Periodic Reporting, 27523-27524 [2018-12646]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 114 / Wednesday, June 13, 2018 / Proposed Rules
of the APA or any other law to publish
a general notice of proposed
rulemaking.
Additionally, this action is not a
significant regulatory action as defined
by Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review), section 3(f), and,
accordingly, this action has not been
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget.
This action will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in
accordance with Executive Order 13132
(Federalism) it is determined that this
action does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
SUMMARY:
List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 1308
Administrative practice and
procedure, Drug traffic control,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set out above, the DEA
proposes to amend 21 CFR part 1308 as
follows:
David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202–789–6820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. The authority citation for part 1308
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 811, 812, 871(b),
956(b), unless otherwise noted.
2. In § 1308.11, add paragraph (h)(36)
to read as follows:
■
*
Schedule I.
*
*
(h) * * *
*
Submit comments
electronically via the Commission’s
Filing Online system at https://
www.prc.gov. Those who cannot submit
comments electronically should contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section by
telephone for advice on filing
alternatives.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Proposal Three
III. Notice and Comment
IV. Ordering Paragraphs
I. Introduction
PART 1308—SCHEDULES OF
CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
§ 1308.11
The Commission is noticing a
recent filing requesting that the
Commission initiate an informal
rulemaking proceeding to consider
changes to an analytical method for use
in periodic reporting (Proposal Three).
This document informs the public of the
filing, invites public comment, and
takes other administrative steps.
DATES: Comments are due: June 29,
2018.
On June 1, 2018, the Postal Service
filed a petition pursuant to 39 CFR
3050.11, requesting that the
Commission initiate a rulemaking
proceeding to consider changes to
analytical principles relating to periodic
reports.1 The Petition identifies the
proposed analytical changes filed in this
docket as Proposal Three.
II. Proposal Three
*
Background. The Commission
adopted the use of incremental costs as
the basis for class-level and productlevel attributable costs in September of
2016.2 In FY 2017, the methodology was
fully applied for the first time.3 Proposal
(7543)
Three seeks to revise two incremental
*
*
*
*
*
costing procedures in accordance with
this methodological change.
Dated: June 6, 2018.
The first proposed revision concerns
Robert W. Patterson,
the Postal Service’s method for
Acting Administrator.
calculating incremental costs for
[FR Doc. 2018–12669 Filed 6–12–18; 8:45 am]
competitive products collectively.
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
Under current analytical principles, the
Postal Service calculates these costs
using a so-called ‘‘hybrid’’ approach.
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
The Postal Service first calculates the
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
(36) N-Ethylpentylone, its optical,
positional, and geometric isomers, salts and salts of isomers
(Other names: ephylone, N-1(1,3-benzodioxol-5-yl)-2(ethylamino)-1-pentanone) ..........
39 CFR Part 3050
[Docket No. RM2018–6; Order No. 4635]
Periodic Reporting
Postal Regulatory Commission.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:45 Jun 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
1 Petition of the United States Postal Service for
the Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider Proposed
Changes in Analytical Principles (Proposal Three),
June 1, 2018 (Petition).
2 Docket No. ACR2017, Annual Compliance
Report, December 29, 2017, at 4–6.
3 Docket No. ACR2017, Annual Compliance
Determination, March 29, 2018, at 8.
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4702
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27523
incremental costs of competitive
domestic products (including group
specific costs for these products) and
then adds it to the volume variable and
product specific costs of competitive
international products. This ‘‘hybrid’’
approach blends an estimate of
competitive domestic incremental costs
with a proxy estimate of competitive
international incremental costs.
The second proposed revision relates
to estimating inframarginal costs for
products with insufficient data at the
cost pool level. The Postal Service states
that this revision primarily concerns
negotiated service agreements (NSAs),
because NSAs are classified as
independent products, which can have
low volumes. Petition, Proposal Three at
1. Furthermore, the Postal Service
contends that NSAs create practical
issues in calculating incremental costs,
in part because the Postal Service’s data
systems do not distinguish between
NSA and non-NSA mailpieces. Id. at 13.
This prevents the Postal Service from
creating the standard cost drivers for
NSAs (e.g. volume, weight, cubic
volume), which are necessary for
calculating incremental costs. Id.
Proposal. As discussed above, the
Postal Service proposes two procedures
to revise its calculation of incremental
costs.
Under procedure one, the Postal
Service seeks to replace the ‘‘hybrid’’
approach to calculating aggregate
incremental costs, which relies on a
proxy for international costs, with a
direct estimation of those costs. Id. at 4.
Due to improvements suggested in the
FY 2016 Annual Compliance
Determination, in conjunction with
corresponding analytical improvements,
the Postal Service states that it can now
directly estimate the actual incremental
costs of international mail. Id. at 6.
Under procedure two, the Postal
Service proposes thresholds for
calculating inframarginal costs and an
alternative methodology for
approximating the appropriate cost
driver ratios for NSAs. Id. at 8.
Specifically, the Postal Service suggests
that it should not have to calculate the
incremental costs if an NSA has less
than 0.3 percent of the product type’s
(e.g. Priority Mail, Parcel Select) volume
variable cost or less than $8 million in
volume variable cost. Id. at 11. The
Postal Service also seeks to use the ratio
of NSA volume variable costs to product
type volume variable costs as a proxy
cost driver to calculate the incremental
cost of NSA products. Id. at 12–20.
Rationale and impact. The Postal
Service contends that procedure one
will allow it ‘‘to rely upon the best
available information’’ because the
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13JNP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
27524
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 114 / Wednesday, June 13, 2018 / Proposed Rules
procedure replaces the hybrid
approach’s proxy incremental costs with
actual estimation of the incremental
costs of international products. Id. at 7.
The Postal Service comments that
‘‘[t]his alone constitute[s] a clear
improvement over past practice.’’ Id. at
6. Furthermore, the Postal Service notes
that the change will allow ‘‘the
incremental cost model to directly
estimate the costs of producing all
competitive products simultaneously,
and thus provide exactly the
information needed to fully conduct the
cross-subsidy test as intended.’’ Id. at 7.
The Postal Service estimates that the
impact of procedure one would be to
raise competitive product incremental
costs by 0.2 percent. Id. at 7–8. The
Postal Service estimates that amount to
be approximately $25 million. Id.
The Postal Service argues that
procedure two’s proposed thresholds
are appropriate because its testing
suggests that NSAs ‘‘have no
appreciable inframarginal costs’’ below
these thresholds. Id. at 11. The Postal
Service argues that ‘‘when a product has
a very small volume relative to the other
products handled in the activity or cost
pool, the product’s volume variable cost
and incremental cost will virtually be
the same.’’ Id. at 9. For that reason, the
Postal Service avers that ‘‘the
calculation of incremental costs for the
hundreds of domestic NSA’s with
minimal volumes would require a
material amount of scarce Postal Service
resources, and the resulting incremental
cost estimates for those products would
not be practically different from their
volume variable costs.’’ Id. at 12. The
Postal Service concludes that it and the
Commission ‘‘are better served when the
Postal Service expends those resources
on other, critical, costing issues.’’ Id.
With regard to procedure two’s
proposed cost driver change, the Postal
Service states that it ‘‘is not possible
. . . to generate the required cost driver
proportions for specific NSA products.’’
Id. at 13. For this reason, the Postal
Service proposes to use ‘‘the volume
variable cost ratio as a proxy for the
unknown true variable, the ratio of the
cost drivers.’’ Id. at 17. In the Postal
Service’s view ‘‘the approximation used
for the missing driver ratios should
reflect the characteristics of the missing
information as well as possible.’’ Id. at
13.
The Postal Service states that the
impacts associated with procedure two
are ‘‘less clear cut’’ than procedure one
because ‘‘there is no intuitive baseline
against which to compare [results].’’ Id.
at 20. The Postal Service explains that
‘‘[i]n theory, the logical baseline would
be actual inframarginal costs calculated
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:45 Jun 12, 2018
Jkt 244001
using actual data at the cost pool level.’’
Id. However, ‘‘since the very reason we
must rely on the approximation is
because such actual data at that level do
not exist, that theoretical baseline does
not exist either.’’ Id.
III. Notice and Comment
The Commission establishes Docket
No. RM2018–6 for consideration of
matters raised by the Petition. More
information on the Petition may be
accessed via the Commission’s website
at https://www.prc.gov. Interested
persons may submit comments on the
Petition and Proposal Three no later
than June 29, 2018. Pursuant to 39
U.S.C. 505, Katalin K. Clendenin is
designated as an officer of the
Commission (Public Representative) to
represent the interests of the general
public in this proceeding.
IV. Ordering Paragraphs
It is ordered:
1. The Commission establishes Docket
No. RM2018–6 for consideration of the
matters raised by the Petition of the
United States Postal Service for the
Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider
Proposed Changes in Analytical
Principles (Proposal Three), filed June 1,
2018.
2. Comments by interested persons in
this proceeding are due no later than
June 29, 2018.
3. Pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 505, the
Commission appoints Katalin K.
Clendenin to serve as an officer of the
Commission (Public Representative) to
represent the interests of the general
public in this docket.
4. The Secretary shall arrange for
publication of this order in the Federal
Register.
By the Commission.
Stacy L. Ruble,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–12646 Filed 6–12–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–FW–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Ch. I
[EPA–HQ–OA–2018–0107; FRL–9979–41–
OP]
RIN 2010–AA12
Increasing Consistency and
Transparency in Considering Costs
and Benefits in the Rulemaking
Process
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
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Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
ACTION:
EPA promulgates regulations
under authority provided in the federal
environmental statutes such as the
Clean Air Act (CAA), Clean Water Act
(CWA), Safe Drinking Water Act
(SDWA), and many others. Most
statutory provisions require or allow
some consideration of cost and benefits
when setting pollution standards, but
there is variation in terminology and
specificity provided in each law
regarding the nature and scope of the
cost and benefit considerations. In this
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPRM), EPA is soliciting comment on
whether and how EPA should
promulgate regulations that provide a
consistent and transparent
interpretation relating to the
consideration of weighing costs and
benefits in making regulatory decisions
in a manner consistent with applicable
authorizing statutes. EPA is also
soliciting comment on whether and how
these regulations, if promulgated, could
also prescribe specific analytic
approaches to quantifying the costs and
benefits of EPA regulations. This
ANPRM does not propose any
regulatory requirements.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before July 13, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OA–2018–0107 at https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
EPA may publish any comment received
to its public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you
consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Multimedia submissions (audio, video,
etc.) must be accompanied by a written
comment. The written comment is
considered the official comment and
should include discussion of all points
you wish to make. EPA will generally
not consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information on this document,
please contact Elizabeth Kopits,
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 114 (Wednesday, June 13, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 27523-27524]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-12646]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
39 CFR Part 3050
[Docket No. RM2018-6; Order No. 4635]
Periodic Reporting
AGENCY: Postal Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission is noticing a recent filing requesting that the
Commission initiate an informal rulemaking proceeding to consider
changes to an analytical method for use in periodic reporting (Proposal
Three). This document informs the public of the filing, invites public
comment, and takes other administrative steps.
DATES: Comments are due: June 29, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments electronically via the Commission's Filing
Online system at https://www.prc.gov. Those who cannot submit comments
electronically should contact the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section by telephone for advice on filing
alternatives.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202-789-6820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Proposal Three
III. Notice and Comment
IV. Ordering Paragraphs
I. Introduction
On June 1, 2018, the Postal Service filed a petition pursuant to 39
CFR 3050.11, requesting that the Commission initiate a rulemaking
proceeding to consider changes to analytical principles relating to
periodic reports.\1\ The Petition identifies the proposed analytical
changes filed in this docket as Proposal Three.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Petition of the United States Postal Service for the
Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider Proposed Changes in
Analytical Principles (Proposal Three), June 1, 2018 (Petition).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Proposal Three
Background. The Commission adopted the use of incremental costs as
the basis for class-level and product-level attributable costs in
September of 2016.\2\ In FY 2017, the methodology was fully applied for
the first time.\3\ Proposal Three seeks to revise two incremental
costing procedures in accordance with this methodological change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Docket No. ACR2017, Annual Compliance Report, December 29,
2017, at 4-6.
\3\ Docket No. ACR2017, Annual Compliance Determination, March
29, 2018, at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first proposed revision concerns the Postal Service's method
for calculating incremental costs for competitive products
collectively. Under current analytical principles, the Postal Service
calculates these costs using a so-called ``hybrid'' approach. The
Postal Service first calculates the incremental costs of competitive
domestic products (including group specific costs for these products)
and then adds it to the volume variable and product specific costs of
competitive international products. This ``hybrid'' approach blends an
estimate of competitive domestic incremental costs with a proxy
estimate of competitive international incremental costs.
The second proposed revision relates to estimating inframarginal
costs for products with insufficient data at the cost pool level. The
Postal Service states that this revision primarily concerns negotiated
service agreements (NSAs), because NSAs are classified as independent
products, which can have low volumes. Petition, Proposal Three at 1.
Furthermore, the Postal Service contends that NSAs create practical
issues in calculating incremental costs, in part because the Postal
Service's data systems do not distinguish between NSA and non-NSA
mailpieces. Id. at 13. This prevents the Postal Service from creating
the standard cost drivers for NSAs (e.g. volume, weight, cubic volume),
which are necessary for calculating incremental costs. Id.
Proposal. As discussed above, the Postal Service proposes two
procedures to revise its calculation of incremental costs.
Under procedure one, the Postal Service seeks to replace the
``hybrid'' approach to calculating aggregate incremental costs, which
relies on a proxy for international costs, with a direct estimation of
those costs. Id. at 4. Due to improvements suggested in the FY 2016
Annual Compliance Determination, in conjunction with corresponding
analytical improvements, the Postal Service states that it can now
directly estimate the actual incremental costs of international mail.
Id. at 6.
Under procedure two, the Postal Service proposes thresholds for
calculating inframarginal costs and an alternative methodology for
approximating the appropriate cost driver ratios for NSAs. Id. at 8.
Specifically, the Postal Service suggests that it should not have to
calculate the incremental costs if an NSA has less than 0.3 percent of
the product type's (e.g. Priority Mail, Parcel Select) volume variable
cost or less than $8 million in volume variable cost. Id. at 11. The
Postal Service also seeks to use the ratio of NSA volume variable costs
to product type volume variable costs as a proxy cost driver to
calculate the incremental cost of NSA products. Id. at 12-20.
Rationale and impact. The Postal Service contends that procedure
one will allow it ``to rely upon the best available information''
because the
[[Page 27524]]
procedure replaces the hybrid approach's proxy incremental costs with
actual estimation of the incremental costs of international products.
Id. at 7. The Postal Service comments that ``[t]his alone constitute[s]
a clear improvement over past practice.'' Id. at 6. Furthermore, the
Postal Service notes that the change will allow ``the incremental cost
model to directly estimate the costs of producing all competitive
products simultaneously, and thus provide exactly the information
needed to fully conduct the cross-subsidy test as intended.'' Id. at 7.
The Postal Service estimates that the impact of procedure one would
be to raise competitive product incremental costs by 0.2 percent. Id.
at 7-8. The Postal Service estimates that amount to be approximately
$25 million. Id.
The Postal Service argues that procedure two's proposed thresholds
are appropriate because its testing suggests that NSAs ``have no
appreciable inframarginal costs'' below these thresholds. Id. at 11.
The Postal Service argues that ``when a product has a very small volume
relative to the other products handled in the activity or cost pool,
the product's volume variable cost and incremental cost will virtually
be the same.'' Id. at 9. For that reason, the Postal Service avers that
``the calculation of incremental costs for the hundreds of domestic
NSA's with minimal volumes would require a material amount of scarce
Postal Service resources, and the resulting incremental cost estimates
for those products would not be practically different from their volume
variable costs.'' Id. at 12. The Postal Service concludes that it and
the Commission ``are better served when the Postal Service expends
those resources on other, critical, costing issues.'' Id.
With regard to procedure two's proposed cost driver change, the
Postal Service states that it ``is not possible . . . to generate the
required cost driver proportions for specific NSA products.'' Id. at
13. For this reason, the Postal Service proposes to use ``the volume
variable cost ratio as a proxy for the unknown true variable, the ratio
of the cost drivers.'' Id. at 17. In the Postal Service's view ``the
approximation used for the missing driver ratios should reflect the
characteristics of the missing information as well as possible.'' Id.
at 13.
The Postal Service states that the impacts associated with
procedure two are ``less clear cut'' than procedure one because ``there
is no intuitive baseline against which to compare [results].'' Id. at
20. The Postal Service explains that ``[i]n theory, the logical
baseline would be actual inframarginal costs calculated using actual
data at the cost pool level.'' Id. However, ``since the very reason we
must rely on the approximation is because such actual data at that
level do not exist, that theoretical baseline does not exist either.''
Id.
III. Notice and Comment
The Commission establishes Docket No. RM2018-6 for consideration of
matters raised by the Petition. More information on the Petition may be
accessed via the Commission's website at https://www.prc.gov. Interested
persons may submit comments on the Petition and Proposal Three no later
than June 29, 2018. Pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 505, Katalin K. Clendenin is
designated as an officer of the Commission (Public Representative) to
represent the interests of the general public in this proceeding.
IV. Ordering Paragraphs
It is ordered:
1. The Commission establishes Docket No. RM2018-6 for consideration
of the matters raised by the Petition of the United States Postal
Service for the Initiation of a Proceeding to Consider Proposed Changes
in Analytical Principles (Proposal Three), filed June 1, 2018.
2. Comments by interested persons in this proceeding are due no
later than June 29, 2018.
3. Pursuant to 39 U.S.C. 505, the Commission appoints Katalin K.
Clendenin to serve as an officer of the Commission (Public
Representative) to represent the interests of the general public in
this docket.
4. The Secretary shall arrange for publication of this order in the
Federal Register.
By the Commission.
Stacy L. Ruble,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-12646 Filed 6-12-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710-FW-P