Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed eCollection eComments Requested; Extension of a Currently Approved Collection: National Corrections Reporting Program, 31778-31780 [2018-14599]
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31778
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 131 / Monday, July 9, 2018 / Notices
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms
of information technology, e.g.,
permitting electronic submission of
responses.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Overview of This Information
Collection:
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[FR Doc. 2018–14598 Filed 7–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
1. Type of Information Collection:
Extension of a currently approved
collection.
2. The Title of the Form/Collection:
Law Enforcement Officers Killed and
Assaulted Program, Analysis of Officers
Feloniously Killed and Assaulted
Program; and Law Enforcement Officers
Killed and Assaulted, Analysis of
Officers Accidentally Killed
3. The agency form number, if any,
and the applicable component of the
Department sponsoring the collection:
The form number is 1–701 and 1–701a.
The applicable component within the
Department of Justice is the Criminal
Justice Information Services Division, in
the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
4. Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract:
Primary: City, county, state, tribal and
federal law enforcement agencies.
Abstract: Under Title 28, U.S. Code,
Section 534, Acquisition, Preservation,
and Exchange of Identification Records;
Appointment of Officials this collection
requests the number of officers killed or
assaulted from law enforcement
agencies in order for the FBI Uniform
Crime Reporting Program to serve as the
national clearinghouse for the collection
and dissemination of law enforcement
officer death/assault data and to publish
these statistics in Law Enforcement
Officers Killed and Assaulted.
5. An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: UCR Participation Burden
Estimation: There are approximately
188 law enforcement agency
respondents with an estimated response
time of 1 hour per report.
6. An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: There are approximately 188
hours, annual burden, associated with
this information collection.
If additional information is required
contact: Melody Braswell, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Two Constitution
Square, 145 N Street NE, 3E.405A,
Washington, DC 20530.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Dated: July 3, 2018.
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[OMB Number 1121–0065]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed eCollection
eComments Requested; Extension of a
Currently Approved Collection:
National Corrections Reporting
Program
Bureau of Justice Statistics,
Department of Justice.
ACTION: 60-Day notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice
(DOJ), Office of Justice Programs,
Bureau of Justice Statistics, will be
submitting the following information
collection request to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Comments are encouraged and
will be accepted for 60 days until
September 7, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have additional comments
especially on the estimated public
burden or associated response time,
suggestions, or need a copy of the
proposed information collection
instrument with instructions or
additional information, please contact
Elizabeth Ann Carson, Statistician,
Bureau of Justice Statistics, 810 Seventh
Street NW, Washington, DC 20531
(email: elizabeth.carson@usdoj.gov;
telephone: 202–616–3496).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Written
comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning
the proposed collection of information
are encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
four points:
—Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
—Evaluate the accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
—Evaluate whether and if so how the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected can be
enhanced; and
SUMMARY:
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—Minimize the burden of the collection
of information on those who are to
respond, including through the use of
appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological
collection techniques or other forms
of information technology, e.g.,
permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Overview of This Information
Collection
(1) Type of Information Collection:
Extension of a Currently Approved
Collection.
(2) The Title of the Form/Collection:
National Corrections Reporting Program.
The collection includes the following
parts: Prisoner Admission Report,
Prisoner Release Report, Prisoners in
Custody at Year-end Report, PostCustody Community Supervision Entry
Report, Post-Custody Community
Supervision Exit Report.
(3) The agency form number, if any,
and the applicable component of the
Department sponsoring the collection:
Form number(s): NCRP–1A, NCRP–1B,
NCRP–1D, NCRP–1E, NCRP–1F. The
applicable component within the
Department of Justice is the Bureau of
Justice Statistics (Corrections Unit), in
the Office of Justice Programs.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract: Primary: 50 state departments
of corrections (DOCs) and 7 parole
boards (in six states and the District of
Columbia). The National Corrections
Reporting Program (NCRP) is the only
national data collection furnishing
annual individual-level information for
state prisoners at five points in the
incarceration process: Prison admission,
prison release, annual year-end prison
custody census, entry to post-custody
community corrections supervision, and
exits from post-custody community
corrections supervision. BJS, the U.S.
Congress, researchers, and criminal
justice practitioners use these data to
describe annual movements of adult
offenders through state correctional
systems, as well as to examine long-term
trends in time served in prison,
demographic and offense characteristics
of inmates, sentencing practices in the
states that submit data, transitions
between incarceration and community
corrections, and recidivism. Providers of
the data are personnel in the states’
Departments of Corrections and Parole,
and all data are submitted on a
voluntary basis. The NCRP collects the
following administrative data on each
inmate in participating states’ custody:
• County of sentencing
• State and federal inmate
identification numbers
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• Dates of: Birth, prison admission,
prison release, projected prison release,
mandatory prison release, eligibility
hearing for post-custody community
corrections supervision, post-custody
community corrections supervision
entry, post-custody community
corrections supervision exit
• First, middle, and last names
• Demographic information: Sex,
race, Hispanic origin, education level,
prior military service, date and type of
last discharge from military
• Offense type and number of counts
per inmate for a maximum of three
convicted offenses per inmate
• Total sentence length imposed
• Type of facility where inmate is
serving sentence (for year-end custody
census records only, the name of the
facility is also requested)
• Type of prison admission
• Type of prison release
• Location of post-custody
community supervision exit or postcustody community supervision office
(post-custody community supervision
records only)
• Social security number
• Address of last residence prior to
incarceration
• Prison security level at which the
inmate is held
For consideration, BJS is proposing to
add the following items to the NCRP
collection, all of which are likely
available from the same databases as
existing data elements and should likely
pose minimal additional burden to the
respondents, while enhancing BJS’s
ability to characterize the corrections
systems and populations it serves:
• Status of current U.S. citizenship
• Country of current citizenship
• Country of birth
Finally, BJS is proposing to remove
the following items from the NCRP
collection, based on a combination of
low response rates (less than 50% of
states) and/or high levels of missing
data (30% or higher missing) among
states that do respond:
• Prior prison time served by the
offender
• Additional offenses since admission
date
• Additional sentence time since
admission date
• Whether the offender was on
AWOL or escape while serving
sentences
• Whether the offender was serving
time concurrently on community release
prior to prison release
• The number of days on community
release prior to prison release served by
the offender
• Agencies assuming custody at the
time of prison release
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• Offender’s supervision status prior
to release from post-custody community
supervision
• Whether the offender’s maximum
sentence includes a mandatory
minimum sentence
• Whether the offender’s maximum
sentence includes a Truth in Sentencing
Law restriction
• The length of court-imposed
sentence to community service for the
offender
BJS uses the information gathered in
NCRP in published reports and
statistics. The reports will be made
available to the U.S. Congress, Executive
Office of the President, practitioners,
researchers, students, the media, others
interested in criminal justice statistics,
and the general public via the BJS
website.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond: BJS anticipates 57 respondents
to NCRP by 2021: 50 state DOC
respondents and seven separate parole
boards (in six states and the District of
Columbia). Burden hours for the three
collection years (2019–2021) differ
based on whether a state has previously
submitted NCRP prison and PCCS data
in recent years. All 50 DOCs have
recently submitted NCRP prison data,
but currently, only 32 DOCs have
submitted PCCS data in the last four
years.
Burden Hours for Prison Records
(NCRP–1A, NCRP–1B, NCRP–1D)
All 50 DOCs have recently submitted
NCRP prison data, so the average time
needed to continue providing prison
data is expected to be 8 hours per
respondent for both prisoner admissions
and releases (NCRP–1A and NCRP–1B)
and 8 hours for data on persons in
prison at year-end (NCRP–1D). For
2019, the total burden estimate of 16
hours per DOC for these three record
types is increased by 45 minutes from
the previous NCRP OMB submission, to
account for the addition and removal of
variables from states’ extract programs
(a 30 minute increase to add citizenship
questions to NCRP–1A and NCRP–1D,
and a 15 minute increase to remove the
11 variables). The total amount of time
estimated for 50 DOCs to submit NCRP–
A, –B, and –D records in 2019 is 837.5
hours (16.75 hours*50 = 837.5 hours).
In 2020 and 2021, BJS expects to have
all 50 DOCs providing NCRP prison
data. The burden for provision of the
NCRP prison data will decrease to 14
hours per respondent due to the
removal of the 11 items (7 hours for the
prison admission and release records
combined, and 7 hours for the year-end
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31779
custody records), for a total of 700 hours
annually for the 50 DOCs in 2020 and
2021 (14 hours*50 = 70 hours).
Burden Hours for PCCS Records
(NCRP–1E, NCRP–1F)
There are currently 37 jurisdictions
submitting PCCS data (32 DOCs and 5
parole boards), and BJS estimates that
extraction and submission of both the
PCCS entries and exits takes an average
of 8 hours per jurisdiction. In 2019, BJS
anticipates that 8 additional DOCs and
one parole board (likely the District of
Columbia) will submit data, with the
burden for each new jurisdiction being
24 hours to set up extraction programs
and make the submission. Thus, the
burden for PCCS records is 296 hours
for those already submitting (8 hours*37
= 296 hours), and 216 hours for new
submissions (24 hours*9 = 216). The
total amount of time for all PCCS
submissions in 2019 is 512 hours.
In 2020, BJS hope to recruit an
additional 2 DOCs and the remaining
parole board to submit NCRP PCCS
data. The total estimate for submission
of PCCS for new jurisdictions in 2020 is
72 hours (24 hours*3 = 72 hours). For
those 40 DOCs and 6 parole boards
currently responding, provision of the
PCCS data in 2020 will total 368 hours
(8 hours*46 = 368 hours). The total
amount of time for all PCCS
submissions in 2020 is 440 hours.
Similarly, BJS hopes that the
remaining 2 DOCs will submit PCCS
data for the first time in 2021. The
remaining non-reporting DOCs would
need a total of 48 hours to create data
extraction programs and begin data
submission (24 hours*2 = 48 hours).
Those jurisdictions (42 DOCs and 7
parole boards) who provided NCRP
PCCS data in 2020 will require 392
hours total to do the same in 2021 (8
hours*49 = 392 hours). The total
amount of time for all PCCS
submissions in 2021 is 440 hours.
Burden Hours for Data Review/Followup Consultations
Follow-up consultations with
respondents are usually necessary while
processing the data to obtain further
information regarding the definition,
completeness and accuracy of their
report. The duration of these follow-up
consultations will vary based on the
number of record types submitted, so
BJS has estimated an average of 3 hours
per jurisdiction to cover all of the
records (prison and/or PCCS) submitted.
In 2019, BJS anticipates that one of the
two parole boards not currently
submitting PCCS data will begin to
submit, so the number of jurisdictions
requiring follow-up consultations is 51
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 131 / Monday, July 9, 2018 / Notices
(50 DOCs submitting at least the prison
data, and one parole board submitting
only PCCS data). This yields a total of
153 hours of follow-up consultation
after submission (3 hours*51 = 153
hours).
This total estimate of 153 hours for
data review/follow-up consultations
remains the same for 2020 and 2021.
Total Burden Hours for Submitting
NCRP Data
BJS anticipates that the total burden
for provision and data follow-up of all
NCRP data across the participating
jurisdictions in 2019 is 1,502.5 hours
(837.5 hours for prison records, 512
hours for PCCS records, and 153 hours
for follow-up consultation). This is
equivalent to roughly 29 hours per
respondent. The total annual burden for
provision and follow-up of NCRP data
in 2020 and 2021 is anticipated to be
1,293 hours (700 hours for prison
records, 440 hours for PCCS records,
and 153 hours for follow-up
consultation).
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: There are an estimated
1,502.5 total burden hours associated
with this collection in 2019, and 1,293
hours in both 2020 and 2021.
If additional information is required
contact: Melody Braswell, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Two Constitution
Square, 145 N street NE, 3E.405B,
Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: July 3, 2018
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2018–14599 Filed 7–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[OMB Number 1122–0020]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed eCollection
eComments Requested; Revision of a
Currently Approved Collection
Office on Violence Against
Women, Department of Justice.
ACTION: 60-Day notice.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice,
Office on Violence Against Women
(OVW) will be submitting the following
information collection request to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:00 Jul 06, 2018
Jkt 244001
Comments are encouraged and
will be accepted for 60 days until
September 7, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Written comments and/or suggestion
regarding the items contained in this
notice, especially the estimated public
burden and associated response time,
should be directed to Cathy Poston,
Office on Violence Against Women, at
202–514–5430 or Catherine.poston@
usdoj.gov.
DATES:
Written
comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning
the proposed collection of information
are encouraged. Your comments should
address one or more of the following
four points:
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview of This Information
Collection
(1) Type of Information Collection:
Extension of a currently approved
collection.
(2) Title of the Form/Collection: OVW
Solicitation Template.
(3) Agency form number, if any, and
the applicable component of the
Department of Justice sponsoring the
collection: Form Number: 1122–0020.
U.S. Department of Justice, OVW.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract: Primary: The affected public
includes applicants to OVW grant
programs authorized under the Violence
Against Women Act of 1994 as
amended. These include States,
territories, Tribes or units of local
government, institutions of higher
education including colleges and
universities, tribal organizations,
Federal, State, tribal, territorial or local
courts or court-based programs, State
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sexual assault coalitions, State domestic
violence coalitions; territorial domestic
violence or sexual assault coalitions,
tribal coalitions, community-based
organizations, and non-profit,
nongovernmental organizations. The
purpose of the solicitation template is to
provide a framework to develop
program-specific announcements
soliciting applications for funding. A
program solicitation outlines the
specifics of the funding program;
describes the requirements for
eligibility; instructs an applicant on the
necessary components of an application
under a specific program (e.g. project
activities and timeline, proposed
budget): and provides registration dates,
due dates, and instructions on how to
apply within the designated application
system. OVW is proposing revisions to
the current OMB-approved solicitation
template to reduce duplicative language,
employ plain language, ensure
consistency, outline all requirements
clearly, and conform with 2 CFR part
200, Uniform Administrative
Requirements, Cost Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards.
(5) An estimate of the total number of
respondents and the amount of time
estimated for an average respondent to
respond/reply: It is estimated that
information will be collect annually
from the approximately 1800
respondents (applicants to the OVW
grant programs). The public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated at up to 30 hours per
application. The 30-hour estimate is
based on the amount of time to prepare
a narrative, budget and other materials
for the application and, if required, to
coordinate with and develop a
memorandum of understanding with
requisite project partners.
(6) An estimate of the total public
burden (in hours) associated with the
collection: The estimated public burden
associated with this collection is 54,000
hours.
If additional information is required
contact: Melody Braswell, Department
Clearance Officer, United States
Department of Justice, Justice
Management Division, Policy and
Planning Staff, Two Constitution
Square, 145 N Street NE, 3E.405A,
Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: July 3, 2018.
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer, PRA, U.S.
Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2018–14642 Filed 7–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–FX–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 131 (Monday, July 9, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31778-31780]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-14599]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[OMB Number 1121-0065]
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed eCollection
eComments Requested; Extension of a Currently Approved Collection:
National Corrections Reporting Program
AGENCY: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Department of Justice.
ACTION: 60-Day notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Justice (DOJ), Office of Justice Programs,
Bureau of Justice Statistics, will be submitting the following
information collection request to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Comments are encouraged and will be accepted for 60 days until
September 7, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have additional comments
especially on the estimated public burden or associated response time,
suggestions, or need a copy of the proposed information collection
instrument with instructions or additional information, please contact
Elizabeth Ann Carson, Statistician, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 810
Seventh Street NW, Washington, DC 20531 (email:
[email protected]; telephone: 202-616-3496).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Written comments and suggestions from the
public and affected agencies concerning the proposed collection of
information are encouraged. Your comments should address one or more of
the following four points:
--Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the functions of the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, including whether the information will have practical
utility;
--Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
--Evaluate whether and if so how the quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected can be enhanced; and
--Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those who are
to respond, including through the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
Overview of This Information Collection
(1) Type of Information Collection: Extension of a Currently
Approved Collection.
(2) The Title of the Form/Collection: National Corrections
Reporting Program. The collection includes the following parts:
Prisoner Admission Report, Prisoner Release Report, Prisoners in
Custody at Year-end Report, Post-Custody Community Supervision Entry
Report, Post-Custody Community Supervision Exit Report.
(3) The agency form number, if any, and the applicable component of
the Department sponsoring the collection: Form number(s): NCRP-1A,
NCRP-1B, NCRP-1D, NCRP-1E, NCRP-1F. The applicable component within the
Department of Justice is the Bureau of Justice Statistics (Corrections
Unit), in the Office of Justice Programs.
(4) Affected public who will be asked or required to respond, as
well as a brief abstract: Primary: 50 state departments of corrections
(DOCs) and 7 parole boards (in six states and the District of
Columbia). The National Corrections Reporting Program (NCRP) is the
only national data collection furnishing annual individual-level
information for state prisoners at five points in the incarceration
process: Prison admission, prison release, annual year-end prison
custody census, entry to post-custody community corrections
supervision, and exits from post-custody community corrections
supervision. BJS, the U.S. Congress, researchers, and criminal justice
practitioners use these data to describe annual movements of adult
offenders through state correctional systems, as well as to examine
long-term trends in time served in prison, demographic and offense
characteristics of inmates, sentencing practices in the states that
submit data, transitions between incarceration and community
corrections, and recidivism. Providers of the data are personnel in the
states' Departments of Corrections and Parole, and all data are
submitted on a voluntary basis. The NCRP collects the following
administrative data on each inmate in participating states' custody:
County of sentencing
State and federal inmate identification numbers
[[Page 31779]]
Dates of: Birth, prison admission, prison release,
projected prison release, mandatory prison release, eligibility hearing
for post-custody community corrections supervision, post-custody
community corrections supervision entry, post-custody community
corrections supervision exit
First, middle, and last names
Demographic information: Sex, race, Hispanic origin,
education level, prior military service, date and type of last
discharge from military
Offense type and number of counts per inmate for a maximum
of three convicted offenses per inmate
Total sentence length imposed
Type of facility where inmate is serving sentence (for
year-end custody census records only, the name of the facility is also
requested)
Type of prison admission
Type of prison release
Location of post-custody community supervision exit or
post-custody community supervision office (post-custody community
supervision records only)
Social security number
Address of last residence prior to incarceration
Prison security level at which the inmate is held
For consideration, BJS is proposing to add the following items to
the NCRP collection, all of which are likely available from the same
databases as existing data elements and should likely pose minimal
additional burden to the respondents, while enhancing BJS's ability to
characterize the corrections systems and populations it serves:
Status of current U.S. citizenship
Country of current citizenship
Country of birth
Finally, BJS is proposing to remove the following items from the
NCRP collection, based on a combination of low response rates (less
than 50% of states) and/or high levels of missing data (30% or higher
missing) among states that do respond:
Prior prison time served by the offender
Additional offenses since admission date
Additional sentence time since admission date
Whether the offender was on AWOL or escape while serving
sentences
Whether the offender was serving time concurrently on
community release prior to prison release
The number of days on community release prior to prison
release served by the offender
Agencies assuming custody at the time of prison release
Offender's supervision status prior to release from post-
custody community supervision
Whether the offender's maximum sentence includes a
mandatory minimum sentence
Whether the offender's maximum sentence includes a Truth
in Sentencing Law restriction
The length of court-imposed sentence to community service
for the offender
BJS uses the information gathered in NCRP in published reports and
statistics. The reports will be made available to the U.S. Congress,
Executive Office of the President, practitioners, researchers,
students, the media, others interested in criminal justice statistics,
and the general public via the BJS website.
(5) An estimate of the total number of respondents and the amount
of time estimated for an average respondent to respond: BJS anticipates
57 respondents to NCRP by 2021: 50 state DOC respondents and seven
separate parole boards (in six states and the District of Columbia).
Burden hours for the three collection years (2019-2021) differ based on
whether a state has previously submitted NCRP prison and PCCS data in
recent years. All 50 DOCs have recently submitted NCRP prison data, but
currently, only 32 DOCs have submitted PCCS data in the last four
years.
Burden Hours for Prison Records (NCRP-1A, NCRP-1B, NCRP-1D)
All 50 DOCs have recently submitted NCRP prison data, so the
average time needed to continue providing prison data is expected to be
8 hours per respondent for both prisoner admissions and releases (NCRP-
1A and NCRP-1B) and 8 hours for data on persons in prison at year-end
(NCRP-1D). For 2019, the total burden estimate of 16 hours per DOC for
these three record types is increased by 45 minutes from the previous
NCRP OMB submission, to account for the addition and removal of
variables from states' extract programs (a 30 minute increase to add
citizenship questions to NCRP-1A and NCRP-1D, and a 15 minute increase
to remove the 11 variables). The total amount of time estimated for 50
DOCs to submit NCRP-A, -B, and -D records in 2019 is 837.5 hours (16.75
hours*50 = 837.5 hours).
In 2020 and 2021, BJS expects to have all 50 DOCs providing NCRP
prison data. The burden for provision of the NCRP prison data will
decrease to 14 hours per respondent due to the removal of the 11 items
(7 hours for the prison admission and release records combined, and 7
hours for the year-end custody records), for a total of 700 hours
annually for the 50 DOCs in 2020 and 2021 (14 hours*50 = 70 hours).
Burden Hours for PCCS Records (NCRP-1E, NCRP-1F)
There are currently 37 jurisdictions submitting PCCS data (32 DOCs
and 5 parole boards), and BJS estimates that extraction and submission
of both the PCCS entries and exits takes an average of 8 hours per
jurisdiction. In 2019, BJS anticipates that 8 additional DOCs and one
parole board (likely the District of Columbia) will submit data, with
the burden for each new jurisdiction being 24 hours to set up
extraction programs and make the submission. Thus, the burden for PCCS
records is 296 hours for those already submitting (8 hours*37 = 296
hours), and 216 hours for new submissions (24 hours*9 = 216). The total
amount of time for all PCCS submissions in 2019 is 512 hours.
In 2020, BJS hope to recruit an additional 2 DOCs and the remaining
parole board to submit NCRP PCCS data. The total estimate for
submission of PCCS for new jurisdictions in 2020 is 72 hours (24
hours*3 = 72 hours). For those 40 DOCs and 6 parole boards currently
responding, provision of the PCCS data in 2020 will total 368 hours (8
hours*46 = 368 hours). The total amount of time for all PCCS
submissions in 2020 is 440 hours.
Similarly, BJS hopes that the remaining 2 DOCs will submit PCCS
data for the first time in 2021. The remaining non-reporting DOCs would
need a total of 48 hours to create data extraction programs and begin
data submission (24 hours*2 = 48 hours). Those jurisdictions (42 DOCs
and 7 parole boards) who provided NCRP PCCS data in 2020 will require
392 hours total to do the same in 2021 (8 hours*49 = 392 hours). The
total amount of time for all PCCS submissions in 2021 is 440 hours.
Burden Hours for Data Review/Follow-up Consultations
Follow-up consultations with respondents are usually necessary
while processing the data to obtain further information regarding the
definition, completeness and accuracy of their report. The duration of
these follow-up consultations will vary based on the number of record
types submitted, so BJS has estimated an average of 3 hours per
jurisdiction to cover all of the records (prison and/or PCCS)
submitted. In 2019, BJS anticipates that one of the two parole boards
not currently submitting PCCS data will begin to submit, so the number
of jurisdictions requiring follow-up consultations is 51
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(50 DOCs submitting at least the prison data, and one parole board
submitting only PCCS data). This yields a total of 153 hours of follow-
up consultation after submission (3 hours*51 = 153 hours).
This total estimate of 153 hours for data review/follow-up
consultations remains the same for 2020 and 2021.
Total Burden Hours for Submitting NCRP Data
BJS anticipates that the total burden for provision and data
follow-up of all NCRP data across the participating jurisdictions in
2019 is 1,502.5 hours (837.5 hours for prison records, 512 hours for
PCCS records, and 153 hours for follow-up consultation). This is
equivalent to roughly 29 hours per respondent. The total annual burden
for provision and follow-up of NCRP data in 2020 and 2021 is
anticipated to be 1,293 hours (700 hours for prison records, 440 hours
for PCCS records, and 153 hours for follow-up consultation).
(6) An estimate of the total public burden (in hours) associated
with the collection: There are an estimated 1,502.5 total burden hours
associated with this collection in 2019, and 1,293 hours in both 2020
and 2021.
If additional information is required contact: Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer, United States Department of Justice,
Justice Management Division, Policy and Planning Staff, Two
Constitution Square, 145 N street NE, 3E.405B, Washington, DC 20530.
Dated: July 3, 2018
Melody Braswell,
Department Clearance Officer for PRA, U.S. Department of Justice.
[FR Doc. 2018-14599 Filed 7-6-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-18-P