Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratories; Revised Fee Schedule and Adoption of New Application Acceptance and Review Procedures, 49336-49344 [2019-20212]
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49336
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 182 / Thursday, September 19, 2019 / Notices
are to file public interest submissions
pursuant to Commission rules.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Houda Morad, Office of the General
Counsel, U.S. International Trade
Commission, 500 E Street SW,
Washington, DC 20436, telephone (202)
708–4716. Copies of non-confidential
documents filed in connection with this
investigation are or will be available for
inspection during official business
hours (8:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.) in the
Office of the Secretary, U.S.
International Trade Commission, 500 E
Street SW, Washington, DC 20436,
telephone (202) 205–2000. General
information concerning the Commission
may also be obtained by accessing its
internet server (https://www.usitc.gov).
The public record for this investigation
may be viewed on the Commission’s
Electronic Docket Information System
(‘‘EDIS’’) (https://edis.usitc.gov).
Hearing-impaired persons are advised
that information on this matter can be
obtained by contacting the
Commission’s TDD terminal, telephone
(202) 205–1810.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended, 19 U.S.C. 1337 (‘‘Section
337’’), provides that if the Commission
finds a violation it shall exclude the
articles concerned from the United
States unless after considering the
public interest factors listed in 19 U.S.C.
1337(d)(1), it finds such articles should
not be prevented from entry.
The Commission is soliciting
comments on public interest issues
raised by the recommended relief
should the Commission find a violation,
specifically whether the Commission
should issue a limited exclusion order
(‘‘LEO’’) against certain human milk
oligosaccharides that are imported, sold
for importation, and/or sold after
importation by respondent Jennewein
Biotechnologie GmbH of
Rheinbreitbach, Germany.
The Commission is interested in
further development of the record on
the public interest in this investigation.
Accordingly, parties are to file public
interest submissions pursuant to 19 CFR
210.50(a)(4). In addition, members of
the public are hereby invited to file
submissions of no more than five (5)
pages, inclusive of attachments,
concerning the public interest in light of
the administrative law judge’s
Recommended Determination on
Remedy and Bonding issued in this
investigation on September 9, 2019.
Comments should address whether
issuance of an LEO in this investigation,
should the Commission find a violation,
would affect the public health and
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welfare in the United States,
competitive conditions in the United
States economy, the production of like
or directly competitive articles in the
United States, or United States
consumers.
In particular, the Commission is
interested in comments that:
(i) Explain how the articles
potentially subject to the recommended
orders are used in the United States;
(ii) Identify any public health, safety,
or welfare concerns in the United States
relating to the recommended orders;
(iii) Identify like or directly
competitive articles that complainant,
their licensees, or third parties make in
the United States which could replace
the subject articles if they were to be
excluded;
(iv) Indicate whether complainant,
complainant’s licensees, and/or third
party suppliers have the capacity to
replace the volume of articles
potentially subject to the recommended
exclusion order and/or a cease and
desist order within a commercially
reasonable time; and
(v) Explain how the LEO would
impact consumers in the United States.
Written submissions from the public
must be filed no later than by close of
business on Wednesday, October 23,
2019.
Persons filing written submissions
must file the original document
electronically on or before the deadlines
stated above and submit 8 true paper
copies to the Office of the Secretary by
noon the next day pursuant to section
210.4(f) of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure (19 CFR
210.4(f)). Submissions should refer to
the investigation number (‘‘Inv. No.
337–TA–1120’’) in a prominent place on
the cover page and/or the first page. (See
Handbook for Electronic Filing
Procedures, https://www.usitc.gov/
documents/handbook_on_filing_
procedures.pdf). Persons with questions
regarding filing should contact the
Secretary (202–205–2000).
Any person desiring to submit a
document to the Commission in
confidence must request confidential
treatment unless the information has
already been granted such treatment
during the proceedings. All such
requests should be directed to the
Secretary of the Commission and must
include a full statement of the reasons
why the Commission should grant such
treatment. See 19 CFR part 210.6.
Documents for which confidential
treatment by the Commission is sought
will be treated accordingly. All nonconfidential written submissions will be
available for public inspection at the
Office of the Secretary and on EDIS.
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The authority for the Commission’s
determination is contained in section
337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as
amended (19 U.S.C. 1337), and in part
210 of the Commission’s Rules of
Practice and Procedure (19 CFR part
210).
By order of the Commission.
Issued: September 13, 2019.
Lisa Barton,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2019–20217 Filed 9–18–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[Docket No. OSHA–2007–0031]
Nationally Recognized Testing
Laboratories; Revised Fee Schedule
and Adoption of New Application
Acceptance and Review Procedures
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In this notice, OSHA revises
the schedule of fees that the agency
charges to Nationally Recognized
Testing Laboratories (NRTLs) and NRTL
applicants. In addition, OSHA adopts
new streamlined procedures for
accepting and reviewing applications of
organizations seeking to obtain, renew,
or expand NRTL recognition.
DATES: The revised NRTL Fee Schedule
and New Application Acceptance and
Review Procedures become effective on
October 21, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Press inquiries: Contact Mr. Frank
Meilinger, Director, OSHA Office of
Communications, U.S. Department of
Labor; telephone: (202) 693–1999;
email: meilinger.francis2@dol.gov.
General and technical information:
Contact Mr. Kevin Robinson, Director,
Office of Technical Programs and
Coordination Activities, Directorate of
Technical Support and Emergency
Management, Occupational Safety and
Health Administration, U.S. Department
of Labor; telephone: (202) 693–2110 or
email: robinson.kevin@dol.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Notice
On September 22, 2015, OSHA
published a notice proposing the
adoption of new streamlined procedures
for accepting and reviewing
applications of organizations seeking to
obtain, renew, or expand NRTL
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recognition, and the revision of the
existing NRTL Program fee schedule
pursuant to the NRTL Program
regulation, 29 CFR 1910.7(f) (80 FR
57222). The agency received one
comment in response to this notice,
available on www.regulations.gov under
docket number OSHA–2007–0031.
OSHA addresses this comment, infra, in
section III of this notice.
OSHA now is proceeding with this
notice and hereby adopts the proposed
streamlined procedures for accepting
and reviewing applications, with one
minor, non-substantive change, as
discussed infra, in section III of this
notice. OSHA also adopts the proposed
NRTL Program fee schedule, without
change, as discussed infra, in section IV
of this notice.
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II. Background on the NRTL Program
Many of OSHA’s safety standards
(e.g., 29 CFR part 1910, subpart S)
require that equipment and products be
tested and certified to help ensure their
safe use in the workplace. To implement
these requirements, OSHA established
the NRTL Program and the agency
generally requires NRTLs to perform
this testing and certification.
The NRTL Program regulation, 29
CFR 1910.7, requires that, to obtain and
retain OSHA recognition as a NRTL, an
organization must: (1) Have the
appropriate capability to test, evaluate,
and approve products to assure their
safe use in the workplace; (2) be
completely independent of employers
subject to the tested equipment
requirements and manufacturers and
vendors of products for which OSHA
requires certification; (3) have internal
programs that ensure proper control of
the testing and certification process; and
(4) have effective reporting and
complaint handling procedures (29 CFR
1910.7(b)). OSHA requires organizations
applying for NRTL recognition to
provide, in their applications, detailed
and comprehensive information about
their programs, processes, and
procedures, in writing. When an
organization makes an initial
application to be recognized as a NRTL,
OSHA reviews the written information
contained in the organization’s
application and conducts an on-site
assessment to determine whether the
organization meets the requirements of
29 CFR 1910.7. OSHA uses a similar
process when a NRTL applies for
expansion or renewal of its recognition,
although the type and amount of
information in some areas can differ
significantly from those of initial
applications. In addition, the agency
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conducts annual assessments 1 of NRTLs
to ensure that the recognized
laboratories adequately maintain their
programs and continue to meet the
recognition requirements.
To support these core functions,
OSHA also performs a number of
ancillary activities. For example, OSHA
investigates complaints filed against
NRTLs to ensure that the laboratories
are performing their testing and
certification functions adequately;
represents the NRTL Program in a
variety of forums related to conformity
assessment products used in the
workplace; and maintains a detailed
website that both explains the program
and lists all the laboratories currently
recognized under the NRTL Program,
the products each laboratory can test,
and registered certification marks used
by each laboratory.
III. Revision of Existing Application
Acceptance and Review Procedures
OSHA currently has a number of
initiatives underway to improve the
operations of the NRTL Program. This
section of the notice discusses one such
initiative, under which OSHA adopts
new streamlined procedures for
accepting and reviewing applications of
organizations seeking to obtain, renew,
or expand NRTL recognition. OSHA
will follow these new procedures in lieu
of those contained in the agency’s
existing NRTL Program Directive (CPL
01–00–004, NRTL Program Policies,
Procedures, and Guidelines, September
5, 2019) (‘‘Directive’’ or ‘‘NRTL Program
Directive’’) and the additional practices
OSHA has routinely followed in
accepting applications.
OSHA adopts the new streamlined
procedures to eliminate delays caused
by multiple revisions by an applicant
during the application-acceptance and
-review process. In addition, OSHA
simplifies the application process to
make it clearer when the application
acceptance process ends and the
substantive application review process
begins. This streamlined application
process will also reduce NRTL Program
fees, as OSHA will discuss later in this
notice.
The existing procedures for
application acceptance and review are
contained in both Appendix A to the
NRTL Program regulations, (‘‘Appendix
A’’) and the NRTL Program Directive,
CPL–01–00–004. OSHA does not, in this
notice, revise Appendix A; instead,
1 OSHA uses the term ‘‘assessments’’ to mean
those activities described by the term ‘‘audits’’
under 29 CFR 1910.7(f). OSHA uses the term
‘‘assessments,’’ rather than ‘‘audits’’ because it
better reflects the overall purpose of the program’s
activities, i.e., conformity assessments.
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OSHA has updated the NRTL Program
Directive to include the revised
application acceptance and review
procedures made final by this notice.
A. Existing Procedures in Appendix A
That Were Not Subject to Revision
Per Appendix A, the burden is
generally ‘‘on the applicant to establish
by a preponderance of the evidence that
it is entitled to recognition as an NRTL’’
(App. A. Introduction). Thus, in its
application, an applicant must ‘‘provide
sufficient information and detail
demonstrating that it meets the
requirements set forth in § 1910.7, in
order for an informed decision
concerning recognition to be made’’ by
the Assistant Secretary for Occupational
Safety and Health (‘‘Assistant
Secretary’’), and must also ‘‘identify the
scope of the NRTL-related activity for
which the applicant wishes to be
recognized’’ (i.e., the test standards the
applicant will use for testing products)
(App. A.I.A.2.b). To meet its burden, the
applicant may include any
documentation (i.e., enclosures,
attachments, or exhibits) it deems
appropriate (App. A.I.A.2.c).
Also under Appendix A,
‘‘[a]pplications submitted by eligible
testing agencies will be accepted by
OSHA, and their receipt acknowledged
in writing’’ (App. A.I.B.1.a). Moreover,
‘‘[a]fter receipt of an application, OSHA
may request additional information if it
believes information relevant to the
requirements for recognition has been
omitted’’ (Id.). In addition, ‘‘OSHA
shall, as necessary, conduct an on-site
review of the testing facilities of the
applicant, as well as the applicant’s
administrative and technical practices,
and, if necessary, review any additional
documentation underlying the
application’’ (App. A.I.B.1.b).
Appendix A provides the responsible
OSHA staff with two options following
review of the application, and any
additional information and on-site
review report. On the one hand, if ‘‘the
applicant appears to have met the
requirements for recognition,’’
responsible OSHA staff must make a
‘‘positive finding’’ to the Assistant
Secretary, which consists of ‘‘a written
recommendation . . . that the
application be approved, accompanied
by a supporting explanation’’ (App.
A.I.B.2). Once this recommendation is
made, OSHA follows the procedures in
the Appendix for making preliminary
and final findings on the application
(App. A.I.B.4, A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6).
On the other hand, if ‘‘the applicant
does not appear to have met the
requirements for recognition,’’
responsible OSHA staff must make a
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‘‘negative finding’’ to the ‘‘applicant in
writing, listing the specific requirements
of § 1910.7 and [Appendix A] which the
applicant has not met, and allow[ing] a
reasonable period for response’’ (App.
A.I.B.3.a). After the applicant receives
‘‘a notification of negative finding (i.e.,
for intended disapproval of the
application), and within the response
period provided,’’ the applicant may
either (1) ‘‘[s]ubmit a revised
application for further review, which
could result in a positive finding’’ (the
procedures for which are explained in
the previous paragraph), or (2)
‘‘[r]equest that the original application
be submitted to the Assistant Secretary
with an attached statement of reasons,
supplied by the applicant of why the
application should be approved’’ (App.
A.I.B.3.b.i). In either case (i.e., if a
positive finding is made on a revised
application or if the applicant requests
that the original application be
submitted to the Assistant Secretary),
OSHA would follow the procedures in
the Appendix for making preliminary
and final findings on the application
(App. A.I.B.4, A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6). The
‘‘procedure for applicant notification
and potential revision shall be used
only once during each recognition
process’’ (App. A.I.B.3.b.ii).
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B. OSHA Will No Longer Follow Existing
NRTL Program Directive Procedures for
Accepting and Reviewing Applications
Existing policies contained in the
NRTL Program Directive expand on the
application procedures contained in
Appendix A, as follows. Per the
Directive, OSHA staff ‘‘formally accept
or reject the application’’ based on a
review of the application for
‘‘completeness and for adequacy’’
(Directive Ch. 2.V.B, Ch. 3.II.B.1). The
procedures for this review are contained
in Appendix D to the Directive
(Directive Ch. 3.II.B.1). An application
is considered complete ‘‘if it contains all
necessary documents, and sufficient
information for all relevant items,’’ and
is considered adequate ‘‘if the
information submitted sufficiently
demonstrates that the requirements for
recognition can be met, and where
relevant, if at least one test standard
requested can be approved’’ (Directive
App. D) (emphasis in original).
In reviewing the application, OSHA
staff will return and ‘‘take[ ] no further
action’’ on an application ‘‘[i]f [the]
application is frivolous or grossly
incomplete or inadequate.’’ In such
circumstances, ‘‘any future application
from the applicant’’ will be processed
‘‘as a new application’’ (Directive Ch.
3.II.A).
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If the application is not ‘‘frivolous or
grossly incomplete or inadequate,’’
OSHA staff discusses its review with the
applicant, ‘‘noting any deficiencies
found or clarifications needed’’
(Directive Ch. 3.II.B.2). If the
‘‘application is determined to be
complete and adequate,’’ OSHA ‘‘sends
a letter to the applicant to accept the
application’’ (Directive Ch. 3.II.C).
If the application is determined to be
incomplete or inadequate, the Directive
provides two opportunities for
applicants to correct deficiencies before
rejection of an application (Directive Ch.
3.II.C). In practice, however, OSHA has
given applicants three such
opportunities. Per the Directive, OSHA
‘‘sends a letter to the applicant,
detailing the deficiencies and the
additional information needed and
requesting a response by an appropriate
deadline,’’ and if ‘‘the response does not
adequately resolve the deficiencies,’’
OSHA ‘‘provides the applicant a
[second] opportunity to respond within
a given period.’’ (Directive Ch. 3.II.C.) If
deficiencies remain after the second
opportunity, OSHA, in practice, gives
applicants a third, but relatively limited,
opportunity to make corrections before
the effective date of the rejection. This
limited duration is sufficient for
applicants to correct deficiencies if only
a few critical deficiencies remain.
If an applicant’s timely response cures
the deficiencies in its application,
OSHA ‘‘sends an acceptance letter to the
applicant’’ (Directive Ch. 3.II.C).
However, ‘‘[i]f the applicant does not
respond adequately or fails to reply by
any deadline(s) provided or an
approved extension of these
deadline(s),’’ OSHA ‘‘sends a letter
notifying the applicant that the
application is not accepted and the Case
File is closed’’ (Directive Ch. 3.II.C.2).
Finally, the Directive provides that,
after an application is accepted, ‘‘the
assigned staff determines whether an
on-site review is necessary’’ (Directive
Ch. 3.II.D). However, the Directive also
provides for non-acceptance during the
on-site review process, if an applicant
fails to respond adequately to the
findings of an on-site review (Directive
Ch.4.IV.C).
OSHA proposed that it will no longer
follow the existing procedures,
described above, to afford applicants
three opportunities to modify their
applications before acceptance or nonacceptance. These existing procedures
are inefficient and cause delays because,
in some cases, these multiple
opportunities cause the process to take
years. OSHA also proposed that it will
also not follow its existing procedure for
accepting an application only when it is
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found to be complete and adequate.
This existing procedure has caused
confusion as to when the application
acceptance process ends and the
substantive application review process
begins. OSHA received no comments
objecting to its proposed decision to no
longer follow the above-described
existing procedures. OSHA therefore
adopts its proposed decision, without
change.
C. OSHA Adopts New Streamlined
Procedures for Accepting and Reviewing
Applications, as Proposed, With One
Minor, Non-Substantive Change
In lieu of the existing NRTL Program
Directive procedures, described above,
OSHA proposed to follow streamlined
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications. OSHA received one
comment in response to the proposal,
from Curtis-Strauss, LLC, a NRTL
(available on www.regulations.gov
under Docket Number OSHA–2007–
0031). Curtis-Strauss was generally
supportive of the proposed streamlined
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, and of the proposed
revised NRTL Program fee schedule,
discussed below, but suggested two
additions to the proposed procedures:
• Curtis-Strauss suggested that
‘‘OSHA provide updates to applicants
every 60 days because ‘‘[t]his would
keep applicants informed and could
also enhance OSHA’s management of
the agency’s application queue as
grouped by applicant,’’ and because
‘‘[t]his may help OSHA to realize other
process efficiencies when scheduling
on-site audits or performing technical
reviews.’’
• Curtis-Strauss suggested that
‘‘OSHA offer an opportunity to the
applicant to have a conference call or an
in-person meeting with the relevant
OSHA staff promptly after the notice of
intent to recommend a negative finding’’
because ‘‘[t]his would give applicants
the ability to ask questions and better
understand the application’s
deficiencies while still leaving enough
time to correct them prior to the
deadline.’’
OSHA supports keeping lines of
communication open during the
application process. However, OSHA
does not believe that formalizing rules
for open dialogue, as suggested by
Curtis-Strauss, will make the
application process more effective. Each
application is different and requires
different levels and types of
communication. The degree and types
of communication suggested by CurtisStrauss may be too little in some cases
and too much in others. Therefore,
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OSHA is not adopting the suggestions
made by Curtis-Strauss.
OSHA hereby adopts the streamlined
procedures, as proposed, with one
minor, non-substantive change,
discussed, infra. These streamlined
procedures will reduce delays, fees, and
confusion associated with application
processing. Under these streamlined
procedures, OSHA will review an
application for completeness, but not
adequacy, in deciding whether to accept
the application. OSHA’s review for
adequacy, and any on-site review, will
occur only after OSHA accepted the
application. Furthermore, OSHA will
permit the applicant one opportunity
only, rather than three, to resolve
deficiencies in the completeness of its
application before deciding whether to
accept it. OSHA describes the new
streamlined procedures it adopts in this
notice in more detail, immediately
below.
1. Initial Review and Acceptance
OSHA proposed that, when OSHA
receives an application, it will
acknowledge its receipt, establish (for
initial applications) or update (for
expansion and renewal applications) the
docket for the organization, and upload
the application materials to the docket.2
For this notice, OSHA decided that it
will not establish or update a docket for
an organization in connection with an
application upon receipt. Instead,
OSHA will establish a docket for an
application only in connection with the
preparation of a Federal Register notice
announcing a preliminary finding on
the application. Establishing dockets for
applications at this later point in the
application process will further
streamline the application acceptance
and review process, as many
applications are withdrawn or amended
before the applications reach the
preliminary determination stage.
After it receives an application, OSHA
will perform an administrative review of
the application to determine whether it
is complete (i.e., has sufficient
information to determine whether the
applicant meets the requirements for
recognition). If not complete, OSHA will
notify the applicant, in writing, that it
has 30 days from the date of the notice
to provide the missing or additional
information. OSHA will also inform the
applicant, in the notice, that it is unable
to review the merits of the application
because the application itself does not
contain sufficient information to show
2 As currently used by OSHA, the term ‘‘docket’’
means an electronic file folder containing
documents that pertain to an official action taken
by the agency. OSHA generally makes these
documents available to the public.
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that the requirements for recognition
can be met. Finally, OSHA will inform
the applicant, in the notice, that this
review involved no technical
determination, only an administrative
one of whether the application has all
of the necessary documentation. If the
applicant does not respond by the 30day deadline, or does not adequately
respond, and the application remains
incomplete, OSHA will inform the
applicant that OSHA cannot accept the
application, and the applicant must
reapply. If the applicant provides a
complete application within the 30
days, or provided a complete
application when it was first received,
OSHA will accept the application.
2. Determination of Adequacy
After accepting the application,
OSHA will review the merits of the
application to determine whether the
application is adequate. OSHA will first
conduct a technical review of the
application (i.e., a detailed review of all
of the application’s administrative and
technical procedures and content).
Following this technical review, OSHA
will determine whether to conduct an
on-site assessment as part of evaluating
the management system and technical
capabilities of the organization. OSHA
will generally conduct an on-site review
for initial applications and for
expansion applications that involve new
areas of testing for the NRTL or areas of
concern to OSHA. If OSHA finds
deficiencies during the technical review
or during the on-site assessment, OSHA
will provide the applicant with an
explanation of deficiencies and needed
corrections, and a 90-day opportunity to
respond. Failure to respond by the 90day deadline will constitute a
withdrawal of the application, and
OSHA will take no further action on it.
If the applicant or NRTL responds, it
will need to demonstrate it corrected all
deficiencies found in its application
and/or during the assessment, and
provide evidence to OSHA that the
corrections have been implemented into
the applicant’s or NRTL’s management
systems. In that case, OSHA will
conclude the application is adequate.
On the other hand, if OSHA finds that
deficiencies remain, OSHA will
conclude the application is not
adequate.
If OSHA staff determines an
application is adequate, OSHA will
follow existing procedures, and
recommend a positive finding, per
Appendix A.I.B.2. Otherwise, OSHA
staff will notify the applicant in writing
that they intend to recommend a
negative finding. In that case, the
applicant has two options under
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49339
Appendix A.I.B.3. First, the applicant
has one additional chance to revise its
application within 30 days of receipt of
OSHA’s written notice. Second, the
applicant may request that its original
application (as supplemented in
response during the review for
adequacy) be submitted to the Assistant
Secretary (also within 30 days of receipt
of OSHA’s written notice). In this case,
the applicant must attach a statement of
reasons to the application explaining
why the application should be
approved. OSHA would consider the
failure to submit a revised application
or a request that the original application
be submitted to the Assistant Secretary
within the 30-day deadline to be a
withdrawal of the application.
If the applicant opts to revise its
application, OSHA will invoice the
applicant for the fee to review its
revised submission. This fee would
equal the estimated hours for the review
multiplied by the hourly rate for the
applicable Miscellaneous Fee in the
NRTL Program’s fee schedule. Like
other application fees, this review fee
will not be refundable. The applicant
will need to pay this fee before OSHA
performs the review of the revised
application. OSHA will consider a
failure to pay the fee within 30 days of
receipt of the invoice as a withdrawal of
the application. When OSHA receives
the fee, OSHA will review the revised
application to determine whether to
sustain the negative finding or change it
to a positive one. If OSHA staff decides
to sustain the recommendation for a
negative finding, they will first afford
the applicant the opportunity to
withdraw the application. If the
applicant does not withdraw it, OSHA
will proceed with the preliminary
finding.
Once OSHA staff recommends a
positive finding on either an original or
revised application, sustains its
recommendation for a negative finding
after a review of a revised application,
or the applicant requests that the
original application be submitted to the
Assistant Secretary, OSHA will follow
the procedures in Appendix A for
making preliminary and final findings
on the application (App. A.I.B.4,
A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6).
OSHA will no longer follow the
existing NRTL Program Directive
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, as described in section
III.B. of this notice. Instead, OSHA
adopts the proposed streamlined
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, with one minor nonsubstantive change, as described above.
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IV. Revision of the NRTL Program Fee
Schedule
A. Background
OSHA revises the existing NRTL
Program fee schedule pursuant to the
NRTL Program regulation, 29 CFR
1910.7(f). That regulation requires
NRTLs and applicants to ‘‘pay fees for
services provided by OSHA in advance
of the provision of those services’’ (29
CFR 1910.7(f)(1)). OSHA assesses fees
for core service activities, that is, for
‘‘[p]rocessing of applications for initial
recognition, expansion of recognition, or
renewal of recognition, including onsite reviews; review and evaluation of
the applications; and preparation of
reports, evaluations and Federal
Register notices;’’ and ‘‘[a]udits of sites’’
(Id.). OSHA’s fee schedule ‘‘reflects the
full cost of performing the activities’’ for
these services (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(2)).
OSHA calculates fees ‘‘based on either
the average or actual time required to
perform the work necessary; the staff
costs per hour (which include wages,
fringe benefits, and expenses other than
travel for personnel that perform or
administer the activities covered by the
fees); and the average or actual costs for
travel when on-site reviews are
involved’’ (Id.). Thus, the formula for
calculating a fee for an activity is the
‘‘[Average (or Actual) Hours to
Complete the Activity x Staff Costs per
Hour] + Average (or Actual) Travel
Costs’’ (Id.).
OSHA periodically reviews the full
costs of performing core services and, if
warranted, will propose a revised fee
schedule in the Federal Register (29
CFR 1910.7(f)(3), (f)(4)). If OSHA
approves the proposed fee schedule
(after giving the public an opportunity
to comment), it ‘‘publish[es] the final fee
schedule in the Federal Register,
making the fee schedule effective on a
specific date’’ (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(3),
(f)(4)).
To ensure that its fees for core
services reflect the full cost of those
services, OSHA’s existing fee schedule
(which OSHA adopted in 2011) takes
into account both the direct and indirect
costs it incurs in performing those
services (76 FR 10501–10504). Direct
costs include staff costs (i.e. the
applicable portion of the salaries and
fringe benefits of the applicable staff)
incurred for application processing and
assessment (Id.). Ancillary (or indirect)
costs include staff costs incurred for the
administration and support of the
program, including legal support,
budgeting, policy matters, intragency
and international coordination,
responses to requests for information
related to the program, handling
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complaints, website development and
maintenance, and participation in
meetings with stakeholders and outside
interest groups (Id.). OSHA refers to the
sum of its direct costs and ancillary
costs as the total program costs (TPC) for
the purpose of this notice. TPC does not
include travel expenses, which are
assessed separately (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(2),
76 FR 10504 n.5).
In the existing fee schedule, OSHA
calculates the fee for each core service
activity by multiplying an equivalent
average cost per hour rate (ECR) by the
time it takes to perform that activity: Fee
for Activity = ECR × Time for Activity
(76 FR 10504). In 2000, when OSHA
began assessing fees for services, OSHA
explained that it derived that fee
schedule’s ECR by dividing TPC by the
total available annual work hours of the
NRTL Program and legal staff that
perform the services (TAW) (Id.).
Accordingly, ECR2000 = TPC2000/
TAW2000. The approach used in 2000
resulted in fees that recouped the costs
only of the time spent actually
performing individualized audits and
application processing, which is only a
portion of TAW, and did not recoup the
costs of the time associated with
running the program and providing
other benefits shared among all NRTLs
(Id.).
To account for the costs associated
with these shared benefits, OSHA
adopted a new approach in 2011 for
calculating ECR (ECR2011) in the
existing fee schedule (Id.). Under the
new approach, OSHA divides the
estimated total cost of the NRTL
Program (TPC2011) by the total annual
service hours (TAS2011) (Id.). This
latter term equals the total estimated
work hours that the NRTL Program staff
spend on the core service activities for
which OSHA would bill NRTLs;
accordingly, ECR2011 = TPC2011/
TAS2011 (Id.). By way of comparison
with the 2000 fee schedule, TAS equals
TAW minus estimated hours spent on
ancillary activities (AH) and leave (LH)
(i.e., TAS = TAW–AH–LH) (Id.). By
continuing to include the full program
costs in the numerator (TPC2011), but
including in the denominator
(TAS2011) only the amount of time
spent on providing ‘‘billable’’ core
services, OSHA believed the revised
ECR would more accurately represent
the total work hours spent on those core
activities than the 2000 equation 3 (Id.).
3 The existing fee schedule was supposed to have
been phased in over a three-year phase-in period.
(76 FR 10508). OSHA implemented the first phase
on March 28, 2011. However, due to other priorities
and factors, OSHA was unable to implement the
second and third phases of the increase, as planned.
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B. Explanation of Revised Fee Schedule
OSHA reviewed its existing fee
schedule and, based on that review,
proposed to revise its fee schedule.
OSHA received one comment in
response to the proposal, from CurtisStrauss, LLC, a NRTL (available on
www.regulations.gov under Docket
Number OSHA–2007–0031). CurtisStrauss was generally supportive of the
proposed NRTL Program fee schedule.
OSHA hereby adopts the proposed
NRTL Program fee schedule, without
change. The revised fee schedule more
accurately reflects the full cost of
performing the activities for which
OSHA charges fees. OSHA explains the
details of the revised fee schedule, as
follows:
1. OSHA adopts a new grouping of
fees for each of the core activities for
which OSHA charges fees to NRTLs
(i.e., ‘‘[p]rocessing of applications for
initial recognition, expansion of
recognition, or renewal of recognition,
including on-site reviews; review and
evaluation of the applications; and
preparation of reports, evaluations and
Federal Register notices;’’ and ‘‘[a]udits
of sites’’ (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(1)). Under
the existing fee schedule, OSHA groups
these activities under the terms
Application Processing, Audits, and
Miscellaneous (76 FR 10508). Under
OSHA’s revised fee schedule, shown
below in Table 6, OSHA groups these
activities under the terms:
Administrative Evaluation, Technical
Evaluation, Assessments, Federal
Register Notices, and Miscellaneous
(which includes late fees and other
activities not specifically described).
OSHA adopts these new groupings to
align its fee schedule with the newlyadopted streamlined procedures for
accepting and reviewing applications,
described above. OSHA also believes
that the times it now estimates for
completion of these activities (see
Tables 2 thru 5, below) more accurately
represent the actual time it takes to
complete the core activities for which
OSHA charges fees. Therefore, adoption
of the groupings more accurately reflects
the full cost of the services for which
fees are assessed.
2. OSHA revises the approach it uses
to calculate ECR. Again, under the
existing approach, OSHA calculates
ECR by dividing TPC by the total
estimated work hours that the NRTL
Program staff and legal staff spend on
the core service activities for which
OSHA bills NRTLs (or TAS) (76 FR
10504).
This revised fee schedule renders moot the
implementation of the second and third phases.
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The existing approach depends, in
large measure, on OSHA estimating an
accurate TAS (i.e., number of ‘‘billable’’
core hours). If this estimate is accurate,
the ECR (i.e., the hourly rate OSHA
charges for services) will accurately
reflect the full cost of services (because
ECR = TPC/TAS). But OSHA’s estimate
has not been accurate in practice. Due
in part to insufficient program staffing
and other uncontrollable factors, the
staff has been unable to work the
number of estimated billable hours. This
has resulted in an hourly rate charged
by OSHA that results in fees that are far
lower than the fees OSHA would be
charging if its estimate had been
accurate.
OSHA could reassess TAS on a
regular basis to achieve a more accurate
estimate. However, due to the changing
nature of the staff’s workload, OSHA
likely would need to make such
calculation adjustments, and thus
publish fee schedules, more than once
within a given year to ensure an
accurate estimate. OSHA likely could
not make such adjustments in a timely
manner, largely due to the length of the
process for issuing fee schedules.
Under the revised fee schedule,
OSHA simplifies the existing
calculation. For the purpose of the
revised fee schedule, OSHA assumes
that certain NRTL Program staff (which
OSHA calls ‘‘direct staff’’ in this notice)
work exclusively on core billable
activities, and that other NRTL Program
staff (which OSHA calls ‘‘indirect staff’’
in this notice) work exclusively on
ancillary activities. OSHA calculates the
ECR (ECR2015) by dividing TPC by total
direct staff annual paid (i.e.,
compensable) hours, or simply, direct
staff annual hours (DSH).
Because of the difficulties of
implementing the existing approach,
OSHA believes the change in approach
in the revised fee schedule (replacing
TAS with DSH) will, on average and in
practice, more accurately reflect the full
cost of services for which OSHA charges
fees than the existing approach. The
accuracy of the DSH approach also does
not depend on the variable workload of
staff, and will therefore be simpler to
implement than the existing approach.
OSHA estimates for the revised fee
schedule that four full-time NRTL
Program staff members are direct staff
and the other full-time NRTL Program
staff member is indirect staff. OSHA
believes the estimate of four full-time
direct staff is reasonable because OSHA
projects a significant increase in the
number of applications the NRTL
Program will process and audits the
NRTL Program will perform (i.e., a
significant increase in the time NRTL
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Program staff will spend on core
activities).
For the purposes of the revised fee
calculation, DSH equals 8,352 hours.
This was derived by multiplying 2,088,
the regular annual paid hours for one
full-time staff, by the number of fulltime direct staff 4 (again, currently four).
As explained more fully in the notice
of proposed decision, the proposed
(now revised) fees for individual core
service activities are often significantly
less than the analogous existing fees for
such services. These changes arise from
the change in the way that OSHA will
calculate the ECR (which excludes some
previously included indirect costs but
increases the number of direct staff
hours) and streamlined review
procedures (which decrease the amount
of staff hours needed for some tasks in
the process). OSHA nonetheless
estimates that fees collected under the
revised fee schedule will, in toto,
approximate the full costs of
administering the NRTL Program
because, as stated above, OSHA
estimated a significant increase in the
number of applications the NRTL
Program will process and audits the
NRTL Program will perform (i.e., a
significant increase in the time NRTL
Program staff will spend on core service
activities).
3. Under the revised fee schedule,
OSHA breaks out the fees for the legal
review of Federal Register notices
associated with initial, renewal, and
expansion applications from the general
fees it charges for preparation of these
Federal Register notices by NRTL
Program staff. Under the existing fee
structure, OSHA charges one general fee
that covers both preparation and legal
review of a Final Report and Federal
Register notice (76 FR 10505–10511).5
The revision more accurately reflects
the portion of the fees attributed to legal
review. Under the existing fee structure,
OSHA charges a single hourly rate for
core activities, regardless of whether the
time charged is attorney time or NRTL
Program staff time (76 FR 10505). Under
the revised fee structure, OSHA
calculates a separate hourly rate for core
4 This figure is the number of compensable hours
in a fiscal year, which is used to determine full-time
equivalents (FTE) (i.e., full-time staffing levels) for
purposes of the Federal Budget. See Office and
Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A–11,
Preparation, Submission, and Execution of the
Budget, Section 85—Estimating Employment Levels
and the Employment Summary (Schedule Q), 2015
(available at the time of publication of the proposal
at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/
omb/assets/a11_current_year/s85.pdf).
5 Although OSHA did not state explicitly in the
2011 notice that the Final Report and Federal
Register notice fee included legal review, the hours
used for calculating this fee did in fact include the
legal staff’s time for this review.
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activities performed by legal staff to
reflect that certain ancillary costs, such
as website development and
maintenance, which are properly
incorporated into the hourly rate for
NRTL Program staff, should not be
incorporated into the hourly rate for
legal services. OSHA continues to
incorporate in the hourly rate for legal
costs those indirect costs that tie
directly into the salary of legal staff,
such as fringe benefits. As a result of the
revision, the hourly rate for legal fees,
shown in Table 5, is less than the rate
for NRTL Program staff fees, shown in
Table 1.
OSHA notes that the Department of
Labor incurs legal costs in connection
with the NRTL Program other than costs
associated with the legal review of
Federal Register notices associated with
initial, renewal, and expansion
applications. These other legal costs are
included in the existing fee schedule
(See 76 FR 10504 n.5), and continue to
be included in the revised fee schedule,
as elements in TPC, and therefore, as
elements of the calculation of the hourly
rate for NRTL Program staff.
4. OSHA revises the manner it
calculates the salaries of NRTL Program
staff and Solicitor of Labor staff for the
purpose of calculating TPC. For the
existing fee schedule, OSHA calculates
staff costs using actual staff salaries,
which can vary, sometimes
significantly, over time due to changes
in personnel and positions. Under the
revised fee schedule, OSHA calculates
salaries using midpoint salaries. These
midpoint salaries are the Step 5
amounts shown for a particular grade
(e.g., grade 13) in the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) General Schedule
(GS) salary table for 2015, called the
‘‘Salary Table 2015–DCB,’’ which
pertains to federal workers who have
duty stations located mostly in
Washington, DC, Maryland, and
Virginia. (See Office of Personnel
Management 2015 General Schedule
(GS) Locality Pay Tables at
www.opm.gov.) These midpoint salaries
may differ from actual staff salaries,
which depend on the actual grade and
step for each staff. However, using these
midpoint figures simplifies the
calculation of the staff costs and
provides a consistent fee that OSHA
expects will reflect, on average, actual
staff salaries over time. Because OPM
adjusts its salary tables annually, OSHA
will monitor the adjustments to
determine if their magnitude requires
modification of the fee schedule.
Also, to include an amount for regular
fringe benefits, OSHA multiplies the
midpoint salaries by a fringe benefit
rate. Under the revised fee schedule,
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OSHA uses a 29% rate, and based this
rate on the one the agency uses to
estimate fringe costs of other OSHA
activities.
5. OSHA revises the manner in which
it calculates ancillary (or indirect) costs.
Under the existing fee schedule, OSHA
includes, in its calculation of ancillary
(or indirect) costs, equipment, training,
and space of the staff. Under the revised
fee schedule, OSHA does not include
these items in its calculation of ancillary
costs because NRTLs do not derive a
special benefit from these cost items.
For example, training costs for the
program staff currently consist of
general training available to all
employees. OSHA will include such
costs in future fee schedules if it
determines that NRTLs do derive
special benefits from the items. OSHA
believes the revision to the fee schedule
more accurately reflects the full costs of
performing the activities for which
OSHA charges fees.
6. Under the revised fee schedule,
OSHA does not charge fees for
determining whether proposed test
standards are appropriate test standards
under the NRTL Program. OSHA
charges such fees under the existing fee
schedule. However, OSHA recently
updated its process whereby it
incorporates new test standards into the
NRTL Program’s list of appropriate test
standards (the scope of an appropriate
test standard must cover products for
which OSHA requires NRTL approval
and must meet the requirements of 29
CFR 1910.7(c)(1)). Under the updated
policy, OSHA adds new test standards
when it is made aware of new test
standards and determines them
appropriate (79 FR 17188). It is therefore
no longer necessary to charge NRTLs
specific fees in connection with the
incorporation of standards into the list
of appropriate test standards. OSHA
notes, however, that the costs associated
with the incorporation of test standards
will be ancillary costs under the revised
fee schedule, and will therefore be an
element in the calculation of the fees
OSHA assesses.
C. Basis and Derivation of Revised Fee
Amounts
Table 1, below, shows the direct and
indirect program costs (TPC), direct staff
annual hours (DSH), and hourly rate
OSHA uses to calculate the revised fees.
TABLE 1—NRTL PROGRAM STAFF—
HOURLY RATE CALCULATION
Description
OSHA Direct Costs .................................
OSHA Ancillary Costs .............................
OSHA Total Costs of NRTL Program,
excluding travel (TPC) .........................
OSHA Direct Staff Annual Hours (DSH)
$579,383
287,541
866,924
8,352
TABLE 1—NRTL PROGRAM STAFF—
HOURLY RATE CALCULATION—Continued
Description
OSHA Hourly rate (TPC divided by
DSH) ....................................................
104
Tables 2 to 5, below, describe the fees
OSHA adopts in conjunction with the
core services for which OSHA charges
fees. OSHA calculates each fee (with the
exception of fees for legal review of
Federal Register notices) by multiplying
the NRTL Program staff hourly rate of
$104 (see Table 1, above) by the time
OSHA estimates it takes NRTL Program
staff to perform the activity at issue, on
average (i.e., fee for activity = NRTL
Program staff hourly rate ($104) ×
estimated time for activity). OSHA
calculates the fees for legal review of
Federal Register notices by multiplying
the hourly rate for legal services of $89
(see Table 5, below) by the time OSHA
estimates its takes legal staff to perform
the activity at issue, on average (i.e., fee
for activity = legal staff hourly rate ($89)
× estimated time for activity). OSHA
notes that it rounds the revised fees
down to the lower multiple of ten.
OSHA’s revised (and existing) fee for
travel related to assessments is based on
actual travel expenses, and thus OSHA
does not derive a fee to charge for travel.
TABLE 2—FEES FOR ADMINISTRATIVE EVALUATION
Average
hours
Program component
Initial Application—Limited review (per application) ................................................................................................
Expansion Application—Limited review (per application) .......................................................................................
Renewal request review ..........................................................................................................................................
Fee
40
24
16
$4,160
2,490
1,660
TABLE 3—FEES FOR TECHNICAL EVALUATION
Average
hours
Program component
Initial Application—Management Procedures review (per application) ...................................................................
Initial or Expansion Application—Testing capability review (per standard) ............................................................
Initial or Expansion Application—Site capability review (per site) ..........................................................................
Fee
80
24
24
$8,320
2,490
2,490
TABLE 4—FEES FOR ASSESSMENTS
Average
hours
Program component
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Assessment preparation and close out (per lead auditor) ......................................................................................
Assessment preparation and close out (per assistant auditor) ...............................................................................
Each day on-site or at office (per auditor) ..............................................................................................................
Fee
54
32
8
$5,610
3,320
830
TABLE 5—FEES FOR Federal Register NOTICES
Average
hours
Program component
Initial Application Federal Register notice preparation (per application) ** ...........................................................
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20
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TABLE 5—FEES FOR Federal Register NOTICES—Continued
Average
hours
Program component
Fee
Initial Application Federal Register notice legal review (per application) ..............................................................
16
1,420
Total for Initial Application Federal Register notices ......................................................................................
36
5,500
Renewal or Expansion Application Federal Register notice preparation (per application) ** ...............................
Renewal or Expansion Application Federal Register notice legal review (per application) ..................................
16
8
2,470
710
Total for Renewal or Expansion Application Federal Register notices ..........................................................
24
3,180
** Includes estimated Office of Federal Register (OFR) processing fees: $2,000 per initial application notice, or $810 per expansion and renewal notice, as applicable.6
D. Revised Fee Schedule and
Description of Fees
OSHA adopts the revised fee schedule
shown below in Table 6.
TABLE 6—REVISED NRTL PROGRAM FEE SCHEDULE
Fee category
Fee activity
Administrative Evaluation .........
Initial application—Limited review ................................................................................
Expansion application—Limited review .......................................................................
Renewal request review ...............................................................................................
Initial application—Detailed management procedures review .....................................
Initial or Expansion application—Testing capability review (per standard) .................
Initial or Expansion application—Site capability review (per site) ...............................
Assessment preparation and close out (per lead auditor, per site) ............................
Assessment preparation and close out (per assistant auditor, per site) .....................
Assessment—per day at office, on-site, or on travel (per auditor, per site) ...............
Technical Evaluation ................
Assessment ..............................
Federal Register Notices ........
Miscellaneous ...........................
Fee *
Federal Register notices—initial application ..............................................................
Federal Register notices—renewal or expansion application ....................................
Late Fees .....................................................................................................................
Other activities or services not specifically described (per hour) ................................
$4,160.
$2,490.
$1,660.
$8,320.
$2,490.
$2,490.
$5,610.
$3,320.
$830 plus travel expenses.
$5,500.
$3,180.
$210.
$104.
* All fees must be paid in advance of activity or service.
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General Information Regarding the Fees
1. Explanation of Fees
• The Administrative Evaluation fee
covers an administrative review of the
application packet to ensure
completeness. It also covers creating the
docket and addition of the application
to the docket. An applicant must submit
this fee with the application.
• The Technical Evaluation fee covers
a detailed examination of the
application packet to determine the
applicant’s ability to meet the
requirements of the requested
recognition/expansion. An applicant
must submit this fee with the
application.
• On-site or office assessment fees are
calculated based on estimated staff time
and, if applicable, actual travel
expenses. Travel expenses include
expenses for hotel, air transportation,
ground transportation, and per diem.
The assessment preparation and close6 The OFR charges Federal agencies a per column
rate for publishing Federal Register notices. See
https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/write/
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out fees (per lead and assistant auditor,
as applicable) include staff time to make
travel arrangements and file travel
reimbursement claims. At the
conclusion of the assessment, actual
travel expenses are calculated based on
the government per diem and other
travel rules. OSHA will bill or refund
the difference between the prepaid and
the actual travel amounts.
• The fees for ‘‘Other activities or
services not specifically described’’
cover application- or assessment-related
activities that are not specifically
covered by the other fee categories. One
example would be the technical review
of a revised application that an
applicant submits to OSHA in response
to OSHA’s negative finding on an
applicant’s original application.
2. Refunds
• If an application is withdrawn
before OSHA commences the Technical
Evaluation, or the application is rejected
after OSHA completes the
Administrative Evaluation, OSHA will
refund the Technical Evaluation fee.
• If an application is withdrawn
before OSHA commences travel to a site
to perform an on-site assessment, the
agency will refund any prepaid
assessment fees.
3. Late Fees/Failure to Pay. If an
invoice is not paid in full by the due
date, the Late Payment fee will be
assessed. If payment for an application
is not received within 30 days of the
invoice’s original due date, the
application will be rejected. If payment
for an assessment is not received within
30 days of the invoice’s original due
date, OSHA will commence the process
to revoke the NRTL’s recognition (see 29
CFR 1910.7, App. A.II.E). OSHA notes
that NRTLs or applicants may be subject
to collection procedures under U.S.
Federal law for unpaid fees.
conference/publishing-billing.pdf. OSHA derived
an estimated average processing fee based on the
number of columns in typical Federal Register
notices published for the NRTL Program.
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4. Changes to Fee Schedule. The
effective date of this fee schedule is
thirty days after the publication of the
Assistant Secretary’s notice in the
Federal Register. A NRTL or applicant
pays fees according to the fee schedule
in effect on the date the agency receives
an application or commences an on-site
assessment.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
Requirements
The revisions adopted in this notice
contains collections of information (also
referred to as ‘‘paperwork’’
requirements) that are subject to review
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq., and OMB’s regulations at
5 CFR part 1320. The purposes of the
PRA include enhancing the quality and
utility of information the Federal
government requires and minimizing
the information collection burden on
affected entities. The PRA requires
certain actions before an agency can
adopt or revise a collection of
information, including publishing a
summary of the collection of
information and a brief description of
the need for and proposed use of the
information. The PRA defines
‘‘collection of information’’ to mean,
‘‘the obtaining, causing to be obtained,
soliciting, or requiring the disclosure to
third parties or the public, of facts or
opinions by or for an agency, regardless
of form or format’’ (44 U.S.C.
3502(3)(A)).
Under the PRA, a Federal agency may
not conduct or sponsor a collection of
information unless it is approved by
OMB under the PRA and displays a
currently valid OMB control number (44
U.S.C. 3507). Also, notwithstanding any
other provisions of law, no person shall
be subject to penalty for failing to
comply with a collection of information
if the collection of information does not
display a currently valid OMB control
number (44 U.S.C. 3512).
As required by 5 CFR 1320.8(d),
OSHA published a Federal Register
notice on December 28, 2016 (81 FR
95650, Docket No. OSHA–2010–0007)
requesting comments from the public
and other interested parties on proposed
revisions to the Information Collection
Requirements approved by OMB as part
of the NRTL Program’s Paperwork
Package. The notice was part of a
preclearance consultation program that
provided interested parties with an
opportunity to comment on the current
request for OMB approval of
modification of the existing Paperwork
Reduction Act package by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). The
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:30 Sep 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
previous approval of the existing
information collection requirements by
OMB and the request for modification of
that approval both addressed the
information collection requirements
found in the NRTL Program
requirements (29 CFR 1910.7) (OMB
Control Number 1218–0147).
The Federal Register notice generated
two comments from the public. Both
comments are available on
regulations.gov under docket number
OSHA–2010–0007. OSHA responded to
these comments in a Supporting
Statement for the Revised Information
Collection Requirements. A copy of the
revised Information Collection
Requirements, with applicable
supporting documentation, including a
description of the likely respondents,
frequency of response, and estimated
total burden, may be obtained free of
charge from the RegInfo.gov website at
https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=1218-0147.
On June 29, 2018, the Department of
Labor submitted to OMB for approval
the proposed revisions to the
Information Collection Requirements
(83 FR 30779). OMB provided approval
of this submission on November 29,
2018.
Agency: DOL—OSHA.
Title of Collection: Definition and
Requirements of a Nationally
Recognized Testing Laboratory (29 CFR
1910.7).
OMB Control Number: 1218–0147.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
Total Estimated Number of
Respondents: 20.
Total Estimated Number of
Responses: 140.
Total Estimated Annual Time Burden:
1,523 hours.
Total Estimated Annual Other Costs
Burden: $718,836.
VI. Final Decision
OSHA will no longer follow the
existing NRTL Program Directive
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, as described in section
III.B. of this notice. Instead, OSHA
adopts the proposed streamlined
procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, with one minor, nonsubstantive change, as described in
section III.C. of this notice.
OSHA also adopts the proposed
revised fee schedule, as described in
sections IV.B, IV.C, and IV.D of this
notice, without change. Moreover, as
described in sections IV.B, IV.C, and
IV.D of this notice, the revised fee
schedule adopted herein replaces
OSHA’s existing fee schedule.
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Authority and Signature
Loren Sweatt, Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health, 200
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20210, authorized the preparation of
this notice. Accordingly, the agency is
issuing this notice pursuant to 29 U.S.C.
657(g)(2), Secretary of Labor’s Order No.
1–2012 (77 FR 3912, Jan. 25, 2012), and
29 CFR 1910.7.
Signed at Washington, DC, on September
12, 2019.
Loren Sweatt,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor
for Occupational Safety and Health.
[FR Doc. 2019–20212 Filed 9–18–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Veterans’ Employment and Training
Service
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Comment Request: VETS’
Competitive Grant Program Reporting
Notice of availability; request
for comments.
ACTION:
VETS is announcing an
opportunity for public comment on the
proposed revision of certain information
the agency collects from grant
recipients. Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995, Federal
agencies are required to publish a notice
in the Federal Register concerning each
proposed collection of information and
to allow 60 days for public comment in
response to the notice.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all
written comments received by
November 18, 2019.
ADDRESSES: A copy of this Information
Collection Request (ICR) with applicable
supporting documentation, including a
description of the likely respondents,
proposed frequency of response, and
estimated total burden, may be obtained
for free by contacting Rebekah Haydin
by telephone at (972) 850–4720 (this is
not a toll-free number) or by email at
Haydin.Rebekah@dol.gov.
Submit written comments about this
ICR by mail or courier to the U.S.
Department of Labor, Veterans’
Employment and Training Service, 525
S. Griffin Street, #858, Dallas, TX 75202;
by email: Haydin.Rebekah@dol.gov; or
by fax: (972) 850–4716.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rebekah Haydin, by telephone at (972)
850–4720 (this is not a toll-free number)
or by email at Haydin.Rebekah@dol.gov.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\19SEN1.SGM
19SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 182 (Thursday, September 19, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 49336-49344]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-20212]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
[Docket No. OSHA-2007-0031]
Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratories; Revised Fee Schedule
and Adoption of New Application Acceptance and Review Procedures
AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this notice, OSHA revises the schedule of fees that the
agency charges to Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratories (NRTLs)
and NRTL applicants. In addition, OSHA adopts new streamlined
procedures for accepting and reviewing applications of organizations
seeking to obtain, renew, or expand NRTL recognition.
DATES: The revised NRTL Fee Schedule and New Application Acceptance and
Review Procedures become effective on October 21, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Press inquiries: Contact Mr. Frank Meilinger, Director, OSHA Office
of Communications, U.S. Department of Labor; telephone: (202) 693-1999;
email: [email protected].
General and technical information: Contact Mr. Kevin Robinson,
Director, Office of Technical Programs and Coordination Activities,
Directorate of Technical Support and Emergency Management, Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor; telephone:
(202) 693-2110 or email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Notice
On September 22, 2015, OSHA published a notice proposing the
adoption of new streamlined procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications of organizations seeking to obtain, renew, or expand NRTL
[[Page 49337]]
recognition, and the revision of the existing NRTL Program fee schedule
pursuant to the NRTL Program regulation, 29 CFR 1910.7(f) (80 FR
57222). The agency received one comment in response to this notice,
available on www.regulations.gov under docket number OSHA-2007-0031.
OSHA addresses this comment, infra, in section III of this notice.
OSHA now is proceeding with this notice and hereby adopts the
proposed streamlined procedures for accepting and reviewing
applications, with one minor, non-substantive change, as discussed
infra, in section III of this notice. OSHA also adopts the proposed
NRTL Program fee schedule, without change, as discussed infra, in
section IV of this notice.
II. Background on the NRTL Program
Many of OSHA's safety standards (e.g., 29 CFR part 1910, subpart S)
require that equipment and products be tested and certified to help
ensure their safe use in the workplace. To implement these
requirements, OSHA established the NRTL Program and the agency
generally requires NRTLs to perform this testing and certification.
The NRTL Program regulation, 29 CFR 1910.7, requires that, to
obtain and retain OSHA recognition as a NRTL, an organization must: (1)
Have the appropriate capability to test, evaluate, and approve products
to assure their safe use in the workplace; (2) be completely
independent of employers subject to the tested equipment requirements
and manufacturers and vendors of products for which OSHA requires
certification; (3) have internal programs that ensure proper control of
the testing and certification process; and (4) have effective reporting
and complaint handling procedures (29 CFR 1910.7(b)). OSHA requires
organizations applying for NRTL recognition to provide, in their
applications, detailed and comprehensive information about their
programs, processes, and procedures, in writing. When an organization
makes an initial application to be recognized as a NRTL, OSHA reviews
the written information contained in the organization's application and
conducts an on-site assessment to determine whether the organization
meets the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.7. OSHA uses a similar process
when a NRTL applies for expansion or renewal of its recognition,
although the type and amount of information in some areas can differ
significantly from those of initial applications. In addition, the
agency conducts annual assessments \1\ of NRTLs to ensure that the
recognized laboratories adequately maintain their programs and continue
to meet the recognition requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ OSHA uses the term ``assessments'' to mean those activities
described by the term ``audits'' under 29 CFR 1910.7(f). OSHA uses
the term ``assessments,'' rather than ``audits'' because it better
reflects the overall purpose of the program's activities, i.e.,
conformity assessments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To support these core functions, OSHA also performs a number of
ancillary activities. For example, OSHA investigates complaints filed
against NRTLs to ensure that the laboratories are performing their
testing and certification functions adequately; represents the NRTL
Program in a variety of forums related to conformity assessment
products used in the workplace; and maintains a detailed website that
both explains the program and lists all the laboratories currently
recognized under the NRTL Program, the products each laboratory can
test, and registered certification marks used by each laboratory.
III. Revision of Existing Application Acceptance and Review Procedures
OSHA currently has a number of initiatives underway to improve the
operations of the NRTL Program. This section of the notice discusses
one such initiative, under which OSHA adopts new streamlined procedures
for accepting and reviewing applications of organizations seeking to
obtain, renew, or expand NRTL recognition. OSHA will follow these new
procedures in lieu of those contained in the agency's existing NRTL
Program Directive (CPL 01-00-004, NRTL Program Policies, Procedures,
and Guidelines, September 5, 2019) (``Directive'' or ``NRTL Program
Directive'') and the additional practices OSHA has routinely followed
in accepting applications.
OSHA adopts the new streamlined procedures to eliminate delays
caused by multiple revisions by an applicant during the application-
acceptance and -review process. In addition, OSHA simplifies the
application process to make it clearer when the application acceptance
process ends and the substantive application review process begins.
This streamlined application process will also reduce NRTL Program
fees, as OSHA will discuss later in this notice.
The existing procedures for application acceptance and review are
contained in both Appendix A to the NRTL Program regulations,
(``Appendix A'') and the NRTL Program Directive, CPL-01-00-004. OSHA
does not, in this notice, revise Appendix A; instead, OSHA has updated
the NRTL Program Directive to include the revised application
acceptance and review procedures made final by this notice.
A. Existing Procedures in Appendix A That Were Not Subject to Revision
Per Appendix A, the burden is generally ``on the applicant to
establish by a preponderance of the evidence that it is entitled to
recognition as an NRTL'' (App. A. Introduction). Thus, in its
application, an applicant must ``provide sufficient information and
detail demonstrating that it meets the requirements set forth in Sec.
1910.7, in order for an informed decision concerning recognition to be
made'' by the Assistant Secretary for Occupational Safety and Health
(``Assistant Secretary''), and must also ``identify the scope of the
NRTL-related activity for which the applicant wishes to be recognized''
(i.e., the test standards the applicant will use for testing products)
(App. A.I.A.2.b). To meet its burden, the applicant may include any
documentation (i.e., enclosures, attachments, or exhibits) it deems
appropriate (App. A.I.A.2.c).
Also under Appendix A, ``[a]pplications submitted by eligible
testing agencies will be accepted by OSHA, and their receipt
acknowledged in writing'' (App. A.I.B.1.a). Moreover, ``[a]fter receipt
of an application, OSHA may request additional information if it
believes information relevant to the requirements for recognition has
been omitted'' (Id.). In addition, ``OSHA shall, as necessary, conduct
an on-site review of the testing facilities of the applicant, as well
as the applicant's administrative and technical practices, and, if
necessary, review any additional documentation underlying the
application'' (App. A.I.B.1.b).
Appendix A provides the responsible OSHA staff with two options
following review of the application, and any additional information and
on-site review report. On the one hand, if ``the applicant appears to
have met the requirements for recognition,'' responsible OSHA staff
must make a ``positive finding'' to the Assistant Secretary, which
consists of ``a written recommendation . . . that the application be
approved, accompanied by a supporting explanation'' (App. A.I.B.2).
Once this recommendation is made, OSHA follows the procedures in the
Appendix for making preliminary and final findings on the application
(App. A.I.B.4, A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6).
On the other hand, if ``the applicant does not appear to have met
the requirements for recognition,'' responsible OSHA staff must make a
[[Page 49338]]
``negative finding'' to the ``applicant in writing, listing the
specific requirements of Sec. 1910.7 and [Appendix A] which the
applicant has not met, and allow[ing] a reasonable period for
response'' (App. A.I.B.3.a). After the applicant receives ``a
notification of negative finding (i.e., for intended disapproval of the
application), and within the response period provided,'' the applicant
may either (1) ``[s]ubmit a revised application for further review,
which could result in a positive finding'' (the procedures for which
are explained in the previous paragraph), or (2) ``[r]equest that the
original application be submitted to the Assistant Secretary with an
attached statement of reasons, supplied by the applicant of why the
application should be approved'' (App. A.I.B.3.b.i). In either case
(i.e., if a positive finding is made on a revised application or if the
applicant requests that the original application be submitted to the
Assistant Secretary), OSHA would follow the procedures in the Appendix
for making preliminary and final findings on the application (App.
A.I.B.4, A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6). The ``procedure for applicant notification
and potential revision shall be used only once during each recognition
process'' (App. A.I.B.3.b.ii).
B. OSHA Will No Longer Follow Existing NRTL Program Directive
Procedures for Accepting and Reviewing Applications
Existing policies contained in the NRTL Program Directive expand on
the application procedures contained in Appendix A, as follows. Per the
Directive, OSHA staff ``formally accept or reject the application''
based on a review of the application for ``completeness and for
adequacy'' (Directive Ch. 2.V.B, Ch. 3.II.B.1). The procedures for this
review are contained in Appendix D to the Directive (Directive Ch.
3.II.B.1). An application is considered complete ``if it contains all
necessary documents, and sufficient information for all relevant
items,'' and is considered adequate ``if the information submitted
sufficiently demonstrates that the requirements for recognition can be
met, and where relevant, if at least one test standard requested can be
approved'' (Directive App. D) (emphasis in original).
In reviewing the application, OSHA staff will return and ``take[ ]
no further action'' on an application ``[i]f [the] application is
frivolous or grossly incomplete or inadequate.'' In such circumstances,
``any future application from the applicant'' will be processed ``as a
new application'' (Directive Ch. 3.II.A).
If the application is not ``frivolous or grossly incomplete or
inadequate,'' OSHA staff discusses its review with the applicant,
``noting any deficiencies found or clarifications needed'' (Directive
Ch. 3.II.B.2). If the ``application is determined to be complete and
adequate,'' OSHA ``sends a letter to the applicant to accept the
application'' (Directive Ch. 3.II.C).
If the application is determined to be incomplete or inadequate,
the Directive provides two opportunities for applicants to correct
deficiencies before rejection of an application (Directive Ch. 3.II.C).
In practice, however, OSHA has given applicants three such
opportunities. Per the Directive, OSHA ``sends a letter to the
applicant, detailing the deficiencies and the additional information
needed and requesting a response by an appropriate deadline,'' and if
``the response does not adequately resolve the deficiencies,'' OSHA
``provides the applicant a [second] opportunity to respond within a
given period.'' (Directive Ch. 3.II.C.) If deficiencies remain after
the second opportunity, OSHA, in practice, gives applicants a third,
but relatively limited, opportunity to make corrections before the
effective date of the rejection. This limited duration is sufficient
for applicants to correct deficiencies if only a few critical
deficiencies remain.
If an applicant's timely response cures the deficiencies in its
application, OSHA ``sends an acceptance letter to the applicant''
(Directive Ch. 3.II.C). However, ``[i]f the applicant does not respond
adequately or fails to reply by any deadline(s) provided or an approved
extension of these deadline(s),'' OSHA ``sends a letter notifying the
applicant that the application is not accepted and the Case File is
closed'' (Directive Ch. 3.II.C.2).
Finally, the Directive provides that, after an application is
accepted, ``the assigned staff determines whether an on-site review is
necessary'' (Directive Ch. 3.II.D). However, the Directive also
provides for non-acceptance during the on-site review process, if an
applicant fails to respond adequately to the findings of an on-site
review (Directive Ch.4.IV.C).
OSHA proposed that it will no longer follow the existing
procedures, described above, to afford applicants three opportunities
to modify their applications before acceptance or non-acceptance. These
existing procedures are inefficient and cause delays because, in some
cases, these multiple opportunities cause the process to take years.
OSHA also proposed that it will also not follow its existing procedure
for accepting an application only when it is found to be complete and
adequate. This existing procedure has caused confusion as to when the
application acceptance process ends and the substantive application
review process begins. OSHA received no comments objecting to its
proposed decision to no longer follow the above-described existing
procedures. OSHA therefore adopts its proposed decision, without
change.
C. OSHA Adopts New Streamlined Procedures for Accepting and Reviewing
Applications, as Proposed, With One Minor, Non-Substantive Change
In lieu of the existing NRTL Program Directive procedures,
described above, OSHA proposed to follow streamlined procedures for
accepting and reviewing applications. OSHA received one comment in
response to the proposal, from Curtis-Strauss, LLC, a NRTL (available
on www.regulations.gov under Docket Number OSHA-2007-0031). Curtis-
Strauss was generally supportive of the proposed streamlined procedures
for accepting and reviewing applications, and of the proposed revised
NRTL Program fee schedule, discussed below, but suggested two additions
to the proposed procedures:
Curtis-Strauss suggested that ``OSHA provide updates to
applicants every 60 days because ``[t]his would keep applicants
informed and could also enhance OSHA's management of the agency's
application queue as grouped by applicant,'' and because ``[t]his may
help OSHA to realize other process efficiencies when scheduling on-site
audits or performing technical reviews.''
Curtis-Strauss suggested that ``OSHA offer an opportunity
to the applicant to have a conference call or an in-person meeting with
the relevant OSHA staff promptly after the notice of intent to
recommend a negative finding'' because ``[t]his would give applicants
the ability to ask questions and better understand the application's
deficiencies while still leaving enough time to correct them prior to
the deadline.''
OSHA supports keeping lines of communication open during the
application process. However, OSHA does not believe that formalizing
rules for open dialogue, as suggested by Curtis-Strauss, will make the
application process more effective. Each application is different and
requires different levels and types of communication. The degree and
types of communication suggested by Curtis-Strauss may be too little in
some cases and too much in others. Therefore,
[[Page 49339]]
OSHA is not adopting the suggestions made by Curtis-Strauss.
OSHA hereby adopts the streamlined procedures, as proposed, with
one minor, non-substantive change, discussed, infra. These streamlined
procedures will reduce delays, fees, and confusion associated with
application processing. Under these streamlined procedures, OSHA will
review an application for completeness, but not adequacy, in deciding
whether to accept the application. OSHA's review for adequacy, and any
on-site review, will occur only after OSHA accepted the application.
Furthermore, OSHA will permit the applicant one opportunity only,
rather than three, to resolve deficiencies in the completeness of its
application before deciding whether to accept it. OSHA describes the
new streamlined procedures it adopts in this notice in more detail,
immediately below.
1. Initial Review and Acceptance
OSHA proposed that, when OSHA receives an application, it will
acknowledge its receipt, establish (for initial applications) or update
(for expansion and renewal applications) the docket for the
organization, and upload the application materials to the docket.\2\
For this notice, OSHA decided that it will not establish or update a
docket for an organization in connection with an application upon
receipt. Instead, OSHA will establish a docket for an application only
in connection with the preparation of a Federal Register notice
announcing a preliminary finding on the application. Establishing
dockets for applications at this later point in the application process
will further streamline the application acceptance and review process,
as many applications are withdrawn or amended before the applications
reach the preliminary determination stage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ As currently used by OSHA, the term ``docket'' means an
electronic file folder containing documents that pertain to an
official action taken by the agency. OSHA generally makes these
documents available to the public.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After it receives an application, OSHA will perform an
administrative review of the application to determine whether it is
complete (i.e., has sufficient information to determine whether the
applicant meets the requirements for recognition). If not complete,
OSHA will notify the applicant, in writing, that it has 30 days from
the date of the notice to provide the missing or additional
information. OSHA will also inform the applicant, in the notice, that
it is unable to review the merits of the application because the
application itself does not contain sufficient information to show that
the requirements for recognition can be met. Finally, OSHA will inform
the applicant, in the notice, that this review involved no technical
determination, only an administrative one of whether the application
has all of the necessary documentation. If the applicant does not
respond by the 30-day deadline, or does not adequately respond, and the
application remains incomplete, OSHA will inform the applicant that
OSHA cannot accept the application, and the applicant must reapply. If
the applicant provides a complete application within the 30 days, or
provided a complete application when it was first received, OSHA will
accept the application.
2. Determination of Adequacy
After accepting the application, OSHA will review the merits of the
application to determine whether the application is adequate. OSHA will
first conduct a technical review of the application (i.e., a detailed
review of all of the application's administrative and technical
procedures and content). Following this technical review, OSHA will
determine whether to conduct an on-site assessment as part of
evaluating the management system and technical capabilities of the
organization. OSHA will generally conduct an on-site review for initial
applications and for expansion applications that involve new areas of
testing for the NRTL or areas of concern to OSHA. If OSHA finds
deficiencies during the technical review or during the on-site
assessment, OSHA will provide the applicant with an explanation of
deficiencies and needed corrections, and a 90-day opportunity to
respond. Failure to respond by the 90-day deadline will constitute a
withdrawal of the application, and OSHA will take no further action on
it. If the applicant or NRTL responds, it will need to demonstrate it
corrected all deficiencies found in its application and/or during the
assessment, and provide evidence to OSHA that the corrections have been
implemented into the applicant's or NRTL's management systems. In that
case, OSHA will conclude the application is adequate. On the other
hand, if OSHA finds that deficiencies remain, OSHA will conclude the
application is not adequate.
If OSHA staff determines an application is adequate, OSHA will
follow existing procedures, and recommend a positive finding, per
Appendix A.I.B.2. Otherwise, OSHA staff will notify the applicant in
writing that they intend to recommend a negative finding. In that case,
the applicant has two options under Appendix A.I.B.3. First, the
applicant has one additional chance to revise its application within 30
days of receipt of OSHA's written notice. Second, the applicant may
request that its original application (as supplemented in response
during the review for adequacy) be submitted to the Assistant Secretary
(also within 30 days of receipt of OSHA's written notice). In this
case, the applicant must attach a statement of reasons to the
application explaining why the application should be approved. OSHA
would consider the failure to submit a revised application or a request
that the original application be submitted to the Assistant Secretary
within the 30-day deadline to be a withdrawal of the application.
If the applicant opts to revise its application, OSHA will invoice
the applicant for the fee to review its revised submission. This fee
would equal the estimated hours for the review multiplied by the hourly
rate for the applicable Miscellaneous Fee in the NRTL Program's fee
schedule. Like other application fees, this review fee will not be
refundable. The applicant will need to pay this fee before OSHA
performs the review of the revised application. OSHA will consider a
failure to pay the fee within 30 days of receipt of the invoice as a
withdrawal of the application. When OSHA receives the fee, OSHA will
review the revised application to determine whether to sustain the
negative finding or change it to a positive one. If OSHA staff decides
to sustain the recommendation for a negative finding, they will first
afford the applicant the opportunity to withdraw the application. If
the applicant does not withdraw it, OSHA will proceed with the
preliminary finding.
Once OSHA staff recommends a positive finding on either an original
or revised application, sustains its recommendation for a negative
finding after a review of a revised application, or the applicant
requests that the original application be submitted to the Assistant
Secretary, OSHA will follow the procedures in Appendix A for making
preliminary and final findings on the application (App. A.I.B.4,
A.I.B.5, A.I.B.6).
OSHA will no longer follow the existing NRTL Program Directive
procedures for accepting and reviewing applications, as described in
section III.B. of this notice. Instead, OSHA adopts the proposed
streamlined procedures for accepting and reviewing applications, with
one minor non-substantive change, as described above.
[[Page 49340]]
IV. Revision of the NRTL Program Fee Schedule
A. Background
OSHA revises the existing NRTL Program fee schedule pursuant to the
NRTL Program regulation, 29 CFR 1910.7(f). That regulation requires
NRTLs and applicants to ``pay fees for services provided by OSHA in
advance of the provision of those services'' (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(1)).
OSHA assesses fees for core service activities, that is, for
``[p]rocessing of applications for initial recognition, expansion of
recognition, or renewal of recognition, including on-site reviews;
review and evaluation of the applications; and preparation of reports,
evaluations and Federal Register notices;'' and ``[a]udits of sites''
(Id.). OSHA's fee schedule ``reflects the full cost of performing the
activities'' for these services (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(2)).
OSHA calculates fees ``based on either the average or actual time
required to perform the work necessary; the staff costs per hour (which
include wages, fringe benefits, and expenses other than travel for
personnel that perform or administer the activities covered by the
fees); and the average or actual costs for travel when on-site reviews
are involved'' (Id.). Thus, the formula for calculating a fee for an
activity is the ``[Average (or Actual) Hours to Complete the Activity x
Staff Costs per Hour] + Average (or Actual) Travel Costs'' (Id.).
OSHA periodically reviews the full costs of performing core
services and, if warranted, will propose a revised fee schedule in the
Federal Register (29 CFR 1910.7(f)(3), (f)(4)). If OSHA approves the
proposed fee schedule (after giving the public an opportunity to
comment), it ``publish[es] the final fee schedule in the Federal
Register, making the fee schedule effective on a specific date'' (29
CFR 1910.7(f)(3), (f)(4)).
To ensure that its fees for core services reflect the full cost of
those services, OSHA's existing fee schedule (which OSHA adopted in
2011) takes into account both the direct and indirect costs it incurs
in performing those services (76 FR 10501-10504). Direct costs include
staff costs (i.e. the applicable portion of the salaries and fringe
benefits of the applicable staff) incurred for application processing
and assessment (Id.). Ancillary (or indirect) costs include staff costs
incurred for the administration and support of the program, including
legal support, budgeting, policy matters, intragency and international
coordination, responses to requests for information related to the
program, handling complaints, website development and maintenance, and
participation in meetings with stakeholders and outside interest groups
(Id.). OSHA refers to the sum of its direct costs and ancillary costs
as the total program costs (TPC) for the purpose of this notice. TPC
does not include travel expenses, which are assessed separately (29 CFR
1910.7(f)(2), 76 FR 10504 n.5).
In the existing fee schedule, OSHA calculates the fee for each core
service activity by multiplying an equivalent average cost per hour
rate (ECR) by the time it takes to perform that activity: Fee for
Activity = ECR x Time for Activity (76 FR 10504). In 2000, when OSHA
began assessing fees for services, OSHA explained that it derived that
fee schedule's ECR by dividing TPC by the total available annual work
hours of the NRTL Program and legal staff that perform the services
(TAW) (Id.). Accordingly, ECR2000 = TPC2000/TAW2000. The approach used
in 2000 resulted in fees that recouped the costs only of the time spent
actually performing individualized audits and application processing,
which is only a portion of TAW, and did not recoup the costs of the
time associated with running the program and providing other benefits
shared among all NRTLs (Id.).
To account for the costs associated with these shared benefits,
OSHA adopted a new approach in 2011 for calculating ECR (ECR2011) in
the existing fee schedule (Id.). Under the new approach, OSHA divides
the estimated total cost of the NRTL Program (TPC2011) by the total
annual service hours (TAS2011) (Id.). This latter term equals the total
estimated work hours that the NRTL Program staff spend on the core
service activities for which OSHA would bill NRTLs; accordingly,
ECR2011 = TPC2011/TAS2011 (Id.). By way of comparison with the 2000 fee
schedule, TAS equals TAW minus estimated hours spent on ancillary
activities (AH) and leave (LH) (i.e., TAS = TAW-AH-LH) (Id.). By
continuing to include the full program costs in the numerator
(TPC2011), but including in the denominator (TAS2011) only the amount
of time spent on providing ``billable'' core services, OSHA believed
the revised ECR would more accurately represent the total work hours
spent on those core activities than the 2000 equation \3\ (Id.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The existing fee schedule was supposed to have been phased
in over a three-year phase-in period. (76 FR 10508). OSHA
implemented the first phase on March 28, 2011. However, due to other
priorities and factors, OSHA was unable to implement the second and
third phases of the increase, as planned. This revised fee schedule
renders moot the implementation of the second and third phases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Explanation of Revised Fee Schedule
OSHA reviewed its existing fee schedule and, based on that review,
proposed to revise its fee schedule. OSHA received one comment in
response to the proposal, from Curtis-Strauss, LLC, a NRTL (available
on www.regulations.gov under Docket Number OSHA-2007-0031). Curtis-
Strauss was generally supportive of the proposed NRTL Program fee
schedule. OSHA hereby adopts the proposed NRTL Program fee schedule,
without change. The revised fee schedule more accurately reflects the
full cost of performing the activities for which OSHA charges fees.
OSHA explains the details of the revised fee schedule, as follows:
1. OSHA adopts a new grouping of fees for each of the core
activities for which OSHA charges fees to NRTLs (i.e., ``[p]rocessing
of applications for initial recognition, expansion of recognition, or
renewal of recognition, including on-site reviews; review and
evaluation of the applications; and preparation of reports, evaluations
and Federal Register notices;'' and ``[a]udits of sites'' (29 CFR
1910.7(f)(1)). Under the existing fee schedule, OSHA groups these
activities under the terms Application Processing, Audits, and
Miscellaneous (76 FR 10508). Under OSHA's revised fee schedule, shown
below in Table 6, OSHA groups these activities under the terms:
Administrative Evaluation, Technical Evaluation, Assessments, Federal
Register Notices, and Miscellaneous (which includes late fees and other
activities not specifically described). OSHA adopts these new groupings
to align its fee schedule with the newly-adopted streamlined procedures
for accepting and reviewing applications, described above. OSHA also
believes that the times it now estimates for completion of these
activities (see Tables 2 thru 5, below) more accurately represent the
actual time it takes to complete the core activities for which OSHA
charges fees. Therefore, adoption of the groupings more accurately
reflects the full cost of the services for which fees are assessed.
2. OSHA revises the approach it uses to calculate ECR. Again, under
the existing approach, OSHA calculates ECR by dividing TPC by the total
estimated work hours that the NRTL Program staff and legal staff spend
on the core service activities for which OSHA bills NRTLs (or TAS) (76
FR 10504).
[[Page 49341]]
The existing approach depends, in large measure, on OSHA estimating
an accurate TAS (i.e., number of ``billable'' core hours). If this
estimate is accurate, the ECR (i.e., the hourly rate OSHA charges for
services) will accurately reflect the full cost of services (because
ECR = TPC/TAS). But OSHA's estimate has not been accurate in practice.
Due in part to insufficient program staffing and other uncontrollable
factors, the staff has been unable to work the number of estimated
billable hours. This has resulted in an hourly rate charged by OSHA
that results in fees that are far lower than the fees OSHA would be
charging if its estimate had been accurate.
OSHA could reassess TAS on a regular basis to achieve a more
accurate estimate. However, due to the changing nature of the staff's
workload, OSHA likely would need to make such calculation adjustments,
and thus publish fee schedules, more than once within a given year to
ensure an accurate estimate. OSHA likely could not make such
adjustments in a timely manner, largely due to the length of the
process for issuing fee schedules.
Under the revised fee schedule, OSHA simplifies the existing
calculation. For the purpose of the revised fee schedule, OSHA assumes
that certain NRTL Program staff (which OSHA calls ``direct staff'' in
this notice) work exclusively on core billable activities, and that
other NRTL Program staff (which OSHA calls ``indirect staff'' in this
notice) work exclusively on ancillary activities. OSHA calculates the
ECR (ECR2015) by dividing TPC by total direct staff annual paid (i.e.,
compensable) hours, or simply, direct staff annual hours (DSH).
Because of the difficulties of implementing the existing approach,
OSHA believes the change in approach in the revised fee schedule
(replacing TAS with DSH) will, on average and in practice, more
accurately reflect the full cost of services for which OSHA charges
fees than the existing approach. The accuracy of the DSH approach also
does not depend on the variable workload of staff, and will therefore
be simpler to implement than the existing approach.
OSHA estimates for the revised fee schedule that four full-time
NRTL Program staff members are direct staff and the other full-time
NRTL Program staff member is indirect staff. OSHA believes the estimate
of four full-time direct staff is reasonable because OSHA projects a
significant increase in the number of applications the NRTL Program
will process and audits the NRTL Program will perform (i.e., a
significant increase in the time NRTL Program staff will spend on core
activities).
For the purposes of the revised fee calculation, DSH equals 8,352
hours. This was derived by multiplying 2,088, the regular annual paid
hours for one full-time staff, by the number of full-time direct staff
\4\ (again, currently four).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ This figure is the number of compensable hours in a fiscal
year, which is used to determine full-time equivalents (FTE) (i.e.,
full-time staffing levels) for purposes of the Federal Budget. See
Office and Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-11, Preparation,
Submission, and Execution of the Budget, Section 85--Estimating
Employment Levels and the Employment Summary (Schedule Q), 2015
(available at the time of publication of the proposal at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/a11_current_year/s85.pdf).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained more fully in the notice of proposed decision, the
proposed (now revised) fees for individual core service activities are
often significantly less than the analogous existing fees for such
services. These changes arise from the change in the way that OSHA will
calculate the ECR (which excludes some previously included indirect
costs but increases the number of direct staff hours) and streamlined
review procedures (which decrease the amount of staff hours needed for
some tasks in the process). OSHA nonetheless estimates that fees
collected under the revised fee schedule will, in toto, approximate the
full costs of administering the NRTL Program because, as stated above,
OSHA estimated a significant increase in the number of applications the
NRTL Program will process and audits the NRTL Program will perform
(i.e., a significant increase in the time NRTL Program staff will spend
on core service activities).
3. Under the revised fee schedule, OSHA breaks out the fees for the
legal review of Federal Register notices associated with initial,
renewal, and expansion applications from the general fees it charges
for preparation of these Federal Register notices by NRTL Program
staff. Under the existing fee structure, OSHA charges one general fee
that covers both preparation and legal review of a Final Report and
Federal Register notice (76 FR 10505-10511).\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Although OSHA did not state explicitly in the 2011 notice
that the Final Report and Federal Register notice fee included legal
review, the hours used for calculating this fee did in fact include
the legal staff's time for this review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The revision more accurately reflects the portion of the fees
attributed to legal review. Under the existing fee structure, OSHA
charges a single hourly rate for core activities, regardless of whether
the time charged is attorney time or NRTL Program staff time (76 FR
10505). Under the revised fee structure, OSHA calculates a separate
hourly rate for core activities performed by legal staff to reflect
that certain ancillary costs, such as website development and
maintenance, which are properly incorporated into the hourly rate for
NRTL Program staff, should not be incorporated into the hourly rate for
legal services. OSHA continues to incorporate in the hourly rate for
legal costs those indirect costs that tie directly into the salary of
legal staff, such as fringe benefits. As a result of the revision, the
hourly rate for legal fees, shown in Table 5, is less than the rate for
NRTL Program staff fees, shown in Table 1.
OSHA notes that the Department of Labor incurs legal costs in
connection with the NRTL Program other than costs associated with the
legal review of Federal Register notices associated with initial,
renewal, and expansion applications. These other legal costs are
included in the existing fee schedule (See 76 FR 10504 n.5), and
continue to be included in the revised fee schedule, as elements in
TPC, and therefore, as elements of the calculation of the hourly rate
for NRTL Program staff.
4. OSHA revises the manner it calculates the salaries of NRTL
Program staff and Solicitor of Labor staff for the purpose of
calculating TPC. For the existing fee schedule, OSHA calculates staff
costs using actual staff salaries, which can vary, sometimes
significantly, over time due to changes in personnel and positions.
Under the revised fee schedule, OSHA calculates salaries using midpoint
salaries. These midpoint salaries are the Step 5 amounts shown for a
particular grade (e.g., grade 13) in the Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) General Schedule (GS) salary table for 2015, called the ``Salary
Table 2015-DCB,'' which pertains to federal workers who have duty
stations located mostly in Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia. (See
Office of Personnel Management 2015 General Schedule (GS) Locality Pay
Tables at www.opm.gov.) These midpoint salaries may differ from actual
staff salaries, which depend on the actual grade and step for each
staff. However, using these midpoint figures simplifies the calculation
of the staff costs and provides a consistent fee that OSHA expects will
reflect, on average, actual staff salaries over time. Because OPM
adjusts its salary tables annually, OSHA will monitor the adjustments
to determine if their magnitude requires modification of the fee
schedule.
Also, to include an amount for regular fringe benefits, OSHA
multiplies the midpoint salaries by a fringe benefit rate. Under the
revised fee schedule,
[[Page 49342]]
OSHA uses a 29% rate, and based this rate on the one the agency uses to
estimate fringe costs of other OSHA activities.
5. OSHA revises the manner in which it calculates ancillary (or
indirect) costs. Under the existing fee schedule, OSHA includes, in its
calculation of ancillary (or indirect) costs, equipment, training, and
space of the staff. Under the revised fee schedule, OSHA does not
include these items in its calculation of ancillary costs because NRTLs
do not derive a special benefit from these cost items. For example,
training costs for the program staff currently consist of general
training available to all employees. OSHA will include such costs in
future fee schedules if it determines that NRTLs do derive special
benefits from the items. OSHA believes the revision to the fee schedule
more accurately reflects the full costs of performing the activities
for which OSHA charges fees.
6. Under the revised fee schedule, OSHA does not charge fees for
determining whether proposed test standards are appropriate test
standards under the NRTL Program. OSHA charges such fees under the
existing fee schedule. However, OSHA recently updated its process
whereby it incorporates new test standards into the NRTL Program's list
of appropriate test standards (the scope of an appropriate test
standard must cover products for which OSHA requires NRTL approval and
must meet the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.7(c)(1)). Under the updated
policy, OSHA adds new test standards when it is made aware of new test
standards and determines them appropriate (79 FR 17188). It is
therefore no longer necessary to charge NRTLs specific fees in
connection with the incorporation of standards into the list of
appropriate test standards. OSHA notes, however, that the costs
associated with the incorporation of test standards will be ancillary
costs under the revised fee schedule, and will therefore be an element
in the calculation of the fees OSHA assesses.
C. Basis and Derivation of Revised Fee Amounts
Table 1, below, shows the direct and indirect program costs (TPC),
direct staff annual hours (DSH), and hourly rate OSHA uses to calculate
the revised fees.
Table 1--NRTL Program Staff--Hourly Rate Calculation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OSHA Direct Costs............................................ $579,383
OSHA Ancillary Costs......................................... 287,541
OSHA Total Costs of NRTL Program, excluding travel (TPC)..... 866,924
OSHA Direct Staff Annual Hours (DSH)......................... 8,352
OSHA Hourly rate (TPC divided by DSH)........................ 104
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tables 2 to 5, below, describe the fees OSHA adopts in conjunction
with the core services for which OSHA charges fees. OSHA calculates
each fee (with the exception of fees for legal review of Federal
Register notices) by multiplying the NRTL Program staff hourly rate of
$104 (see Table 1, above) by the time OSHA estimates it takes NRTL
Program staff to perform the activity at issue, on average (i.e., fee
for activity = NRTL Program staff hourly rate ($104) x estimated time
for activity). OSHA calculates the fees for legal review of Federal
Register notices by multiplying the hourly rate for legal services of
$89 (see Table 5, below) by the time OSHA estimates its takes legal
staff to perform the activity at issue, on average (i.e., fee for
activity = legal staff hourly rate ($89) x estimated time for
activity). OSHA notes that it rounds the revised fees down to the lower
multiple of ten.
OSHA's revised (and existing) fee for travel related to assessments
is based on actual travel expenses, and thus OSHA does not derive a fee
to charge for travel.
Table 2--Fees for Administrative Evaluation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program component Average hours Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Application--Limited review (per 40 $4,160
application)...........................
Expansion Application--Limited review 24 2,490
(per application)......................
Renewal request review.................. 16 1,660
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 3--Fees for Technical Evaluation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program component Average hours Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Application--Management 80 $8,320
Procedures review (per application)....
Initial or Expansion Application-- 24 2,490
Testing capability review (per
standard)..............................
Initial or Expansion Application--Site 24 2,490
capability review (per site)...........
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 4--Fees for Assessments
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program component Average hours Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assessment preparation and close out 54 $5,610
(per lead auditor).....................
Assessment preparation and close out 32 3,320
(per assistant auditor)................
Each day on-site or at office (per 8 830
auditor)...............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 5--Fees for Federal Register Notices
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program component Average hours Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Application Federal Register 20 $4,080
notice preparation (per application) **
[[Page 49343]]
Initial Application Federal Register 16 1,420
notice legal review (per application)..
-------------------------------
Total for Initial Application 36 5,500
Federal Register notices...........
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Renewal or Expansion Application Federal 16 2,470
Register notice preparation (per
application) **........................
Renewal or Expansion Application Federal 8 710
Register notice legal review (per
application)...........................
-------------------------------
Total for Renewal or Expansion 24 3,180
Application Federal Register
notices............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
** Includes estimated Office of Federal Register (OFR) processing fees:
$2,000 per initial application notice, or $810 per expansion and
renewal notice, as applicable.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The OFR charges Federal agencies a per column rate for
publishing Federal Register notices. See https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/write/conference/publishing-billing.pdf. OSHA
derived an estimated average processing fee based on the number of
columns in typical Federal Register notices published for the NRTL
Program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Revised Fee Schedule and Description of Fees
OSHA adopts the revised fee schedule shown below in Table 6.
Table 6--Revised NRTL Program Fee Schedule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fee category Fee activity Fee *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Administrative Evaluation................... Initial application-- $4,160.
Limited review.
Expansion application-- $2,490.
Limited review.
Renewal request review..... $1,660.
Technical Evaluation........................ Initial application-- $8,320.
Detailed management
procedures review.
Initial or Expansion $2,490.
application--Testing
capability review (per
standard).
Initial or Expansion $2,490.
application--Site
capability review (per
site).
Assessment.................................. Assessment preparation and $5,610.
close out (per lead
auditor, per site).
Assessment preparation and $3,320.
close out (per assistant
auditor, per site).
Assessment--per day at $830 plus travel expenses.
office, on-site, or on
travel (per auditor, per
site).
Federal Register Notices.................... Federal Register notices-- $5,500.
initial application.
Federal Register notices-- $3,180.
renewal or expansion
application.
Miscellaneous............................... Late Fees.................. $210.
Other activities or $104.
services not specifically
described (per hour).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* All fees must be paid in advance of activity or service.
General Information Regarding the Fees
1. Explanation of Fees
The Administrative Evaluation fee covers an administrative
review of the application packet to ensure completeness. It also covers
creating the docket and addition of the application to the docket. An
applicant must submit this fee with the application.
The Technical Evaluation fee covers a detailed examination
of the application packet to determine the applicant's ability to meet
the requirements of the requested recognition/expansion. An applicant
must submit this fee with the application.
On-site or office assessment fees are calculated based on
estimated staff time and, if applicable, actual travel expenses. Travel
expenses include expenses for hotel, air transportation, ground
transportation, and per diem. The assessment preparation and close-out
fees (per lead and assistant auditor, as applicable) include staff time
to make travel arrangements and file travel reimbursement claims. At
the conclusion of the assessment, actual travel expenses are calculated
based on the government per diem and other travel rules. OSHA will bill
or refund the difference between the prepaid and the actual travel
amounts.
The fees for ``Other activities or services not
specifically described'' cover application- or assessment-related
activities that are not specifically covered by the other fee
categories. One example would be the technical review of a revised
application that an applicant submits to OSHA in response to OSHA's
negative finding on an applicant's original application.
2. Refunds
If an application is withdrawn before OSHA commences the
Technical Evaluation, or the application is rejected after OSHA
completes the Administrative Evaluation, OSHA will refund the Technical
Evaluation fee.
If an application is withdrawn before OSHA commences
travel to a site to perform an on-site assessment, the agency will
refund any prepaid assessment fees.
3. Late Fees/Failure to Pay. If an invoice is not paid in full by
the due date, the Late Payment fee will be assessed. If payment for an
application is not received within 30 days of the invoice's original
due date, the application will be rejected. If payment for an
assessment is not received within 30 days of the invoice's original due
date, OSHA will commence the process to revoke the NRTL's recognition
(see 29 CFR 1910.7, App. A.II.E). OSHA notes that NRTLs or applicants
may be subject to collection procedures under U.S. Federal law for
unpaid fees.
[[Page 49344]]
4. Changes to Fee Schedule. The effective date of this fee schedule
is thirty days after the publication of the Assistant Secretary's
notice in the Federal Register. A NRTL or applicant pays fees according
to the fee schedule in effect on the date the agency receives an
application or commences an on-site assessment.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act Requirements
The revisions adopted in this notice contains collections of
information (also referred to as ``paperwork'' requirements) that are
subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., and
OMB's regulations at 5 CFR part 1320. The purposes of the PRA include
enhancing the quality and utility of information the Federal government
requires and minimizing the information collection burden on affected
entities. The PRA requires certain actions before an agency can adopt
or revise a collection of information, including publishing a summary
of the collection of information and a brief description of the need
for and proposed use of the information. The PRA defines ``collection
of information'' to mean, ``the obtaining, causing to be obtained,
soliciting, or requiring the disclosure to third parties or the public,
of facts or opinions by or for an agency, regardless of form or
format'' (44 U.S.C. 3502(3)(A)).
Under the PRA, a Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor a
collection of information unless it is approved by OMB under the PRA
and displays a currently valid OMB control number (44 U.S.C. 3507).
Also, notwithstanding any other provisions of law, no person shall be
subject to penalty for failing to comply with a collection of
information if the collection of information does not display a
currently valid OMB control number (44 U.S.C. 3512).
As required by 5 CFR 1320.8(d), OSHA published a Federal Register
notice on December 28, 2016 (81 FR 95650, Docket No. OSHA-2010-0007)
requesting comments from the public and other interested parties on
proposed revisions to the Information Collection Requirements approved
by OMB as part of the NRTL Program's Paperwork Package. The notice was
part of a preclearance consultation program that provided interested
parties with an opportunity to comment on the current request for OMB
approval of modification of the existing Paperwork Reduction Act
package by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The previous
approval of the existing information collection requirements by OMB and
the request for modification of that approval both addressed the
information collection requirements found in the NRTL Program
requirements (29 CFR 1910.7) (OMB Control Number 1218-0147).
The Federal Register notice generated two comments from the public.
Both comments are available on regulations.gov under docket number
OSHA-2010-0007. OSHA responded to these comments in a Supporting
Statement for the Revised Information Collection Requirements. A copy
of the revised Information Collection Requirements, with applicable
supporting documentation, including a description of the likely
respondents, frequency of response, and estimated total burden, may be
obtained free of charge from the RegInfo.gov website at https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=1218-0147.
On June 29, 2018, the Department of Labor submitted to OMB for
approval the proposed revisions to the Information Collection
Requirements (83 FR 30779). OMB provided approval of this submission on
November 29, 2018.
Agency: DOL--OSHA.
Title of Collection: Definition and Requirements of a Nationally
Recognized Testing Laboratory (29 CFR 1910.7).
OMB Control Number: 1218-0147.
Affected Public: Business or other for-profit.
Total Estimated Number of Respondents: 20.
Total Estimated Number of Responses: 140.
Total Estimated Annual Time Burden: 1,523 hours.
Total Estimated Annual Other Costs Burden: $718,836.
VI. Final Decision
OSHA will no longer follow the existing NRTL Program Directive
procedures for accepting and reviewing applications, as described in
section III.B. of this notice. Instead, OSHA adopts the proposed
streamlined procedures for accepting and reviewing applications, with
one minor, non-substantive change, as described in section III.C. of
this notice.
OSHA also adopts the proposed revised fee schedule, as described in
sections IV.B, IV.C, and IV.D of this notice, without change. Moreover,
as described in sections IV.B, IV.C, and IV.D of this notice, the
revised fee schedule adopted herein replaces OSHA's existing fee
schedule.
Authority and Signature
Loren Sweatt, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20210, authorized the preparation of this notice. Accordingly, the
agency is issuing this notice pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 657(g)(2),
Secretary of Labor's Order No. 1-2012 (77 FR 3912, Jan. 25, 2012), and
29 CFR 1910.7.
Signed at Washington, DC, on September 12, 2019.
Loren Sweatt,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety
and Health.
[FR Doc. 2019-20212 Filed 9-18-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-26-P