Notice of Amendment to Procedural Guidelines for the Development and Maintenance of the List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor, 29487-29490 [2020-10341]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 95 / Friday, May 15, 2020 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2020–10416 Filed 5–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Notice of Amendment to Procedural
Guidelines for the Development and
Maintenance of the List of Goods
Produced by Child Labor or Forced
Labor
Bureau of International Labor
Affairs, United States Department of
Labor.
ACTION: Notice of amendment to
procedural guidelines for the
development and maintenance of a list
of goods produced by child labor or
forced labor in violation of international
standards.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Labor’s Bureau of International Labor
Affairs (‘‘ILAB’’) amends a provision of
its procedural guidelines (‘‘Guidelines’’)
for the development and maintenance of
a list of goods from countries that ILAB
has reason to believe are produced by
child labor or forced labor in violation
of international standards (‘‘List’’). The
Guidelines establish the process for the
public submission of information and
the evaluation and reporting process to
be used by the U.S. Department of
Labor’s (‘‘DOL or Department’’) Office of
Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human
Trafficking (‘‘Office’’) in ILAB in
maintaining and updating the List. DOL
is required to develop and make
available to the public the List pursuant
to the Trafficking Victims Protection
Reauthorization Act of 2005.
DATES: This notice is effective on May
15, 2020.
SUMMARY:
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29487
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Director, Office of Child Labor, Forced
Labor, and Human Trafficking, Bureau
of International Labor Affairs, U.S.
Department of Labor at (202) 693–4843
(this is not a toll-free number).
Individuals with hearing or speech
impairments may access the telephone
number above via TTY by calling the
Federal Information Relay Service at 1–
877–889–5627.
Information may be submitted by the
following methods:
• Facsimile (fax): ILAB/Office of
Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human
Trafficking at (202) 693–4830.
• Mail, Express Delivery, Hand
Delivery, and Messenger Service: Austin
Pederson at U.S. Department of Labor,
ILAB/Office of Child Labor, Forced
Labor, and Human Trafficking, 200
Constitution Ave. NW, Room S–5317,
Washington, DC 20210.
• Email: ilab-tvpra@dol.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: DOL is
making no substantive changes to the
Guidelines; rather, the change is
technical in nature. Through this notice,
DOL incorporates an amendment to the
Department’s mandate for the
development and maintenance of the
List set forth in the Frederick Douglass
Trafficking Victims Prevention and
Protection Reauthorization Act of 2018,
Public Law 115–425, title I, § 133(a),
Jan. 8 2019, 132 State. 5481. This 2018
Act directs that the List include, ‘‘to the
extent practicable, goods that are
produced with inputs that are produced
with forced labor or child labor.’’
Section 105(b)(1) of the Trafficking
Victims Protection Reauthorization Act
of 2005 (‘‘TVPRA of 2005’’), Public Law
109–164 (2006), directed the Secretary
of Labor, acting through the Bureau of
International Labor Affairs, to ‘‘carry out
additional activities to monitor and
combat forced labor and child labor in
foreign countries as described in
paragraph (2).’’ Section 105(b)(2)(C) of
the TVPRA, 22 U.S.C. 7112(b)(2)(C),
directed the Department to ‘‘[d]evelop
and make available to the public a list
of goods from countries that the Bureau
of International Labor Affairs has reason
to believe are produced by forced labor
or child labor in violation of
international standards.’’
The Office carries out the
Department’s responsibilities in the
TVPRA of 2005, as amended. Pursuant
to this mandate, DOL published in the
Federal Register a set of procedural
guidelines that ILAB follows in the
development and maintenance of the
List. 72 FR 73374 (Dec. 27, 2007). The
Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims
Prevention and Protection
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Reauthorization Act of 2018, Public Law
115–425, title I, § 133(a), Jan. 8 2019,
132 State. 5481, expanded the scope of
the Department’s mandate for the
development and maintenance of the
List. Pursuant to this law, the List must
also include, ‘‘to the extent practicable,
goods that are produced with inputs
that are produced with forced labor or
child labor.’’ Accordingly, the
Department is amending the Guidelines
to incorporate this new mandate.
Though the Guidelines were initially
adopted after offering the public an
opportunity to submit comments, the
Department is not seeking comment on
this amendment because it merely
incorporates the recent changes to the
statute. Cf Mack Trucks, Inc. v. EPA, 682
F.3d 87, 94 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (notice and
comment rulemaking under the
Administrative Procedure Act is not
necessary when ‘‘the administrative rule
is a routine determination, insignificant
in nature and impact, and
inconsequential to the industry and to
the public.’’’); Gray Panthers Advocacy
Comm. v. Sullivan, 936 F.2d 1284,
1291–92 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (notice and
comment rulemaking is not necessary
when changes to the regulation merely
restate the changes in the enabling
legislation).
The Office will evaluate all
information received according to the
processes outlined in these amended
Guidelines. Goods that meet the criteria
outlined in these amended Guidelines
will be placed on the List, published in
the Federal Register and on the DOL
website.
Sections Revised
This notice makes only one technical
revision to the Guidelines. In order to
reflect the List’s mandate, as revised by
the Frederick Douglass Trafficking
Victims Prevention and Protection
Reauthorization Act of 2018, a revision
to Section A of the Guidelines is
necessary. The Department therefore
replaces the following sentences:
‘‘Whether a good is placed on the List
may depend on which stage of
production used child labor or forced
labor. For example, if child labor or
forced labor was only used in the
extraction, harvesting, assembly, or
production of raw materials or
component articles, and these materials
or articles are subsequently used under
non-violative conditions in the
manufacture or processing of a final
good, only the raw materials/component
articles and the country/ies where they
were extracted, harvested, assembled, or
produced, as appropriate, may be placed
on the List.’’ with ‘‘To the extent
practicable, the List will include goods
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that are produced with inputs that are
produced with forced labor or child
labor.’’ No other revisions have been
made.
Final Procedural Guidelines
A. Sources of Information and Factors
Considered in the Development and
Maintenance of the List
The Office will make use of all
relevant information, whether gathered
through research, public submissions of
information, a public hearing,
interagency consultations, or other
means, in developing the List. In the
interest of maintaining a transparent
process, the Office will not accept
classified information in developing the
List. The Office may request that any
such information brought to its attention
be declassified. If submissions contain
confidential or personal information,
the Office may redact such information
in accordance with applicable laws and
regulations before making the
submission available to the public.
In evaluating information, the Office
will consider and weigh several factors,
including:
1. Nature of information. Whether the
information about child labor or forced
labor gathered from research, public
submissions, hearing testimony, or other
sources is relevant and probative, and
meets the definitions of child labor or
forced labor.
2. Date of information. Whether the
information about child labor or forced
labor in the production of the good(s) is
no more than 7 years old at the time of
receipt. More current information will
generally be given priority, and
information older than 7 years will
generally not be considered.
3. Source of information. Whether the
information, either from primary or
secondary sources, is from a source
whose methodology, prior publications,
degree of familiarity and experience
with international labor standards, and/
or reputation for accuracy and
objectivity, warrants a determination
that it is relevant and probative.
4. Extent of corroboration. The extent
to which the information about the use
of child labor or forced labor in the
production of a good(s) is corroborated
by other sources.
5. Significant incidence of child labor
or forced labor. Whether the information
about the use of child labor or forced
labor in the production of a good(s)
warrants a determination that the
incidence of such practices is significant
in the country in question. Information
that relates only to a single company or
facility; or that indicates an isolated
incident of child labor or forced labor,
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will ordinarily not weigh in favor of a
finding that a good is produced in
violation of international standards.
Information that demonstrates a
significant incidence of child labor or
forced labor in the production of a
particular good(s), although not
necessarily representing a pattern or
practice in the industry as a whole, will
ordinarily weigh in favor of a finding
that a good is produced in violation of
international standards.
In determining which goods and
countries are to be placed on the List,
the Office will, as appropriate, take into
consideration the stages in the chain of
a good’s production. To the extent
practicable, the List will include goods
that are produced with inputs that are
produced with forced labor or child
labor. If child labor or forced labor was
used in both the production or
extraction of raw materials/component
articles and the manufacture or
processing of a final good, then both the
raw materials/component articles and
the final good, and the country/ies in
which such labor was used, may be
placed on the List. This is to ensure a
direct correspondence between the
goods and countries which appear on
the List, and the use of child labor or
forced labor.
Information on government, industry,
or third-party actions and initiatives to
combat child labor or forced labor will
be taken into consideration, although
they are not necessarily sufficient in and
of themselves to prevent a good and
country from being listed. In evaluating
such information, the Office will
consider particularly relevant and
probative any evidence of government,
industry, and third-party actions and
initiatives that are effective in
significantly reducing if not eliminating
child labor and forced labor.
Goods and countries (‘‘entries’’) that
meet the criteria outlined in these
procedural Guidelines will be placed on
an initial List, to be published in the
Federal Register and on the DOL
website. This initial List will continue
to be updated as additional information
becomes available. Before publication of
the initial List or subsequent versions of
the List, the Office will inform the
relevant foreign governments of their
presence on the List and request their
responses. The Office will review these
responses and make a determination as
to their relevance. The List, along with
a listing of the sources used to identify
the goods and countries on it, will be
published in the Federal Register and
on the DOL website. The List will
represent DOL’s conclusions based on
all relevant information available at the
time of publication.
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For each entry, the List will indicate
whether the good is made using child
labor, forced labor, or both. As the List
continues to be maintained and
updated, the List will also indicate the
date when each entry was included. The
List will not include any company or
individual names. DOL’s postings on its
website of source material used in
identifying goods and countries on the
List will be redacted to remove
company or individual names, and
other confidential material, pursuant to
applicable laws and regulations.
B. Procedures for the Maintenance of
the List
1. Following publication of the initial
List, the Office will periodically review
and update the List, as appropriate. The
Office conducts ongoing research and
monitoring of child labor and forced
labor, and if relevant information is
obtained through such research, the
Office may add an entry to, or remove
an entry from the List using the process
described in Section A of the
Guidelines. The Office may also update
the List on the basis of public
information submissions, as detailed
below.
2. Any party may at any time file an
information submission with the Office
regarding the addition or removal of an
entry from the List. Submitters should
take note of the criteria and instructions
in the ‘‘Information Requested on Child
Labor and Forced Labor’’ section of this
notice, as well as the criteria listed in
Section A of the Guidelines.
3. The Office will review any
submission of information to determine
whether it provides relevant and
probative information.
4. The Office may consider a
submission less reliable if it determines
that: The submission does not clearly
indicate the source(s) of the information
presented; the submission does not
identify the party filing the submission
or is not signed and dated; the
submission does not provide relevant or
probative information; or, the
information is not within the scope of
the TVPRA and/or does not address
child labor or forced labor as defined
herein. All submissions received will be
made available to the public on the DOL
website, consistent with applicable laws
or regulations.
5. In evaluating a submission, the
Office will conduct further examination
of available information relating to the
good and country, as necessary, to assist
the Office in making a determination
concerning the addition or removal of
the good from the List. The Office will
undertake consultations with relevant
U.S. government agencies and foreign
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governments, and may hold a public
hearing for the purpose of receiving
relevant information from interested
persons.
6. In order for an entry to be removed
from the List, any person filing
information regarding the entry must
provide information that demonstrates
that there is no significant incidence of
child labor or forced labor in the
production of the particular good in the
country in question. In evaluating
information on government, industry, or
third-party actions and initiatives to
combat child labor or forced labor, the
Office will consider particularly
relevant and probative any available
evidence of government, industry, and
third-party actions that are effective in
significantly reducing if not eliminating
child labor and forced labor.
7. Where the Office has made a
determination concerning the addition,
maintenance, or removal of the entry
from the List, and where otherwise
appropriate, the Office will publish an
updated List in the Federal Register and
on the DOL website.
C. Key Terms Used in the Guidelines
‘‘Child Labor’’—‘‘Child labor’’ under
international standards means all work
performed by a person below the age of
15. It also includes all work performed
by a person below the age of 18 in the
following practices: (A) All forms of
slavery or practices similar to slavery,
such as the sale or trafficking of
children, debt bondage and serfdom, or
forced or compulsory labor, including
forced or compulsory recruitment of
children for use in armed conflict; (B)
the use, procuring, or offering of a child
for prostitution, for the production of
pornography or for pornographic
purposes; (C) the use, procuring, or
offering of a child for illicit activities in
particular for the production and
trafficking of drugs; and (D) work
which, by its nature or the
circumstances in which it is carried out,
is likely to harm the health, safety, or
morals of children. The work referred to
in subparagraph (D) is determined by
the laws, regulations, or competent
authority of the country involved, after
consultation with the organizations of
employers and workers concerned, and
taking into consideration relevant
international standards. This definition
will not apply to work specifically
authorized by national laws, including
work done by children in schools for
general, vocational or technical
education or in other training
institutions, where such work is carried
out in accordance with international
standards under conditions prescribed
by the competent authority, and does
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not prejudice children’s attendance in
school or their capacity to benefit from
the instruction received.
‘‘Countries’’—‘‘Countries’’ means any
foreign country or territory, including
any overseas dependent territory or
possession of a foreign country, or the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
‘‘Forced Labor’’—‘‘Forced labor’’
under international standards means all
work or service which is exacted from
any person under the menace of any
penalty for its nonperformance and for
which the worker does not offer himself
voluntarily, and includes indentured
labor. ‘‘Forced labor’’ includes work
provided or obtained by force, fraud, or
coercion, including: (1) By threats of
serious harm to, or physical restraint
against any person; (2) by means of any
scheme, plan, or pattern intended to
cause the person to believe that, if the
person did not perform such labor or
services, that person or another person
would suffer serious harm or physical
restraint; or (3) by means of the abuse
or threatened abuse of law or the legal
process. For purposes of this definition,
forced labor does not include work
specifically authorized by national laws
where such work is carried out in
accordance with conditions prescribed
by the competent authority, including:
any work or service required by
compulsory military service laws for
work of a purely military character;
work or service which forms part of the
normal civic obligations of the citizens
of a fully self-governing country; work
or service exacted from any person as a
consequence of a conviction in a court
of law, provided that the said work or
service is carried out under the
supervision and control of a public
authority and that the said person is not
hired to or placed at the disposal of
private individuals, companies or
associations; work or service required in
cases of emergency, such as in the event
of war or of a calamity or threatened
calamity, fire, flood, famine, earthquake,
violent epidemic or epizootic diseases,
invasion by animal, insect or vegetable
pests, and in general any circumstance
that would endanger the existence or
the well-being of the whole or part of
the population; and minor communal
services of a kind which, being
performed by the members of the
community in the direct interest of the
said community, can therefore be
considered as normal civic obligations
incumbent upon the members of the
community, provided that the members
of the community or their direct
representatives have the right to be
consulted in regard to the need for such
services.
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‘‘Goods’’— ‘‘Goods’’ means goods,
wares, articles, materials, items,
supplies, and merchandise.
‘‘Indentured Labor’’—‘‘Indentured
labor’’ means all labor undertaken
pursuant to a contract entered into by an
employee the enforcement of which can
be accompanied by process or penalties.
‘‘International Standards’’—
‘‘International standards’’ means
generally accepted international
standards relating to forced labor and
child labor, such as international
conventions and treaties. These
Guidelines employ definitions of ‘‘child
labor’’ and ‘‘forced labor’’ derived from
international standards.
‘‘Produced’’—‘‘Produced’’ means
mined, extracted, harvested, farmed,
produced, created, and manufactured.
Authority: 22 U.S.C. 7112(b)(2)(C)
Signed at Washington, DC, this 6th day of
May 2020.
Martha Newton,
Deputy Undersecretary for International
Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2020–10341 Filed 5–14–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–28–P
NATIONAL FOUNDATION ON THE
ARTS AND THE HUMANITIES
Institute of Museum and Library
Services
Submission for OMB Review,
Comment Request, Proposed
Collection: ‘‘Museums Empowered:
Professional Development
Opportunities for Museum Staff’’
Institute of Museum and
Library Services, National Foundation
on the Arts and the Humanities.
ACTION: Submission for OMB review,
comment request.
AGENCY:
The Institute of Museum and
Library Services (IMLS), as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
and respondent burden, conducts a preclearance consultation program to
provide the general public and federal
agencies with an opportunity to
comment on proposed and/or
continuing collections of information in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act. This program helps to
ensure that requested data can be
provided in the desired format,
reporting burden (time and financial
resources) is minimized, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
the impact of collection requirements on
respondents can be properly assessed. A
copy of the proposed information
collection request can be obtained by
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SUMMARY:
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contacting the individual listed below
in the ADDRESSES section of this notice.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted to the office listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
below on or before June 13, 2020.
OMB is particularly interested in
comments that help the agency to:
• Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology
(e.g., permitting electronic submission
of responses).
ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attn.: OMB Desk Officer for
Education, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, Washington, DC
20503, (202) 395–7316.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Isaksen, Senior Museum Program
Officer, Institute of Museum and Library
Services, 955 L’Enfant Plaza North SW,
Suite 4000, Washington, DC 20024. Mr.
Isaksen can be reached by telephone:
202–653–4662; email: misaksen@
imls.gov or by or by teletype (TTY/TDD)
for persons with hearing difficulty at
202–653–4614.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Institute of Museum and Library
Services is the primary source of federal
support for the nation’s libraries and
museums. We advance, support, and
empower America’s museums, libraries,
and related organizations through grant
making, research, and policy
development. Our vision is a nation
where museums and libraries work
together to work together to transform
the lives of individuals and
communities. To learn more, visit
www.imls.gov.
Current Actions: To administer a
special initiative in the Museums for
America (MFA) grant program titled
Museums Empowered: Professional
Development Opportunities for Museum
Staff.
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Museums Empowered: Professional
Development Opportunities for Museum
Staff is a special initiative of the
Museums for America grant program
with the goal of strengthening the ability
of an individual museum to serve its
public through professional
development activities that cross-cut
various departments to generate
systemic change within the museum.
Museums need to be dynamic to
respond to fast-evolving technological
advances and changing demographics.
Museums also need to generate and
share results that document the
effectiveness of their work in addressing
community problems. In addition, they
need to develop sustainable
organizational structures and flexible
strategies for long-term stability.
Professional development is critical for
museums to deliver on these areas of
need.
IMLS encourages applicants to invest
in the professional development of
museum staff, leadership, and
volunteers to enhance their skills and
ensure the highest standards in all
aspects of museum operations. Potential
projects should involve multiple levels
of staff and generate organizational
change.
Your project should align with one of
the following four categories: (1) Digital
Technology, (2) Diversity and Inclusion,
(3) Evaluation, and (4) Organizational
Management.
This action is to seek renewal
clearance of the ‘‘Museums Empowered:
Professional Development
Opportunities for Museum Staff.’’ The
60-day was published in the Federal
Register on November 14, 2019 (FR vol.
84, No. 220, pgs. 61942–61943). There
were no public comments.
Agency: Institute of Museum and
Library Services.
Title: ‘‘Museums Empowered:
Professional Development
Opportunities for Museum Staff.’’
OMB Number: 3137–0107.
Agency Number: 3137.
Frequency: Annually.
Affected Public: Museums that meet
the IMLS Museums for America
institutional eligibility criteria.
Number of Respondents: 100.
Estimated Time per Respondent: 40
hours.
Total Burden Hours: 4,000.
Total Annualized Cost to
Respondents: $112,480.00.
Total Annualized Capital/Startup
Costs: 0.
Total Annualized Cost to Federal
Government: $14,471.88.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 95 (Friday, May 15, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29487-29490]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-10341]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Notice of Amendment to Procedural Guidelines for the Development
and Maintenance of the List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced
Labor
AGENCY: Bureau of International Labor Affairs, United States Department
of Labor.
ACTION: Notice of amendment to procedural guidelines for the
development and maintenance of a list of goods produced by child labor
or forced labor in violation of international standards.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of International Labor
Affairs (``ILAB'') amends a provision of its procedural guidelines
(``Guidelines'') for the development and maintenance of a list of goods
from countries that ILAB has reason to believe are produced by child
labor or forced labor in violation of international standards
(``List''). The Guidelines establish the process for the public
submission of information and the evaluation and reporting process to
be used by the U.S. Department of Labor's (``DOL or Department'')
Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking (``Office'')
in ILAB in maintaining and updating the List. DOL is required to
develop and make available to the public the List pursuant to the
Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005.
DATES: This notice is effective on May 15, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Director, Office of Child Labor,
Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking, Bureau of International Labor
Affairs, U.S. Department of Labor at (202) 693-4843 (this is not a
toll-free number). Individuals with hearing or speech impairments may
access the telephone number above via TTY by calling the Federal
Information Relay Service at 1-877-889-5627.
Information may be submitted by the following methods:
Facsimile (fax): ILAB/Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor,
and Human Trafficking at (202) 693-4830.
Mail, Express Delivery, Hand Delivery, and Messenger
Service: Austin Pederson at U.S. Department of Labor, ILAB/Office of
Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking, 200 Constitution Ave.
NW, Room S-5317, Washington, DC 20210.
Email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: DOL is making no substantive changes to the
Guidelines; rather, the change is technical in nature. Through this
notice, DOL incorporates an amendment to the Department's mandate for
the development and maintenance of the List set forth in the Frederick
Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization
Act of 2018, Public Law 115-425, title I, Sec. 133(a), Jan. 8 2019,
132 State. 5481. This 2018 Act directs that the List include, ``to the
extent practicable, goods that are produced with inputs that are
produced with forced labor or child labor.''
Section 105(b)(1) of the Trafficking Victims Protection
Reauthorization Act of 2005 (``TVPRA of 2005''), Public Law 109-164
(2006), directed the Secretary of Labor, acting through the Bureau of
International Labor Affairs, to ``carry out additional activities to
monitor and combat forced labor and child labor in foreign countries as
described in paragraph (2).'' Section 105(b)(2)(C) of the TVPRA, 22
U.S.C. 7112(b)(2)(C), directed the Department to ``[d]evelop and make
available to the public a list of goods from countries that the Bureau
of International Labor Affairs has reason to believe are produced by
forced labor or child labor in violation of international standards.''
The Office carries out the Department's responsibilities in the
TVPRA of 2005, as amended. Pursuant to this mandate, DOL published in
the Federal Register a set of procedural guidelines that ILAB follows
in the development and maintenance of the List. 72 FR 73374 (Dec. 27,
2007). The Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and
Protection
[[Page 29488]]
Reauthorization Act of 2018, Public Law 115-425, title I, Sec. 133(a),
Jan. 8 2019, 132 State. 5481, expanded the scope of the Department's
mandate for the development and maintenance of the List. Pursuant to
this law, the List must also include, ``to the extent practicable,
goods that are produced with inputs that are produced with forced labor
or child labor.'' Accordingly, the Department is amending the
Guidelines to incorporate this new mandate. Though the Guidelines were
initially adopted after offering the public an opportunity to submit
comments, the Department is not seeking comment on this amendment
because it merely incorporates the recent changes to the statute. Cf
Mack Trucks, Inc. v. EPA, 682 F.3d 87, 94 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (notice and
comment rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure Act is not
necessary when ``the administrative rule is a routine determination,
insignificant in nature and impact, and inconsequential to the industry
and to the public.'''); Gray Panthers Advocacy Comm. v. Sullivan, 936
F.2d 1284, 1291-92 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (notice and comment rulemaking is
not necessary when changes to the regulation merely restate the changes
in the enabling legislation).
The Office will evaluate all information received according to the
processes outlined in these amended Guidelines. Goods that meet the
criteria outlined in these amended Guidelines will be placed on the
List, published in the Federal Register and on the DOL website.
Sections Revised
This notice makes only one technical revision to the Guidelines. In
order to reflect the List's mandate, as revised by the Frederick
Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization
Act of 2018, a revision to Section A of the Guidelines is necessary.
The Department therefore replaces the following sentences: ``Whether a
good is placed on the List may depend on which stage of production used
child labor or forced labor. For example, if child labor or forced
labor was only used in the extraction, harvesting, assembly, or
production of raw materials or component articles, and these materials
or articles are subsequently used under non-violative conditions in the
manufacture or processing of a final good, only the raw materials/
component articles and the country/ies where they were extracted,
harvested, assembled, or produced, as appropriate, may be placed on the
List.'' with ``To the extent practicable, the List will include goods
that are produced with inputs that are produced with forced labor or
child labor.'' No other revisions have been made.
Final Procedural Guidelines
A. Sources of Information and Factors Considered in the Development and
Maintenance of the List
The Office will make use of all relevant information, whether
gathered through research, public submissions of information, a public
hearing, interagency consultations, or other means, in developing the
List. In the interest of maintaining a transparent process, the Office
will not accept classified information in developing the List. The
Office may request that any such information brought to its attention
be declassified. If submissions contain confidential or personal
information, the Office may redact such information in accordance with
applicable laws and regulations before making the submission available
to the public.
In evaluating information, the Office will consider and weigh
several factors, including:
1. Nature of information. Whether the information about child labor
or forced labor gathered from research, public submissions, hearing
testimony, or other sources is relevant and probative, and meets the
definitions of child labor or forced labor.
2. Date of information. Whether the information about child labor
or forced labor in the production of the good(s) is no more than 7
years old at the time of receipt. More current information will
generally be given priority, and information older than 7 years will
generally not be considered.
3. Source of information. Whether the information, either from
primary or secondary sources, is from a source whose methodology, prior
publications, degree of familiarity and experience with international
labor standards, and/or reputation for accuracy and objectivity,
warrants a determination that it is relevant and probative.
4. Extent of corroboration. The extent to which the information
about the use of child labor or forced labor in the production of a
good(s) is corroborated by other sources.
5. Significant incidence of child labor or forced labor. Whether
the information about the use of child labor or forced labor in the
production of a good(s) warrants a determination that the incidence of
such practices is significant in the country in question. Information
that relates only to a single company or facility; or that indicates an
isolated incident of child labor or forced labor, will ordinarily not
weigh in favor of a finding that a good is produced in violation of
international standards. Information that demonstrates a significant
incidence of child labor or forced labor in the production of a
particular good(s), although not necessarily representing a pattern or
practice in the industry as a whole, will ordinarily weigh in favor of
a finding that a good is produced in violation of international
standards.
In determining which goods and countries are to be placed on the
List, the Office will, as appropriate, take into consideration the
stages in the chain of a good's production. To the extent practicable,
the List will include goods that are produced with inputs that are
produced with forced labor or child labor. If child labor or forced
labor was used in both the production or extraction of raw materials/
component articles and the manufacture or processing of a final good,
then both the raw materials/component articles and the final good, and
the country/ies in which such labor was used, may be placed on the
List. This is to ensure a direct correspondence between the goods and
countries which appear on the List, and the use of child labor or
forced labor.
Information on government, industry, or third-party actions and
initiatives to combat child labor or forced labor will be taken into
consideration, although they are not necessarily sufficient in and of
themselves to prevent a good and country from being listed. In
evaluating such information, the Office will consider particularly
relevant and probative any evidence of government, industry, and third-
party actions and initiatives that are effective in significantly
reducing if not eliminating child labor and forced labor.
Goods and countries (``entries'') that meet the criteria outlined
in these procedural Guidelines will be placed on an initial List, to be
published in the Federal Register and on the DOL website. This initial
List will continue to be updated as additional information becomes
available. Before publication of the initial List or subsequent
versions of the List, the Office will inform the relevant foreign
governments of their presence on the List and request their responses.
The Office will review these responses and make a determination as to
their relevance. The List, along with a listing of the sources used to
identify the goods and countries on it, will be published in the
Federal Register and on the DOL website. The List will represent DOL's
conclusions based on all relevant information available at the time of
publication.
[[Page 29489]]
For each entry, the List will indicate whether the good is made
using child labor, forced labor, or both. As the List continues to be
maintained and updated, the List will also indicate the date when each
entry was included. The List will not include any company or individual
names. DOL's postings on its website of source material used in
identifying goods and countries on the List will be redacted to remove
company or individual names, and other confidential material, pursuant
to applicable laws and regulations.
B. Procedures for the Maintenance of the List
1. Following publication of the initial List, the Office will
periodically review and update the List, as appropriate. The Office
conducts ongoing research and monitoring of child labor and forced
labor, and if relevant information is obtained through such research,
the Office may add an entry to, or remove an entry from the List using
the process described in Section A of the Guidelines. The Office may
also update the List on the basis of public information submissions, as
detailed below.
2. Any party may at any time file an information submission with
the Office regarding the addition or removal of an entry from the List.
Submitters should take note of the criteria and instructions in the
``Information Requested on Child Labor and Forced Labor'' section of
this notice, as well as the criteria listed in Section A of the
Guidelines.
3. The Office will review any submission of information to
determine whether it provides relevant and probative information.
4. The Office may consider a submission less reliable if it
determines that: The submission does not clearly indicate the source(s)
of the information presented; the submission does not identify the
party filing the submission or is not signed and dated; the submission
does not provide relevant or probative information; or, the information
is not within the scope of the TVPRA and/or does not address child
labor or forced labor as defined herein. All submissions received will
be made available to the public on the DOL website, consistent with
applicable laws or regulations.
5. In evaluating a submission, the Office will conduct further
examination of available information relating to the good and country,
as necessary, to assist the Office in making a determination concerning
the addition or removal of the good from the List. The Office will
undertake consultations with relevant U.S. government agencies and
foreign governments, and may hold a public hearing for the purpose of
receiving relevant information from interested persons.
6. In order for an entry to be removed from the List, any person
filing information regarding the entry must provide information that
demonstrates that there is no significant incidence of child labor or
forced labor in the production of the particular good in the country in
question. In evaluating information on government, industry, or third-
party actions and initiatives to combat child labor or forced labor,
the Office will consider particularly relevant and probative any
available evidence of government, industry, and third-party actions
that are effective in significantly reducing if not eliminating child
labor and forced labor.
7. Where the Office has made a determination concerning the
addition, maintenance, or removal of the entry from the List, and where
otherwise appropriate, the Office will publish an updated List in the
Federal Register and on the DOL website.
C. Key Terms Used in the Guidelines
``Child Labor''--``Child labor'' under international standards
means all work performed by a person below the age of 15. It also
includes all work performed by a person below the age of 18 in the
following practices: (A) All forms of slavery or practices similar to
slavery, such as the sale or trafficking of children, debt bondage and
serfdom, or forced or compulsory labor, including forced or compulsory
recruitment of children for use in armed conflict; (B) the use,
procuring, or offering of a child for prostitution, for the production
of pornography or for pornographic purposes; (C) the use, procuring, or
offering of a child for illicit activities in particular for the
production and trafficking of drugs; and (D) work which, by its nature
or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the
health, safety, or morals of children. The work referred to in
subparagraph (D) is determined by the laws, regulations, or competent
authority of the country involved, after consultation with the
organizations of employers and workers concerned, and taking into
consideration relevant international standards. This definition will
not apply to work specifically authorized by national laws, including
work done by children in schools for general, vocational or technical
education or in other training institutions, where such work is carried
out in accordance with international standards under conditions
prescribed by the competent authority, and does not prejudice
children's attendance in school or their capacity to benefit from the
instruction received.
``Countries''--``Countries'' means any foreign country or
territory, including any overseas dependent territory or possession of
a foreign country, or the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
``Forced Labor''--``Forced labor'' under international standards
means all work or service which is exacted from any person under the
menace of any penalty for its nonperformance and for which the worker
does not offer himself voluntarily, and includes indentured labor.
``Forced labor'' includes work provided or obtained by force, fraud, or
coercion, including: (1) By threats of serious harm to, or physical
restraint against any person; (2) by means of any scheme, plan, or
pattern intended to cause the person to believe that, if the person did
not perform such labor or services, that person or another person would
suffer serious harm or physical restraint; or (3) by means of the abuse
or threatened abuse of law or the legal process. For purposes of this
definition, forced labor does not include work specifically authorized
by national laws where such work is carried out in accordance with
conditions prescribed by the competent authority, including: any work
or service required by compulsory military service laws for work of a
purely military character; work or service which forms part of the
normal civic obligations of the citizens of a fully self-governing
country; work or service exacted from any person as a consequence of a
conviction in a court of law, provided that the said work or service is
carried out under the supervision and control of a public authority and
that the said person is not hired to or placed at the disposal of
private individuals, companies or associations; work or service
required in cases of emergency, such as in the event of war or of a
calamity or threatened calamity, fire, flood, famine, earthquake,
violent epidemic or epizootic diseases, invasion by animal, insect or
vegetable pests, and in general any circumstance that would endanger
the existence or the well-being of the whole or part of the population;
and minor communal services of a kind which, being performed by the
members of the community in the direct interest of the said community,
can therefore be considered as normal civic obligations incumbent upon
the members of the community, provided that the members of the
community or their direct representatives have the right to be
consulted in regard to the need for such services.
[[Page 29490]]
``Goods''-- ``Goods'' means goods, wares, articles, materials,
items, supplies, and merchandise.
``Indentured Labor''--``Indentured labor'' means all labor
undertaken pursuant to a contract entered into by an employee the
enforcement of which can be accompanied by process or penalties.
``International Standards''--``International standards'' means
generally accepted international standards relating to forced labor and
child labor, such as international conventions and treaties. These
Guidelines employ definitions of ``child labor'' and ``forced labor''
derived from international standards.
``Produced''--``Produced'' means mined, extracted, harvested,
farmed, produced, created, and manufactured.
Authority: 22 U.S.C. 7112(b)(2)(C)
Signed at Washington, DC, this 6th day of May 2020.
Martha Newton,
Deputy Undersecretary for International Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2020-10341 Filed 5-14-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-28-P