter stated that the system
has proved inadequate to prevent pests
from escaping, as in the escape of citrus
longhorned beetle (Anoplophora
chinensis) at a nursery in Tukwila, WA.
The commenter hoped that APHIS will
shift from using postentry quarantine as
a mitigation to the use of IPRMM.
We do intend to emphasize the use of
IPRMM to address pest risks rather than
postentry quarantine in the future. The
restructuring of the plants for planting
regulations will make it easier to do so.
We proposed to set out requirements
for State postentry quarantine
agreements in paragraph (b) of proposed
§ 319.37–23. Such requirements were
previously found in paragraph (c) of
§ 319.37–7. We stated that there is no
need to retain the level of detail
regarding such agreements that is found
in current paragraph (c), which sets out
extensive requirements that States must
meet in order to be sites for postentry
quarantine; for example, the paragraph
includes detailed requirements for State
laws and regulations, duties of State
inspectors, services APHIS agrees to
provide, and provisions for termination
of a State postentry quarantine
agreement.
One commenter expressed concern
about removing this detail, believing
that the agreements could be subject to
political pressure and other
nonscientific factors during negotiation
that could result in heightened pest risk.
We do not anticipate that anything
will change as a result of removing the
details, and, as the commenter noted,
removing those details will allow us to
tailor the agreements to specific
circumstances.
Miscellaneous Changes
Proposed paragraph (c) of § 319.37–1
indicated that the importation of plants
that are imported for processing, as
determined by an inspector based on
documentation accompanying the
articles, is not subject to the plants for
planting regulations. However, the
importation of such plants may be
subject to other regulations, and the
proposed text could have given the
impression that there were no further
requirements for the importation of such
plants. Therefore, in this final rule, we
have changed the proposed paragraph to
indicate that the importation of such
plants is not subject to the plants for
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planting regulations but may be subject
to regulations elsewhere in 7 CFR part
319, which contains the import
quarantine notices.
Additionally, plants that are imported
for consumption, as determined by an
inspector based on documentation
accompanying the articles, are similarly
not subject to the plants for planting
regulations. We have changed proposed
paragraph (c) to reflect this as well.
In the same section, proposed
paragraph (f) had indicated that
common names of plants for planting
may be given in parentheses after most
scientific names, when common names
are known. This was intended to refer
to the Plants for Planting Manual, rather
than the regulations themselves, since
we were proposing to move taxaspecific restrictions and prohibitions to
the manual. In this final rule, we clarify
that paragraph (f) of § 319.37–1 pertains
to the Plants for Planting Manual.
In the definitions section of this final
rule, § 319.37–2, we are adding a
definition of Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) for clarity.
Adding this definition allows us to
simplify the wording of the definition of
Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs and reflects the use of the
acronym ‘‘APHIS’’ throughout the
subpart. Additionally, since the
proposed rule was issued, we revised
the definition of phytosanitary
certificate within the plants for planting
regulations. We are retaining this
revised definition, with minor edits to
reflect the structure of the revised
subpart.
Finally, the revisions to the subpart
make it necessary for us to update
references and citations that appear
elsewhere in our regulations in title 7.
We are making these nonsubstantive
updates in 7 CFR parts 318, 319, 330,
340, 360, and 361.
Therefore, for the reasons given in the
proposed rule and in this document, we
are adopting the proposed rule as a final
rule, with the changes discussed in this
document.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13771 and
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 and,
therefore, has not been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget. This
rule is not expected to be an E.O. 13771
regulatory action because it is not
significant under E.O. 12866. Further,
APHIS considers this rule to be a
deregulatory action under E.O. 13771 as
it will facilitate access to information on
import restrictions for specific types of
plants for planting and create a more
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efficient process for amending import
requirements.
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 604, we
have performed a final regulatory
flexibility analysis, which is
summarized below, regarding the
economic effects of this rule on small
entities. Copies of the full analysis are
available on the Regulations.gov website
(see footnote 1 in this document for a
link to Regulations.gov) or by contacting
the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
This analysis examines the potential
economic impacts on small entities of a
final rule to restructure the regulations
contained in 7 CFR part 319 that govern
the importation of plants for planting.
This action will provide for more
efficient application of these
regulations, while not making any major
changes to current import restrictions.
Besides improving the clarity of these
regulations, the rule will:
• Consolidate the requirements for
importation of plants for planting into
one subpart in 7 CFR part 319;
• Add most of the plants for planting
that are listed as prohibited to the list
of those whose importation is NAPPRA;
• Characterize the other prohibitions
as restrictions, and add them to the
Plants for Planting manual;
• Remove several lists of approved
items (for example, approved growing
media, packing materials, and ports of
entry) from the regulations and instead
provide these lists to the public in the
Plants for Planting Manual;
• Move restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting from the regulations to the
Plants for Planting Manual;
• Establish a framework for the use of
IPRMM where appropriate in the
production of specific types of plants for
planting for importation into the United
States;
• Clarify postentry quarantine
requirements; and
• Establish a process for making
changes to import restrictions on
specific types of plants for planting after
taking public comment on notices
published in the Federal Register,
rather than by publishing proposed and
final rules.
The changes will facilitate access to
information on import restrictions for
specific types of plants for planting, and
create a more efficient process for
amending import requirements.
Importers of plants for planting can
expect changes in import restrictions to
be accomplished more than 4 months
sooner than they would be through
rulemaking. While nearly all importers
of plants for planting that are directly
affected by the rule are small, any
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Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701–7772 and 7781–
7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
associated costs will be modest,
including instances in which
phytosanitary certification are newly
required.
2. Section 318.60 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as
follows:
■
Executive Order 12988
This final rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. This rule: (1) Preempts
all State and local laws and regulations
that are inconsistent with this rule; (2)
has no retroactive effect; and (3) does
not require administrative proceedings
before parties may file suit in court
challenging this rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains no new
reporting, recordkeeping, or third party
disclosure requirements under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 318
Cotton, Cottonseeds, Fruits, Guam,
Plant diseases and pests, Puerto Rico,
Quarantine, Transportation, Vegetables,
Virgin Islands.
7 CFR Part 319
Coffee, Cotton, Fruits, Imports, Logs,
Plant diseases and pests, Plants for
planting, Quarantine, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rice,
Vegetables.
7 CFR Part 330
Customs duties and inspection, Plant
diseases and pests, Quarantine,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Transportation.
7 CFR Part 340
Administrative practice and
procedure, Biotechnology, Genetic
engineering, Imports, Packaging and
containers, Plant diseases and pests,
Transportation.
7 CFR Part 360
Plants, Quarantine, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements,
Transportation.
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7 CFR Part 361
Agricultural commodities, Imports,
Labeling, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Seeds.
Accordingly, we are amending 7 CFR
parts 318, 319, 330, 340, 360, and 361
as follows:
PART 318—STATE OF HAWAII AND
TERRITORIES QUARANTINE NOTICES
1. The authority citation for part 318
continues to read as follows.
■
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§ 318.60
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Sand (other than clean ocean
sand), soil, or earth around the roots of
plants shall not be shipped, offered for
shipment to a common carrier, received
for transportation or transported by a
common carrier, or carried, transported,
moved, or allowed to be moved by any
person from Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the
Virgin Islands of the United States into
or through any other State, Territory, or
District of the United States: Provided,
That the prohibitions of this section
shall not apply to the movement of such
products in either direction between
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands of the
United States: Provided further, That
such prohibitions shall not prohibit the
movement of such products by the
United States Department of Agriculture
for scientific or experimental purposes,
nor prohibit the movement of sand, soil,
or earth around the roots of plants
which are carried, for ornamental
purposes, on vessels into mainland
ports of the United States and which are
not intended to be landed thereat, when
evidence is presented satisfactory to the
inspector of the Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs of the Department
of Agriculture that such sand, soil, or
earth has been so processed or is of such
nature that no pest risk is involved, or
that the plants with sand, soil, or earth
around them are maintained on board
under such safeguards as will preclude
pest escape: And provided further, That
such prohibitions shall not prohibit the
movement of plant cuttings or plants
that have been—
(1) Freed from sand, soil, and earth;
(2) Subsequently potted and
established in sphagnum moss or other
packing material approved under
§ 319.37–11 of this chapter that had
been stored under shelter and had not
been previously used for growing or
packing plants;
(3) Grown thereafter in a manner
satisfactory to an inspector of the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs to
prevent infestation through contact with
sand, soil, or earth; and
(4) Certified by an inspector of the
Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs as meeting the requirements of
paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
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11855
PART 319—FOREIGN QUARANTINE
NOTICES
3. The authority citation for part 319
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450, 7701–7772, and
7781–7786; 21 U.S.C. 136 and 136a; 7 CFR
2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
§ 319.6
[Amended]
4. In § 319.6, paragraph (d)(4) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–9’’ and adding the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–11’’ in its place.
■ 5. Section 319.8 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By designating the current text of
the section as paragraph (a); and
■ b. By adding paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 319.8
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The importation of cotton plants
(including any plant parts) that are for
planting or capable of being planted is
restricted in Subpart—Plants for
Planting of this part.
§ 319.8–1
[Amended]
6. In § 319.8–1, the definition of
cottonseed is amended by adding the
words ‘‘and that is intended for
processing or consumption’’ before the
period.
■ 7. Section 319.15 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By redesignating paragraph (b) as
paragraph (c); and
■ b. By adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 319.15
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The importation of sugarcane
plants (including any plant parts) that
are for planting or capable of being
planted is restricted under Subpart—
Plants for Planting of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart—Citrus Canker and Other
Citrus Diseases [Removed]
8. Subpart—Citrus Canker and Other
Citrus Diseases, consisting of § 319.19,
is removed.
■ 9. Section 319.24 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By redesignating paragraphs (b)
through (d) as paragraphs (c) through
(e), respectively; and
■ b. By adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 319.24
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The importation of corn plants
(including any plant parts) that are for
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planting or capable of being planted is
restricted in Subpart—Plants for
Planting of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Subpart—Citrus Fruit, is amended
by revising the first paragraph of the
Note below the subpart heading that
precedes § 319.28 to read as follows:
Subpart—Citrus Fruit
Note 1 to Subpart—Citrus Fruit:
Citrus plants for planting may be
imported in accordance with Subpart—
Plants for Planting of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Section 319.28 is amended as
follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a)(4), by removing the
words ‘‘§§ 319.37 through 319.37–27’’
and adding the words ‘‘§§ 319.37–1
through 319.37–23’’ in their place;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(8) introductory
text, by removing the words ‘‘port of
entry identified in § 319.37–14’’ and
adding the words ‘‘Customs designated
port of entry indicated in 19 CFR
101.3(b)(1)’’ in their place; and
■ c. By revising the OMB citation at the
end of the section.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 319.28
*
*
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0173
and 0579–0314)
12. Subpart—Plants for Planting,
consisting currently of §§ 319.37
through 319.37–14, is revised to read as
follows:
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■
Subpart—Plants for Planting
Sec.
319.37–1 Notice of quarantine.
319.37–2 Definitions.
319.37–3 General restrictions on the
importation of plants for planting.
319.37–4 Taxa of plants for planting whose
importation is not authorized pending
pest risk analysis.
319.37–5 Permits.
319.37–6 Phytosanitary certificates.
319.37–7 Marking and identity.
319.37–8 Ports of entry: Approved ports,
notification of arrival, inspection, and
refusal of entry.
319.37–9 Treatment of plants for planting;
costs and charges for inspection and
treatment; treatments applied outside the
United States.
319.37–10 Growing media.
319.37–11 Packing and approved packing
material.
319.37–12 through 319.37–19 [Reserved]
319.37–20 Restrictions on the importation
of specific types of plants for planting.
319.37–21 Integrated pest risk management
measures.
319.37–22 Trust fund agreements.
319.37–23 Postentry quarantine.
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§ 319.37–2
Subpart—Plants for Planting
§ 319.37–1
Notice of quarantine.
(a) Under section 412(a) of the Plant
Protection Act, the Secretary of
Agriculture may prohibit or restrict the
importation and entry of any plant or
plant product if the Secretary
determines that the prohibition or
restriction is necessary to prevent the
introduction into the United States or
the dissemination within the United
States of a plant pest or noxious weed.
(b) The Secretary has determined that
it is necessary to designate the
importation of certain taxa of plants for
planting as not authorized pending pest
risk analysis, as provided in § 319.37–4.
The Secretary has determined that it is
necessary to restrict the importation into
the United States of all other plants for
planting and to impose additional
restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting, in
accordance with this subpart and as
described in the Plants for Planting
Manual.
(c) The importation of plants that are
imported for processing or
consumption, as determined by an
inspector based on documentation
accompanying the articles, is not subject
to this subpart but may be subject to
restrictions elsewhere in this part.
(d) The importation of taxa of plants
for planting that are listed in parts 360
and 361 of this chapter is subject to the
restrictions in those parts.
(e) The Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs also enforces
regulations promulgated under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16
U.S.C. 1531–1544) which contain
additional prohibitions and restrictions
on importation into the United States of
plants for planting subject to this
subpart (see 50 CFR parts 17 and 23).
(f) Within the Plants for Planting
Manual, one or more common names of
plants for planting may be given in
parentheses after most scientific names
(when common names are known) for
the purpose of helping to identify the
plants for planting represented by such
scientific names; however, unless
otherwise specified, a reference to a
scientific name includes all plants for
planting within the taxon represented
by the scientific name regardless of
whether the common name or names are
as comprehensive in scope as the
scientific name. When restrictions apply
to the importation of a taxon of plants
for planting for which there are
taxonomic synonyms, those restrictions
apply to the importation of all the
synonyms of that taxon as well.
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Definitions.
The following definitions apply to
this subpart:
Administrator. The Administrator of
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, United States Department of
Agriculture, or any other employee of
the United States Department of
Agriculture authorized to act in his or
her stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS). The Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service, United States
Department of Agriculture.
Bulb. The portion of a plant
commonly known as a bulb, bulbil,
bulblet, corm, cormel, rhizome, tuber, or
pip, and including fleshy roots or other
underground fleshy growths, a unit of
which produces an individual plant.
Consignment. A quantity of plants for
planting being moved from one country
to another and covered, when required,
by a single phytosanitary certificate (a
consignment may be composed of one
or more lots or taxa).
Controlled import permit. A written
or electronically transmitted
authorization issued by APHIS for the
importation into the United States of
otherwise prohibited or restricted plant
material for experimental, therapeutic,
or developmental purposes, under
controlled conditions as prescribed by
the Administrator in accordance with
§ 319.6.
Earth. The softer matter composing
part of the surface of the globe, in
distinction from the firm rock, and
including the soil and subsoil, as well
as finely divided rock and other soil
formation materials down to the rock
layer.
From. Plants for planting are
considered to be ‘‘from’’ any country or
locality in which they are grown.
Provided, That plants for planting
imported into Canada from another
country or locality shall be considered
as being solely from Canada if they meet
the following conditions:
(1) They are imported into the United
States directly from Canada after having
been grown for at least 1 year in Canada;
(2) They have never been grown in a
country from which their importation
would not be authorized pending pest
risk analysis under § 319.37–4;
(3) They have never been grown in a
country, other than Canada, from which
it would be subject to certain
restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting
under § 319.37–20, which are listed in
the Plants for Planting Manual;
Provided, that plants for planting that
would be subject to postentry
quarantine if imported into the United
States may be imported from Canada
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after growth in another country if they
were grown in Canada in postentry
quarantine under conditions equivalent
to those specified in the Plants for
Planting Manual; and
(4) They were not imported into
Canada in growing media.
Inspector. Any individual authorized
by the Administrator or the
Commissioner of Customs and Border
Protection, Department of Homeland
Security, to enforce the regulations in
this part.
Lot. A number of units of a single
commodity, identifiable by its
homogeneity of composition and origin,
forming all or part of a consignment.
Mother stock. A group of plants from
which plant parts are taken to produce
new plants.
National plant protection
organization (NPPO). The official
service established by a government to
discharge the functions specified by the
International Plant Protection
Convention.
Noxious weed. Any plant or plant
product that can directly or indirectly
injure or cause damage to crops
(including plants for planting or plant
products), livestock, poultry, or other
interests of agriculture, irrigation,
navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the
environment.
Official control. The active
enforcement of mandatory
phytosanitary regulations and the
application of mandatory phytosanitary
procedures with the objective of
eradication or containment of
quarantine pests.
Person. Any individual, partnership,
corporation, association, joint venture,
or other legal entity.
Phytosanitary certificate. A
document, including electronic
versions, that is related to a restricted
article and is issued not more than 15
days prior to shipment of the restricted
article from the country in which it was
grown and that:
(1) Is patterned after the model
certificate of the International Plant
Protection Convention, a multilateral
convention on plant protection under
the authority of the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO);
(2) Is issued by an official of a foreign
national plant protection organization in
one of the five official languages of the
FAO;
(3) Is addressed to the national plant
protection organization of the United
States (Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service);
(4) Describes the shipment;
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(5) Certifies the place of origin for all
contents of the shipment;
(6) Certifies that the shipment has
been inspected and/or tested according
to appropriate official procedures and is
considered free from quarantine pests of
the United States;
(7) Contains any additional
declarations required in the Plants for
Planting Manual; and
(8) Certifies that the shipment
conforms with the phytosanitary
requirements of the United States and is
considered eligible for importation
pursuant to the laws and regulations of
the United States.
Place of production. Any premises or
collection of fields operated as a single
production or farming unit. This may
include production sites that are
separately managed for phytosanitary
purposes.
Plant. Any plant (including any plant
part) for or capable of propagation,
including a tree, a tissue culture, a
plantlet culture, pollen, a shrub, a vine,
a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb,
a root, and a seed.
Plant broker. An entity that purchases
or takes possession of plants for
planting from an approved place of
production for the purpose of exporting
those plants without further growing
beyond maintaining the plants until
export.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of
the following that can directly or
indirectly injure, cause damage to, or
cause disease in any plant or plant
product: A protozoan, a nonhuman
animal, a parasitic plant, a bacterium, a
fungus, a virus or viroid, an infectious
agent or other pathogen, or any article
similar to or allied with any of these
articles.
Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs. The organizational unit
within APHIS that is delegated
responsibility for enforcing provisions
of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C.
7701 et seq.) and related legislation,
quarantines, and regulations.
Planting. Any operation for the
placing of plants in a growing medium,
or by grafting or similar operations, to
ensure their subsequent growth,
reproduction, or propagation.
Plants for planting. Plants intended to
remain planted, to be planted, or
replanted.
Plants for Planting Manual. The
document that contains restrictions on
the importation of specific types of
plants for planting, as provided in
§ 319.37–20, and other information
about the importation of plants for
planting as provided in this subpart.
The Plants for Planting Manual is
available on the internet at https://
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www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/
plants/manuals/ports/downloads/
plants_for_planting.pdf. or by
contacting the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, Plant Protection and
Quarantine, 4700 River Road, Unit 133,
Riverdale, MD 20737–1236.
Port of first arrival. The land area
(such as a seaport, airport, or land
border station) where a person, or a
land, water, or air vehicle, first arrives
after entering the territory of the United
States, and where inspection of plants
for planting is carried out by inspectors.
Preclearance. Phytosanitary
inspection and/or clearance in the
country in which the plants for planting
were grown, performed by or under the
regular supervision of APHIS.
Production site. A defined portion of
a place of production utilized for the
production of a commodity that is
managed separately for phytosanitary
purposes. This may include the entire
place of production or portions of it.
Examples of portions of places of
production are a defined orchard, grove,
field, greenhouse, screenhouse, or
premises.
Quarantine pest. A plant pest or
noxious weed that is of potential
economic importance to the United
States and not yet present in the United
States, or present but not widely
distributed and being officially
controlled.
Regulated plant. A vascular or
nonvascular plant. Vascular plants
include gymnosperms, angiosperms,
ferns, and fern allies. Gymnosperms
include cycads, conifers, and gingko.
Angiosperms include any flowering
plant. Fern allies include club mosses,
horsetails, whisk ferns, spike mosses,
and quillworts. Nonvascular plants
include mosses, liverworts, hornworts,
and green algae.
Secretary. The Secretary of
Agriculture, or any other officer or
employee of the Department of
Agriculture to whom authority to act in
his/her stead has been or may hereafter
be delegated.
Soil. The loose surface material of the
earth in which plants, trees, and shrubs
grow, in most cases consisting of
disintegrated rock with an admixture of
organic material and soluble salts.
Species (spp.). All species, clones,
cultivars, strains, varieties, and hybrids
of a genus.
State. Any of the several States of the
United States, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin
Islands of the United States, or any
other territory or possession of the
United States.
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State Plant Regulatory Official. The
official authorized by the State to sign
agreements with Federal agencies
involving operations of the State plant
protection agency.
Taxon (taxa). Any grouping within
botanical nomenclature, such as family,
genus, species, or cultivar.
Type of plants for planting. A
grouping of plants for planting based on
shared characteristics such as biological
traits, morphology, botanical
nomenclature, or risk factors.
United States. All of the States.
§ 319.37–3 General restrictions on the
importation of plants for planting.
(a) The importation of certain taxa of
plants for planting is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis in accordance
with § 319.37–4.
(b) General restrictions that apply to
the importation of all plants for planting
other than those whose importation is
not authorized pending pest risk
analysis are found in §§ 319.37–5
through 319.37–11.
(c) In accordance with § 319.37–20,
the Administrator may impose
restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting.
These restrictions are listed in the
Plants for Planting Manual. Additional
information on restrictions applicable to
the importation of specific types of
plants for planting can be found in
§§ 319.37–20 through 319.37–23.
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§ 319.37–4 Taxa of plants for planting
whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis.
(a) Determination by the
Administrator. The importation of
certain taxa of plants for planting poses
a risk of introducing quarantine pests
into the United States. Therefore, the
importation of these taxa is not
authorized pending the completion of a
pest risk analysis, except as provided in
paragraph (f) of this section. These taxa
are listed in the Plants for Planting
Manual. There are two categories of taxa
whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis: Taxa of
plants for planting that are quarantine
pests, and taxa of plants for planting
that are hosts of quarantine pests. For
taxa of plants for planting that have
been determined to be quarantine pests,
the list includes the names of the taxa.
For taxa of plants for planting that are
hosts of quarantine pests, the list
includes the names of the taxa, the
foreign places from which the taxa’s
importation is not authorized, and the
quarantine pests of concern.
(b) Addition of taxa. A taxon of plants
for planting may be added to one of the
lists of taxa not authorized for
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importation pending pest risk analysis
under this section as follows:
(1) Data sheet. APHIS will publish in
the Federal Register a document that
announces our determination that a
taxon of plants for planting is either a
quarantine pest or a host of a quarantine
pest. This notice will make available a
data sheet that details the scientific
evidence APHIS evaluated in making
the determination that the taxon is a
quarantine pest or a host of a quarantine
pest. The data sheet will include
references to the scientific evidence that
APHIS used in making the
determination. In our notice, we will
provide for a public comment period of
a minimum of 60 days on our additions
to the list.
(2) Response to comments. (i) APHIS
will issue a notice after the close of the
public comment period indicating that
the taxon will be added to the list of
taxa not authorized for importation
pending pest risk analysis if:
(A) No comments were received on
the data sheet;
(B) The comments on the data sheet
revealed that no changes to the data
sheet were necessary; or
(C) Changes to the data sheet were
made in response to public comments,
but the changes did not affect APHIS’
determination that the taxon poses a
risk of introducing a quarantine pest
into the United States.
(ii) If comments present information
that leads us to determine that the
importation of the taxon does not pose
a risk of introducing a quarantine pest
into the United States, APHIS will not
add the taxon to the list of plants for
planting whose importation is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis.
APHIS will issue a notice giving public
notice of this determination after the
close of the comment period.
(c) Criterion for listing a taxon of
plants for planting as a quarantine pest.
A taxon will be added to the list of taxa
whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis if scientific
evidence causes APHIS to determine
that the taxon is a quarantine pest.
(d) Criteria for listing a taxon of
plants for planting as a host of a
quarantine pest. A taxon will be added
to the list of taxa whose importation is
not authorized pending pest risk
analysis if scientific evidence causes
APHIS to determine that the taxon is a
host of a quarantine pest. The following
criteria must be fulfilled in order to
make this determination:
(1) The plant pest in question must be
determined to be a quarantine pest; and
(2) The taxon of plants for planting
must be determined to be a host of that
quarantine pest.
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(e) Removing a taxon from the list of
taxa not authorized pending pest risk
analysis. (1) Requests to remove a taxon
from the list of taxa whose importation
is not authorized pending pest risk
analysis (NAPPRA) must be made in
accordance with § 319.5. APHIS will
conduct a pest risk analysis in response
to such a request. The pest risk analysis
will examine the risk associated with
the importation of that taxon as well as
measures available to mitigate that risk.
The pest risk analysis may analyze
importation of the taxon from a specific
area, country, or countries, or from all
areas of the world. The conclusions of
the pest risk analysis will apply
accordingly.
(2) If the pest risk analysis indicates
that the taxon is a quarantine pest or a
host of a quarantine pest and the
Administrator determines that there are
no measures available that adequately
mitigate the risk of introducing a
quarantine pest into the United States
through the taxon’s importation, we will
continue to list the taxon as not
authorized for importation pending pest
risk analysis. We will publish a notice
making the pest risk analysis available
for comment. If comments cause us to
change our determination, we will
publish another notice in accordance
with either paragraph (e)(3) or (4) of this
section, as appropriate. If comments do
not cause us to change our
determination, we will publish a second
notice responding to the comments and
affirming our determination that the
taxon should continue to be listed as
NAPPRA.
(3) If the pest risk analysis supports a
determination that importation of the
taxon be allowed subject to taxonspecific restrictions, APHIS will publish
a notice making the pest risk analysis
available to the public for comment in
accordance with the process in
§ 319.37–20(c).
(4) If the pest risk analysis supports a
determination that importation of the
taxon be allowed subject to the general
restrictions of this subpart, APHIS will
publish a notice announcing our intent
to remove the taxon from the list of taxa
whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis and making
the pest risk analysis supporting the
taxon’s removal available for public
comment.
(i) APHIS will issue a notice after the
close of the public comment period
indicating that the importation of the
taxon will be subject only to the general
restrictions of this subpart if:
(A) No comments were received on
the pest risk analysis;
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(B) The comments on the pest risk
analysis revealed that no changes to the
pest risk analysis were necessary; or
(C) Changes to the pest risk analysis
were made in response to public
comments, but the changes did not
affect the overall conclusions of the
analysis and the Administrator’s
determination that the importation of
the taxon does not pose a risk of
introducing a quarantine pest into the
United States.
(ii) If information presented by
commenters indicates that the pest risk
analysis needs to be revised, APHIS will
issue a notice after the close of the
public comment period indicating that
the importation of the taxon will
continue to be listed as not authorized
pending pest risk analysis while the
information presented by commenters is
analyzed and incorporated into the pest
risk analysis. APHIS will subsequently
publish a new notice announcing the
availability of the revised pest risk
analysis.
(5) APHIS may also remove a taxon
from the list of taxa whose importation
is not authorized pending pest risk
analysis when APHIS determines that
the evidence used to add the taxon to
the list was erroneous (for example,
involving a taxonomic
misidentification).
(f) Controlled import permits. Any
plants for planting whose importation is
not authorized pending pest risk
analysis in accordance with this section
may be imported or offered for entry
into the United States if:
(1) Imported for experimental,
therapeutic, or developmental purposes
under the conditions specified in a
controlled import permit issued in
accordance with § 319.6;
(2) Imported at the National Plant
Germplasm Inspection Station, Building
580, Beltsville Agricultural Research
Center East, Beltsville, MD 20705 or
through any USDA plant inspection
station listed in the Plants for Planting
Manual;
(3) Imported pursuant to a controlled
import permit issued for such plants for
planting and kept on file at the port of
entry;
(4) Imported under conditions
specified on the controlled import
permit and found by the Administrator
to be adequate to prevent the
introduction into the United States of
quarantine pests, i.e., conditions of
treatment, processing, growing,
shipment, disposal; and
(5) Imported with a controlled import
tag or label securely attached to the
outside of the container containing the
plants for planting or securely attached
to the plant itself if not in a container,
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and with such tag or label bearing a
controlled import permit number
corresponding to the number of the
controlled import permit issued for such
plants for planting.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0380)
§ 319.37–5
Permits.
(a)(1) Plants for planting may be
imported or offered for importation into
the United States only after issuance of
a written permit by the Plant Protection
and Quarantine Programs, except as
provided in the Plants for Planting
Manual. Exceptions from the
requirement for a written permit will be
added, changed, or removed in
accordance with § 319.37–20.
(2) Plants for planting whose
importation is subject to postentry
quarantine, as listed in the Plants for
Planting Manual, must also be imported
under an importer postentry quarantine
growing agreement in accordance with
§ 319.37–23(c).
(b) An application for a written permit
should be submitted to the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs
(Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, Plant Protection and
Quarantine, Permits, Permit Unit, 4700
River Road, Unit 133, Riverdale, MD
20737–1236) at least 30 days prior to
arrival of the plants for planting at the
port of entry. Application forms are
available without charge from that
address or on the internet at https://
www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/ppq_
epermits.shtml. The completed
application shall include the following
information:
(1) Name, address, and telephone
number of the importer;
(2) The taxon or taxa and the
approximate quantity of plants for
planting intended to be imported;
(3) Country(ies) or locality(ies) where
grown;
(4) Intended United States port of
entry;
(5) Means of transportation, e.g., mail,
airmail, express, air express, freight,
airfreight, or baggage; and
(6) Expected date of arrival.
(c) A permit indicating the applicable
conditions for importation under this
subpart will be issued by Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs if,
after review of the application, the
plants for planting are deemed eligible
to be imported into the United States
under the conditions specified in the
permit. However, even if such a permit
is issued, the plants for planting may be
imported only if all applicable
requirements of this subpart are met and
only if an inspector at the port of entry
determines that no remedial measures
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pursuant to the Plant Protection Act are
necessary with respect to the plants for
planting.1
(d) Any permit that has been issued
may be revoked by an inspector or
APHIS in accordance with § 319.7–4.
(e) Any plants for planting not
required to be imported with a permit
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section may be imported or offered for
importation into the United States only
after issuance of an oral authorization
for importation issued by an inspector at
the port of entry.
(f) An oral authorization for
importation of plants for planting shall
be issued at a port of entry by an
inspector only if all applicable
requirements of this subpart are met,
such plants for planting are eligible to
be imported under an oral
authorization, and an inspector at the
port of entry determines that no
measures pursuant to section 414 of the
Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714) are
necessary with respect to such plants for
planting.
(g) Persons wishing to import plants
for planting into the United States for
experimental, therapeutic, or
developmental purposes must apply for
a controlled import permit in
accordance with §§ 319.6 and 319.37–3.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0190,
0579–0285, and 0579–0319)
§ 319.37–6
Phytosanitary certificates.
(a) Phytosanitary certificates. Any
plants for planting offered for
importation into the United States must
be accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate, except as described in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
The phytosanitary certificate must
identify the genus of the plants for
planting it accompanies. When the
importation of individual species or
cultivars within a genus is restricted in
accordance with § 319.37–20, the
phytosanitary certificate must also
identify the species or cultivar of the
plants for planting it accompanies.
Otherwise, identification of the species
is strongly preferred, but not required.
Intergeneric and interspecific hybrids
must be designated by placing the
multiplication sign ‘‘×’’ between the
names of the parent taxa. If the hybrid
is named, the multiplication sign may
instead be placed before the name of an
intergeneric hybrid or before the epithet
in the name of an interspecific hybrid.
1 An inspector may hold, seize, quarantine, treat,
apply other remedial measures to, destroy, or
otherwise dispose of plants, plant pests, or other
articles in accordance with sections 414, 421, and
434 of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731,
and 7754).
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(b) Small lots of seed. Lots of seed
may be imported without a
phytosanitary certificate required by
paragraph (a) of this section under the
following conditions:
(1) The importation of the seed is
authorized by a written permit issued in
accordance with § 319.37–5.
(2) The seed is not listed as not
authorized pending pest risk analysis, as
provided in § 319.37–4; is not of any
noxious weed species listed in part 360
of this chapter; is not subject to
restrictions on specific types of plants
for planting as provided in § 319.37–20;
is not restricted under the regulations in
parts 330 and 340 of this chapter; and
meets the requirements of part 361 of
this chapter.
(3) The seed meets the following
packaging and shipping requirements:
(i) Each seed packet is clearly labeled
with the name of the collector/shipper,
the country of origin, and the scientific
name at least to the genus, and
preferably to the species, level;
(ii) There are a maximum of 50 seeds
of 1 taxon (taxonomic category such as
genus, species, cultivar, etc.) per packet;
or a maximum weight not to exceed 10
grams of seed of 1 taxon per packet;
(iii) There are a maximum of 50 seed
packets per shipment;
(iv) The seeds are free from pesticides;
(v) The seeds are securely packaged in
packets or envelopes and sealed to
prevent spillage;
(vi) The shipment is free from soil,
plant material other than seed, other
foreign matter or debris, seeds in the
fruit or seed pod, and living organisms
such as parasitic plants, pathogens,
insects, snails, mites; and
(vii) At the time of importation, the
shipment is sent to either the Plant
Germplasm Quarantine Center in
Beltsville, MD, or a USDA plant
inspection station.
(c) Importation of other plants for
planting without phytosanitary
certificates. (1) The Administrator may
authorize the importation of types of
plants for planting without a
phytosanitary certificate if the plants for
planting are accompanied by equivalent
documentation agreed upon by the
Administrator and the NPPO of the
exporting country as sufficient to
establish the eligibility of the plants for
importation into the United States. The
documentation must be provided by the
NPPO or refer to documentation
provided by the NPPO. The
documentation must be agreed upon
before the plants for planting are
exported from the exporting country to
the United States.
(2) The Administrator may impose
additional restrictions on the
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importation of plants for planting that
are not accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate to ensure that the plants are
appropriately identified and free of
quarantine pests.
(3) The Plants for Planting Manual
lists types of plants for planting that are
not required to be accompanied by a
phytosanitary certificate; the countries
from which their importation without a
phytosanitary certificate is authorized;
the approved documentation of
eligibility for importation; and any
additional conditions on their
importation.
(4) Types of plants for planting may
be added to or removed from the list of
plants for planting that are not required
to be accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate in accordance with § 319.37–
20. The requirements for importing
types of plants for planting without a
phytosanitary certificate may also be
changed by a notice issued in
accordance with § 319.37–20. The
notice published for comment will
describe the documentation agreed
upon by the Administrator and the
NPPO of the exporting country and any
additional restrictions to be imposed on
the importation of the type of plants for
planting.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0142,
0579–0190, 0579–0285, and 0579–0319)
§ 319.37–7
Marking and identity.
(a) Any consignment of plants for
planting for importation, other than by
mail at the time of importation, or offer
for importation into the United States
shall plainly and correctly bear on the
outer container (if in a container) or the
plants for planting (if not in a container)
the following information:
(1) General nature and quantity of the
contents;
(2) Country and locality where grown;
(3) Name and address of shipper,
owner, or person shipping or forwarding
the plants for planting;
(4) Name and address of consignee;
(5) Identifying shipper’s mark and
number; and
(6) Number of written permit
authorizing the importation, if one was
required under § 319.37–5.
(b) Any consignment of plants for
planting for importation by mail shall be
plainly and correctly addressed and
mailed to the Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs at a port of entry
listed in the Plants for Planting Manual
as approved to receive imported plants
for planting, shall be accompanied by a
separate sheet of paper within the
package plainly and correctly bearing
the name, address, and telephone
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number of the intended recipient, and
shall plainly and correctly bear on the
outer container the following
information:
(1) General nature and quantity of the
contents;
(2) Country and locality where grown;
(3) Name and address of shipper,
owner, or person shipping or forwarding
the plants for planting; and
(4) Number of written permit
authorizing the importation, if one was
required under § 319.37–5.
(c) Any consignment of plants for
planting for importation (by mail or
otherwise), at the time of importation or
offer for importation into the United
States shall be accompanied by an
invoice or packing list indicating the
contents of the consignment.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0190
and 0579–0319)
§ 319.37–8 Ports of entry: Approved ports,
notification of arrival, inspection, and
refusal of entry.
(a) Approved ports of entry. Any
plants for planting required to be
imported under a written permit in
accordance with § 319.37–5(a), if not
precleared, must be imported or offered
for importation only at a USDA plant
inspection station, unless the Plants for
Planting Manual indicates otherwise.
Ports of entry through which plants for
planting must pass through before
arriving at these USDA plant inspection
stations are listed in the Plants for
Planting Manual. All other plants for
planting may be imported or offered for
importation at any Customs designated
port of entry indicated in 19 CFR
101.3(b)(1). Exceptions may be listed in
§ 330.104 of this chapter. Plants for
planting that are required to be
imported under a written permit that are
also precleared in the country of export
are not required to enter at an
inspection station and may enter
through any Customs port of entry.
Exceptions may be listed in § 330.104 of
this chapter.
(b) Notification upon arrival at the
port of entry. Promptly upon arrival of
any plants for planting at a port of entry,
the importer shall notify the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs of
the arrival by such means as a manifest,
Customs entry document, commercial
invoice, waybill, a broker’s document,
or a notice form provided for that
purpose.
(c) Inspection and treatment. Any
plants for planting may be sampled and
inspected by an inspector at the port of
first arrival and/or under preclearance
inspection arrangements in the country
in which the plants for planting were
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grown, and must undergo treatment in
accordance with part 305 of this chapter
if treatment is ordered by the inspector.
Any plants for planting found upon
inspection to contain or be
contaminated with quarantine pests that
cannot be eliminated by treatment will
be denied entry at the first United States
port of arrival and must be destroyed or
shipped to a point outside the United
States.
(d) Disposition of plants for planting
not in compliance with this subpart.
The importer of any plants for planting
denied entry for noncompliance with
this subpart must, at the importer’s
expense and within the time specified
in an emergency action notification
(PPQ Form 523), destroy, ship to a point
outside the United States, treat in
accordance with part 305 of this
chapter, or apply other safeguards to the
plants for planting, as prescribed by an
inspector, to prevent the introduction
into the United States of quarantine
pests. In choosing which action to order
and in setting the time limit for the
action, the inspector shall consider the
degree of pest risk presented by the
plant pest associated with the plants for
planting, whether the plants for planting
are a host of the pest, the types of other
host materials for the pest in or near the
port, the climate and season at the port
in relation to the pest’s survival range,
and the availability of treatment
facilities for the plants for planting.
(e) Removal of plants for planting
from port of first arrival. No person shall
remove any plants for planting from the
port of first arrival unless and until
notice is given to the collector of
customs by the inspector that the plants
for planting has satisfied all
requirements under this subpart.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0190,
0579–0310, and 0579–0319)
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§ 319.37–9 Treatment of plants for
planting; costs and charges for inspection
and treatment; treatments applied outside
the United States.
(a) The services of a Plant Protection
and Quarantine inspector during
regularly assigned hours of duty and at
the usual places of duty shall be
furnished without cost to the importer.2
No charge will be made to the importer
for Government-owned or -controlled
special inspection facilities and
equipment used in treatment, but the
inspector may require the importer to
furnish any special labor, chemicals,
packing materials, or other supplies
required in handling an importation
2 Provisions relating to costs for other services of
an inspector are contained in part 354 of this
chapter.
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under the regulations in this subpart.
The Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs will not be responsible for any
costs or charges, other than those
indicated in this section.
(b) Any treatment performed in the
United States on plants for planting
must be performed at the time of
importation into the United States.
Treatment shall be performed by an
inspector or under an inspector’s
supervision at a Government-operated
special inspection facility, except that
an importer may have such treatment
performed at a nongovernmental facility
if the treatment is performed at
nongovernment expense under the
supervision of an inspector and in
accordance with part 305 of this chapter
and in accordance with any treatment
required by an inspector as an
emergency measure in order to prevent
the dissemination of any quarantine
pests. However, treatment may be
performed at a nongovernmental facility
only in cases of unavailability of
government facilities and only if, in the
judgment of an inspector, the plants for
planting can be transported to such
nongovernmental facility without the
risk of introduction into the United
States of quarantine pests.
(c) Any treatment performed outside
the United States must be monitored
and certified by an APHIS inspector or
an official from the NPPO of the
exporting country. If monitored and
certified by an official of the NPPO of
the exporting country, then a
phytosanitary certificate must be issued
with the following declaration: ‘‘The
consignment of (fill in taxon) has been
treated in accordance with 7 CFR part
305.’’ During the entire interval between
treatment and export, the consignment
must be stored and handled in a manner
that prevents any infestation by
quarantine pests.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0190)
§ 319.37–10
Growing media.
(a) Any plants for planting at the time
of importation or offer for importation
into the United States shall be free of
sand, soil, earth, and other growing
media, except as provided in paragraph
(b), (c), or (d) of this section.
(b) Plants for planting from Canada
may be imported in any growing
medium, except as restricted in the
Plants for Planting Manual. Restrictions
on growing media for specific types of
plants for planting imported from
Canada will be added, changed, or
removed in accordance with § 319.37–
20.
(c) Certain types of plants for planting
growing solely in certain growing media
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listed in the Plants for Planting Manual
may be imported established in such
growing media. The Administrator has
determined that the importation of the
specified types of plants for planting in
these growing media does not pose a
risk of introducing quarantine pests into
the United States. If the Administrator
determines that a new growing medium
may be added to the list of growing
media in which imported plants for
planting may be established, or that a
growing medium currently listed for
such purposes is no longer suitable for
establishment of imported plants for
planting, APHIS will publish in the
Federal Register a notice that
announces our proposed determination
and requests comment on the change.
After the close of the comment period,
APHIS will publish another notice
informing the public of the
Administrator’s decision on the change
to the list of growing media in which
imported types of plants for planting
may be established.
(d) Certain types of plants for
planting, as listed in the Plants for
Planting Manual, may be imported
when they are established in a growing
medium approved by the Administrator
and they are produced in accordance
with additional requirements specified
in the Plants for Planting Manual.
Changes to the list of plants for planting
that may be imported in growing media,
and to the requirements for the
importation of those types of plants for
planting, will be made in accordance
with § 319.37–20.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control numbers 0579–0190,
0579–0439, 0579–0454, 0579–0458, and
0579–0463)
§ 319.37–11 Packing and approved
packing material.
(a) Plants for planting for importation
into the United States must not be
packed in the same container as plants
for planting whose importation into the
United States is not authorized pending
pest risk analysis in accordance with
§ 319.37–4.
(b) Any plants for planting at the time
of importation or offer for importation
into the United States shall not be
packed in a packing material unless the
plants were packed in the packing
material immediately prior to shipment;
such packing material is free from sand,
soil, or earth (except as designated in
the Plants for Planting Manual); has not
been used previously as packing
material or otherwise; and is approved
by the Administrator as not posing a
risk of introducing quarantine pests.
Approved packing materials are listed
in the Plants for Planting Manual.
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(c) If the Administrator determines
that a new packing material may be
added to the list of packing materials, or
that a packing material currently listed
should no longer be approved, APHIS
will publish in the Federal Register a
notice that announces our proposed
determination and requests comment on
the change. After the close of the
comment period, APHIS will publish
another notice informing the public of
the Administrator’s decision on the
change to the list of approved packing
materials.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0190)
§§ 319.37–12 through 319.37–19
[Reserved]
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§ 319.37–20 Restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants for
planting.
(a) Plant type-specific restrictions. In
addition to the general restrictions in
this subpart, the Administrator may
impose additional restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants
for planting necessary to effectively
mitigate the risk of introducing
quarantine pests into the United States
through the importation of specific
plants for planting. Additional
restrictions may be placed on the
importation of the entire plant or on
certain plant parts. A list of the types of
plants for planting whose importation is
subject to additional restrictions, and
the specific restrictions that apply to the
importation of each type of plants for
planting, may be found in the Plants for
Planting Manual.
(b) Basis for changing restrictions. The
Administrator may determine that it is
necessary to add, change, or remove
restrictions on the importation of a
specific type of plants for planting,
based on the risk of introducing a
quarantine pest through the importation
of that type of plants for planting. The
Administrator will make this
determination based on the findings of
a pest risk analysis or on other scientific
evidence.
(c) Process for adding, changing, or
removing restrictions. Restrictions on
the importation of a specific type of
plants for planting beyond the general
restrictions in §§ 319.37–5 through
319.37–11 will be changed through the
following process:
(1) Document describing restrictions.
APHIS will publish in the Federal
Register a notice that announces our
proposed determination that it is
necessary to add, change, or remove
restrictions on the importation of a
specific type of plants for planting. This
notice will make available for public
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comment a document describing the
restrictions that the Administrator has
determined are necessary and how these
restrictions will mitigate the risk of
introducing quarantine pests into the
United States.
(2) Response to comments. APHIS
will issue a second notice after the close
of the public comment period on the
notice described in paragraph (c)(1) of
this section. This notice will inform the
public of the specific restrictions, if any,
that the Administrator has determined
to be necessary in order to mitigate the
risk of introducing quarantine pests into
the United States through the
importation of the type of plants for
planting. In response to the public
comments submitted, the Administrator
may implement the restrictions
described in the document made
available by the initial notice, amend
the restrictions in response to public
comment, or determine that changes to
the restrictions on the importation of the
type of plants for planting are
unnecessary.
(d) Previously imposed restrictions on
specific types of plants for planting.
Types of plants for planting whose
importation was subject to specific
restrictions by specific regulation as of
April 18, 2018, will continue to be
subject to those restrictions, except as
changed in accordance with the process
specified in paragraph (c) of this
section. The restrictions are found in the
Plants for Planting Manual.
§ 319.37–21 Integrated pest risk
management measures.
If a type of plants for planting is a
host of a quarantine pest or pests,
APHIS may require the type of plants
for planting to be produced in
accordance with integrated pest risk
management measures as a condition of
importation. This section sets out a
general framework for integrated pest
risk management measures. When
APHIS determines that integrated
measures are necessary to mitigate risk,
APHIS will use this framework to
develop integrated pest risk
management measures that mitigate the
quarantine pest risks associated with
that type of plants for planting through
the process described in § 319.37–20.
(a) Responsibilities of the place of
production. The place of production is
responsible for identifying, developing,
and implementing procedures that meet
the requirements of both the NPPO of
the exporting country and APHIS.
Participants in the export program must
be approved by the NPPO or its
designee and APHIS. Approval will be
conferred by the NPPO or its designee
and APHIS after the participant meets
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the conditions required for integrated
pest risk management. Approval will be
withdrawn if the participant fails to
meet the conditions at any time. All
documentation required under
paragraphs (a)(5) and (6) of this section
will be maintained by the exporting
place of production and made available
to official representatives of the NPPO
of the exporting country and APHIS
upon request. The place of production
must be open to necessary and
reasonable audit, monitoring, and
evaluation of compliance by the NPPO
of the exporting country and APHIS.
The management of the place of
production will be responsible for
complying with the integrated pest risk
management measures. Management
must specify the roles and
responsibilities of its personnel to
perform program activities. The place of
production must notify the NPPO of the
exporting country of deficiencies
detected during internal audits. The
NPPO of the exporting country will be
responsible for ensuring that the place
of production is in compliance with the
integrated pest risk management
measures.
(1) Pest management program. The
place of production must develop and
implement an approved pest
management program that contains
ongoing pest monitoring and procedures
for the exclusion and control of plant
pests. The place of production must
obtain material used to produce plants
for planting from sources that are free of
quarantine pests and that are approved
by the NPPO of the exporting country
and APHIS. All sources of plants for
planting and the phytosanitary status of
those plants must be well-documented
and the program for producing plants
for planting carefully monitored.
(2) Training. A training program
approved by the NPPO of the exporting
country and APHIS must be established,
documented, and regularly conducted at
the place of production. The training
program must ensure that all those
involved in the export program possess
specific knowledge related to the
relevant components of the program and
a general understanding of its
requirements.
(3) Internal audits. The place of
production must perform, or designate
parties to perform internal audits that
ensure that a plan approved and
documented by APHIS and the NPPO of
the exporting country is being followed
and is achieving the appropriate level of
pest management.
(4) Traceability. The place of
production must implement a procedure
approved by APHIS and the NPPO of
the exporting country or its designee
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that documents and identifies plants
from propagation through harvest and
sale to ensure that plants can be traced
forward and back from the place of
production. Depending on the nature of
the quarantine pests, the system may
need to account for:
(i) The origin and pest status of
mother stock;
(ii) The year of propagation and the
place of production of all plant parts
that make up the plants for planting
intended for export;
(iii) Geographic location of the place
of production;
(iv) Location of plants for planting
within the place of production;
(v) The plant taxon; and
(vi) The purchaser’s identity.
(5) Documentation of program
procedures. The place of production
must develop a manual approved by the
NPPO of the exporting country and
APHIS that guides the place of
production’s operation and that
includes the following components:
(i) Administrative procedures
(including roles and responsibilities and
training procedures);
(ii) Pest management plan;
(iii) Place of production internal audit
procedures;
(iv) Management of noncompliant
product or procedures;
(v) Traceability procedures; and
(vi) Recordkeeping systems.
(6) Records. A place of production
must maintain records on its premises
as specified by APHIS and the NPPO of
the exporting country. These records
must be made available to APHIS and
the NPPO of the exporting country upon
request. These documents include all
the elements described in this paragraph
(a) and copies of all internal and
external audit documents and reports.
(b) Responsibilities of APHIS and the
NPPO of the exporting country. APHIS
and the NPPO of the exporting country
are responsible for collaborating to
establish program requirements,
including workplans and compliance
agreements as necessary, for recognizing
and implementing particular import
programs. Technically justified
modifications to the program may be
negotiated. The administration of
program requirements must include
such elements as clarification of
terminology, testing and retesting
requirements, eligibility, the
nomenclature of certification levels,
horticultural management, isolation and
sanitation requirements, inspection,
documentation, identification and
labeling, quality assurance,
noncompliance and remedial measures,
and postentry quarantine requirements.
The criteria for approving, suspending,
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removing, and reinstating approval for a
particular program should be jointly
developed and agreed upon by APHIS
and the NPPO of the exporting country.
Information should be exchanged
between APHIS and the NPPO of the
exporting country through officially
designated points of contact.
(c) Responsibilities of the NPPO of the
exporting country. (1) The NPPO of the
exporting country must provide
sufficient information to APHIS to
support the evaluation and acceptance
of export programs. This may include:
(i) Specific identification of the
commodity, place of production, and
expected volume and frequency of
consignments;
(ii) Relevant production, harvest,
packing, handling, and transport details;
(iii) Pests associated with the plant
including prevalence, distribution, and
damage potential;
(iv) Risk management measures
proposed for a pest management
program; and
(v) Relevant efficacy data.
(2) A phytosanitary certificate should
be issued by the NPPO of the exporting
country unless APHIS and the NPPO of
the exporting country agree to use other
documentation in accordance with
§ 319.37–6(c).
(3) Other responsibilities of the NPPO
of the exporting country include:
(i) Establishing and maintaining
compliance agreements as necessary;
(ii) Oversight and enforcement of
program provisions;
(iii) Arrangements for monitoring and
audit; and
(iv) Maintaining appropriate records.
(d) Responsibilities of plant brokers
trading in plants for planting produced
in accordance with integrated pest risk
management measures. Plant brokers
trading in plants for planting produced
in accordance with integrated pest risk
management measures must be
approved by the NPPO of the exporting
country or its designee. The list of plant
brokers must be provided to APHIS
upon request. Approval may only be
conferred by the NPPO or its designee
after the participant demonstrates that it
can meet the requirements of this
paragraph (d). Approval must be
withdrawn if the participant fails to
meet the conditions at any time. Plant
brokers must ensure the traceability of
export consignments to an approved
place of production or production site.
Brokers must maintain the
phytosanitary status of the plants
equivalent to an approved place of
production from purchase, storage, and
transportation to the export destination.
Plant brokers must document these
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processes for verifying status and
maintaining traceability.
(e) External audits. APHIS and the
NPPO of the exporting country will
agree to the requirements for external
audits.
(1) APHIS audits. APHIS will evaluate
the integrated pest risk management
measures of the NPPO of the exporting
country before acceptance. This could
consist of documentation review, site
visits, and inspection and testing of
plants produced under the system.
Following approval, APHIS or its
designee will monitor and periodically
audit the system to ensure that it
continues to meet the stated objectives.
Audits will include inspection of
imported plants for planting, site visits,
and review of the integrated pest risk
management measures and internal
audit processes of the place of
production and the NPPO of the
exporting country.
(2) Audits by the NPPO of the
exporting country. The NPPO must
arrange for audits of the exporting
system. Audits may be conducted by the
NPPO or its designee and may consist
of inspection and testing of plants for
planting and the documentation and
management practices as they relate to
the program. Audits should verify that:
(i) The places of production in the
program are free of quarantine pests;
(ii) Program participants are
complying with the specified standards;
(iii) The integrated pest management
measures continue to meet APHIS
requirements; and
(iv) Arrangements with designees are
complied with.
(f) Noncompliance. (1) The exporting
NPPO must notify APHIS of
noncompliance within the integrity of
the system or noncompliance by a place
of production that affects the
phytosanitary integrity of the
commodity. The requirements for
notification will be determined between
the NPPO of the exporting country and
APHIS.
(2) Regulatory responses to program
failures will be based on existing
bilateral agreements. Contingency plans
may be established in advance to ensure
that alternative measures are available
in the event that all or part of a program
fails. APHIS will specify the
consequences of noncompliance to the
NPPO of the exporting country. The
NPPO must specify the consequences of
noncompliance to the participants in
the program. These may vary depending
on the nature and severity of the
infraction. In addition, remedial
measures should be specified to enable
a suspended or decertified place of
production or plant broker to become
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eligible for reinstatement or
recertification.
(3) Places of production or plant
brokers that do not meet the conditions
of the program must be suspended.
Plants for planting must not be exported
from a place of production or a plant
broker that has failed to meet the
program requirements.
(4) The effectiveness of remedial
measures taken must be verified before
reinstatement to the program by the
exporting NPPO and, where
appropriate, by APHIS.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0190)
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§ 319.37–22
Trust fund agreements.
If APHIS personnel need to be
physically present in an exporting
country or region to facilitate the
exportation of plants for planting and
APHIS services are to be funded by the
NPPO of the exporting country or a
private export group, then the NPPO or
the private export group must enter into
a trust fund agreement with APHIS that
is in effect at the time APHIS’ services
are needed. Under the agreement, the
NPPO of the exporting country or the
private export group must pay in
advance all estimated costs that APHIS
expects to incur in providing inspection
services in the exporting country. These
costs will include administrative
expenses incurred in conducting the
services and all salaries (including
overtime and the Federal share of
employee benefits), travel expenses
(including per diem expenses), and
other incidental expenses incurred by
the inspectors in performing services.
The agreement must require the NPPO
of the exporting country or region or a
private export group to deposit a
certified or cashier’s check with APHIS
for the amount of those costs, as
estimated by APHIS. The agreement
must further specify that, if the deposit
is not sufficient to meet all costs
incurred by APHIS, the NPPO of the
exporting country or a private export
group must deposit with APHIS, before
the services will be completed, a
certified or cashier’s check for the
amount of the remaining costs, as
determined by APHIS. After a final
audit at the conclusion of each shipping
season, any overpayment of funds
would be returned to the NPPO of the
exporting country or region or a private
export group, or held on account.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0190)
§ 319.37–23
Postentry quarantine.
(a) Postentry quarantine. One specific
restriction that may be placed upon the
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importation of a type of plants for
planting in accordance with § 319.37–20
is that it be grown in postentry
quarantine. The Plants for Planting
Manual lists the taxa required to be
imported into postentry quarantine.
Plants for planting grown in postentry
quarantine must be grown under
postentry quarantine conditions
specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section, and may be imported or
offered for importation into the United
States only:
(1) If destined for a State that has
completed a State postentry quarantine
agreement with APHIS in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section;
(2) If an importer postentry quarantine
growing agreement has been completed
and submitted to Plant Protection and
Quarantine in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section. The
agreement must be signed by the person
(the importer) applying for the
importation of the plants for planting in
accordance with § 319.6; and,
(3) If Plant Protection and Quarantine
has determined that the completed
postentry quarantine growing agreement
fulfills the applicable requirements of
this section and that services by State
inspectors are available to monitor and
enforce the postentry quarantine.
(b) State postentry quarantine
agreement. Plants for planting required
to undergo postentry quarantine in
accordance with § 319.37–20 may only
be imported if destined for postentry
quarantine growing in a State which has
entered into a written agreement with
the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service, signed by the Administrator or
his or her designee and by the State
Plant Regulatory Official. In accordance
with the laws of individual States,
inspection and other postentry
quarantine services provided by a State
may be subject to charges imposed by
the State. A list of States that have
entered into a postentry quarantine
agreement in accordance with this
paragraph can be found in the Plants for
Planting Manual.
(c) Importer postentry quarantine
growing agreements. Any plants for
planting required to be grown under
postentry quarantine conditions, as well
as any increase therefrom, shall be
grown in accordance with an importer
postentry quarantine growing agreement
signed by the person (the importer)
applying for a written permit in
accordance with § 319.37–5 for
importation of the plants for planting
and submitted to Plant Protection and
Quarantine. On each importer postentry
quarantine growing agreement, the
person shall also obtain the signature of
the State Plant Regulatory Official for
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the State in which plants for planting
covered by the agreement will be grown.
The importer postentry quarantine
growing agreement shall specify the
kind, number, and origin of plants to be
imported; the conditions specified in
the Plants for Planting Manual under
which the plants for planting will be
grown, maintained, and labeled; and the
reporting requirements in the case of
abnormal or dead plants for planting.
The agreement shall certify to APHIS
and to the State in which the plants for
planting are grown that the signer of the
agreement will comply with the
conditions of the agreement for the
postentry quarantine growing period
prescribed for the type of plants for
planting in the Plants for Planting
Manual.
(d) Applications for permits. A
completed importer postentry
quarantine agreement shall accompany
the application for a written permit for
plants for planting required to be grown
under postentry quarantine conditions.
Importer postentry quarantine
agreement forms are available without
charge from the Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service, Plant
Protection and Quarantine, Permit Unit,
4700 River Road, Unit 136, Riverdale,
MD 20737–1236 or on the internet at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/
ppq_epermits.shtml.
(e) Inspector-ordered disposal,
movement, or safeguarding of plants for
planting; costs and charges, civil and
criminal liabilities—(1) Growing at
unauthorized sites. If an inspector
determines that any plants for planting
subject to the postentry quarantine
growing requirements of this section, or
any increase therefrom, is being grown
at an unauthorized site, the inspector
may file an emergency action
notification (PPQ Form 523) with the
owner of the plants for planting or the
person who owns or is in possession of
the site on which the plants for planting
is being grown. The person named in
the PPQ Form 523 must, within the time
specified in PPQ Form 523, sign a
postentry quarantine growing
agreement, destroy, ship to a point
outside the United States, move to an
authorized postentry quarantine site,
and/or apply treatments or other
safeguards to the plants for planting, the
increase therefrom, or any portion of the
plants for planting or the increase
therefrom, as prescribed by an inspector
to prevent the introduction of
quarantine pests into the United States.
In choosing which action to order and
in setting the time limit for the action,
the inspector shall consider the degree
of pest risk presented by the quarantine
pests associated with the type of plants
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for planting (including increase
therefrom), the types of other host
materials for the pest in or near the
growing site, the climate and season at
the site in relation to the pest’s survival,
and the availability of treatment
facilities.
(2) Growing at authorized sites. If an
inspector determines that any plants for
planting, or any increase therefrom,
grown at a site specified in an
authorized postentry quarantine
growing agreement is being grown
contrary to the provisions of this
section, including in numbers greater
than the number approved by the
postentry quarantine growing
agreement, or in a manner that
otherwise presents a risk of introducing
quarantine pests into the United States,
the inspector shall issue an emergency
action notification (PPQ Form 523) to
the person who signed the postentry
quarantine growing agreement. That
person shall be responsible for carrying
out all actions specified in the
emergency action notification. The
emergency action notification may
extend the time for which the plants for
planting and the increase therefrom
must be grown under the postentry
quarantine conditions specified in the
authorized postentry quarantine
growing agreement, or may require that
the person named in the notification
must destroy, ship to a point outside the
United States, or apply treatments or
other safeguards to the plants for
planting, the increase therefrom, or any
portion of the plants for planting or the
increase therefrom, within the time
specified in the emergency action
notification. In choosing which action to
order and in setting the time limit for
the action, the inspector shall consider
the degree of pest risk presented by the
quarantine pests associated with the
type of plants for planting (including
increase therefrom), the types of other
host materials for the pest in or near the
growing site, the climate and season at
the site in relation to the pest’s survival,
and the availability of treatment
facilities.
(3) Costs and charges. All costs
pursuant to any action ordered by an
inspector in accordance with this
section shall be borne by the person
who signed the postentry quarantine
growing agreement covering the site
where the plants for planting were
grown, or if no such agreement was
signed, by the owner of the plants for
planting at the growing site.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0190)
13. Section 319.40–2 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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§ 319.40–2 General prohibitions and
restrictions; relation to other regulations.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Regulation of articles imported for
propagation or human consumption.
The requirements of this subpart do not
apply to regulated articles that are
allowed importation in accordance with
Subpart—Plants for Planting of this part
or to regulated articles imported for
human consumption that are allowed
importation in accordance with
Subpart—Fruits and Vegetables of this
part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Section 319.41 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By redesignating paragraph (d) as
paragraph (e); and
■ b. By adding a new paragraph (d).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 319.41
Notice of quarantine.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The importation of plants
(including any plant parts) of any of the
taxa listed in paragraph (b) of this
section that are for planting or capable
of being planted is restricted under
Subpart—Plants for Planting of this
part.
*
*
§ 319.41a
*
*
*
[Amended]
15. In § 319.41a, paragraph (b) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–4(a)’’ and adding the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–6(a)’’ in its place.
■ 16. Section 319.55 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising paragraphs (a) and (b);
■ b. By redesignating paragraph (d) as
paragraph (e); and
■ c. By adding a new paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
§ 319.55
Notice of quarantine.
(a) The fact has been determined by
the Secretary of Agriculture, and notice
is hereby given:
(1) That injurious fungal diseases of
rice, including downy mildew
(Sclerospora macrospora), leaf smut
(Entyloma oryzae), blight (Oospora
oryzetorum), and glume blotch
(Melanomma glumarum), as well as
dangerous insect pests, new to and not
heretofore widely prevalent or
distributed within and throughout the
United States, exist, as to one or more
of such diseases and pests, in Europe,
Asia, Africa, Central America, South
America, and other foreign countries
and localities, and may be introduced
into this country through importations
of rice straw and rice hulls; and
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(2) That the unrestricted importation
of rice straw and rice hulls may result
in the entry into the United States of the
injurious plant diseases heretofore
enumerated, as well as insect pests.
(b) To prevent the introduction into
the United States of the plant pests and
diseases indicated above, the Secretary
has determined that it is necessary to
restrict the importation of rice straw and
rice hulls from all foreign locations,
except as otherwise provided in this
subpart.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The importation of seed or paddy
rice is restricted under Subpart—Plants
for Planting of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 319.55–2
[Amended]
17. Section 319.55–2 is amended by
removing the words ‘‘seed or paddy rice
from Mexico or’’ and the words ‘‘from
any country’’.
■
§ 319.55–3
[Amended]
18. Section 319.55–3 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By removing paragraph (a) and
redesignating paragraphs (b), (c), and (d)
as paragraphs (a), (b), and (c),
respectively;
■ b. In newly redesignated paragraph
(a), by removing the words ‘‘from all
foreign countries’’; and
■ c. In newly redesignated paragraph
(b), by removing the words ‘‘seed or
paddy rice,’’ and by removing the
comma after the word ‘‘straw’’.
■
§ 319.55–6
[Amended]
19. Section 319.55–6 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By removing and reserving
paragraph (a);
■ b. By redesignating paragraphs (c)(1)
and (2) as paragraphs (b)(3) and (4),
respectively; and
■ c. By removing the designation and
heading of paragraph (c).
■ 20. Section 319.55–7 is revised as
follows:
■
§ 319.55–7
Importations by mail.
Importations of rice straw and rice
hulls may be made by mail or cargo,
provided that a permit has been issued
for the importation in accordance with
§§ 319.7 through 319.7–5 and all
conditions of the permit are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and
Budget under control number 0579–0049)
§ 319.56–10
[Amended]
21. In § 319.56–10, paragraph (a)(2) is
amended by removing the words
‘‘§ 319.37–2 of this part’’ and adding the
citation ‘‘§ 319.37–20’’ in their place.
■
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§ 319.56–11
[Amended]
22. In § 319.56–11, paragraph (b)(3) is
amended by removing the words
‘‘§§ 319.37 through 319.37–14 of this
part’’ and adding the words ‘‘§§ 319.37–
1 through 319.37–23’’ in their place.
■
§ 319.59–1
[Amended]
23. In § 319.59–1, the definition of
grain is amended by adding the words
‘‘and not for planting’’ before the period.
■ 24. Section 319.59–2 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By removing and reserving
paragraph (a);
■ b. In paragraph (b) introductory text,
by removing the words ‘‘Triticum spp.
plants, articles’’ and adding the word
‘‘Articles’’ in their place;
■ c. In paragraph (b)(1), by removing the
words ‘‘§ 319.37–14 of this part’’ and
adding the words ‘‘accordance with
§ 319.37–8(a)’’ in their place; and
■ d. By adding paragraph (c).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 319.59–2 General import prohibitions;
exceptions.
(a) * * *
(2) Coffee leaves; and
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The importation of any coffee
plants (including bare seeds, seeds in
pulp, and any other plant parts) that are
for planting or capable of being planted
is restricted under Subpart—Plants for
Planting of this part.
§ 319.74–1
[Amended]
30. In § 319.74–1, the definition of cut
flower is amended by adding the words
‘‘and not for planting’’ after the word
‘‘state’’.
■
§ 319.75 [Amended]
*
*
*
*
(c) The importation of any host crops
(including seed and any other plant
parts) that are for planting or capable of
being planted is restricted under
Subpart—Plants for Planting of this part.
■ 25. Section 319.59–3 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 319.59–3 Articles prohibited importation
pending risk evaluation.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) The following articles of Triticum
spp. (wheat) or of Aegilops spp. (barb
goatgrass, goatgrass): Straw (other than
straw, with or without heads, which has
been processed or manufactured for use
indoors, such as for decorative purposes
or for use in toys); chaff; and products
of the milling process (i.e., bran, shorts,
thistle sharps, and pollards) other than
flour.
*
*
*
*
*
[Amended]
26. In § 319.59–4, paragraph (a)(2) is
amended by removing the word ‘‘seed,’’.
27. In § 319.69a, paragraph (c) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–9’’ and adding the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–11’’ in its place.
■
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§ 319.73–1
§ 319.75–2
Restricted articles.1
*
*
*
*
*
1 The
importation of restricted articles may
be subject to prohibitions or restrictions
under other provisions of 7 CFR part 319. For
example, fresh whole chilies (Capsicum spp.)
and fresh whole red peppers (Capsicum spp.)
from Pakistan are prohibited from being
imported into the United States under the
provisions of Subpart—Fruits and Vegetables
of this part, and the importation of any
restricted articles that are for planting or
capable of being planted is restricted under
Subpart—Plants for Planting of this part.
§ 319.75–8
[Amended]
34. Section 319.75–8 is amended by
removing the words ‘‘port of entry
identified in § 319.37–14 of this part’’
and adding the words ‘‘Customs
designated port of entry indicated in 19
CFR 101.3(b)(1)’’ in their place.
■
§ 319.75–9
[Amended]
35. In § 319.75–9, paragraphs (a), (b),
and (c) are amended by removing the
words ‘‘nursery stock, plant,’’ and the
words ‘‘root, bulb,’’ each time they
occur.
28. In § 319.73–1, the definition of
unroasted coffee is amended by adding
the words ‘‘intended for processing’’
before the period.
■ 29. Section 319.73–2 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (b) to read
as follows:
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[Amended]
36. Section 319.77–2 is amended as
follows:
■ a. In the introductory text, by
removing the words ‘‘through (g)’’ and
adding the words ‘‘through (e)’’ in their
place; and
■ b. By removing paragraphs (b) and (c)
and redesignating paragraphs (d)
■
■
Jkt 244001
*
*
*
*
*
PART 330—FEDERAL PLANT PEST
REGULATIONS; GENERAL; PLANT
PESTS; SOIL, STONE, AND QUARRY
PRODUCTS; GARBAGE
[Amended]
32. Section 319.75–1 is amended by
removing the definition of nursery
stock.
■ 33. Section 319.75–2 is amended by
revising footnote 1 to read as follows:
§ 319.77–2
[Amended]
(a) Trees and shrubs.1
§ 319.75–1
■
[Amended]
§ 319.77–4 Conditions for the importation
of regulated articles.
and Shrubs from Canada may be
subject to additional restrictions under
‘‘Subpart—Logs, Lumber, and Other
Unmanufactured Wood Articles’’ (§§ 319.40–
1 through 319.40–11).
■
§ 319.69a
through (h) as (b) through (f),
respectively.
■ 37. Section 319.77–4 is amended as
follows:
■ a. By revising footnote 1;
■ b. In paragraphs (a)(1) introductory
text and (a)(2) introductory text, by
removing the words ‘‘, trees with roots,
and shrubs with roots and persistent
woody stems’’ each time they occur; and
■ c. In paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (ii), by
removing the words ‘‘or shrubs’’ each
time they occur.
The revision reads as follows:
31. In § 319.75, paragraph (c)(2) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–14’’ and adding the words
‘‘accordance with § 319.37–8(a)’’ in its
place.
■
■
*
§ 319.59–4
§ 319.73–2 Products prohibited
importation.
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1 Trees
38. The authority citation for part 330
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450, 7701–7772, 7781–
7786, and 8301–8317; 21 U.S.C. 136 and
136a; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and
371.3.
§ 330.300a
[Amended]
39. In § 330.300a, footnote 1 is
amended by removing the words ‘‘by
§ 319.37–5’’ and adding the words
‘‘under §§ 319.37–1 through 319.37–23’’
in their place.
■
PART 340—INTRODUCTION OF
ORGANISMS AND PRODUCTS
ALTERED OR PRODUCED THROUGH
GENETIC ENGINEERING WHICH ARE
PLANT PESTS OR WHICH THERE IS
REASON TO BELIEVE ARE PLANT
PESTS
40. The authority citation for part 340
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701–7772 and 7781–
7786; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and
371.3.
§ 340.0
[Amended]
41. In § 340.0, footnote 1 is amended
as follows:
■ a. By removing the words ‘‘Nursery
Stock, Plants, Roots, Bulbs, Seeds, and
Other Plant Products’’ and adding the
words ‘‘Plants for Planting’’ in their
place;
■ b. By removing the citation ‘‘7 CFR
319.37–3’’ and adding the words
‘‘§ 319.37–5 of this chapter’’ in its place;
■ c. By removing the words ‘‘nursery
stock’’ both times they appear and
■
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adding the words ‘‘plants for planting’’
in their place; and
■ d. By removing the words ‘‘stock is’’
and adding the words ‘‘plants are’’ in
their place.
§ 340.4
[Amended]
42. In § 340.4, paragraph (f)(11)(i) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–14’’ and adding the words
‘‘accordance with § 319.37–8(a)’’ in its
place.
■
§ 340.7
43. In § 340.7, paragraph (b)
introductory text is amended by
removing the citation ‘‘§ 319.37–14’’ and
adding the words ‘‘accordance with
§ 319.37–8(a)’’ in its place.
■
PART 360—NOXIOUS WEED
REGULATIONS
44. The authority citation for part 360
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701–7772 and 7781–
7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
[Amended]
45. In § 360.400, paragraph (a)(2) is
amended by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–6’’ and adding the words
‘‘§ 319.37–9(c) of this chapter’’ in its
place, and by removing the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–13(c)’’ and adding the citation
‘‘§ 319.37–9(c)’’ in its place.
■
PART 361—IMPORTATION OF SEED
AND SCREENINGS UNDER THE
FEDERAL SEED ACT
46. The authority citation for part 361
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1581–1610; 7 CFR
2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
§ 361.2
[Amended]
47. In § 361.2, paragraph (d) is
amended by removing the words
‘‘restrictions of § 319.37–3(a)(7)’’ and
adding the words ‘‘permit requirements
of § 319.37–5 of this chapter’’ in their
place.
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■
Done in Washington, DC, this 9th day of
March 2018.
Kevin Shea,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–05424 Filed 3–16–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:37 Mar 16, 2018
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 761
Revision of Delegation of Authority for
the State Executive Director (SED) for
the Farm Loan Programs
Farm Service Agency,
Department of Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This document amends the
delegations of authority from the Farm
Service Agency (FSA) Deputy
Administrator of Farm Loan Programs
(FLP). The change will specify that the
Deputy Administrator redelegates
certain authority to the State Executive
Directors (SED). The change will also
specify that SEDs may redelegate the
authority to a Farm Loan Chief, Farm
Loan Specialist, District Director, Farm
Loan Manager, Senior Farm Loan
Officer, Farm Loan Officer, Loan
Analyst, Loan Resolution Specialist, or
Program Technician to perform loan
activities. This will ensure that certain
loan documents can be signed off
locally instead of requiring the FLP
Deputy Administrator to have to sign off
on certain loan documents.
DATES: Effective: March 19, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bruce Mair; telephone: (202) 720–1645.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication
should contact the USDA Target Center
at (202) 720–2600.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
[Amended]
§ 360.400
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Jkt 244001
Background
FSA makes and services a variety of
direct and guaranteed loans to the
nation’s farmers and ranchers who are
unable to obtain private commercial
credit at reasonable rates and terms.
FSA also provides direct loan customers
with credit counseling and supervision
to enhance their opportunity for
success. FSA direct and guaranteed loan
applicants are often beginning farmers
and socially disadvantaged farmers who
do not qualify for conventional loans
because of insufficient net worth or
established farmers who have suffered
financial setbacks due to natural
disasters or economic downturns. FSA
tailors direct and guaranteed loans to a
customer’s needs and may be used to
buy farmland and to finance agricultural
production.
The Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act of 1972, as amended,
(CONACT) (7 U.S.C. 1921–2009dd–7))
authorizes FSA’s Direct and Guaranteed
Farm Loan Programs.
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Redelegation to and by SEDs
As part of loan servicing, various real
estate documents must be signed by
FSA and the files must be on public
record in certain states. Some of the real
estate documents that FSA signs
include, but are not limited to, lien
satisfactions, partial releases, and
subordinations. FSA’s intent has always
been for the real estate documents to be
signed by FSA officials at the local
level. In the past, the regulations in 7
CFR part 1900 included specific
wording concerning which employees
were delegated with signature authority.
In 2007, when FSA streamlined the FLP
regulations, 7 CFR 761.1 broadened the
regulatory text concerning FLP
delegations, but the original intent as to
who would have the authority to sign
the real estate documents did not
change. FSA recently determined that
more specificity in 7 CFR 761.1
regarding the delegation of authority
would be helpful and is therefore
revising the regulation.
FSA is amending the regulation in 7
CFR part 761 regarding the delegation of
authority for the Deputy of
Administrator of FLP to specify that the
Deputy Administrator of FLP
redelegates certain loan making and
servicing authority to SEDs and when
there is no loss to FSA, the SEDs may
redelegate the authority to the Farm
Loan Chief, Farm Loan Specialist,
District Director, Farm Loan Manager,
Senior Farm Loan Officer, Farm Loan
Officer, Loan Analyst, Loan Resolution
Specialist, or Program Technician. The
revised delegation will clarify the
authority for the Acting SED and other
authorized officials to sign certain loan
documents and to perform other loan
activities for SEDs.
Notice and Comment
In general, the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) requires
that a notice of proposed rulemaking be
published in the Federal Register and
interested persons be given an
opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking through submission of
written data, views, or arguments with
or without opportunity for oral
presentation, except that when the rule
involves a matter relating to public
property, loans, grants, benefits, or
contracts section 553 does not apply.
This rule involves matters relating to
loans and is therefore being published
as a final rule without the prior
opportunity for comments.
Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (5
U.S.C. 553) provides generally that
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 53 (Monday, March 19, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 11845-11867]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-05424]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 53 / Monday, March 19, 2018 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 11845]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
7 CFR Parts 318, 319, 330, 340, 360, and 361
[Docket No. APHIS-2008-0011]
RIN 0579-AD75
Restructuring of Regulations on the Importation of Plants for
Planting
AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are restructuring the regulations governing the importation
of plants for planting. In the new structure, restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants for planting will no longer be
found in the regulations, but instead will be found in the Plants for
Planting Manual. We will make changes to the restrictions in the manual
after taking public comment through notices published in the Federal
Register. As part of this restructuring, we are grouping together
restrictions in the plants for planting regulations that apply to the
importation of most or all plants for planting, and we are adding
general requirements for the development of integrated pest risk
management measures that we may use to mitigate the risk associated
with the importation of a specific type of plants for planting. We are
also amending our foreign quarantine regulations to remove various
provisions regarding the importation of specific types of plants for
planting that are not currently subject to the general plants for
planting regulations; these provisions will also be found in the Plants
for Planting Manual. This action does not make any major changes to the
restrictions that currently apply to the importation of plants for
planting. These changes will make restrictions on the importation of
specific types of plants for planting easier for readers to find and
less cumbersome for us to change.
DATES: Effective April 18, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Shailaja Rabindran, Assistant
Director, Plants for Planting Policy, PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road, Unit
133, Riverdale, MD 20737; (301) 851-2167.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Under the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.), the
Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to take such actions as may be
necessary to prevent the introduction and spread of plant pests and
noxious weeds within the United States. The Secretary has delegated
this authority to the Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS).
The regulations in 7 CFR part 319 prohibit or restrict the
importation of plants and plant products into the United States to
prevent the introduction of plant pests that are not already
established in the United States or plant pests that may be established
but are under the official control of an eradication or containment
program.
The regulations in ``Subpart--Plants for Planting,'' Sec. Sec.
319.37 through 319.37-14 (referred to below as the regulations),
restrict the importation of plants for planting. The term plants for
planting is defined in Sec. 319.37-1 as ``plants intended to remain
planted, to be planted or replanted.'' Plant is defined in that section
as ``any plant (including any plant part) capable of propagation,
including a tree, a tissue culture, a plantlet culture, pollen, a
shrub, a vine, a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb, a root, and
a seed.''
On April 25, 2013, we published in the Federal Register (78 FR
24634-24663, Docket No. APHIS-2008-0011) a proposal \1\ to revise the
plants for planting regulations and make several related changes to the
foreign quarantine notices in 7 CFR part 319. Briefly, we proposed to
do the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ To view the proposed rule, extensions of comment period,
supporting document, and the comments we received, go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2008-0011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Remove provisions from other subparts in 7 CFR part 319
that regulate the importation of plants for planting and thus
consolidate the requirements for importation of all plants for planting
under the plants for planting regulations.
Add most of the plants for planting that are listed as
prohibited in Sec. 319.37-2(a) to the list of plants for planting
whose importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis (NAPPRA)
in accordance with current Sec. 319.37-2a. We proposed to characterize
the other prohibitions as restrictions, rather than prohibitions, and
to list them as such in the Plants for Planting Manual. This manual is
currently used by importers and inspectors as a reference regarding
restrictions on the importation of plants for planting.
Within the plants for planting regulations, group together
the requirements that apply to the importation of all or most plants
for planting.
Move restrictions on the importation of specific types of
plants for planting from the regulations to the Plants for Planting
Manual. We proposed to revise how we change these restrictions. We
proposed to publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing our
determination that it is necessary to add, change, or remove
restrictions on the importation of a specific type of plants for
planting and make available a document describing those restrictions
and why they are necessary. We would allow for public comment on the
notice and the document it makes available. We would then respond to
any comments we receive in a second notice published in the Federal
Register, and implement the restrictions if our determination remains
unchanged.
Remove several lists of approved items (for example, the
lists of approved growing media, packing materials, and ports of entry)
from the regulations and instead provide these lists to the public in
the Plants for Planting Manual. We proposed to update these lists, when
necessary, using the same double-notice process we are proposing to use
to update restrictions on the importation of specific types of plants
for planting.
Establish a framework for the use of integrated pest risk
management measures (IPRMM) in the production of specific types of
plants for planting for importation into the United States, when the
pest risk associated with the importation of a type of plants for
[[Page 11846]]
planting can only be addressed through the use of integrated measures.
Make several minor changes to the regulations to improve
their clarity and reflect current program operations.
We did not propose to make major changes to the restrictions that
currently apply to the importation of plants for planting. The proposal
was directed towards making the regulations easier to use and to
implement.
Comments on the proposed rule were required to be received on or
before June 24, 2013. We reopened and extended the deadline for
comments until September 10, 2013, in a document published in the
Federal Register on July 12, 2013 (78 FR 41866-41867, Docket No. APHIS-
2008-0011). We reopened and extended the deadline for comments a second
time, until January 30, 2014, in a document published in the Federal
Register on December 31, 2013 (78 FR 79636-79637, Docket No. APHIS-
2008-0011). In the latter document, we asked specifically for comments
regarding whether to base the framework for the use of IPRMM on
regional or international standards. We also asked for specific
comments regarding the risk posed when plant brokers purchase and move
plants for planting after they leave their place of production and
before they are exported to the United States.
We received 17 comments by the January 30, 2014, close of the
comment period. They were from producer organizations, State
departments of agriculture, a foreign national plant protection
organization, an environmental protection organization, and private
citizens. They are discussed below by topic.
Scope of the Proposed Rule
Two commenters expressed concern about the length and complexity of
the proposed rule, stating that it should have been broken into
separate, smaller regulatory actions.
Many of the changes in the proposed rule were dependent on each
other, and making one or two at a time would have left the regulations
in an unsettled state. In addition, proposing the changes in separate
chunks would have made the overall process of restructuring the
regulations take much longer.
Plants for Planting Manual
One commenter stated that the updated Plants for Planting Manual
should be made available for review prior to the publication of the
final rule.
We will make the updated manual available upon the effective date
of the final rule. Making it available earlier, when the final rule is
not effective and the current version of the manual is still in use,
could create confusion.
Another commenter stated that navigation of and access to the
manual should be as open and easy as possible, and that stakeholders
should be notified of changes.
We agree. As part of this regulatory process, we have undertaken a
wholesale revision of the Plants for Planting Manual to make it easier
to use. The new version of the manual will be maintained at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/plants/manuals/ports/downloads/plants_for_planting.pdf. Stakeholders can keep abreast of updates to
the Plants for Planting Manual through the APHIS Stakeholder Registry;
interested parties can sign up for email notifications at https://public.govdelivery.com/accounts/USDAAPHIS/subscriber/new. Finally,
whenever we determine that we need to add, change, or remove
phytosanitary restrictions in the Plants for Planting Manual to address
the risk posed by imported plants for planting, we will publish a
notice in the Federal Register requesting public comment.
Consolidation of Plants for Planting Provisions
We proposed to move provisions from other subparts in 7 CFR part
319 that regulate the importation of plants for planting and
consolidate all requirements for importation of plants for planting in
a single location.
One commenter requested clarification on whether we were limiting
the plants for planting regulations to cover only some plants for
planting, or whether we were clarifying that plants for planting rules
do not apply to plants not for planting.
We are neither limiting the plants for planting regulations nor
clarifying as the commenter suggests, but rather making sure that all
plants for planting are imported in accordance with the plants for
planting regulations. Subparts of 7 CFR part 319 not specifically about
plants for planting had contained some provisions regulating plants for
planting. For example, the sugarcane regulations in Sec. 319.15
regulate the importation of all sugarcane plants and plant parts,
whether they are for planting or not.
We proposed to remove provisions in those other subparts that
applied to plants for planting and put them in the Plants for Planting
Manual or to change those subparts to explicitly indicate that they did
not apply to plants for planting, when applicable. For example, we
proposed to amend the subpart regulating the importation of cut flowers
in 7 CFR part 319 to explicitly indicate that such flowers must not be
for planting.
One commenter stated that inspectors should keep the possibility of
planting in mind when conducting inspections.
We agree. The definition of plant in this final rule includes any
plant or plant part that is capable of propagation. This definition
affords our inspectors discretion to determine whether a plant or plant
part that is capable of propagation and offered for importation should
be considered a plant for planting.
Definitions
We proposed to retain many of the current definitions in Sec.
319.37-1 and add a few new ones. We received comments on three of these
definitions.
The definition of from specifies that an article is considered to
be ``from'' any country or locality where it was grown, with exceptions
for articles imported to Canada and subsequently re-exported to the
United States under certain conditions. These conditions are specified
in subparagraphs (1) through (4) of the definition. We proposed to
change the terminology in the definition to reflect the proposal but
did not propose any substantive modifications.
One commenter asked that we further clarify current subparagraph
(3) in the definition of from. Under this subparagraph, to be
considered from Canada, an article must not have been grown in a
country or locality which would subject it to postentry quarantine in
the United States, unless it was grown in Canada under equivalent
postentry quarantine conditions. The commenter understood this
provision to mean that such articles would be subject to two post-entry
quarantines, one in Canada following importation from the country in
which it was grown, the other in the United States following
importation from Canada. The commenter stated that if Canada and the
United States fully harmonize their postentry quarantine requirements,
the article should be allowed to be imported directly from Canada into
the United States, without a second postentry quarantine.
We agree. Should such harmonization occur, we will initiate
rulemaking accordingly.
With respect to current paragraph (4) in the definition of from,
which requires plants for planting to not be imported in growing media
in order to be considered ``from'' Canada, another commenter stated
that we should allow the importation of plants for planting produced in
APHIS programs for the importation of plants in growing media but
imported into Canada before
[[Page 11847]]
movement to the United States to be considered ``from'' Canada.
We understand the commenter to be referring to plants in growing
media that are produced in one of two manners: Either (1), the plants
have been grown in the United States, exported to Canada for finishing,
then subsequently offered for importation back into the United States,
or (2), the plants have been produced in a third country under
conditions that would make the articles eligible for importation into
the United States, exported to Canada, then subsequently offered for
importation into the United States. With regard to the first class of
articles, we are currently in discussions with the national plant
protection organization (NPPO) of Canada regarding the importation of
such articles into the United States, and will take appropriate follow-
up action based on this dialogue.
With regard to the second class of articles, our evaluation will be
on a case-by-case basis based on the safeguards applied to the articles
within Canada.
We proposed to establish a new definition of the term place of
production. The proposed definition indicated that the term may include
``a production site that is separately managed for phytosanitary
purposes.'' One commenter stated that we should modify this definition
to be consistent with the definition in International Plant Protection
Convention's (IPPC) Glossary of Phytosanitary Terms,\2\ which refers to
multiple production sites.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ International Standard for Phytosanitary Measures (ISPM) No.
5. To view this and other ISPMs on the internet, go to https://www.ippc.int/ and click on the ``Adopted Standards'' link under the
``Core activities'' heading.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We based our proposed definition on the IPPC definition; the
inconsistency was inadvertent. We have corrected the definition in this
final rule.
We proposed to define plants for planting as: ``Regulated plants
(including any plant parts) that are for planting or capable of being
planted.'' This proposed definition differs from the IPPC definition of
that term. One commenter suggested that IPPC signatories, such as the
United States, should use the IPPC definitions, or submit proposed
revisions to those definitions to the IPPC.
Although we intended to use a version of the definition of plants
for planting not substantively different from the IPPC's, the
definition in our proposed rule did not include the intended use of the
article. After reviewing our proposed definition in light of the
commenter's concerns, we determined that the IPPC definition, ``plants
intended to remain planted, to be planted, or replanted,'' emphasizes
the intended use of the article, and that this is an important
distinction. Intended use has long played a role in our determining
whether a specific article is a plant for planting; for example, it is
our basis for determining whether to regulate a commercial consignment
of potato tubers, which are articles capable of propagation, as plants
for planting. Accordingly, in this final rule, we have decided to use
the IPPC definition of plants for planting, which had been in the
previous regulations.
Moving Prohibited Taxa to the NAPPRA Category
In Sec. 319.37-2 of the regulations, paragraphs (a) and (b)
currently list several taxa of plants for planting as prohibited. We
proposed to remove these lists from the regulations and add most of
these taxa to the NAPPRA lists.
One commenter asked for clarification on what plants or groups of
prohibited plants would not be added to the NAPPRA lists.
The NAPPRA category lists taxa of plants for planting that are not
authorized for importation pending pest risk analysis, as well as the
parts of those plants that are subject to NAPPRA. We proposed to add
those taxa listed in Sec. 319.37-2 as prohibited articles to the
NAPPRA list if they were listed in Sec. 319.37-2 without any
additional conditions. Some of the prohibited taxa in Sec. 319.37-2
had additional conditions regarding their prohibited status, e.g., the
articles were prohibited importation only if they were a certain size
or age, or only if they were imported in pulp. Those prohibitions can
more accurately be characterized as restrictions on the importation of
plants for planting, rather than outright prohibitions. Accordingly, we
are characterizing them as such and moving the restrictions to the
Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter asked how the proposal to add the prohibited taxa to
the NAPPRA list would affect any pest risk analyses (PRAs) that had
been done for the taxa. Another asked why we chose to add the
prohibited taxa to the NAPPRA category given that PRAs have presumably
already been done for these plants, and their pest risk considered such
that we prohibited their importation into the United States.
To answer the former commenter, any new PRAs conducted regarding
taxa on the NAPPRA list supersede previously conducted PRAs.
To answer the latter commenter, although pest risk information led
us to prohibit the importation of the taxa listed in Sec. 319.37-2,
this information may change. For example, a foreign country may
undertake eradication efforts to combat a particular pest, or new
measures may become available to mitigate the risk associated with the
pest. Additionally, the quarantine significance of a particular pest
may be reevaluated based on new scientific information, or the
introduction and dissemination of that pest within the United States.
Adding the prohibited taxa to the NAPPRA category allows us to
reexamine the risk in light of these possible changes.
Rather than simply add the current prohibited taxa to the NAPPRA
category, one commenter asked that we propose to add the taxa to the
NAPPRA category through an additional regulatory action and opportunity
for public comment.
We do not believe it would be appropriate or necessary to request
additional public comment on the addition of prohibited taxa to the
NAPPRA list. When we added those taxa to the prohibited list based on
their quarantine pest risk, we took public comment through the
rulemaking process. Additionally, we afforded the public an opportunity
to comment on the addition of the taxa to the NAPPRA list during the
comment period associated with the proposed rule.
One commenter asked where information about the taxa of plants for
planting that are NAPPRA would be found. Specifically, the commenter
asked whether the information would be maintained both on the Plants
for Planting website and in the Plants for Planting Manual.
The information will be maintained solely in the Plants for
Planting Manual; the Plants for Planting website will indicate this and
link to the manual. Maintaining the list in two different places could
result in discrepancies between the two lists. We have reformatted the
lists based on this decision to move them to the Plants for Planting
Manual.
Previously, we had maintained two NAPPRA lists on the internet, one
of taxa that we have determined to be quarantine pests and another of
taxa that we have determined to be hosts of a quarantine pest. In
adding the NAPPRA taxa to the Plants for Planting Manual, however, we
discovered that a clearer and more user-friendly format was simply to
list all NAPPRA taxa alphabetically in one list. As such, we have made
a slight change to proposed paragraph (a) of Sec. 319.37-4. The
paragraph had stated that there are two lists of NAPPRA plants for
planting. It
[[Page 11848]]
now indicates that there are two categories of NAPPRA plants for
planting.
Permits
We proposed to move the current permit requirements from Sec.
319.37-3 to Sec. 319.37-5 and make a few changes. One of the changes
we proposed was to change how the current permit requirements are
presented. Rather than indicate which lots of plants for planting must
be imported with a permit, we proposed to indicate that all lots of
plants for planting must be imported with a permit, with exceptions
listed in the Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter stated that the new proposal appeared to require
permits for all plants, while the previous regulations exempted lots of
13 or fewer plants. The commenter requested further explanation and the
opportunity for public comment on this change. Another commenter
supported what the commenter believed was our proposal to require
permits for lots containing 12 or fewer plants. The regulations
exempted, among other things, lots of 13 or more plants from the permit
requirement if they are composed of seeds of herbaceous plants,
precleared bulbs of a taxon approved by APHIS for preclearance, or
sterile cultures of orchid plants. One commenter stated that bulbs
should not be required to be accompanied by a permit, and asked us to
confirm that existing bulb import programs (which do not involve the
issuance of permits) would remain in place.
We did not propose to remove or otherwise alter any exemptions from
permitting for plants for planting. We merely proposed to move the
exemptions from the regulations to the Plants for Planting Manual. We
believe the Plants for Planting Manual affords us an opportunity to
present the exemptions more clearly, and in a manner that is more
accessible to the general public.
The requirement that lots of 13 or more plants be accompanied by a
permit also exempted lots of any size if they were from Canada. One
commenter asked whether we should continue to allow plants to be
imported from Canada without a permit, as this could leave a
substantial gap in our information about what plants we import and
where they are from. The commenter noted that 95 percent of imported
woody shrubs and trees come from Canada.
The exemption is long-standing and has not resulted in the
introduction of quarantine plant pests into the United States. Removing
it in the absence of demonstrable quarantine plant pest risk is not
justified.
One commenter stated that the new regulations should reflect the
adoption of controlled import permits (CIP).
We agree. After the proposed rule to revise the plants for planting
regulations was published, we published a final rule on May 2, 2013 (78
FR 25565-25572, Docket No. APHIS-2008-0055) establishing provisions in
a new Sec. 319.6 for the issuance of CIPs for articles otherwise
prohibited or restricted from importation, including plants for
planting. The May 2013 final rule made several changes to the plants
for planting regulations as part of establishing the CIP provisions. We
are incorporating most of those changes into the revision of the plants
for planting regulations in this final rule, and have made
corresponding changes to proposed Sec. Sec. 319.37-1, 319.37-4,
319.37-5, and 319.37-23.
We are not incorporating one provision of the final rule that
implemented CIPs, which required plants for planting imported into
postentry quarantine to be accompanied by a CIP. When we implemented
that final rule, we discovered that it had inadvertently changed the
regulatory status of plants for planting that are subject to postentry
quarantine from restricted articles to prohibited articles. This caused
significant confusion among stakeholders, and had the unintended effect
of significantly restructuring our postentry quarantine programs by
exempting plants for planting intended for postentry quarantine from
the general requirements of the regulations. As a result,
operationally, we have not required CIPs for plants for planting
intended for postentry quarantine for several years.
One commenter made the general comment that permits should only be
required when the importation of the plant is prohibited or allowed
under certain prescribed conditions. For other plants for planting that
are allowed entry, import requirements should be communicated in a
general manner to exporting countries to allow NPPOs to process and
distribute the information to their inspectors as well as their
stakeholders.
When we consider the plant pest risk associated with the
importation of plants for planting, we must consider both the risk
posed by the articles and the risk posed by the person importing the
articles. Requiring prospective importers to apply for a permit allows
us to deny or revoke permits to applicants who have failed to honor
APHIS plant import regulations in the past or who otherwise appear to
pose a risk of noncompliance. We discuss this at greater length in a
final rule that we published in the Federal Register (79 FR 19805-
19812, Docket No. APHIS-2011-0085) on April 10, 2014. That rule
amended, among other things, the conditions under which plants for
planting permit applications are denied within APHIS.
On a related matter, the April 2014 rule also amended the
conditions under which plants for planting permits are revoked within
APHIS. Those amended conditions are retained in this final rule.
Phytosanitary Certificates
We proposed to move the requirements for phytosanitary certificates
from Sec. 319.37-4 to Sec. 319.37-6. In moving them, we proposed to
remove three paragraphs in current Sec. 319.37-4 that describe
programs under which a phytosanitary certificate is not required, and
replace them with general standards that encompass these three current
programs and allow for the development of future programs.
Specifically, we proposed to state that that the Administrator may
authorize the importation of some types of plants for planting without
a phytosanitary certificate if the plants for planting are accompanied
by equivalent documentation agreed upon by the Administrator and the
NPPO of the exporting country as sufficient to establish the origin,
identity, and quarantine pest status of the plants.
One commenter stated that the requirement to identify place of
origin on documentation that substitutes for a phytosanitary
certificate would be unworkable in the context of the Canadian
greenhouse certification program, which had been set out in paragraph
(c) of Sec. 319.37-4. The commenter pointed out that, under that
program, Canadian producers were not currently required to document the
origin of the plants exported under this program. Implementing this
change, the commenter stated, would create a new administrative burden
for program participants.
It was not our intention to create new burdens for participants in
this program, but rather to put in place general language that could
encompass all the current and future programs under which phytosanitary
certificates are not required.
In this final rule, we are changing proposed Sec. 319.37-6 to
indicate that the Administrator may authorize the importation of types
of plants for planting without a phytosanitary certificate if the
plants for planting are accompanied by equivalent
[[Page 11849]]
documentation agreed upon by the Administrator and the NPPO of the
exporting country as sufficient to establish the eligibility of the
plants for importation into the United States. We believe this will
accommodate the Canadian greenhouse-grown plant program and address the
commenter's concern.
Marking and Identity
We proposed to move Sec. 319.37-10, which contained requirements
for marking and identity of imported plants for planting, to proposed
Sec. 319.37-7 and make minor changes to it.
One commenter noted that proposed Sec. 319.37-7(a) would require
any imported plants for planting to be marked with the number of the
written permit authorizing the importation, if one was required. The
commenter stated that it was unclear whether every individual plant
would have to be marked or if the mark applied to the whole consignment
of plants. The commenter expressed concern about the administrative
burden that would result if each individual plant were required to be
marked, and asked for clarification.
We intend for each consignment of plants for planting to be marked
with the permit number, not each individual plant. We have changed the
text of Sec. 319.37-7 to reflect this.
One commenter stated that some requirements in the section appeared
to be new. The commenter recommended that the requirements be moved to
the Plants for Planting Manual, since they are modified by the ports
from time to time, in recognition of changing trade and shipping
patterns and to improve the inspection process.
Except for some terminology changes, the requirements in proposed
Sec. 319.37-7 were identical to current Sec. 319.37-10, which has
been in place for decades. We are not aware of these requirements being
modified at the ports of entry; they represent a minimum amount of
information that should be conveyed about every consignment of plants
for planting for the purposes of identification and, if a pest is found
at port-of-entry inspection, for traceback.
Ports of Entry
The regulations governing ports of entry for imported plants for
planting were found in Sec. 319.37-14. We proposed to move them to
Sec. 319.37-8 and make some changes. The regulations had stated that
any regulated article required to be imported under a written permit
pursuant to Sec. 319.37-3(a)(1) through (6) must be imported or
offered for importation at a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
plant inspection station. We proposed to indicate instead that any
plants for planting required to be imported under a written permit
pursuant to proposed Sec. 319.37-5(a), if not precleared, may be
imported or offered for importation only at a USDA plant inspection
station listed in the Plants for Planting Manual.
One commenter noted that the proposed provision did not precisely
parallel the previous regulations, in that the current language only
requires certain plants for planting that must be imported under a
written permit to enter at a USDA plant inspection station, while the
proposed language would have required all plants for planting that must
be accompanied by a permit to enter at a USDA plant inspection station.
The commenter stated that the revised regulations should be consistent
with the previous regulations.
We agree with the commenter. We had intended to propose language
substantively identical to the scope of the previous requirements,
which had required plants for planting that must be imported under a
written permit, if not precleared, to be imported or offered for
importation only at a plant inspection station, with limited
exceptions. Our intent was not to remove any of these exceptions.
Accordingly, we have revised the proposed language to state that
any plants for planting required to be imported under a written permit
in accordance with Sec. 319.37-5(a), if not precleared, must be
imported or offered for importation only at a plant inspection station,
unless the Plants for Planting Manual indicates otherwise. The Plants
for Planting Manual will list the conditions under which an imported
plant for planting does not have to be offered for importation at a
plant inspection station. This change will preserve the status quo
while allowing more flexibility to change these conditions in the
future should a change be warranted.
Growing Media
Proposed Sec. 319.37-10 set out requirements for the importation
of plants for planting in growing media. It was based on previous Sec.
319.37-8, but we proposed to revise the current regulations to move
restrictions on the importation of specific types of plants for
planting from the regulations to the Plants for Planting Manual and to
add a notice-based process for updating the list of approved growing
media.
One commenter expressed concern that our proposed regulations did
not specifically allow the importation of plants for planting grown in
agar or agar-like tissue culture medium. The commenter asked us to
confirm that no new restrictions are part of this revision with respect
to plants for planting that are currently allowed into the United
States in agar or agar-like growing media.
We did not propose to make any changes to the current provisions
regarding the importation of plants for planting in agar or agar-like
growing media; we simply proposed to move them to the Plants for
Planting Manual.
One commenter asked that we change the current restrictions to
allow the importation of tissue culture plants that have been produced
in completely sterile conditions but are contained in sterile peat,
rather than in transparent agar or other tissue culture media.
As we did not propose to make any changes to the current
restrictions on the importation of plants for planting in growing
media, making such a change would be outside the scope of this final
rule. However, the changes we are making in this final rule will allow
for more timely addition of this exemption to the Plants for Planting
Manual, should we determine that the requested change is warranted.
Streamlined Process for Changes To Import Restrictions
Several commenters had questions about the streamlined process we
proposed in Sec. 319.37-20 for making changes to the Plants for
Planting Manual.
One commenter asked to confirm that the process will apply to
requests from foreign trading partners seeking to export new types of
plants for planting in growing media to the United States.
The process will be used to make all changes to the restrictions on
the importation of specific types of plants for planting, including
importation of any specific type of plants for planting in growing
media.
One commenter expressed concern regarding whether changes to the
Plants for Planting Manual would be readily evident to stakeholders.
The commenter also asked that sufficient time be provided for comments
from stakeholders, and inquired whether there will be additional
notification through the PPQ Stakeholder Registry to advise
stakeholders of changes. Another commenter stated that it is the
commenter's understanding that the comment period will typically be 60
days.
The second commenter is correct. We will typically provide for a
comment period of 60 days on notices to change restrictions in the
Plants for Planting Manual, and we have the option of
[[Page 11850]]
extending the comment period upon request. We will provide notice of
all changes we propose and all changes we make to the Plants for
Planting Manual through the Stakeholder Registry.
One commenter expressed concern that making it easier to propose to
change the requirements for importing specific types of plants for
planting could result in a very large number of proposals being posted
at one time, overwhelming a stakeholder's resources to respond by
posted deadlines. The commenter asked how the process will be managed
to facilitate stakeholder input.
Stakeholders will still have the opportunity to submit comments on
proposed changes. Making the restrictions on the importation of
planting for planting easier to update may result in more updates, but
we hope that they will also be smaller in scope than our periodic
amendments to the regulations have been. Wherever possible, we will
avoid requesting comment on many actions at once. We also have the
option of extending comment periods if stakeholders indicate they are
unable to provide input on any changes within the initial comment
period.
Integrated Pest Risk Management Measures
We proposed to set out a framework for the development of
integrated pest risk management measures (IPRMM) for the importation of
plants for planting in Sec. 319.37-21. The framework covered pest
management and traceability at the place of production; administration
of the program by APHIS and the NPPO of the supporting country; the
responsibilities of plant brokers; audits of the program; and actions
to take in case of noncompliance.
In the past, we have referred to these programs as ``systems
approaches.'' We stated in the proposed rule that the term ``integrated
pest risk management measures'' in the plants for planting regulations
is consistent with the North American Plant Protection Organization's
(NAPPO) Regional Standard for Phytosanitary Measures (RSPM) No. 24 and
ISPM No. 36 and industry terminology. The term also emphasizes the fact
that such programs involve multiple measures, each of which plays a
necessary part for a comprehensive approach to managing pest risk.
One commenter stated that IPRMM were not defined as being composed
of multiple separate measures that act synergistically to mitigate
plant pest risk. The commenter stated that the elements of separate
action and synergistic effects have long been a foundational principle
of systems approaches. The commenter asked that we state explicitly in
the regulations that the agency will incorporate the elements of
separate action and synergistic effects into its requirements for
integrated pest risk management programs.
In an IPRMM, every measure may be necessary to prevent the plants
from being infested by a particular pest, rather than the measures
having separate, synergistic effects as in a classic systems approach.
The program for production of Pelargonium and Solanum spp. free of
Ralstonia solanacearum race 3 biovar 2, which had been specified in
Sec. 319.37-5(r)(3) of the plants for planting regulations, is an
example of an IPRMM; each of the production practices in the paragraph
must be followed or there will be a significant risk of introduction of
the pathogen into the production site. Therefore, although some IPRMM
are likely to incorporate the effects of separate action and
synergistic effects, it would be inappropriate to state that we will
incorporate these into every IPRMM. However, where we can achieve such
effects, we will consider them as we design our programs.
The proposed rule stated that we would require plants for planting
to be imported in accordance with IPRMM when appropriate. Several
commenters asked for further information about when we might consider
IPRMM appropriate for the importation of plants for planting and
whether we would require them for every type of imported plants for
planting, or if there would be exceptions. One commenter asked whether
certain host/pest associations would be subject to IPRMM, and stated
that they seemed to be most valuable for asymptomatic, cryptic, or
seasonally symptomatic pests and pathogens.
Other commenters made recommendations about when we should employ
such measures. One stated that they should be employed for all plants
for planting to maintain a high level of protection. Two commenters
stated that other mitigation strategies may be appropriate, depending
on the circumstances.
We did not intend that IPRMM would be used for all imported plants
for planting. Such measures, properly implemented, can provide a high
level of protection against pests that are otherwise difficult to
detect or that pose a high risk. However, an IPRMM approach is not
necessary for all types of imported plants for planting. For plants for
planting covered by the inspection and certification program that had
been found in Sec. 319.37-5(a), for example, a simple inspection is
sufficient to assure freedom from quarantine pests.
Our goal is to establish the least restrictive measures for the
importation of plants for planting that will prevent the introduction
of quarantine pests into the United States. The IPRMM framework
described in proposed Sec. 319.37-21 is a means to achieve that goal,
but it will not be the only means we use.
In response to these comments, we have changed the introductory
text of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 to indicate that IPRMM will be
developed when such measures are necessary to mitigate risk.
We stated in the proposed rule that our IPRMM framework was based
on RSPM No. 24 and was consistent with the IPPC's ISPM No. 36, both of
which address plants for planting.
One commenter supported basing our proposed measures on RSPM No.
24. Other commenters stated that they should be based on ISPM No. 36.
Those commenters stated that using the international standard would
make it easier for growers and exporters to adopt and meet a single
standard that is applied globally. They also favored the approach of
ISPM No. 36, which incorporates some general baseline measures for
growing plants for planting and offers the ability to develop pest-
specific measures should they prove necessary. One of these commenters
stated that the RSPM is far more specific in its requirements than the
ISPM, and that the specificity is not appropriate and will not
encourage participation. The minimal components that are part of the
general standards in the ISPM, this commenter stated, would encourage
producers to adopt the measures; the RSPM has the potential to be
complex and burdensome on growers.
We believe that some of these comments may have arisen from
confusion about the applicability of IPRMM. We would only require
plants for planting to be imported under these measures if the risk
warrants it; these will not be general requirements for exporting
plants for planting to the United States.
In that sense, our regulatory approach is similar to that of ISPM
No. 36. As revised by this final rule, the regulations will contain
general standards for the importation of plants for planting, and
restrictions on the importation of specific types of plants for
planting will be found in the Plants for Planting Manual. The framework
in Sec. 319.37-21 is simply one way we plan to address the risks
associated with specific types of imported plants for planting.
[[Page 11851]]
One commenter noted that the NAPPO Plants for Planting Panel that
authored RSPM No. 24 subsequently compared the NAPPO and IPPC standards
and recommended the following: ``In light of the many similarities with
ISPM 36, maintaining RSPM 24 may well cause confusion for NAPPO
countries trying to implement both standards and [we recommend] that
RSPM 24 not be maintained.''
The quote provided by the commenter is correct. However, the
comparison document was not the final word from NAPPO but was intended
to be the subject of further discussion. In fact, NAPPO made the
decision to maintain RSPM No. 24, incorporating references to ISPM No.
36.\3\ The RSPM was most recently revised in August 2013. As the
document noted, the two standards are very similar, but the NAPPO
Plants for Planting Panel concluded that the differences were
significant enough to maintain two separate standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See https://www.nappo.org/files/3414/3895/8942/RSPM24-Revision-01-08-13-e.pdf for a discussion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated that we should pilot ISPM No. 36 with high-
volume plants for planting trading partners as the first step in
reducing the largely unmitigated risks of such trade.
As stated earlier, we only intend to require IPRMM in response to
an identified pest risk. However, we believe the general practices in
ISPM No. 36 are baseline practices for anyone who wishes to maintain a
successful plants for planting production facility.
One commenter stated that we should indicate in the regulations
that we will rely on the Annex to ISPM No. 36 when evaluating pest risk
and on section 2.2.1.2 and Appendix 1 to the standard in developing
mitigation measures.
We do not believe specific references in the regulations to these
sections of ISPM No. 36 are necessary. As a signatory to the IPPC, we
are committed to taking actions that are consistent with any relevant
ISPMs. In addition, the specific sections of the ISPM may change or be
removed, meaning we would have to change our regulations to reflect
that. One goal of this rulemaking is to reduce the number of changes we
have to make to keep the regulations current so including references to
specific sections of the ISPM would be counterproductive.
One commenter noted two differences between ISPM No. 36 and RSPM
No. 24:
ISPM No. 36 does not exclude plants as pests, while RSPM
No. 24 does.
ISPM No. 36 excludes seeds from consideration, while RSPM
No. 24 does not.
The commenter expressed openness to including plants as pests in
IPRMM, and felt that seeds should be excluded.
The aim of IPRMM is to prevent the introduction of quarantine pests
via the importation of plants for planting. A plant that was itself a
quarantine pest could not have measures applied to it to prevent it
from being a quarantine pest, meaning that it is appropriate to exclude
pest plants from IPRMM. However, if we identify a seed-borne pathogen
as a pest, we may need to develop IPRMM to ensure that the pathogen is
not present in imported seed. Therefore, we are making no changes in
response to these comments.
One commenter encouraged us to implement IPRMM so that any
enterable type of plants for planting grown under those measures will
also be allowed entry into the United States in approved growing media.
The commenter pointed out that it is currently our policy to conduct
pest risk assessments each time a country requests authorization to
import a taxon of plants for planting in approved growing media into
the United States, even if the same taxon is already authorized
importation into the United States, if it is bare-rooted. The commenter
stated that, after the final rule has been published, a pest risk
assessment for every new plant and growing media combination should not
be a mandatory requirement anymore, and that instead an approved IPRMM
system will allow a currently enterable plant to be imported in growing
media.
As plants in growing media pose different risks than plants not in
growing media, we will continue to consider the risk they pose
separately. We would need to identify the pests that could be
introduced in growing media and develop separate mitigations for them,
as we do now. However, we are open to the possibility of IPRMM for
plants in growing media that could address all types of quarantine
pests that could be associated with a type of plants for planting.
One commenter asked us to establish clear criteria for the approval
of IPRMM so that the NPPO of an exporting country, along with the
NPPO's stakeholders, can evaluate whether a proposed use of IPRMM will
be feasible. The commenter noted that the proposed rule did not specify
a timeframe for the approval process for IPRMM.
We will develop IPRMM in consultation with foreign NPPOs that
desire to export plants for planting to the United States. We do not
want to put in place requirements that an exporting country cannot
meet; where difficulties arise, we will work with exporting countries
to find equivalent mitigations. The framework for IPRMM is open to the
use of any means to effectively mitigate the pest risk, as it allows
places of production and NPPOs to come up with pest management plans
for their facilities.
As with our other programs for importation of plants and plant
products, the time necessary to develop and approve a set of IPRMM will
vary with the number of pests that must be mitigated and the complexity
of the mitigations that are necessary.
One commenter stated that the current regulations for importation
of plants in growing media in Sec. 319.37-8 require that APHIS and the
NPPO of the exporting country establish a written agreement for
enforcement of the regulations, which is reflected through a bilateral
workplan. The commenter asked whether the workplans would be replaced
by IPRMM or would continue to exist in parallel with such measures.
We are not making any changes to our existing use of workplans to
help implement the plants for planting regulations. When we develop
IPRMM, it is likely that a workplan will be necessary to implement
them.
Paragraph (a) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 describes the
responsibilities of the place of production. It refers to documentation
required under proposed paragraph (a)(5), which required documentation
of program procedures being maintained by the place of production and
available to the NPPO of the exporting country and APHIS upon request.
One commenter suggested that this reference should be to proposed
paragraph (a)(6), which requires recordkeeping, rather than (a)(5).
We believe the documentation of program procedures maintained by
places of production should be available to the NPPO of the exporting
country and APHIS, but so should records required under paragraph
(a)(6), as the commenter suggests. In this final rule, the reference
includes both paragraphs.
Paragraph (a)(4) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 set out requirements
for approved places of production to maintain traceability. We proposed
that the system would at a minimum have to account for:
The origin and pest status of mother stock;
The year of propagation and the place of production of all
plant parts that make up the plants for planting intended for export;
Geographic location of the place of production;
Location of plants for planting within the place of
production;
The plant taxon; and
[[Page 11852]]
The purchaser's identity.
One commenter stated that the requirements for traceability in RSPM
No. 24 are far too prescriptive, often beyond the capacity of a grower.
The commenter stated that it is impossible, for many
faster[hyphen]growing crops, to keep records on the location of plants
for planting within the place of production. Within greenhouse
production, the commenter stated that the limitations of space, timing
of turns, and modern production practices would make it nearly
impossible and certainly too costly to accomplish this level of
traceability. The commenter added that in nursery production there are
often multiple growing operations involved with producing a marketable
crop, typically many iterations away from mother stock. In the
commenter's opinion, the reality of pest and pathogen dispersal make it
overwhelmingly unlikely that information connecting a plant to mother
stock would be of any value and would be costly far beyond its utility.
The commenter stated that the same general concern about being overly
specific applies to many of the prescriptive elements in this section.
We disagree with the commenter that these requirements are
unrealistic. Knowing where in the production facility plants are
located, for example, is not only necessary to maintain phytosanitary
security but also to fulfill orders. Records of the mother stock used
to produce plants allows for tracking which stock is most successful,
as well as providing traceability in the event of a pest outbreak. A
well-maintained place of production will keep these records as a means
to ensure that its plants grow well so that orders can be fulfilled
safely and efficiently.
ISPM No. 36 supports our judgment. The standard indicates in
section 2.1.1 that the following conditions (among others) should be
included in the approval process for producers seeking to use the
general integrated measures:
Maintaining an updated plan of the place of production as
well as keeping records of when, where and how plants for planting were
produced, treated, stored or prepared for movement from the place of
production (including information on all plant species at the place of
production and the type of plant material such as cuttings, in vitro
cultures, bare root plants).
Keeping records for a period determined by the NPPO of the
exporting country that verify where and how plants for planting were
purchased, stored, produced, distributed and any other relevant
information on their plant health status.
These are substantively identical to the traceability requirements
in proposed paragraph (a)(4).
However, we have reviewed the proposed traceability requirements
and determined that they may not all need to be in place for every set
of IPRMM. Different pests will require different levels and types of
traceability. Therefore, this final rule indicates that, depending on
the nature of the quarantine pest, the system may need to include those
traceability elements. This change will ensure that our traceability
requirements in IPRMM are not unnecessarily restrictive.
Paragraph (c)(1) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 required the NPPO of
the exporting country to provide APHIS with information about, among
other things, the pests associated with the plant, including
prevalence, distribution, and damage potential. One commenter asked how
the exporting country can assess the potential damage that might occur
in the United States.
If the exporting country has information about the damage a plant
pest causes in that country, we can use it to inform our assessment of
the potential damage the pest can cause in the United States.
Requesting such information is consistent with the requirements for
requests to change the general requirements for importing a plant or
plant product into the United States in Sec. 319.5.
Paragraph (d) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 addressed the
responsibilities of plant brokers trading in plants for planting for
export that are produced in accordance with IPRMM. We proposed to
require plant brokers to be approved by the NPPO of the exporting
country or its designee. Under the proposed rule, plant brokers would
have to ensure the traceability of consignments from an approved place
of production or production site and maintain the phytosanitary status
of the plants in a manner equivalent to an approved place of production
from purchase, storage, and transportation to the export destination.
Brokers would also have to document their processes for verifying
status and maintaining traceability.
We received several comments on these provisions. One commenter
opposed the proposed requirements for plant brokers, stating that they
were overly restrictive and should be rewritten in consultation with
industry. The commenter specifically opposed the requirements that
brokers maintain the phytosanitary status and traceability of their
plants, stating that brokers are likely commingling material from
several places of production. The commenter supported the approach of
ISPM No. 36, which limits integrated measures to the place of
production.
Five commenters supported the proposed provisions. One stated that
brokers play an extremely important role in ensuring the integrity of
the proposed measures and that consignments of plants that have been
produced under different IPRMM or outside any such measures cannot be
allowed to be mixed because such mixing would undermine the system.
Another stated that, in the commenter's experience, sales demands or
lack of inventory lead to substitutions by brokers, especially if
untrained employees are responsible for fulfilling orders, and
supported the requirements as an effort to ensure that careful
consideration is given to the role and responsibilities of brokers in
the importation process.
We are retaining the proposed provisions for plant brokers in this
final rule. We agree with the latter commenters that the step of the
export chain after the plants leave the place of production and before
they are exported is crucial to ensuring the success of IPRMM. For
example, if a plant was produced in accordance with measures designed
to exclude an insect pest, it would need to be secured to prevent
infestation after it left the production site. In particular,
commingling the plants for planting with plants for planting not
produced in accordance with IPRMM could result in infested plants being
exported to the United States. Brokers have a responsibility to
maintain such security.
One commenter stated that we should prohibit plant brokers from
commingling plants from various sources.
The requirement that plant brokers maintain the phytosanitary
status of their plants will prevent plant brokers from commingling
plants for planting produced in accordance with IPRMM and plants not
produced in accordance with such measures. However, there is no
phytosanitary risk-based reason to prohibit plant brokers from
commingling plants for planting produced in accordance with IPRMM from
different places of production. The places of production with
commingled plants assume a risk that, if a pest is detected at the port
of entry, and, depending on the biology of the pest, it is necessary to
destroy, treat, or re-export the shipment, all the plants in the
shipment would be affected.
One commenter asked whether plant brokers are considered plant
exporters. Another asked whether brokers who take possession of plants
for planting at
[[Page 11853]]
U.S. ports would be covered by proposed paragraph (d).
We do not know the distinction the first commenter intends between
the terms ``plant broker'' and ``plant exporter.'' In response to the
second comment, brokers who take possession of plants for planting at
U.S. ports would not be covered by the IPRMM. However, these two
comments indicate to us that we need to define the term ``plant
broker'' more clearly. RSPM No. 24 includes a definition that reads as
follows: ``An entity that purchases or takes possession of plants for
planting from an approved place of production for the purpose of
exporting those plants without further growing beyond maintaining the
plants until export.'' In this final rule, we are adding this
definition of plant broker to Sec. 319.37-2 to provide further
clarity.
One commenter asked about the rationale for requiring plant brokers
to be officially approved, noting that such a requirement does not
exist currently when exporting plants for planting to the United
States. The commenter stated that such a requirement could be a barrier
to trade, preventing brokers from taking advantage of export
opportunities. The commenter recommended that certification of
traceability be left to the NPPO of the exporting country.
As discussed earlier, we will only use IPRMM when the pest risk
warrants doing so. Pests for which such measures will be developed will
likely be high-risk, difficult or impossible to detect through visual
inspection, or both. In such cases, we believe plant brokers must be
approved by the NPPO of the exporting country. This will ensure
additional accountability in the context of the IPRMM. As noted later
in the framework, a plant broker could be suspended from participating
in an IPRMM program if he or she was found to have failed to meet the
program requirements. In order to be suspended, the plant broker must
first be approved.
It is important to note again that approval of plant brokers by the
NPPO of the exporting country will not be a general requirement for the
importation of all plants for planting, just those whose importation
will be subject to IPRMM. Plant brokers who, for whatever reason,
cannot or do not want to get approval from their NPPO to act as plant
brokers in IPRMM programs will be able to participate in the export of
other plants. To make this clear, this final rule modifies proposed
paragraph (d) to indicate that the requirements for plant brokers only
apply when they trade in plants for planting produced in accordance
with IPRMM.
One commenter asked how traceback would affect plant brokers and
approved production sites or places of production if a pest was
detected at the port of entry in a consignment of plants for planting
produced in accordance with IPRMM. The commenter asked how traceback
would function to decide at which point the system failed, and whether
the place of production or the broker would be held responsible. The
commenter also asked what remedies would be applied if the broker was
not approved.
Under our current regulations and in accordance with international
standards, when a pest is detected at the port of entry in exported
plants for planting, the NPPO of the exporting country conducts
traceback to determine where phytosanitary security may have been
compromised. This would continue to be the case for any plants for
planting produced in accordance with IPRMM. Responsibility would be
determined based on the investigation. Any place of production or plant
broker not meeting the conditions of the IPRMM would be suspended. If a
broker is not approved to participate in the IPRMM program, APHIS and
the NPPO of the exporting country would work together to determine
whether tighter controls should be applied.
As noted earlier, the proposed plant broker requirements included a
requirement that the brokers maintain the phytosanitary status of the
plants in a manner equivalent to an approved place of production from
purchase, storage, and transportation to the export destination. We
also proposed to require plant brokers to document their process for
verifying status.
One commenter asked how a broker would write up a ``place of
production'' manual and audit it.
We believe the wording of the proposed requirement may have created
some confusion. We do not intend for plant brokers to maintain the
phytosanitary status of plants exactly as a place of production would,
but rather to ensure that the plants remain free of the pests of
concern after they leave the place of production. For example, if the
pest of concern is an insect pest, the place of production may be
required to have double-entry doors, trapping and monitoring, or other
such mitigations. The plant broker may be able to secure the plants
simply by keeping them in a sealed container or making sure they are
covered with insect-proof mesh at all times. To make this clear, we are
removing the words ``in a manner'' from the proposed text, so that the
broker is required to maintain the phytosanitary status of the plants
after they leave the place of production but not necessarily to use the
same methods as the place of production to do so.
Paragraph (e) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 set out requirements for
external audits of IPRMM. Paragraph (e)(1) set out provisions for APHIS
audits.
One commenter stated that it is considered the responsibility of
the NPPO of the exporting country to verify compliance, not the
importing country, under the IPPC. The commenter also objected to the
idea that APHIS would audit the performance of the NPPO of the
exporting country.
We agree with the commenter. The proposed requirements indicated
that APHIS or its designee will periodically audit the system to ensure
that it continues to meet the stated objectives, but the performance of
the NPPO will not be audited. In the proposed rule, we indicated that
post-approval audits will include inspection of imported plants for
planting, site visits, and review of the IPRMM and internal audit
processes of both the place of production and the NPPO of the exporting
country. We are indicating in this final rule that such audits may
include those things, as we so require, to allow for more leeway to
choose the appropriate level of auditing.
Paragraph (f) of proposed Sec. 319.37-21 set out a framework for
determining actions in case of noncompliance. It stated that regulatory
responses to program failures will be based on existing bilateral
agreements and that APHIS will specify the consequences of
noncompliance to the NPPO of the exporting country.
One commenter stated that we should incorporate the strongest
penalties listed in ISPM No. 36, RSPM No. 24, and the proposal,
wherever they may happen to be found, into the final regulations.
We understand the commenter's concerns about the potential
consequences of noncompliance. However, as different IPRMM will
necessarily have different points of concern and potential
noncompliance, we believe it will be simpler and more flexible to
determine the actions we take in case of noncompliance within the
individual IPRMM.
Postentry Quarantine
We proposed to set out requirements for postentry quarantine in
Sec. 319.37-23. Under current Sec. 319.37-7, certain taxa of plants
for planting are required to be grown in postentry quarantine in order
to determine whether they are infested with quarantine pests, typically
pathogens. Section 319.37-7 also provides a framework of requirements
under which postentry quarantine must be conducted and completed. We
[[Page 11854]]
proposed to move the lists of taxa that must be grown in postentry
quarantine that are currently found in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Sec.
319.37-7 to the Plants for Planting Manual and update them with the
streamlined process.
One commenter expressed concerns about the use of postentry
quarantine. The commenter stated that the system has proved inadequate
to prevent pests from escaping, as in the escape of citrus longhorned
beetle (Anoplophora chinensis) at a nursery in Tukwila, WA. The
commenter hoped that APHIS will shift from using postentry quarantine
as a mitigation to the use of IPRMM.
We do intend to emphasize the use of IPRMM to address pest risks
rather than postentry quarantine in the future. The restructuring of
the plants for planting regulations will make it easier to do so.
We proposed to set out requirements for State postentry quarantine
agreements in paragraph (b) of proposed Sec. 319.37-23. Such
requirements were previously found in paragraph (c) of Sec. 319.37-7.
We stated that there is no need to retain the level of detail regarding
such agreements that is found in current paragraph (c), which sets out
extensive requirements that States must meet in order to be sites for
postentry quarantine; for example, the paragraph includes detailed
requirements for State laws and regulations, duties of State
inspectors, services APHIS agrees to provide, and provisions for
termination of a State postentry quarantine agreement.
One commenter expressed concern about removing this detail,
believing that the agreements could be subject to political pressure
and other nonscientific factors during negotiation that could result in
heightened pest risk.
We do not anticipate that anything will change as a result of
removing the details, and, as the commenter noted, removing those
details will allow us to tailor the agreements to specific
circumstances.
Miscellaneous Changes
Proposed paragraph (c) of Sec. 319.37-1 indicated that the
importation of plants that are imported for processing, as determined
by an inspector based on documentation accompanying the articles, is
not subject to the plants for planting regulations. However, the
importation of such plants may be subject to other regulations, and the
proposed text could have given the impression that there were no
further requirements for the importation of such plants. Therefore, in
this final rule, we have changed the proposed paragraph to indicate
that the importation of such plants is not subject to the plants for
planting regulations but may be subject to regulations elsewhere in 7
CFR part 319, which contains the import quarantine notices.
Additionally, plants that are imported for consumption, as
determined by an inspector based on documentation accompanying the
articles, are similarly not subject to the plants for planting
regulations. We have changed proposed paragraph (c) to reflect this as
well.
In the same section, proposed paragraph (f) had indicated that
common names of plants for planting may be given in parentheses after
most scientific names, when common names are known. This was intended
to refer to the Plants for Planting Manual, rather than the regulations
themselves, since we were proposing to move taxa-specific restrictions
and prohibitions to the manual. In this final rule, we clarify that
paragraph (f) of Sec. 319.37-1 pertains to the Plants for Planting
Manual.
In the definitions section of this final rule, Sec. 319.37-2, we
are adding a definition of Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) for clarity. Adding this definition allows us to simplify the
wording of the definition of Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs
and reflects the use of the acronym ``APHIS'' throughout the subpart.
Additionally, since the proposed rule was issued, we revised the
definition of phytosanitary certificate within the plants for planting
regulations. We are retaining this revised definition, with minor edits
to reflect the structure of the revised subpart.
Finally, the revisions to the subpart make it necessary for us to
update references and citations that appear elsewhere in our
regulations in title 7. We are making these nonsubstantive updates in 7
CFR parts 318, 319, 330, 340, 360, and 361.
Therefore, for the reasons given in the proposed rule and in this
document, we are adopting the proposed rule as a final rule, with the
changes discussed in this document.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13771 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 and, therefore, has not been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget. This rule is not
expected to be an E.O. 13771 regulatory action because it is not
significant under E.O. 12866. Further, APHIS considers this rule to be
a deregulatory action under E.O. 13771 as it will facilitate access to
information on import restrictions for specific types of plants for
planting and create a more efficient process for amending import
requirements.
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 604, we have performed a final
regulatory flexibility analysis, which is summarized below, regarding
the economic effects of this rule on small entities. Copies of the full
analysis are available on the Regulations.gov website (see footnote 1
in this document for a link to Regulations.gov) or by contacting the
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
This analysis examines the potential economic impacts on small
entities of a final rule to restructure the regulations contained in 7
CFR part 319 that govern the importation of plants for planting. This
action will provide for more efficient application of these
regulations, while not making any major changes to current import
restrictions. Besides improving the clarity of these regulations, the
rule will:
Consolidate the requirements for importation of plants for
planting into one subpart in 7 CFR part 319;
Add most of the plants for planting that are listed as
prohibited to the list of those whose importation is NAPPRA;
Characterize the other prohibitions as restrictions, and
add them to the Plants for Planting manual;
Remove several lists of approved items (for example,
approved growing media, packing materials, and ports of entry) from the
regulations and instead provide these lists to the public in the Plants
for Planting Manual;
Move restrictions on the importation of specific types of
plants for planting from the regulations to the Plants for Planting
Manual;
Establish a framework for the use of IPRMM where
appropriate in the production of specific types of plants for planting
for importation into the United States;
Clarify postentry quarantine requirements; and
Establish a process for making changes to import
restrictions on specific types of plants for planting after taking
public comment on notices published in the Federal Register, rather
than by publishing proposed and final rules.
The changes will facilitate access to information on import
restrictions for specific types of plants for planting, and create a
more efficient process for amending import requirements. Importers of
plants for planting can expect changes in import restrictions to be
accomplished more than 4 months sooner than they would be through
rulemaking. While nearly all importers of plants for planting that are
directly affected by the rule are small, any
[[Page 11855]]
associated costs will be modest, including instances in which
phytosanitary certification are newly required.
Executive Order 12988
This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. This rule: (1) Preempts all State and local laws
and regulations that are inconsistent with this rule; (2) has no
retroactive effect; and (3) does not require administrative proceedings
before parties may file suit in court challenging this rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains no new reporting, recordkeeping, or third
party disclosure requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 318
Cotton, Cottonseeds, Fruits, Guam, Plant diseases and pests, Puerto
Rico, Quarantine, Transportation, Vegetables, Virgin Islands.
7 CFR Part 319
Coffee, Cotton, Fruits, Imports, Logs, Plant diseases and pests,
Plants for planting, Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rice, Vegetables.
7 CFR Part 330
Customs duties and inspection, Plant diseases and pests,
Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Transportation.
7 CFR Part 340
Administrative practice and procedure, Biotechnology, Genetic
engineering, Imports, Packaging and containers, Plant diseases and
pests, Transportation.
7 CFR Part 360
Plants, Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Transportation.
7 CFR Part 361
Agricultural commodities, Imports, Labeling, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Seeds.
Accordingly, we are amending 7 CFR parts 318, 319, 330, 340, 360,
and 361 as follows:
PART 318--STATE OF HAWAII AND TERRITORIES QUARANTINE NOTICES
0
1. The authority citation for part 318 continues to read as follows.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80,
and 371.3.
0
2. Section 318.60 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 318.60 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(c) Sand (other than clean ocean sand), soil, or earth around the
roots of plants shall not be shipped, offered for shipment to a common
carrier, received for transportation or transported by a common
carrier, or carried, transported, moved, or allowed to be moved by any
person from Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands of the United
States into or through any other State, Territory, or District of the
United States: Provided, That the prohibitions of this section shall
not apply to the movement of such products in either direction between
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands of the United States: Provided
further, That such prohibitions shall not prohibit the movement of such
products by the United States Department of Agriculture for scientific
or experimental purposes, nor prohibit the movement of sand, soil, or
earth around the roots of plants which are carried, for ornamental
purposes, on vessels into mainland ports of the United States and which
are not intended to be landed thereat, when evidence is presented
satisfactory to the inspector of the Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs of the Department of Agriculture that such sand, soil, or
earth has been so processed or is of such nature that no pest risk is
involved, or that the plants with sand, soil, or earth around them are
maintained on board under such safeguards as will preclude pest escape:
And provided further, That such prohibitions shall not prohibit the
movement of plant cuttings or plants that have been--
(1) Freed from sand, soil, and earth;
(2) Subsequently potted and established in sphagnum moss or other
packing material approved under Sec. 319.37-11 of this chapter that
had been stored under shelter and had not been previously used for
growing or packing plants;
(3) Grown thereafter in a manner satisfactory to an inspector of
the Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs to prevent infestation
through contact with sand, soil, or earth; and
(4) Certified by an inspector of the Plant Protection and
Quarantine Programs as meeting the requirements of paragraphs (c)(1)
through (3) of this section.
* * * * *
PART 319--FOREIGN QUARANTINE NOTICES
0
3. The authority citation for part 319 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450, 7701-7772, and 7781-7786; 21 U.S.C.
136 and 136a; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
Sec. 319.6 [Amended]
0
4. In Sec. 319.6, paragraph (d)(4) is amended by removing the citation
``Sec. 319.37-9'' and adding the citation ``Sec. 319.37-11'' in its
place.
0
5. Section 319.8 is amended as follows:
0
a. By designating the current text of the section as paragraph (a); and
0
b. By adding paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 319.8 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(b) The importation of cotton plants (including any plant parts)
that are for planting or capable of being planted is restricted in
Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
Sec. 319.8-1 [Amended]
0
6. In Sec. 319.8-1, the definition of cottonseed is amended by adding
the words ``and that is intended for processing or consumption'' before
the period.
0
7. Section 319.15 is amended as follows:
0
a. By redesignating paragraph (b) as paragraph (c); and
0
b. By adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 319.15 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(b) The importation of sugarcane plants (including any plant parts)
that are for planting or capable of being planted is restricted under
Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
* * * * *
Subpart--Citrus Canker and Other Citrus Diseases [Removed]
0
8. Subpart--Citrus Canker and Other Citrus Diseases, consisting of
Sec. 319.19, is removed.
0
9. Section 319.24 is amended as follows:
0
a. By redesignating paragraphs (b) through (d) as paragraphs (c)
through (e), respectively; and
0
b. By adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 319.24 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(b) The importation of corn plants (including any plant parts) that
are for
[[Page 11856]]
planting or capable of being planted is restricted in Subpart--Plants
for Planting of this part.
* * * * *
0
10. Subpart--Citrus Fruit, is amended by revising the first paragraph
of the Note below the subpart heading that precedes Sec. 319.28 to
read as follows:
Subpart--Citrus Fruit
Note 1 to Subpart--Citrus Fruit: Citrus plants for planting may be
imported in accordance with Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
* * * * *
0
11. Section 319.28 is amended as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(4), by removing the words ``Sec. Sec. 319.37
through 319.37-27'' and adding the words ``Sec. Sec. 319.37-1 through
319.37-23'' in their place;
0
b. In paragraph (b)(8) introductory text, by removing the words ``port
of entry identified in Sec. 319.37-14'' and adding the words ``Customs
designated port of entry indicated in 19 CFR 101.3(b)(1)'' in their
place; and
0
c. By revising the OMB citation at the end of the section.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.28 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0173 and 0579-0314)
0
12. Subpart--Plants for Planting, consisting currently of Sec. Sec.
319.37 through 319.37-14, is revised to read as follows:
Subpart--Plants for Planting
Sec.
319.37-1 Notice of quarantine.
319.37-2 Definitions.
319.37-3 General restrictions on the importation of plants for
planting.
319.37-4 Taxa of plants for planting whose importation is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis.
319.37-5 Permits.
319.37-6 Phytosanitary certificates.
319.37-7 Marking and identity.
319.37-8 Ports of entry: Approved ports, notification of arrival,
inspection, and refusal of entry.
319.37-9 Treatment of plants for planting; costs and charges for
inspection and treatment; treatments applied outside the United
States.
319.37-10 Growing media.
319.37-11 Packing and approved packing material.
319.37-12 through 319.37-19 [Reserved]
319.37-20 Restrictions on the importation of specific types of
plants for planting.
319.37-21 Integrated pest risk management measures.
319.37-22 Trust fund agreements.
319.37-23 Postentry quarantine.
Subpart--Plants for Planting
Sec. 319.37-1 Notice of quarantine.
(a) Under section 412(a) of the Plant Protection Act, the Secretary
of Agriculture may prohibit or restrict the importation and entry of
any plant or plant product if the Secretary determines that the
prohibition or restriction is necessary to prevent the introduction
into the United States or the dissemination within the United States of
a plant pest or noxious weed.
(b) The Secretary has determined that it is necessary to designate
the importation of certain taxa of plants for planting as not
authorized pending pest risk analysis, as provided in Sec. 319.37-4.
The Secretary has determined that it is necessary to restrict the
importation into the United States of all other plants for planting and
to impose additional restrictions on the importation of specific types
of plants for planting, in accordance with this subpart and as
described in the Plants for Planting Manual.
(c) The importation of plants that are imported for processing or
consumption, as determined by an inspector based on documentation
accompanying the articles, is not subject to this subpart but may be
subject to restrictions elsewhere in this part.
(d) The importation of taxa of plants for planting that are listed
in parts 360 and 361 of this chapter is subject to the restrictions in
those parts.
(e) The Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs also enforces
regulations promulgated under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16
U.S.C. 1531-1544) which contain additional prohibitions and
restrictions on importation into the United States of plants for
planting subject to this subpart (see 50 CFR parts 17 and 23).
(f) Within the Plants for Planting Manual, one or more common names
of plants for planting may be given in parentheses after most
scientific names (when common names are known) for the purpose of
helping to identify the plants for planting represented by such
scientific names; however, unless otherwise specified, a reference to a
scientific name includes all plants for planting within the taxon
represented by the scientific name regardless of whether the common
name or names are as comprehensive in scope as the scientific name.
When restrictions apply to the importation of a taxon of plants for
planting for which there are taxonomic synonyms, those restrictions
apply to the importation of all the synonyms of that taxon as well.
Sec. 319.37-2 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart:
Administrator. The Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, or any
other employee of the United States Department of Agriculture
authorized to act in his or her stead.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service, United States Department of
Agriculture.
Bulb. The portion of a plant commonly known as a bulb, bulbil,
bulblet, corm, cormel, rhizome, tuber, or pip, and including fleshy
roots or other underground fleshy growths, a unit of which produces an
individual plant.
Consignment. A quantity of plants for planting being moved from one
country to another and covered, when required, by a single
phytosanitary certificate (a consignment may be composed of one or more
lots or taxa).
Controlled import permit. A written or electronically transmitted
authorization issued by APHIS for the importation into the United
States of otherwise prohibited or restricted plant material for
experimental, therapeutic, or developmental purposes, under controlled
conditions as prescribed by the Administrator in accordance with Sec.
319.6.
Earth. The softer matter composing part of the surface of the
globe, in distinction from the firm rock, and including the soil and
subsoil, as well as finely divided rock and other soil formation
materials down to the rock layer.
From. Plants for planting are considered to be ``from'' any country
or locality in which they are grown. Provided, That plants for planting
imported into Canada from another country or locality shall be
considered as being solely from Canada if they meet the following
conditions:
(1) They are imported into the United States directly from Canada
after having been grown for at least 1 year in Canada;
(2) They have never been grown in a country from which their
importation would not be authorized pending pest risk analysis under
Sec. 319.37-4;
(3) They have never been grown in a country, other than Canada,
from which it would be subject to certain restrictions on the
importation of specific types of plants for planting under Sec.
319.37-20, which are listed in the Plants for Planting Manual;
Provided, that plants for planting that would be subject to postentry
quarantine if imported into the United States may be imported from
Canada
[[Page 11857]]
after growth in another country if they were grown in Canada in
postentry quarantine under conditions equivalent to those specified in
the Plants for Planting Manual; and
(4) They were not imported into Canada in growing media.
Inspector. Any individual authorized by the Administrator or the
Commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland
Security, to enforce the regulations in this part.
Lot. A number of units of a single commodity, identifiable by its
homogeneity of composition and origin, forming all or part of a
consignment.
Mother stock. A group of plants from which plant parts are taken to
produce new plants.
National plant protection organization (NPPO). The official service
established by a government to discharge the functions specified by the
International Plant Protection Convention.
Noxious weed. Any plant or plant product that can directly or
indirectly injure or cause damage to crops (including plants for
planting or plant products), livestock, poultry, or other interests of
agriculture, irrigation, navigation, the natural resources of the
United States, the public health, or the environment.
Official control. The active enforcement of mandatory phytosanitary
regulations and the application of mandatory phytosanitary procedures
with the objective of eradication or containment of quarantine pests.
Person. Any individual, partnership, corporation, association,
joint venture, or other legal entity.
Phytosanitary certificate. A document, including electronic
versions, that is related to a restricted article and is issued not
more than 15 days prior to shipment of the restricted article from the
country in which it was grown and that:
(1) Is patterned after the model certificate of the International
Plant Protection Convention, a multilateral convention on plant
protection under the authority of the Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations (FAO);
(2) Is issued by an official of a foreign national plant protection
organization in one of the five official languages of the FAO;
(3) Is addressed to the national plant protection organization of
the United States (Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service);
(4) Describes the shipment;
(5) Certifies the place of origin for all contents of the shipment;
(6) Certifies that the shipment has been inspected and/or tested
according to appropriate official procedures and is considered free
from quarantine pests of the United States;
(7) Contains any additional declarations required in the Plants for
Planting Manual; and
(8) Certifies that the shipment conforms with the phytosanitary
requirements of the United States and is considered eligible for
importation pursuant to the laws and regulations of the United States.
Place of production. Any premises or collection of fields operated
as a single production or farming unit. This may include production
sites that are separately managed for phytosanitary purposes.
Plant. Any plant (including any plant part) for or capable of
propagation, including a tree, a tissue culture, a plantlet culture,
pollen, a shrub, a vine, a cutting, a graft, a scion, a bud, a bulb, a
root, and a seed.
Plant broker. An entity that purchases or takes possession of
plants for planting from an approved place of production for the
purpose of exporting those plants without further growing beyond
maintaining the plants until export.
Plant pest. Any living stage of any of the following that can
directly or indirectly injure, cause damage to, or cause disease in any
plant or plant product: A protozoan, a nonhuman animal, a parasitic
plant, a bacterium, a fungus, a virus or viroid, an infectious agent or
other pathogen, or any article similar to or allied with any of these
articles.
Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs. The organizational unit
within APHIS that is delegated responsibility for enforcing provisions
of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.) and related
legislation, quarantines, and regulations.
Planting. Any operation for the placing of plants in a growing
medium, or by grafting or similar operations, to ensure their
subsequent growth, reproduction, or propagation.
Plants for planting. Plants intended to remain planted, to be
planted, or replanted.
Plants for Planting Manual. The document that contains restrictions
on the importation of specific types of plants for planting, as
provided in Sec. 319.37-20, and other information about the
importation of plants for planting as provided in this subpart. The
Plants for Planting Manual is available on the internet at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/import_export/plants/manuals/ports/downloads/plants_for_planting.pdf. or by contacting the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, Plant Protection and Quarantine, 4700 River Road,
Unit 133, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236.
Port of first arrival. The land area (such as a seaport, airport,
or land border station) where a person, or a land, water, or air
vehicle, first arrives after entering the territory of the United
States, and where inspection of plants for planting is carried out by
inspectors.
Preclearance. Phytosanitary inspection and/or clearance in the
country in which the plants for planting were grown, performed by or
under the regular supervision of APHIS.
Production site. A defined portion of a place of production
utilized for the production of a commodity that is managed separately
for phytosanitary purposes. This may include the entire place of
production or portions of it. Examples of portions of places of
production are a defined orchard, grove, field, greenhouse,
screenhouse, or premises.
Quarantine pest. A plant pest or noxious weed that is of potential
economic importance to the United States and not yet present in the
United States, or present but not widely distributed and being
officially controlled.
Regulated plant. A vascular or nonvascular plant. Vascular plants
include gymnosperms, angiosperms, ferns, and fern allies. Gymnosperms
include cycads, conifers, and gingko. Angiosperms include any flowering
plant. Fern allies include club mosses, horsetails, whisk ferns, spike
mosses, and quillworts. Nonvascular plants include mosses, liverworts,
hornworts, and green algae.
Secretary. The Secretary of Agriculture, or any other officer or
employee of the Department of Agriculture to whom authority to act in
his/her stead has been or may hereafter be delegated.
Soil. The loose surface material of the earth in which plants,
trees, and shrubs grow, in most cases consisting of disintegrated rock
with an admixture of organic material and soluble salts.
Species (spp.). All species, clones, cultivars, strains, varieties,
and hybrids of a genus.
State. Any of the several States of the United States, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, Guam, the Virgin Islands of the
United States, or any other territory or possession of the United
States.
[[Page 11858]]
State Plant Regulatory Official. The official authorized by the
State to sign agreements with Federal agencies involving operations of
the State plant protection agency.
Taxon (taxa). Any grouping within botanical nomenclature, such as
family, genus, species, or cultivar.
Type of plants for planting. A grouping of plants for planting
based on shared characteristics such as biological traits, morphology,
botanical nomenclature, or risk factors.
United States. All of the States.
Sec. 319.37-3 General restrictions on the importation of plants for
planting.
(a) The importation of certain taxa of plants for planting is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis in accordance with Sec. 319.37-
4.
(b) General restrictions that apply to the importation of all
plants for planting other than those whose importation is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis are found in Sec. Sec. 319.37-5
through 319.37-11.
(c) In accordance with Sec. 319.37-20, the Administrator may
impose restrictions on the importation of specific types of plants for
planting. These restrictions are listed in the Plants for Planting
Manual. Additional information on restrictions applicable to the
importation of specific types of plants for planting can be found in
Sec. Sec. 319.37-20 through 319.37-23.
Sec. 319.37-4 Taxa of plants for planting whose importation is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis.
(a) Determination by the Administrator. The importation of certain
taxa of plants for planting poses a risk of introducing quarantine
pests into the United States. Therefore, the importation of these taxa
is not authorized pending the completion of a pest risk analysis,
except as provided in paragraph (f) of this section. These taxa are
listed in the Plants for Planting Manual. There are two categories of
taxa whose importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis:
Taxa of plants for planting that are quarantine pests, and taxa of
plants for planting that are hosts of quarantine pests. For taxa of
plants for planting that have been determined to be quarantine pests,
the list includes the names of the taxa. For taxa of plants for
planting that are hosts of quarantine pests, the list includes the
names of the taxa, the foreign places from which the taxa's importation
is not authorized, and the quarantine pests of concern.
(b) Addition of taxa. A taxon of plants for planting may be added
to one of the lists of taxa not authorized for importation pending pest
risk analysis under this section as follows:
(1) Data sheet. APHIS will publish in the Federal Register a
document that announces our determination that a taxon of plants for
planting is either a quarantine pest or a host of a quarantine pest.
This notice will make available a data sheet that details the
scientific evidence APHIS evaluated in making the determination that
the taxon is a quarantine pest or a host of a quarantine pest. The data
sheet will include references to the scientific evidence that APHIS
used in making the determination. In our notice, we will provide for a
public comment period of a minimum of 60 days on our additions to the
list.
(2) Response to comments. (i) APHIS will issue a notice after the
close of the public comment period indicating that the taxon will be
added to the list of taxa not authorized for importation pending pest
risk analysis if:
(A) No comments were received on the data sheet;
(B) The comments on the data sheet revealed that no changes to the
data sheet were necessary; or
(C) Changes to the data sheet were made in response to public
comments, but the changes did not affect APHIS' determination that the
taxon poses a risk of introducing a quarantine pest into the United
States.
(ii) If comments present information that leads us to determine
that the importation of the taxon does not pose a risk of introducing a
quarantine pest into the United States, APHIS will not add the taxon to
the list of plants for planting whose importation is not authorized
pending pest risk analysis. APHIS will issue a notice giving public
notice of this determination after the close of the comment period.
(c) Criterion for listing a taxon of plants for planting as a
quarantine pest. A taxon will be added to the list of taxa whose
importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis if scientific
evidence causes APHIS to determine that the taxon is a quarantine pest.
(d) Criteria for listing a taxon of plants for planting as a host
of a quarantine pest. A taxon will be added to the list of taxa whose
importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis if scientific
evidence causes APHIS to determine that the taxon is a host of a
quarantine pest. The following criteria must be fulfilled in order to
make this determination:
(1) The plant pest in question must be determined to be a
quarantine pest; and
(2) The taxon of plants for planting must be determined to be a
host of that quarantine pest.
(e) Removing a taxon from the list of taxa not authorized pending
pest risk analysis. (1) Requests to remove a taxon from the list of
taxa whose importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis
(NAPPRA) must be made in accordance with Sec. 319.5. APHIS will
conduct a pest risk analysis in response to such a request. The pest
risk analysis will examine the risk associated with the importation of
that taxon as well as measures available to mitigate that risk. The
pest risk analysis may analyze importation of the taxon from a specific
area, country, or countries, or from all areas of the world. The
conclusions of the pest risk analysis will apply accordingly.
(2) If the pest risk analysis indicates that the taxon is a
quarantine pest or a host of a quarantine pest and the Administrator
determines that there are no measures available that adequately
mitigate the risk of introducing a quarantine pest into the United
States through the taxon's importation, we will continue to list the
taxon as not authorized for importation pending pest risk analysis. We
will publish a notice making the pest risk analysis available for
comment. If comments cause us to change our determination, we will
publish another notice in accordance with either paragraph (e)(3) or
(4) of this section, as appropriate. If comments do not cause us to
change our determination, we will publish a second notice responding to
the comments and affirming our determination that the taxon should
continue to be listed as NAPPRA.
(3) If the pest risk analysis supports a determination that
importation of the taxon be allowed subject to taxon-specific
restrictions, APHIS will publish a notice making the pest risk analysis
available to the public for comment in accordance with the process in
Sec. 319.37-20(c).
(4) If the pest risk analysis supports a determination that
importation of the taxon be allowed subject to the general restrictions
of this subpart, APHIS will publish a notice announcing our intent to
remove the taxon from the list of taxa whose importation is not
authorized pending pest risk analysis and making the pest risk analysis
supporting the taxon's removal available for public comment.
(i) APHIS will issue a notice after the close of the public comment
period indicating that the importation of the taxon will be subject
only to the general restrictions of this subpart if:
(A) No comments were received on the pest risk analysis;
[[Page 11859]]
(B) The comments on the pest risk analysis revealed that no changes
to the pest risk analysis were necessary; or
(C) Changes to the pest risk analysis were made in response to
public comments, but the changes did not affect the overall conclusions
of the analysis and the Administrator's determination that the
importation of the taxon does not pose a risk of introducing a
quarantine pest into the United States.
(ii) If information presented by commenters indicates that the pest
risk analysis needs to be revised, APHIS will issue a notice after the
close of the public comment period indicating that the importation of
the taxon will continue to be listed as not authorized pending pest
risk analysis while the information presented by commenters is analyzed
and incorporated into the pest risk analysis. APHIS will subsequently
publish a new notice announcing the availability of the revised pest
risk analysis.
(5) APHIS may also remove a taxon from the list of taxa whose
importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis when APHIS
determines that the evidence used to add the taxon to the list was
erroneous (for example, involving a taxonomic misidentification).
(f) Controlled import permits. Any plants for planting whose
importation is not authorized pending pest risk analysis in accordance
with this section may be imported or offered for entry into the United
States if:
(1) Imported for experimental, therapeutic, or developmental
purposes under the conditions specified in a controlled import permit
issued in accordance with Sec. 319.6;
(2) Imported at the National Plant Germplasm Inspection Station,
Building 580, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center East, Beltsville,
MD 20705 or through any USDA plant inspection station listed in the
Plants for Planting Manual;
(3) Imported pursuant to a controlled import permit issued for such
plants for planting and kept on file at the port of entry;
(4) Imported under conditions specified on the controlled import
permit and found by the Administrator to be adequate to prevent the
introduction into the United States of quarantine pests, i.e.,
conditions of treatment, processing, growing, shipment, disposal; and
(5) Imported with a controlled import tag or label securely
attached to the outside of the container containing the plants for
planting or securely attached to the plant itself if not in a
container, and with such tag or label bearing a controlled import
permit number corresponding to the number of the controlled import
permit issued for such plants for planting.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0380)
Sec. 319.37-5 Permits.
(a)(1) Plants for planting may be imported or offered for
importation into the United States only after issuance of a written
permit by the Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs, except as
provided in the Plants for Planting Manual. Exceptions from the
requirement for a written permit will be added, changed, or removed in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-20.
(2) Plants for planting whose importation is subject to postentry
quarantine, as listed in the Plants for Planting Manual, must also be
imported under an importer postentry quarantine growing agreement in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-23(c).
(b) An application for a written permit should be submitted to the
Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs (Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, Plant Protection and Quarantine, Permits, Permit
Unit, 4700 River Road, Unit 133, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236) at least 30
days prior to arrival of the plants for planting at the port of entry.
Application forms are available without charge from that address or on
the internet at https://www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/ppq_epermits.shtml.
The completed application shall include the following information:
(1) Name, address, and telephone number of the importer;
(2) The taxon or taxa and the approximate quantity of plants for
planting intended to be imported;
(3) Country(ies) or locality(ies) where grown;
(4) Intended United States port of entry;
(5) Means of transportation, e.g., mail, airmail, express, air
express, freight, airfreight, or baggage; and
(6) Expected date of arrival.
(c) A permit indicating the applicable conditions for importation
under this subpart will be issued by Plant Protection and Quarantine
Programs if, after review of the application, the plants for planting
are deemed eligible to be imported into the United States under the
conditions specified in the permit. However, even if such a permit is
issued, the plants for planting may be imported only if all applicable
requirements of this subpart are met and only if an inspector at the
port of entry determines that no remedial measures pursuant to the
Plant Protection Act are necessary with respect to the plants for
planting.\1\
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\1\ An inspector may hold, seize, quarantine, treat, apply other
remedial measures to, destroy, or otherwise dispose of plants, plant
pests, or other articles in accordance with sections 414, 421, and
434 of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714, 7731, and 7754).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Any permit that has been issued may be revoked by an inspector
or APHIS in accordance with Sec. 319.7-4.
(e) Any plants for planting not required to be imported with a
permit in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section may be imported
or offered for importation into the United States only after issuance
of an oral authorization for importation issued by an inspector at the
port of entry.
(f) An oral authorization for importation of plants for planting
shall be issued at a port of entry by an inspector only if all
applicable requirements of this subpart are met, such plants for
planting are eligible to be imported under an oral authorization, and
an inspector at the port of entry determines that no measures pursuant
to section 414 of the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7714) are
necessary with respect to such plants for planting.
(g) Persons wishing to import plants for planting into the United
States for experimental, therapeutic, or developmental purposes must
apply for a controlled import permit in accordance with Sec. Sec.
319.6 and 319.37-3.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0190, 0579-0285, and 0579-0319)
Sec. 319.37-6 Phytosanitary certificates.
(a) Phytosanitary certificates. Any plants for planting offered for
importation into the United States must be accompanied by a
phytosanitary certificate, except as described in paragraphs (b) and
(c) of this section. The phytosanitary certificate must identify the
genus of the plants for planting it accompanies. When the importation
of individual species or cultivars within a genus is restricted in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-20, the phytosanitary certificate must
also identify the species or cultivar of the plants for planting it
accompanies. Otherwise, identification of the species is strongly
preferred, but not required. Intergeneric and interspecific hybrids
must be designated by placing the multiplication sign ``x'' between the
names of the parent taxa. If the hybrid is named, the multiplication
sign may instead be placed before the name of an intergeneric hybrid or
before the epithet in the name of an interspecific hybrid.
[[Page 11860]]
(b) Small lots of seed. Lots of seed may be imported without a
phytosanitary certificate required by paragraph (a) of this section
under the following conditions:
(1) The importation of the seed is authorized by a written permit
issued in accordance with Sec. 319.37-5.
(2) The seed is not listed as not authorized pending pest risk
analysis, as provided in Sec. 319.37-4; is not of any noxious weed
species listed in part 360 of this chapter; is not subject to
restrictions on specific types of plants for planting as provided in
Sec. 319.37-20; is not restricted under the regulations in parts 330
and 340 of this chapter; and meets the requirements of part 361 of this
chapter.
(3) The seed meets the following packaging and shipping
requirements:
(i) Each seed packet is clearly labeled with the name of the
collector/shipper, the country of origin, and the scientific name at
least to the genus, and preferably to the species, level;
(ii) There are a maximum of 50 seeds of 1 taxon (taxonomic category
such as genus, species, cultivar, etc.) per packet; or a maximum weight
not to exceed 10 grams of seed of 1 taxon per packet;
(iii) There are a maximum of 50 seed packets per shipment;
(iv) The seeds are free from pesticides;
(v) The seeds are securely packaged in packets or envelopes and
sealed to prevent spillage;
(vi) The shipment is free from soil, plant material other than
seed, other foreign matter or debris, seeds in the fruit or seed pod,
and living organisms such as parasitic plants, pathogens, insects,
snails, mites; and
(vii) At the time of importation, the shipment is sent to either
the Plant Germplasm Quarantine Center in Beltsville, MD, or a USDA
plant inspection station.
(c) Importation of other plants for planting without phytosanitary
certificates. (1) The Administrator may authorize the importation of
types of plants for planting without a phytosanitary certificate if the
plants for planting are accompanied by equivalent documentation agreed
upon by the Administrator and the NPPO of the exporting country as
sufficient to establish the eligibility of the plants for importation
into the United States. The documentation must be provided by the NPPO
or refer to documentation provided by the NPPO. The documentation must
be agreed upon before the plants for planting are exported from the
exporting country to the United States.
(2) The Administrator may impose additional restrictions on the
importation of plants for planting that are not accompanied by a
phytosanitary certificate to ensure that the plants are appropriately
identified and free of quarantine pests.
(3) The Plants for Planting Manual lists types of plants for
planting that are not required to be accompanied by a phytosanitary
certificate; the countries from which their importation without a
phytosanitary certificate is authorized; the approved documentation of
eligibility for importation; and any additional conditions on their
importation.
(4) Types of plants for planting may be added to or removed from
the list of plants for planting that are not required to be accompanied
by a phytosanitary certificate in accordance with Sec. 319.37-20. The
requirements for importing types of plants for planting without a
phytosanitary certificate may also be changed by a notice issued in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-20. The notice published for comment will
describe the documentation agreed upon by the Administrator and the
NPPO of the exporting country and any additional restrictions to be
imposed on the importation of the type of plants for planting.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0142, 0579-0190, 0579-0285, and 0579-0319)
Sec. 319.37-7 Marking and identity.
(a) Any consignment of plants for planting for importation, other
than by mail at the time of importation, or offer for importation into
the United States shall plainly and correctly bear on the outer
container (if in a container) or the plants for planting (if not in a
container) the following information:
(1) General nature and quantity of the contents;
(2) Country and locality where grown;
(3) Name and address of shipper, owner, or person shipping or
forwarding the plants for planting;
(4) Name and address of consignee;
(5) Identifying shipper's mark and number; and
(6) Number of written permit authorizing the importation, if one
was required under Sec. 319.37-5.
(b) Any consignment of plants for planting for importation by mail
shall be plainly and correctly addressed and mailed to the Plant
Protection and Quarantine Programs at a port of entry listed in the
Plants for Planting Manual as approved to receive imported plants for
planting, shall be accompanied by a separate sheet of paper within the
package plainly and correctly bearing the name, address, and telephone
number of the intended recipient, and shall plainly and correctly bear
on the outer container the following information:
(1) General nature and quantity of the contents;
(2) Country and locality where grown;
(3) Name and address of shipper, owner, or person shipping or
forwarding the plants for planting; and
(4) Number of written permit authorizing the importation, if one
was required under Sec. 319.37-5.
(c) Any consignment of plants for planting for importation (by mail
or otherwise), at the time of importation or offer for importation into
the United States shall be accompanied by an invoice or packing list
indicating the contents of the consignment.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0190 and 0579-0319)
Sec. 319.37-8 Ports of entry: Approved ports, notification of
arrival, inspection, and refusal of entry.
(a) Approved ports of entry. Any plants for planting required to be
imported under a written permit in accordance with Sec. 319.37-5(a),
if not precleared, must be imported or offered for importation only at
a USDA plant inspection station, unless the Plants for Planting Manual
indicates otherwise. Ports of entry through which plants for planting
must pass through before arriving at these USDA plant inspection
stations are listed in the Plants for Planting Manual. All other plants
for planting may be imported or offered for importation at any Customs
designated port of entry indicated in 19 CFR 101.3(b)(1). Exceptions
may be listed in Sec. 330.104 of this chapter. Plants for planting
that are required to be imported under a written permit that are also
precleared in the country of export are not required to enter at an
inspection station and may enter through any Customs port of entry.
Exceptions may be listed in Sec. 330.104 of this chapter.
(b) Notification upon arrival at the port of entry. Promptly upon
arrival of any plants for planting at a port of entry, the importer
shall notify the Plant Protection and Quarantine Programs of the
arrival by such means as a manifest, Customs entry document, commercial
invoice, waybill, a broker's document, or a notice form provided for
that purpose.
(c) Inspection and treatment. Any plants for planting may be
sampled and inspected by an inspector at the port of first arrival and/
or under preclearance inspection arrangements in the country in which
the plants for planting were
[[Page 11861]]
grown, and must undergo treatment in accordance with part 305 of this
chapter if treatment is ordered by the inspector. Any plants for
planting found upon inspection to contain or be contaminated with
quarantine pests that cannot be eliminated by treatment will be denied
entry at the first United States port of arrival and must be destroyed
or shipped to a point outside the United States.
(d) Disposition of plants for planting not in compliance with this
subpart. The importer of any plants for planting denied entry for
noncompliance with this subpart must, at the importer's expense and
within the time specified in an emergency action notification (PPQ Form
523), destroy, ship to a point outside the United States, treat in
accordance with part 305 of this chapter, or apply other safeguards to
the plants for planting, as prescribed by an inspector, to prevent the
introduction into the United States of quarantine pests. In choosing
which action to order and in setting the time limit for the action, the
inspector shall consider the degree of pest risk presented by the plant
pest associated with the plants for planting, whether the plants for
planting are a host of the pest, the types of other host materials for
the pest in or near the port, the climate and season at the port in
relation to the pest's survival range, and the availability of
treatment facilities for the plants for planting.
(e) Removal of plants for planting from port of first arrival. No
person shall remove any plants for planting from the port of first
arrival unless and until notice is given to the collector of customs by
the inspector that the plants for planting has satisfied all
requirements under this subpart.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0190, 0579-0310, and 0579-0319)
Sec. 319.37-9 Treatment of plants for planting; costs and charges for
inspection and treatment; treatments applied outside the United States.
(a) The services of a Plant Protection and Quarantine inspector
during regularly assigned hours of duty and at the usual places of duty
shall be furnished without cost to the importer.\2\ No charge will be
made to the importer for Government-owned or -controlled special
inspection facilities and equipment used in treatment, but the
inspector may require the importer to furnish any special labor,
chemicals, packing materials, or other supplies required in handling an
importation under the regulations in this subpart. The Plant Protection
and Quarantine Programs will not be responsible for any costs or
charges, other than those indicated in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Provisions relating to costs for other services of an
inspector are contained in part 354 of this chapter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Any treatment performed in the United States on plants for
planting must be performed at the time of importation into the United
States. Treatment shall be performed by an inspector or under an
inspector's supervision at a Government-operated special inspection
facility, except that an importer may have such treatment performed at
a nongovernmental facility if the treatment is performed at
nongovernment expense under the supervision of an inspector and in
accordance with part 305 of this chapter and in accordance with any
treatment required by an inspector as an emergency measure in order to
prevent the dissemination of any quarantine pests. However, treatment
may be performed at a nongovernmental facility only in cases of
unavailability of government facilities and only if, in the judgment of
an inspector, the plants for planting can be transported to such
nongovernmental facility without the risk of introduction into the
United States of quarantine pests.
(c) Any treatment performed outside the United States must be
monitored and certified by an APHIS inspector or an official from the
NPPO of the exporting country. If monitored and certified by an
official of the NPPO of the exporting country, then a phytosanitary
certificate must be issued with the following declaration: ``The
consignment of (fill in taxon) has been treated in accordance with 7
CFR part 305.'' During the entire interval between treatment and
export, the consignment must be stored and handled in a manner that
prevents any infestation by quarantine pests.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0190)
Sec. 319.37-10 Growing media.
(a) Any plants for planting at the time of importation or offer for
importation into the United States shall be free of sand, soil, earth,
and other growing media, except as provided in paragraph (b), (c), or
(d) of this section.
(b) Plants for planting from Canada may be imported in any growing
medium, except as restricted in the Plants for Planting Manual.
Restrictions on growing media for specific types of plants for planting
imported from Canada will be added, changed, or removed in accordance
with Sec. 319.37-20.
(c) Certain types of plants for planting growing solely in certain
growing media listed in the Plants for Planting Manual may be imported
established in such growing media. The Administrator has determined
that the importation of the specified types of plants for planting in
these growing media does not pose a risk of introducing quarantine
pests into the United States. If the Administrator determines that a
new growing medium may be added to the list of growing media in which
imported plants for planting may be established, or that a growing
medium currently listed for such purposes is no longer suitable for
establishment of imported plants for planting, APHIS will publish in
the Federal Register a notice that announces our proposed determination
and requests comment on the change. After the close of the comment
period, APHIS will publish another notice informing the public of the
Administrator's decision on the change to the list of growing media in
which imported types of plants for planting may be established.
(d) Certain types of plants for planting, as listed in the Plants
for Planting Manual, may be imported when they are established in a
growing medium approved by the Administrator and they are produced in
accordance with additional requirements specified in the Plants for
Planting Manual. Changes to the list of plants for planting that may be
imported in growing media, and to the requirements for the importation
of those types of plants for planting, will be made in accordance with
Sec. 319.37-20.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
numbers 0579-0190, 0579-0439, 0579-0454, 0579-0458, and 0579-0463)
Sec. 319.37-11 Packing and approved packing material.
(a) Plants for planting for importation into the United States must
not be packed in the same container as plants for planting whose
importation into the United States is not authorized pending pest risk
analysis in accordance with Sec. 319.37-4.
(b) Any plants for planting at the time of importation or offer for
importation into the United States shall not be packed in a packing
material unless the plants were packed in the packing material
immediately prior to shipment; such packing material is free from sand,
soil, or earth (except as designated in the Plants for Planting
Manual); has not been used previously as packing material or otherwise;
and is approved by the Administrator as not posing a risk of
introducing quarantine pests. Approved packing materials are listed in
the Plants for Planting Manual.
[[Page 11862]]
(c) If the Administrator determines that a new packing material may
be added to the list of packing materials, or that a packing material
currently listed should no longer be approved, APHIS will publish in
the Federal Register a notice that announces our proposed determination
and requests comment on the change. After the close of the comment
period, APHIS will publish another notice informing the public of the
Administrator's decision on the change to the list of approved packing
materials.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0190)
Sec. Sec. 319.37-12 through 319.37-19 [Reserved]
Sec. 319.37-20 Restrictions on the importation of specific types of
plants for planting.
(a) Plant type-specific restrictions. In addition to the general
restrictions in this subpart, the Administrator may impose additional
restrictions on the importation of specific types of plants for
planting necessary to effectively mitigate the risk of introducing
quarantine pests into the United States through the importation of
specific plants for planting. Additional restrictions may be placed on
the importation of the entire plant or on certain plant parts. A list
of the types of plants for planting whose importation is subject to
additional restrictions, and the specific restrictions that apply to
the importation of each type of plants for planting, may be found in
the Plants for Planting Manual.
(b) Basis for changing restrictions. The Administrator may
determine that it is necessary to add, change, or remove restrictions
on the importation of a specific type of plants for planting, based on
the risk of introducing a quarantine pest through the importation of
that type of plants for planting. The Administrator will make this
determination based on the findings of a pest risk analysis or on other
scientific evidence.
(c) Process for adding, changing, or removing restrictions.
Restrictions on the importation of a specific type of plants for
planting beyond the general restrictions in Sec. Sec. 319.37-5 through
319.37-11 will be changed through the following process:
(1) Document describing restrictions. APHIS will publish in the
Federal Register a notice that announces our proposed determination
that it is necessary to add, change, or remove restrictions on the
importation of a specific type of plants for planting. This notice will
make available for public comment a document describing the
restrictions that the Administrator has determined are necessary and
how these restrictions will mitigate the risk of introducing quarantine
pests into the United States.
(2) Response to comments. APHIS will issue a second notice after
the close of the public comment period on the notice described in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section. This notice will inform the public of
the specific restrictions, if any, that the Administrator has
determined to be necessary in order to mitigate the risk of introducing
quarantine pests into the United States through the importation of the
type of plants for planting. In response to the public comments
submitted, the Administrator may implement the restrictions described
in the document made available by the initial notice, amend the
restrictions in response to public comment, or determine that changes
to the restrictions on the importation of the type of plants for
planting are unnecessary.
(d) Previously imposed restrictions on specific types of plants for
planting. Types of plants for planting whose importation was subject to
specific restrictions by specific regulation as of April 18, 2018, will
continue to be subject to those restrictions, except as changed in
accordance with the process specified in paragraph (c) of this section.
The restrictions are found in the Plants for Planting Manual.
Sec. 319.37-21 Integrated pest risk management measures.
If a type of plants for planting is a host of a quarantine pest or
pests, APHIS may require the type of plants for planting to be produced
in accordance with integrated pest risk management measures as a
condition of importation. This section sets out a general framework for
integrated pest risk management measures. When APHIS determines that
integrated measures are necessary to mitigate risk, APHIS will use this
framework to develop integrated pest risk management measures that
mitigate the quarantine pest risks associated with that type of plants
for planting through the process described in Sec. 319.37-20.
(a) Responsibilities of the place of production. The place of
production is responsible for identifying, developing, and implementing
procedures that meet the requirements of both the NPPO of the exporting
country and APHIS. Participants in the export program must be approved
by the NPPO or its designee and APHIS. Approval will be conferred by
the NPPO or its designee and APHIS after the participant meets the
conditions required for integrated pest risk management. Approval will
be withdrawn if the participant fails to meet the conditions at any
time. All documentation required under paragraphs (a)(5) and (6) of
this section will be maintained by the exporting place of production
and made available to official representatives of the NPPO of the
exporting country and APHIS upon request. The place of production must
be open to necessary and reasonable audit, monitoring, and evaluation
of compliance by the NPPO of the exporting country and APHIS. The
management of the place of production will be responsible for complying
with the integrated pest risk management measures. Management must
specify the roles and responsibilities of its personnel to perform
program activities. The place of production must notify the NPPO of the
exporting country of deficiencies detected during internal audits. The
NPPO of the exporting country will be responsible for ensuring that the
place of production is in compliance with the integrated pest risk
management measures.
(1) Pest management program. The place of production must develop
and implement an approved pest management program that contains ongoing
pest monitoring and procedures for the exclusion and control of plant
pests. The place of production must obtain material used to produce
plants for planting from sources that are free of quarantine pests and
that are approved by the NPPO of the exporting country and APHIS. All
sources of plants for planting and the phytosanitary status of those
plants must be well-documented and the program for producing plants for
planting carefully monitored.
(2) Training. A training program approved by the NPPO of the
exporting country and APHIS must be established, documented, and
regularly conducted at the place of production. The training program
must ensure that all those involved in the export program possess
specific knowledge related to the relevant components of the program
and a general understanding of its requirements.
(3) Internal audits. The place of production must perform, or
designate parties to perform internal audits that ensure that a plan
approved and documented by APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country
is being followed and is achieving the appropriate level of pest
management.
(4) Traceability. The place of production must implement a
procedure approved by APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country or
its designee
[[Page 11863]]
that documents and identifies plants from propagation through harvest
and sale to ensure that plants can be traced forward and back from the
place of production. Depending on the nature of the quarantine pests,
the system may need to account for:
(i) The origin and pest status of mother stock;
(ii) The year of propagation and the place of production of all
plant parts that make up the plants for planting intended for export;
(iii) Geographic location of the place of production;
(iv) Location of plants for planting within the place of
production;
(v) The plant taxon; and
(vi) The purchaser's identity.
(5) Documentation of program procedures. The place of production
must develop a manual approved by the NPPO of the exporting country and
APHIS that guides the place of production's operation and that includes
the following components:
(i) Administrative procedures (including roles and responsibilities
and training procedures);
(ii) Pest management plan;
(iii) Place of production internal audit procedures;
(iv) Management of noncompliant product or procedures;
(v) Traceability procedures; and
(vi) Recordkeeping systems.
(6) Records. A place of production must maintain records on its
premises as specified by APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country.
These records must be made available to APHIS and the NPPO of the
exporting country upon request. These documents include all the
elements described in this paragraph (a) and copies of all internal and
external audit documents and reports.
(b) Responsibilities of APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting
country. APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country are responsible
for collaborating to establish program requirements, including
workplans and compliance agreements as necessary, for recognizing and
implementing particular import programs. Technically justified
modifications to the program may be negotiated. The administration of
program requirements must include such elements as clarification of
terminology, testing and retesting requirements, eligibility, the
nomenclature of certification levels, horticultural management,
isolation and sanitation requirements, inspection, documentation,
identification and labeling, quality assurance, noncompliance and
remedial measures, and postentry quarantine requirements. The criteria
for approving, suspending, removing, and reinstating approval for a
particular program should be jointly developed and agreed upon by APHIS
and the NPPO of the exporting country. Information should be exchanged
between APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country through officially
designated points of contact.
(c) Responsibilities of the NPPO of the exporting country. (1) The
NPPO of the exporting country must provide sufficient information to
APHIS to support the evaluation and acceptance of export programs. This
may include:
(i) Specific identification of the commodity, place of production,
and expected volume and frequency of consignments;
(ii) Relevant production, harvest, packing, handling, and transport
details;
(iii) Pests associated with the plant including prevalence,
distribution, and damage potential;
(iv) Risk management measures proposed for a pest management
program; and
(v) Relevant efficacy data.
(2) A phytosanitary certificate should be issued by the NPPO of the
exporting country unless APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country
agree to use other documentation in accordance with Sec. 319.37-6(c).
(3) Other responsibilities of the NPPO of the exporting country
include:
(i) Establishing and maintaining compliance agreements as
necessary;
(ii) Oversight and enforcement of program provisions;
(iii) Arrangements for monitoring and audit; and
(iv) Maintaining appropriate records.
(d) Responsibilities of plant brokers trading in plants for
planting produced in accordance with integrated pest risk management
measures. Plant brokers trading in plants for planting produced in
accordance with integrated pest risk management measures must be
approved by the NPPO of the exporting country or its designee. The list
of plant brokers must be provided to APHIS upon request. Approval may
only be conferred by the NPPO or its designee after the participant
demonstrates that it can meet the requirements of this paragraph (d).
Approval must be withdrawn if the participant fails to meet the
conditions at any time. Plant brokers must ensure the traceability of
export consignments to an approved place of production or production
site. Brokers must maintain the phytosanitary status of the plants
equivalent to an approved place of production from purchase, storage,
and transportation to the export destination. Plant brokers must
document these processes for verifying status and maintaining
traceability.
(e) External audits. APHIS and the NPPO of the exporting country
will agree to the requirements for external audits.
(1) APHIS audits. APHIS will evaluate the integrated pest risk
management measures of the NPPO of the exporting country before
acceptance. This could consist of documentation review, site visits,
and inspection and testing of plants produced under the system.
Following approval, APHIS or its designee will monitor and periodically
audit the system to ensure that it continues to meet the stated
objectives. Audits will include inspection of imported plants for
planting, site visits, and review of the integrated pest risk
management measures and internal audit processes of the place of
production and the NPPO of the exporting country.
(2) Audits by the NPPO of the exporting country. The NPPO must
arrange for audits of the exporting system. Audits may be conducted by
the NPPO or its designee and may consist of inspection and testing of
plants for planting and the documentation and management practices as
they relate to the program. Audits should verify that:
(i) The places of production in the program are free of quarantine
pests;
(ii) Program participants are complying with the specified
standards;
(iii) The integrated pest management measures continue to meet
APHIS requirements; and
(iv) Arrangements with designees are complied with.
(f) Noncompliance. (1) The exporting NPPO must notify APHIS of
noncompliance within the integrity of the system or noncompliance by a
place of production that affects the phytosanitary integrity of the
commodity. The requirements for notification will be determined between
the NPPO of the exporting country and APHIS.
(2) Regulatory responses to program failures will be based on
existing bilateral agreements. Contingency plans may be established in
advance to ensure that alternative measures are available in the event
that all or part of a program fails. APHIS will specify the
consequences of noncompliance to the NPPO of the exporting country. The
NPPO must specify the consequences of noncompliance to the participants
in the program. These may vary depending on the nature and severity of
the infraction. In addition, remedial measures should be specified to
enable a suspended or decertified place of production or plant broker
to become
[[Page 11864]]
eligible for reinstatement or recertification.
(3) Places of production or plant brokers that do not meet the
conditions of the program must be suspended. Plants for planting must
not be exported from a place of production or a plant broker that has
failed to meet the program requirements.
(4) The effectiveness of remedial measures taken must be verified
before reinstatement to the program by the exporting NPPO and, where
appropriate, by APHIS.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0190)
Sec. 319.37-22 Trust fund agreements.
If APHIS personnel need to be physically present in an exporting
country or region to facilitate the exportation of plants for planting
and APHIS services are to be funded by the NPPO of the exporting
country or a private export group, then the NPPO or the private export
group must enter into a trust fund agreement with APHIS that is in
effect at the time APHIS' services are needed. Under the agreement, the
NPPO of the exporting country or the private export group must pay in
advance all estimated costs that APHIS expects to incur in providing
inspection services in the exporting country. These costs will include
administrative expenses incurred in conducting the services and all
salaries (including overtime and the Federal share of employee
benefits), travel expenses (including per diem expenses), and other
incidental expenses incurred by the inspectors in performing services.
The agreement must require the NPPO of the exporting country or region
or a private export group to deposit a certified or cashier's check
with APHIS for the amount of those costs, as estimated by APHIS. The
agreement must further specify that, if the deposit is not sufficient
to meet all costs incurred by APHIS, the NPPO of the exporting country
or a private export group must deposit with APHIS, before the services
will be completed, a certified or cashier's check for the amount of the
remaining costs, as determined by APHIS. After a final audit at the
conclusion of each shipping season, any overpayment of funds would be
returned to the NPPO of the exporting country or region or a private
export group, or held on account.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0190)
Sec. 319.37-23 Postentry quarantine.
(a) Postentry quarantine. One specific restriction that may be
placed upon the importation of a type of plants for planting in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-20 is that it be grown in postentry
quarantine. The Plants for Planting Manual lists the taxa required to
be imported into postentry quarantine. Plants for planting grown in
postentry quarantine must be grown under postentry quarantine
conditions specified in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section, and may
be imported or offered for importation into the United States only:
(1) If destined for a State that has completed a State postentry
quarantine agreement with APHIS in accordance with paragraph (b) of
this section;
(2) If an importer postentry quarantine growing agreement has been
completed and submitted to Plant Protection and Quarantine in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section. The agreement must be
signed by the person (the importer) applying for the importation of the
plants for planting in accordance with Sec. 319.6; and,
(3) If Plant Protection and Quarantine has determined that the
completed postentry quarantine growing agreement fulfills the
applicable requirements of this section and that services by State
inspectors are available to monitor and enforce the postentry
quarantine.
(b) State postentry quarantine agreement. Plants for planting
required to undergo postentry quarantine in accordance with Sec.
319.37-20 may only be imported if destined for postentry quarantine
growing in a State which has entered into a written agreement with the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, signed by the Administrator
or his or her designee and by the State Plant Regulatory Official. In
accordance with the laws of individual States, inspection and other
postentry quarantine services provided by a State may be subject to
charges imposed by the State. A list of States that have entered into a
postentry quarantine agreement in accordance with this paragraph can be
found in the Plants for Planting Manual.
(c) Importer postentry quarantine growing agreements. Any plants
for planting required to be grown under postentry quarantine
conditions, as well as any increase therefrom, shall be grown in
accordance with an importer postentry quarantine growing agreement
signed by the person (the importer) applying for a written permit in
accordance with Sec. 319.37-5 for importation of the plants for
planting and submitted to Plant Protection and Quarantine. On each
importer postentry quarantine growing agreement, the person shall also
obtain the signature of the State Plant Regulatory Official for the
State in which plants for planting covered by the agreement will be
grown. The importer postentry quarantine growing agreement shall
specify the kind, number, and origin of plants to be imported; the
conditions specified in the Plants for Planting Manual under which the
plants for planting will be grown, maintained, and labeled; and the
reporting requirements in the case of abnormal or dead plants for
planting. The agreement shall certify to APHIS and to the State in
which the plants for planting are grown that the signer of the
agreement will comply with the conditions of the agreement for the
postentry quarantine growing period prescribed for the type of plants
for planting in the Plants for Planting Manual.
(d) Applications for permits. A completed importer postentry
quarantine agreement shall accompany the application for a written
permit for plants for planting required to be grown under postentry
quarantine conditions. Importer postentry quarantine agreement forms
are available without charge from the Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, Plant Protection and Quarantine, Permit Unit, 4700
River Road, Unit 136, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236 or on the internet at
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/permits/ppq_epermits.shtml.
(e) Inspector-ordered disposal, movement, or safeguarding of plants
for planting; costs and charges, civil and criminal liabilities--(1)
Growing at unauthorized sites. If an inspector determines that any
plants for planting subject to the postentry quarantine growing
requirements of this section, or any increase therefrom, is being grown
at an unauthorized site, the inspector may file an emergency action
notification (PPQ Form 523) with the owner of the plants for planting
or the person who owns or is in possession of the site on which the
plants for planting is being grown. The person named in the PPQ Form
523 must, within the time specified in PPQ Form 523, sign a postentry
quarantine growing agreement, destroy, ship to a point outside the
United States, move to an authorized postentry quarantine site, and/or
apply treatments or other safeguards to the plants for planting, the
increase therefrom, or any portion of the plants for planting or the
increase therefrom, as prescribed by an inspector to prevent the
introduction of quarantine pests into the United States. In choosing
which action to order and in setting the time limit for the action, the
inspector shall consider the degree of pest risk presented by the
quarantine pests associated with the type of plants
[[Page 11865]]
for planting (including increase therefrom), the types of other host
materials for the pest in or near the growing site, the climate and
season at the site in relation to the pest's survival, and the
availability of treatment facilities.
(2) Growing at authorized sites. If an inspector determines that
any plants for planting, or any increase therefrom, grown at a site
specified in an authorized postentry quarantine growing agreement is
being grown contrary to the provisions of this section, including in
numbers greater than the number approved by the postentry quarantine
growing agreement, or in a manner that otherwise presents a risk of
introducing quarantine pests into the United States, the inspector
shall issue an emergency action notification (PPQ Form 523) to the
person who signed the postentry quarantine growing agreement. That
person shall be responsible for carrying out all actions specified in
the emergency action notification. The emergency action notification
may extend the time for which the plants for planting and the increase
therefrom must be grown under the postentry quarantine conditions
specified in the authorized postentry quarantine growing agreement, or
may require that the person named in the notification must destroy,
ship to a point outside the United States, or apply treatments or other
safeguards to the plants for planting, the increase therefrom, or any
portion of the plants for planting or the increase therefrom, within
the time specified in the emergency action notification. In choosing
which action to order and in setting the time limit for the action, the
inspector shall consider the degree of pest risk presented by the
quarantine pests associated with the type of plants for planting
(including increase therefrom), the types of other host materials for
the pest in or near the growing site, the climate and season at the
site in relation to the pest's survival, and the availability of
treatment facilities.
(3) Costs and charges. All costs pursuant to any action ordered by
an inspector in accordance with this section shall be borne by the
person who signed the postentry quarantine growing agreement covering
the site where the plants for planting were grown, or if no such
agreement was signed, by the owner of the plants for planting at the
growing site.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0190)
0
13. Section 319.40-2 is amended by revising paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 319.40-2 General prohibitions and restrictions; relation to
other regulations.
* * * * *
(c) Regulation of articles imported for propagation or human
consumption. The requirements of this subpart do not apply to regulated
articles that are allowed importation in accordance with Subpart--
Plants for Planting of this part or to regulated articles imported for
human consumption that are allowed importation in accordance with
Subpart--Fruits and Vegetables of this part.
* * * * *
0
14. Section 319.41 is amended as follows:
0
a. By redesignating paragraph (d) as paragraph (e); and
0
b. By adding a new paragraph (d).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 319.41 Notice of quarantine.
* * * * *
(d) The importation of plants (including any plant parts) of any of
the taxa listed in paragraph (b) of this section that are for planting
or capable of being planted is restricted under
Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.41a [Amended]
0
15. In Sec. 319.41a, paragraph (b) is amended by removing the citation
``Sec. 319.37-4(a)'' and adding the citation ``Sec. 319.37-6(a)'' in
its place.
0
16. Section 319.55 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising paragraphs (a) and (b);
0
b. By redesignating paragraph (d) as paragraph (e); and
0
c. By adding a new paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 319.55 Notice of quarantine.
(a) The fact has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture,
and notice is hereby given:
(1) That injurious fungal diseases of rice, including downy mildew
(Sclerospora macrospora), leaf smut (Entyloma oryzae), blight (Oospora
oryzetorum), and glume blotch (Melanomma glumarum), as well as
dangerous insect pests, new to and not heretofore widely prevalent or
distributed within and throughout the United States, exist, as to one
or more of such diseases and pests, in Europe, Asia, Africa, Central
America, South America, and other foreign countries and localities, and
may be introduced into this country through importations of rice straw
and rice hulls; and
(2) That the unrestricted importation of rice straw and rice hulls
may result in the entry into the United States of the injurious plant
diseases heretofore enumerated, as well as insect pests.
(b) To prevent the introduction into the United States of the plant
pests and diseases indicated above, the Secretary has determined that
it is necessary to restrict the importation of rice straw and rice
hulls from all foreign locations, except as otherwise provided in this
subpart.
* * * * *
(d) The importation of seed or paddy rice is restricted under
Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.55-2 [Amended]
0
17. Section 319.55-2 is amended by removing the words ``seed or paddy
rice from Mexico or'' and the words ``from any country''.
Sec. 319.55-3 [Amended]
0
18. Section 319.55-3 is amended as follows:
0
a. By removing paragraph (a) and redesignating paragraphs (b), (c), and
(d) as paragraphs (a), (b), and (c), respectively;
0
b. In newly redesignated paragraph (a), by removing the words ``from
all foreign countries''; and
0
c. In newly redesignated paragraph (b), by removing the words ``seed or
paddy rice,'' and by removing the comma after the word ``straw''.
Sec. 319.55-6 [Amended]
0
19. Section 319.55-6 is amended as follows:
0
a. By removing and reserving paragraph (a);
0
b. By redesignating paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) as paragraphs (b)(3) and
(4), respectively; and
0
c. By removing the designation and heading of paragraph (c).
0
20. Section 319.55-7 is revised as follows:
Sec. 319.55-7 Importations by mail.
Importations of rice straw and rice hulls may be made by mail or
cargo, provided that a permit has been issued for the importation in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 319.7 through 319.7-5 and all conditions of
the permit are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 0579-0049)
Sec. 319.56-10 [Amended]
0
21. In Sec. 319.56-10, paragraph (a)(2) is amended by removing the
words ``Sec. 319.37-2 of this part'' and adding the citation ``Sec.
319.37-20'' in their place.
[[Page 11866]]
Sec. 319.56-11 [Amended]
0
22. In Sec. 319.56-11, paragraph (b)(3) is amended by removing the
words ``Sec. Sec. 319.37 through 319.37-14 of this part'' and adding
the words ``Sec. Sec. 319.37-1 through 319.37-23'' in their place.
Sec. 319.59-1 [Amended]
0
23. In Sec. 319.59-1, the definition of grain is amended by adding the
words ``and not for planting'' before the period.
0
24. Section 319.59-2 is amended as follows:
0
a. By removing and reserving paragraph (a);
0
b. In paragraph (b) introductory text, by removing the words ``Triticum
spp. plants, articles'' and adding the word ``Articles'' in their
place;
0
c. In paragraph (b)(1), by removing the words ``Sec. 319.37-14 of this
part'' and adding the words ``accordance with Sec. 319.37-8(a)'' in
their place; and
0
d. By adding paragraph (c).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 319.59-2 General import prohibitions; exceptions.
* * * * *
(c) The importation of any host crops (including seed and any other
plant parts) that are for planting or capable of being planted is
restricted under Subpart--Plants for Planting of this part.
0
25. Section 319.59-3 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 319.59-3 Articles prohibited importation pending risk
evaluation.
* * * * *
(a) The following articles of Triticum spp. (wheat) or of Aegilops
spp. (barb goatgrass, goatgrass): Straw (other than straw, with or
without heads, which has been processed or manufactured for use
indoors, such as for decorative purposes or for use in toys); chaff;
and products of the milling process (i.e., bran, shorts, thistle
sharps, and pollards) other than flour.
* * * * *
Sec. 319.59-4 [Amended]
0
26. In Sec. 319.59-4, paragraph (a)(2) is amended by removing the word
``seed,''.
Sec. 319.69a [Amended]
0
27. In Sec. 319.69a, paragraph (c) is amended by removing the citation
``Sec. 319.37-9'' and adding the citation ``Sec. 319.37-11'' in its
place.
Sec. 319.73-1 [Amended]
0
28. In Sec. 319.73-1, the definition of unroasted coffee is amended by
adding the words ``intended for processing'' before the period.
0
29. Section 319.73-2 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)
to read as follows:
Sec. 319.73-2 Products prohibited importation.
(a) * * *
(2) Coffee leaves; and
* * * * *
(b) The importation of any coffee plants (including bare seeds,
seeds in pulp, and any other plant parts) that are for planting or
capable of being planted is restricted under Subpart--Plants for
Planting of this part.
Sec. 319.74-1 [Amended]
0
30. In Sec. 319.74-1, the definition of cut flower is amended by
adding the words ``and not for planting'' after the word ``state''.
Sec. 319.75 [Amended]
0
31. In Sec. 319.75, paragraph (c)(2) is amended by removing the
citation ``Sec. 319.37-14'' and adding the words ``accordance with
Sec. 319.37-8(a)'' in its place.
Sec. 319.75-1 [Amended]
0
32. Section 319.75-1 is amended by removing the definition of nursery
stock.
0
33. Section 319.75-2 is amended by revising footnote 1 to read as
follows:
Sec. 319.75-2 Restricted articles.1
* * * * *
\1\ The importation of restricted articles may be subject to
prohibitions or restrictions under other provisions of 7 CFR part
319. For example, fresh whole chilies (Capsicum spp.) and fresh
whole red peppers (Capsicum spp.) from Pakistan are prohibited from
being imported into the United States under the provisions of
Subpart--Fruits and Vegetables of this part, and the importation of
any restricted articles that are for planting or capable of being
planted is restricted under Subpart--Plants for Planting of this
part.
Sec. 319.75-8 [Amended]
0
34. Section 319.75-8 is amended by removing the words ``port of entry
identified in Sec. 319.37-14 of this part'' and adding the words
``Customs designated port of entry indicated in 19 CFR 101.3(b)(1)'' in
their place.
Sec. 319.75-9 [Amended]
0
35. In Sec. 319.75-9, paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) are amended by
removing the words ``nursery stock, plant,'' and the words ``root,
bulb,'' each time they occur.
Sec. 319.77-2 [Amended]
0
36. Section 319.77-2 is amended as follows:
0
a. In the introductory text, by removing the words ``through (g)'' and
adding the words ``through (e)'' in their place; and
0
b. By removing paragraphs (b) and (c) and redesignating paragraphs (d)
through (h) as (b) through (f), respectively.
0
37. Section 319.77-4 is amended as follows:
0
a. By revising footnote 1;
0
b. In paragraphs (a)(1) introductory text and (a)(2) introductory text,
by removing the words ``, trees with roots, and shrubs with roots and
persistent woody stems'' each time they occur; and
0
c. In paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (ii), by removing the words ``or
shrubs'' each time they occur.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 319.77-4 Conditions for the importation of regulated articles.
(a) Trees and shrubs.1
* * * * *
\1\ Trees and Shrubs from Canada may be subject to additional
restrictions under ``Subpart--Logs, Lumber, and Other Unmanufactured
Wood Articles'' (Sec. Sec. 319.40-1 through 319.40-11).
PART 330--FEDERAL PLANT PEST REGULATIONS; GENERAL; PLANT PESTS;
SOIL, STONE, AND QUARRY PRODUCTS; GARBAGE
0
38. The authority citation for part 330 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 450, 7701-7772, 7781-7786, and 8301-8317;
21 U.S.C. 136 and 136a; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
Sec. 330.300a [Amended]
0
39. In Sec. 330.300a, footnote 1 is amended by removing the words ``by
Sec. 319.37-5'' and adding the words ``under Sec. Sec. 319.37-1
through 319.37-23'' in their place.
PART 340--INTRODUCTION OF ORGANISMS AND PRODUCTS ALTERED OR
PRODUCED THROUGH GENETIC ENGINEERING WHICH ARE PLANT PESTS OR WHICH
THERE IS REASON TO BELIEVE ARE PLANT PESTS
0
40. The authority citation for part 340 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 7
CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
Sec. 340.0 [Amended]
0
41. In Sec. 340.0, footnote 1 is amended as follows:
0
a. By removing the words ``Nursery Stock, Plants, Roots, Bulbs, Seeds,
and Other Plant Products'' and adding the words ``Plants for Planting''
in their place;
0
b. By removing the citation ``7 CFR 319.37-3'' and adding the words
``Sec. 319.37-5 of this chapter'' in its place;
0
c. By removing the words ``nursery stock'' both times they appear and
[[Page 11867]]
adding the words ``plants for planting'' in their place; and
0
d. By removing the words ``stock is'' and adding the words ``plants
are'' in their place.
Sec. 340.4 [Amended]
0
42. In Sec. 340.4, paragraph (f)(11)(i) is amended by removing the
citation ``Sec. 319.37-14'' and adding the words ``accordance with
Sec. 319.37-8(a)'' in its place.
Sec. 340.7 [Amended]
0
43. In Sec. 340.7, paragraph (b) introductory text is amended by
removing the citation ``Sec. 319.37-14'' and adding the words
``accordance with Sec. 319.37-8(a)'' in its place.
PART 360--NOXIOUS WEED REGULATIONS
0
44. The authority citation for part 360 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7701-7772 and 7781-7786; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80,
and 371.3.
Sec. 360.400 [Amended]
0
45. In Sec. 360.400, paragraph (a)(2) is amended by removing the
citation ``Sec. 319.37-6'' and adding the words ``Sec. 319.37-9(c) of
this chapter'' in its place, and by removing the citation ``Sec.
319.37-13(c)'' and adding the citation ``Sec. 319.37-9(c)'' in its
place.
PART 361--IMPORTATION OF SEED AND SCREENINGS UNDER THE FEDERAL SEED
ACT
0
46. The authority citation for part 361 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1581-1610; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3.
Sec. 361.2 [Amended]
0
47. In Sec. 361.2, paragraph (d) is amended by removing the words
``restrictions of Sec. 319.37-3(a)(7)'' and adding the words ``permit
requirements of Sec. 319.37-5 of this chapter'' in their place.
Done in Washington, DC, this 9th day of March 2018.
Kevin Shea,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-05424 Filed 3-16-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P