Request for Comments on the Cross-Agency Priority Goal: Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset, 30113-30116 [2018-13768]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 27, 2018 / Notices
‘‘Multiple Family Housing Project
Budget Utility Allowance,’’ must
allocate revenue and expense between
project operations and the service
component.
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F. Equal Opportunity and NonDiscrimination Requirements
[FR Doc. 2018–13761 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
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[Docket Number USBC–2018–0011]
Request for Comments on the CrossAgency Priority Goal: Leveraging Data
as a Strategic Asset
Department of Commerce.
Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
In accordance with Federal civil
rights law and U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights
regulations and policies, the USDA, its
Agencies, offices, and employees, and
institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are
prohibited from discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, religion, sex,
gender identity (including gender
expression), sexual orientation,
disability, age, marital status, family/
parental status, income derived from a
public assistance program. Political
beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior
civil rights activity, in any program or
activity conducted or funded by USDA
(not all bases apply to all programs).
Remedies and complaint filing
deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means of communication for
program information (e.g., Braille, large
print, audiotape, American Sign
Language, etc.) should contact the
responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET
Center at (202) 720–2600 (voice and
TTY) or contact USDA through the
Federal Relay Service at (800) 877–8339.
Additionally, program information may
be made available in languages other
than English.
To file a program discrimination
complaint, complete the USDA Program
Discrimination Complaint Form, AD–
3027, found online at: https://
www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_
cust.html, and at any USDA office or
write a letter addressed to USDA and
provide in the letter all of the
information requested in the form. To
request a copy of a complaint form, call,
(866) 632–9992. Submit your completed
form or letter to USDA by:
(1) Mail: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20250–9410;
(2) Fax: (202) 690–7442; or
(3) Email at: program.intake@
usda.gov.
USDA is an equal opportunity
provider, employer, and lender.
Dated: June 21, 2018.
Joel C. Baxley,
Administrator, Rural Housing Service.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
ACTION:
In March 2018, the Trump
Administration launched the President’s
Management Agenda (PMA). It lays out
a long-term vision for modernizing the
Federal Government in key areas that
will improve the ability of agencies to
deliver mission outcomes, provide
excellent service, and effectively
steward taxpayer dollars on behalf of
the American people. The PMA
established a Cross-Agency Priority
(CAP) goal of Leveraging Data as a
Strategic Asset with an intended
purpose of guiding development of a
comprehensive long-term Federal Data
Strategy to grow the economy, increase
the effectiveness of the Federal
Government, facilitate oversight, and
promote transparency (https://
www.performance.gov/CAP/CAP_goal_
2.html). This notice seeks comment on
best strategies and processes for
achieving this CAP goal.
In addition to this request, two
additional future requests for comment
in September and December will inform
draft federal data practices and a year1 action plan.
DATES: Comments on this notice must be
received by July 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments through
the Federal eRulemaking Portal. We will
not accept comments by fax or paper
delivery. Include the Docket ID and the
phrase ‘‘Leveraging Data as a Strategic
Asset Phase 1 Comments’’ at the
beginning of your comments. Also
indicate which questions described in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION of this
notice are addressed in your comments.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
www.regulations.gov to submit your
comments electronically under Docket
ID USBC–2018–0011. Information on
using regulations.gov, including
instructions for accessing documents,
submitting comments, and viewing the
docket, is available on the site under
‘‘How to Use This Site.’’
• Privacy Note: Comments and
information submitted in response to
this notice may be made available to the
public through relevant websites.
Therefore, commenters should only
include in their comments information
that they wish to make publicly
available on the internet. Note that
SUMMARY:
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responses to this public comment
request containing any routine notice
about the confidentiality of the
communication will be treated as public
comments that may be made available to
the public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William Hawk, Economist, U.S.
Department of Commerce, whawk@
doc.gov or (202) 482–2134.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose
The Under Secretary for Economic
Affairs, performing the nonexclusive
duties and functions of the Deputy
Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Commerce, along with the Federal Chief
Information Officer, the Chief
Statistician of the United States, and
executives from the U.S. Small Business
Administration and the White House
Office of Science and Technology
Policy, is charged with developing a
comprehensive Federal Data Strategy
under the PMA CAP goal of Leveraging
Data as a Strategic Asset. Under this
goal, the Federal Government should
leverage programmatic, statistical, and
mission-support data as a strategic asset
to grow the economy, increase the
effectiveness of the Federal
Government, facilitate oversight, and
promote transparency. The Federal
Government’s role in collecting and
disseminating data is rooted in the U.S.
Constitution. Advances in data science
have transformed the production and
use of data across society, business, and
government. The Federal Government
needs a robust, integrated approach to
creating, acquiring, using, and
disseminating data to deliver on
mission, serve customers, and steward
resources while respecting privacy and
confidentiality. Over the next year, an
interdisciplinary team from multiple
federal agencies will develop work
products, including principles,
practices, and action steps for a unified
approach to federal data stewardship
and use, and will test potential plans as
part of The Data Incubator Project
(described below). Stakeholder
engagement is critical to developing a
data strategy that is viable and
sustainable. This Federal Register
notice is the first of three notices and
requests for comment to seek public
input on the strategy and process. This
notice seeks comments on a four-part
strategy to:
1. Manage government data as a
strategic asset;
2. enable the American public,
businesses, and researchers to
effectively and efficiently access and
use data;
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3. improve the use of data for federal
decision-making and accountability,
including for policy-making,
innovation, oversight, and learning; and
4. facilitate the use of federal data by
interested parties to enhance the
accessibility and usefulness of that data
through commercial ventures, or
innovation, or for additional public
uses.
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Request for Comments
This is a general solicitation of
comments from the public that offers
businesses, academic institutions, nonprofit organizations, government
entities, and other interested parties the
opportunity to offer best practices and
use cases to support the Federal Data
Strategy. Comments also are sought on
draft Principles for a Comprehensive
Federal Data Strategy. Finally,
commenters are invited to list
additional mechanisms that the Federal
Government should use to seek
interested parties’ input on the data
strategy. It is for information-gathering
and fact-finding purposes only, and
should not be construed as a request for
proposals or as an obligation on the part
of the U.S. Department of Commerce or
federal agencies to agree with submitted
comments or to incorporate
recommendations identified in public
comments regarding specific work
products.
The U.S. Department of Commerce
requests that respondents briefly
address the following questions, where
possible and applicable. Respondents
are encouraged to focus on questions
informed by relevant expertise or
perspectives. Clearly indicate which
question(s) you address in your
response and any evidence to support
assertions, where practicable.
Best Practices Related to the Four
Pillars of the Federal Data Strategy
1. Enterprise Data Governance. Briefly
describe which best practices the
Federal Government should consider as
it sets priorities for managing
government data as a strategic asset,
including establishing data policies,
specifying roles and responsibilities for
data privacy, security, and
confidentiality protection, and
monitoring compliance with standards
and policies throughout the information
lifecycle.
2. Access, Use, and Augmentation.
List a few best practices that the Federal
Government should consider as it
develops policies and practices to
enable interested parties to effectively
and efficiently access and use data
assets by: (1) Making data available
more quickly and in more useful
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formats; (2) maximizing the amount of
non-sensitive data shared with the
public; and (3) leveraging new
technologies and best practices to
increase access to sensitive or restricted
data while protecting privacy, security,
and confidentiality, and the interests of
data providers.
3. Decision-Making and
Accountability. Which best practices
should the Federal Government
consider to improve the use of data
assets for decision-making and
accountability? Specifically, list best
practices for:
• Providing high quality and timely
information to inform decision-making
and learning;
• facilitating external research on the
effectiveness of government programs
and policies which will inform future
policymaking; and
• fostering public accountability and
transparency by providing accurate and
timely spending information,
performance metrics, and other
administrative data.
4. Commercialization, Innovation, and
Public Use. Outline best practices that
the Federal Government should
consider to facilitate the use of Federal
Government data interested parties to
enhance the accessibility and usefulness
of the data through commercial
ventures, or innovation, or for
additional public uses. Of particular
interest are examples of how the Federal
Government can promote data use by
the private sector and scientific and
research communities, by state and local
governments for public policy purposes,
for education, and in enabling civic
engagement. Please include up to four
examples of:
• How enabling external users to
access and use government data for
commercial or additional public
purposes spurs innovative technological
solutions and fills gaps in government
capacity and knowledge; and
• how supporting the production and
dissemination of comprehensive,
accurate, and objective statistics on the
state of the nation helps businesses and
markets operate more efficiently.
Interim Work Products
5. Principles. The interagency team on
Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset has
written a draft set of principles for a
comprehensive data strategy. Please
review and provide feedback on their
clarity, appropriateness, completeness,
and potential duplications.
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Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset:
Principles for a Comprehensive Federal
Data Strategy
The following broad principles are
intended to guide the development of a
comprehensive data strategy that
encompasses the breadth of data the
Federal Government acquires, uses, and
disseminates for program, statistical,
and mission-support purposes. These
principles include concepts reflected in
existing principles, such as those for the
protection of personal information, for
federal statistical agencies, and for
federal evidence building. The
principles will inform the development
of practices and action steps for the
Federal Data Strategy throughout the
data lifecycle.
Stewardship
1. Exercise Responsibility: Practice
effective data stewardship and
governance by maintaining modern data
security practices, protecting individual
privacy, and maintaining promised
confidentiality.
2. Uphold Ethics: Consider, monitor,
and assess the implications of federal
data practices for the public and provide
sufficient checks and balances to protect
and serve the public interest.
3. Promote Transparency: Articulate
purposes for acquiring, using, and
disseminating data and
comprehensively document processes
and products to inform data users.
Quality
4. Integrate Intentionality: Create,
acquire, use, and disseminate data
deliberately and thoughtfully,
considering quality, consistency,
privacy, value, reuse, and
interoperability from the start.
5. Ensure Relevance: Validate that
data are high quality, useful,
understandable, timely, and needed.
6. Create Value: Coordinate and
prioritize data needs and uses, harness
data from multiple sources, and acquire
new data only when necessary.
Continuous Improvement
7. Demonstrate Responsiveness:
Improve data sharing and access with
ongoing input from users and other
stakeholders.
8. Prioritize Best Practices: Model,
assess, and continuously update best
practices throughout the data lifecycle.
9. Invest in Learning: Promote a
culture of continuous and collaborative
learning with data and about data.
10. Practice Accountability: Audit
data practices, document and learn from
results, and make changes as needed
based on findings.
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Example Use Case Submissions
Sources for Development of Above
Principles
European Statistical System Code of
Practice (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/
web/quality/european-statistics-code-ofpractice); Fair Information Practice
Principles as cited in (https://cep.gov/
cep-final-report.html); First Principles
of Project Management, (https://
www.maxwideman.com/papers/
principles/defns.htm); Guiding
Principles for Evidence-Based
Policymaking (https://cep.gov/cep-finalreport.html); Key Principles of
Government Information from the
American Library Association, (https://
www.ala.org/advocacy/govinfo/
keyprinciples); OMB Statistical
Standards (https://www.whitehouse.gov/
omb/information-regulatory-affairs/
statistical-programs-standards/);
Principles and Practices for a Federal
Statistical Agency, Sixth Edition,
(https://www.nap.edu/read/24810/
chapter/1).
6. Call for Use Cases. What Use Cases
should the Federal Government
consider in developing the Federal Data
Strategy?
Federal Data Strategy: Call for Use
Cases
To solve the most pressing issues
facing the nation, we must leverage data
as a strategic asset. The United States
Federal Data Strategy seeks to replicate,
scale, and prioritize key data use cases
to serve the public.
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What is a Use Case?
For the purposes of the Federal Data
Strategy, a ‘‘Use Case’’ is a data practice
or method that leverages data to support
an articulable Federal agency mission or
public interest outcome. The Federal
Data Strategy is seeking best practices,
missed opportunities, common
solutions, and game changers that can
help inform the four strategy areas:
1. Enterprise Data Governance. What
data governance and stewardship
practices should the Federal
Government be employing and why?
2. Use, Access, and Augmentation.
What data interoperability techniques or
coordination tactics would better serve
agency missions and the public?
3. Decision-making and
Accountability. How can the Federal
Government better assist policy-makers
with data?
4. Commercialization, Innovation, and
Public Use. What data solutions could
address a pervasive problem in
government service delivery or the
public sphere?
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• Economic Development—State and
local authorities increasingly need
detailed local information about their
economies to make informed decisions.
The US Census Bureau’s Longitudinal
Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD)
program (https://lehd.ces.census.gov/)
produces new, cost effective, public-use
information combining federal, state
and Census Bureau data on employers
and employees under the Local
Employment Dynamics (LED)
Partnership (https://lehd.ces.census.
gov/state_partners/).
• National Security—Preventing and
minimizing adverse effects of cyberattacks is imperative to national security
in the 21st century. National Institute of
Standards and Technology’s National
Vulnerability Database (https://
nvd.nist.gov/) and the Homeland
Security Systems Engineering and
Development Institute’s Common
Vulnerabilities and Exposure (https://
cve.mitre.org/) list enable automation of
vulnerability management, security
measurement, and compliance.
• Education—Students seek colleges
that give them the best return on their
investment. The College Scorecard
(https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/)
provides up-to-date, comprehensive,
and reliable information about college
costs, student loan amounts, student
ability to repay loans, and their
expected earnings.
• Public Safety—Emergency
responders rely on up-to-date addresses
for timely response. The Federal
Geospatial Data Committee (https://
www.fgdc.gov/topics/national-addressdatabase) recognizes the need for a free,
open, and up-to-date National Address
Database (NAD) (https://
www.transportation.gov/nad) to serve
these critical needs as well as a broad
range of government services such as
mail delivery, permitting, and school
siting. Based on a minimum content
approach, the Department of
Transportation and the US Census
Bureau’s NAD pilot collected and
standardized addresses from 22 state
partners.
• Health—Local communities and
health professionals reacting to the
opioid crisis require timely data to
assess impact and deliver effective
interventions. The Department of Health
and Human Services’ 5 Point Strategy to
Combat the Opioids Crisis includes
Point 2, Better Data (https://
www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-theepidemic/hhs-response/better-data/
index.html)—supporting more timely,
specific public health data and
reporting, and accelerating the Center
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for Disease Control’s reporting of drug
overdose data.
Why does the Federal Data Strategy
need Use Cases?
While many high-level civic data
challenges have been identified—
archaic data management practices and
IT legacy systems, issues with data
sharing and interoperability, and a lack
of secondary use considerations—the
Federal Government lacks an overall
approach to prioritize data
infrastructure improvements that serve
the public. The Federal Data Strategy is
seeking priority data use cases to ensure
it is comprehensive and actionable.
How will the Federal Data Strategy
incorporate Use Cases?
These use cases will be identified and
discussed in the Federal Data Strategy,
and a select number of ready use cases
will be assessed more deeply in The
Data Incubator Project.
What is The Data Incubator Project?
A select number of Use Cases deemed
‘‘ripe for testing’’ will be included in
The Data Incubator Project. To be ‘‘ripe
for testing,’’ these Use Cases must
demonstrate potential for replication,
scaling, and mission impact. They also
must have a ready team for further
exploration and assessment purposes.
The Data Incubator Project is not a new
platform or set of resources, but rather
is focused research aimed at identifying
methods for the Federal Data Strategy
and for agencies going forward. The
Federal Data Strategy team will seek
academic, private sector, and NGO
partnerships to further our learning
from The Data Incubator Project.
How can I submit a Use Case?
Please submit information about Use
Cases in response to this RFC by July 27,
2018.
To ensure complete use case entries,
please provide as much contextual
information as possible, such as: contact
information for follow-up questions, the
Federal agencies or bureaus related to
the relevant data, related reference
materials (including URLs) such as
documentation about the data, practice,
or goal of the project, and why this Use
Case should be included in Federal Data
Strategy development.
Stakeholder Engagement
7. What are the best mechanisms for
engaging stakeholders in the
development of the data strategy? What
platforms and processes are both
comprehensive and efficient for
collecting stakeholder feedback on
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interim work products and input on
next steps?
Guidance for Submitting Documents
We ask that each respondent include
the name and address of his or her
institution or affiliation, and the name,
title, mailing and email addresses, and
telephone number of a contact person
for his or her institution or affiliation, if
any. No specific information pertaining
to the respondent is required, other than
that necessary for self-identification, as
a condition of the agency’s full
consideration of the comment.
Dated: June 20, 2018.
Karen Dunn Kelley,
Under Secretary for Economic Affairs,
Performing the Nonexclusive Duties and
Functions of the Deputy Secretary of
Commerce, Department of Commerce.
[FR Doc. 2018–13768 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Smart Grid Advisory Committee
Charter Renewal
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Advisory Committee
charter renewal.
AGENCY:
The National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST)
hereby gives notice that the Department
of Commerce Acting Chief Financial
Officer/Assistant Secretary for
Administration, and Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Administration has
determined that charter renewal of the
NIST Smart Grid Advisory Committee
(Committee) is necessary and in the
public interest. The renewed charter can
be found on the Committee website at
the following URL link: https://
www.nist.gov/file/443231.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Cuong Nguyen, Smart Grid and CyberPhysical Systems Program Office,
National Institute of Standards and
Technology, 100 Bureau Drive, Mail
Stop 8200, Gaithersburg, MD 20899–
8200; telephone 301–975–2254, fax
301–948–5668; or via email at
cuong.nguyen@nist.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Committee was established in
accordance with the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, as amended, 5 U.S.C.
App. The Committee is composed of
nine to fifteen members, appointed by
the Director of NIST, who were selected
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on the basis of established records of
distinguished service in their
professional community and their
knowledge of issues affecting Smart
Grid deployment and operations. The
Committee advises the Director of NIST
in carrying out duties authorized by
section 1305 of the Energy
Independence and Security Act of 2007
(Pub. L. 110–140). The Committee
provides input to NIST on Smart Grid
standards, priorities, and gaps, on the
overall direction, status, and health of
the Smart Grid implementation by the
Smart Grid industry, and on the
direction of research and standards
activities. Background information on
the Committee is available at https://
www.nist.gov/smartgrid/.
The Committee functions solely as an
advisory body and in compliance with
provisions of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act. Pursuant to section 9(c)
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act,
5 U.S.C., App., as amended, copies of
the Committee’s charter were furnished
to the Library of Congress and to the
following committees of Congress:
• Senate Committee on Appropriations
• Senate Committee on Finance
• Senate Committee on Commerce,
Science, and Transportation
• House Committee on Appropriations
• House Committee on Science, Space,
and Technology
Kevin A. Kimball,
Chief of Staff.
[FR Doc. 2018–13822 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Prospective Grant of Exclusive Patent
License
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST), U.S.
Department of Commerce, is
contemplating the grant of an exclusive
license in the United States of America,
its territories, possessions and
commonwealths, to NIST’s interest in
the invention embodied in U.S. Patent
9,726,553 B2, titled ‘‘Optical
Temperature Sensor and Use of Same’’
(NIST Docket 13–006) to Fluke
Corporation, a subsidiary of Fortive, Inc.
The grant of the license would be for
manufacture of optical thermometers in
all fields.
The prospective exclusive
license may be granted unless NIST
receives, by July 12, 2018, written
evidence and argument which establish
that the grant of the license would not
be consistent with the requirements of
35 U.S.C. 209 and 37 CFR 404.7.
ADDRESSES: Information related to this
license may be submitted to NIST,
Technology Partnerships Office, 100
Bureau Drive, Stop 2200, Gaithersburg,
MD 20899, or emailed to
donald.archer@nist.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald G. Archer, National Institute of
Standards and Technology, Technology
Partnerships Office, 100 Bureau Drive,
Stop 2200, Gaithersburg, MD 20899,
(301) 975–2522, donald.archer@nist.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a
notice in accordance with 35 U.S.C.
209(e) and 37 CFR 404.7(a)(1)(i) that
NIST is contemplating the grant of an
exclusive license in the United States of
America, its territories, possessions and
commonwealths, to NIST’s interest in
the invention embodied in 9,726,553
B2, titled ‘‘Optical Temperature Sensor
and Use of Same’’ (NIST Docket 13–006)
to Fluke Corporation, a subsidiary of
Fortive, Inc. The grant of the license
would be for manufacture of optical
thermometers in all fields.
The prospective exclusive license will
be royalty bearing and will comply with
the terms and conditions of 35 U.S.C.
209 and 37 CFR 404.7. The prospective
exclusive license may be granted unless,
within fifteen (15) days from the date of
this published Notice, NIST receives
written evidence and argument which
establish that the grant of the license
would not be consistent with the
requirements of 35 U.S.C. 209 and 37
CFR 404.7. The Patent was filed on June
11, 2014, issued on August 8, 2017, and
describes an optical resonator
thermometer.
DATES:
Kevin A. Kimball,
Chief of Staff.
[FR Doc. 2018–13821 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
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SUMMARY:
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Judges Panel of the Malcolm Baldrige
National Quality Award
National Institute of Standards
and Technology, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of closed meeting.
AGENCY:
The Judges Panel of the
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 124 (Wednesday, June 27, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30113-30116]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-13768]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
[Docket Number USBC-2018-0011]
Request for Comments on the Cross-Agency Priority Goal:
Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset
AGENCY: Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In March 2018, the Trump Administration launched the
President's Management Agenda (PMA). It lays out a long-term vision for
modernizing the Federal Government in key areas that will improve the
ability of agencies to deliver mission outcomes, provide excellent
service, and effectively steward taxpayer dollars on behalf of the
American people. The PMA established a Cross-Agency Priority (CAP) goal
of Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset with an intended purpose of
guiding development of a comprehensive long-term Federal Data Strategy
to grow the economy, increase the effectiveness of the Federal
Government, facilitate oversight, and promote transparency (https://www.performance.gov/CAP/CAP_goal_2.html). This notice seeks comment on
best strategies and processes for achieving this CAP goal.
In addition to this request, two additional future requests for
comment in September and December will inform draft federal data
practices and a year-1 action plan.
DATES: Comments on this notice must be received by July 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal. We
will not accept comments by fax or paper delivery. Include the Docket
ID and the phrase ``Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset Phase 1
Comments'' at the beginning of your comments. Also indicate which
questions described in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION of this notice are
addressed in your comments.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to www.regulations.gov to
submit your comments electronically under Docket ID USBC-2018-0011.
Information on using regulations.gov, including instructions for
accessing documents, submitting comments, and viewing the docket, is
available on the site under ``How to Use This Site.''
Privacy Note: Comments and information submitted in
response to this notice may be made available to the public through
relevant websites. Therefore, commenters should only include in their
comments information that they wish to make publicly available on the
internet. Note that responses to this public comment request containing
any routine notice about the confidentiality of the communication will
be treated as public comments that may be made available to the public.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William Hawk, Economist, U.S.
Department of Commerce, [email protected] or (202) 482-2134.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose
The Under Secretary for Economic Affairs, performing the
nonexclusive duties and functions of the Deputy Secretary of the U.S.
Department of Commerce, along with the Federal Chief Information
Officer, the Chief Statistician of the United States, and executives
from the U.S. Small Business Administration and the White House Office
of Science and Technology Policy, is charged with developing a
comprehensive Federal Data Strategy under the PMA CAP goal of
Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset. Under this goal, the Federal
Government should leverage programmatic, statistical, and mission-
support data as a strategic asset to grow the economy, increase the
effectiveness of the Federal Government, facilitate oversight, and
promote transparency. The Federal Government's role in collecting and
disseminating data is rooted in the U.S. Constitution. Advances in data
science have transformed the production and use of data across society,
business, and government. The Federal Government needs a robust,
integrated approach to creating, acquiring, using, and disseminating
data to deliver on mission, serve customers, and steward resources
while respecting privacy and confidentiality. Over the next year, an
interdisciplinary team from multiple federal agencies will develop work
products, including principles, practices, and action steps for a
unified approach to federal data stewardship and use, and will test
potential plans as part of The Data Incubator Project (described
below). Stakeholder engagement is critical to developing a data
strategy that is viable and sustainable. This Federal Register notice
is the first of three notices and requests for comment to seek public
input on the strategy and process. This notice seeks comments on a
four-part strategy to:
1. Manage government data as a strategic asset;
2. enable the American public, businesses, and researchers to
effectively and efficiently access and use data;
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3. improve the use of data for federal decision-making and
accountability, including for policy-making, innovation, oversight, and
learning; and
4. facilitate the use of federal data by interested parties to
enhance the accessibility and usefulness of that data through
commercial ventures, or innovation, or for additional public uses.
Request for Comments
This is a general solicitation of comments from the public that
offers businesses, academic institutions, non-profit organizations,
government entities, and other interested parties the opportunity to
offer best practices and use cases to support the Federal Data
Strategy. Comments also are sought on draft Principles for a
Comprehensive Federal Data Strategy. Finally, commenters are invited to
list additional mechanisms that the Federal Government should use to
seek interested parties' input on the data strategy. It is for
information-gathering and fact-finding purposes only, and should not be
construed as a request for proposals or as an obligation on the part of
the U.S. Department of Commerce or federal agencies to agree with
submitted comments or to incorporate recommendations identified in
public comments regarding specific work products.
The U.S. Department of Commerce requests that respondents briefly
address the following questions, where possible and applicable.
Respondents are encouraged to focus on questions informed by relevant
expertise or perspectives. Clearly indicate which question(s) you
address in your response and any evidence to support assertions, where
practicable.
Best Practices Related to the Four Pillars of the Federal Data Strategy
1. Enterprise Data Governance. Briefly describe which best
practices the Federal Government should consider as it sets priorities
for managing government data as a strategic asset, including
establishing data policies, specifying roles and responsibilities for
data privacy, security, and confidentiality protection, and monitoring
compliance with standards and policies throughout the information
lifecycle.
2. Access, Use, and Augmentation. List a few best practices that
the Federal Government should consider as it develops policies and
practices to enable interested parties to effectively and efficiently
access and use data assets by: (1) Making data available more quickly
and in more useful formats; (2) maximizing the amount of non-sensitive
data shared with the public; and (3) leveraging new technologies and
best practices to increase access to sensitive or restricted data while
protecting privacy, security, and confidentiality, and the interests of
data providers.
3. Decision-Making and Accountability. Which best practices should
the Federal Government consider to improve the use of data assets for
decision-making and accountability? Specifically, list best practices
for:
Providing high quality and timely information to inform
decision-making and learning;
facilitating external research on the effectiveness of
government programs and policies which will inform future policymaking;
and
fostering public accountability and transparency by
providing accurate and timely spending information, performance
metrics, and other administrative data.
4. Commercialization, Innovation, and Public Use. Outline best
practices that the Federal Government should consider to facilitate the
use of Federal Government data interested parties to enhance the
accessibility and usefulness of the data through commercial ventures,
or innovation, or for additional public uses. Of particular interest
are examples of how the Federal Government can promote data use by the
private sector and scientific and research communities, by state and
local governments for public policy purposes, for education, and in
enabling civic engagement. Please include up to four examples of:
How enabling external users to access and use government
data for commercial or additional public purposes spurs innovative
technological solutions and fills gaps in government capacity and
knowledge; and
how supporting the production and dissemination of
comprehensive, accurate, and objective statistics on the state of the
nation helps businesses and markets operate more efficiently.
Interim Work Products
5. Principles. The interagency team on Leveraging Data as a
Strategic Asset has written a draft set of principles for a
comprehensive data strategy. Please review and provide feedback on
their clarity, appropriateness, completeness, and potential
duplications.
Leveraging Data as a Strategic Asset: Principles for a Comprehensive
Federal Data Strategy
The following broad principles are intended to guide the
development of a comprehensive data strategy that encompasses the
breadth of data the Federal Government acquires, uses, and disseminates
for program, statistical, and mission-support purposes. These
principles include concepts reflected in existing principles, such as
those for the protection of personal information, for federal
statistical agencies, and for federal evidence building. The principles
will inform the development of practices and action steps for the
Federal Data Strategy throughout the data lifecycle.
Stewardship
1. Exercise Responsibility: Practice effective data stewardship and
governance by maintaining modern data security practices, protecting
individual privacy, and maintaining promised confidentiality.
2. Uphold Ethics: Consider, monitor, and assess the implications of
federal data practices for the public and provide sufficient checks and
balances to protect and serve the public interest.
3. Promote Transparency: Articulate purposes for acquiring, using,
and disseminating data and comprehensively document processes and
products to inform data users.
Quality
4. Integrate Intentionality: Create, acquire, use, and disseminate
data deliberately and thoughtfully, considering quality, consistency,
privacy, value, reuse, and interoperability from the start.
5. Ensure Relevance: Validate that data are high quality, useful,
understandable, timely, and needed.
6. Create Value: Coordinate and prioritize data needs and uses,
harness data from multiple sources, and acquire new data only when
necessary.
Continuous Improvement
7. Demonstrate Responsiveness: Improve data sharing and access with
ongoing input from users and other stakeholders.
8. Prioritize Best Practices: Model, assess, and continuously
update best practices throughout the data lifecycle.
9. Invest in Learning: Promote a culture of continuous and
collaborative learning with data and about data.
10. Practice Accountability: Audit data practices, document and
learn from results, and make changes as needed based on findings.
[[Page 30115]]
Sources for Development of Above Principles
European Statistical System Code of Practice (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/quality/european-statistics-code-of-practice); Fair
Information Practice Principles as cited in (https://cep.gov/cep-final-report.html); First Principles of Project Management, (https://www.maxwideman.com/papers/principles/defns.htm); Guiding Principles for
Evidence-Based Policymaking (https://cep.gov/cep-final-report.html);
Key Principles of Government Information from the American Library
Association, (https://www.ala.org/advocacy/govinfo/keyprinciples); OMB
Statistical Standards (https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/information-regulatory-affairs/statistical-programs-standards/); Principles and
Practices for a Federal Statistical Agency, Sixth Edition, (https://www.nap.edu/read/24810/chapter/1).
6. Call for Use Cases. What Use Cases should the Federal Government
consider in developing the Federal Data Strategy?
Federal Data Strategy: Call for Use Cases
To solve the most pressing issues facing the nation, we must
leverage data as a strategic asset. The United States Federal Data
Strategy seeks to replicate, scale, and prioritize key data use cases
to serve the public.
What is a Use Case?
For the purposes of the Federal Data Strategy, a ``Use Case'' is a
data practice or method that leverages data to support an articulable
Federal agency mission or public interest outcome. The Federal Data
Strategy is seeking best practices, missed opportunities, common
solutions, and game changers that can help inform the four strategy
areas:
1. Enterprise Data Governance. What data governance and stewardship
practices should the Federal Government be employing and why?
2. Use, Access, and Augmentation. What data interoperability
techniques or coordination tactics would better serve agency missions
and the public?
3. Decision-making and Accountability. How can the Federal
Government better assist policy-makers with data?
4. Commercialization, Innovation, and Public Use. What data
solutions could address a pervasive problem in government service
delivery or the public sphere?
Example Use Case Submissions
Economic Development--State and local authorities
increasingly need detailed local information about their economies to
make informed decisions. The US Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-
Household Dynamics (LEHD) program (https://lehd.ces.census.gov/)
produces new, cost effective, public-use information combining federal,
state and Census Bureau data on employers and employees under the Local
Employment Dynamics (LED) Partnership (https://lehd.ces.census.gov/state_partners/).
National Security--Preventing and minimizing adverse
effects of cyber-attacks is imperative to national security in the 21st
century. National Institute of Standards and Technology's National
Vulnerability Database (https://nvd.nist.gov/) and the Homeland
Security Systems Engineering and Development Institute's Common
Vulnerabilities and Exposure (https://cve.mitre.org/) list enable
automation of vulnerability management, security measurement, and
compliance.
Education--Students seek colleges that give them the best
return on their investment. The College Scorecard (https://collegescorecard.ed.gov/) provides up-to-date, comprehensive, and
reliable information about college costs, student loan amounts, student
ability to repay loans, and their expected earnings.
Public Safety--Emergency responders rely on up-to-date
addresses for timely response. The Federal Geospatial Data Committee
(https://www.fgdc.gov/topics/national-address-database) recognizes the
need for a free, open, and up-to-date National Address Database (NAD)
(https://www.transportation.gov/nad) to serve these critical needs as
well as a broad range of government services such as mail delivery,
permitting, and school siting. Based on a minimum content approach, the
Department of Transportation and the US Census Bureau's NAD pilot
collected and standardized addresses from 22 state partners.
Health--Local communities and health professionals
reacting to the opioid crisis require timely data to assess impact and
deliver effective interventions. The Department of Health and Human
Services' 5 Point Strategy to Combat the Opioids Crisis includes Point
2, Better Data (https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-the-epidemic/hhs-response/better-data/)--supporting more timely, specific
public health data and reporting, and accelerating the Center for
Disease Control's reporting of drug overdose data.
Why does the Federal Data Strategy need Use Cases?
While many high-level civic data challenges have been identified--
archaic data management practices and IT legacy systems, issues with
data sharing and interoperability, and a lack of secondary use
considerations--the Federal Government lacks an overall approach to
prioritize data infrastructure improvements that serve the public. The
Federal Data Strategy is seeking priority data use cases to ensure it
is comprehensive and actionable.
How will the Federal Data Strategy incorporate Use Cases?
These use cases will be identified and discussed in the Federal
Data Strategy, and a select number of ready use cases will be assessed
more deeply in The Data Incubator Project.
What is The Data Incubator Project?
A select number of Use Cases deemed ``ripe for testing'' will be
included in The Data Incubator Project. To be ``ripe for testing,''
these Use Cases must demonstrate potential for replication, scaling,
and mission impact. They also must have a ready team for further
exploration and assessment purposes. The Data Incubator Project is not
a new platform or set of resources, but rather is focused research
aimed at identifying methods for the Federal Data Strategy and for
agencies going forward. The Federal Data Strategy team will seek
academic, private sector, and NGO partnerships to further our learning
from The Data Incubator Project.
How can I submit a Use Case?
Please submit information about Use Cases in response to this RFC
by July 27, 2018.
To ensure complete use case entries, please provide as much
contextual information as possible, such as: contact information for
follow-up questions, the Federal agencies or bureaus related to the
relevant data, related reference materials (including URLs) such as
documentation about the data, practice, or goal of the project, and why
this Use Case should be included in Federal Data Strategy development.
Stakeholder Engagement
7. What are the best mechanisms for engaging stakeholders in the
development of the data strategy? What platforms and processes are both
comprehensive and efficient for collecting stakeholder feedback on
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interim work products and input on next steps?
Guidance for Submitting Documents
We ask that each respondent include the name and address of his or
her institution or affiliation, and the name, title, mailing and email
addresses, and telephone number of a contact person for his or her
institution or affiliation, if any. No specific information pertaining
to the respondent is required, other than that necessary for self-
identification, as a condition of the agency's full consideration of
the comment.
Dated: June 20, 2018.
Karen Dunn Kelley,
Under Secretary for Economic Affairs, Performing the Nonexclusive
Duties and Functions of the Deputy Secretary of Commerce, Department of
Commerce.
[FR Doc. 2018-13768 Filed 6-26-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-07-P