Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, 43624-43626 [2021-17020]
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43624
Notices
Federal Register
Vol. 86, No. 151
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains documents other than rules or
proposed rules that are applicable to the
public. Notices of hearings and investigations,
committee meetings, agency decisions and
rulings, delegations of authority, filing of
petitions and applications and agency
statements of organization and functions are
examples of documents appearing in this
section.
at the time of renewal (expiration date
is 12/31/2021).
Levi S. Harrell,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2021–16988 Filed 8–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Submission for OMB Review; Notice of
Request for Emergency Approval
May 13, 2021.
In compliance with the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), the Department of Agriculture
(USDA) has submitted a request to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for a six-month emergency
approval of the following information
collection: ICR 0596–NEW, Grant or
Agreement Award Face Sheet. The
requested approval would enable the
collection of this information and the
implementation of this program while
USDA completes the normal PRA
approval process for ICR 0596–0217.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Forest Service
Title: Grant or Agreement Award Face
Sheet.
OMB Control Number: 0596–NEW.
Summary of Collection: The 2018
Farm Bill expanded the ability for tribes
to enter into agreements with the Forest
Service to manage programs
implementing the Tribal Forest
Protection Act (‘‘638 agreements,’’
pursuant to the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act (Pub. L. 93–638). The
proposed information collection
approves the use of a new form needed
to execute these agreements. In
conjunction with the Intertribal Timber
Council, the Forest Service assessed the
status of development of demonstration
project agreements under this important
new authority and anticipates the need
to evaluate and execute numerous
projects in the near future. It is critical
that the agency be able to support these
important economic development
projects in a timely fashion.
If approved for emergency use, this
form will be combined with 0596–0217
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17:05 Aug 09, 2021
Jkt 253001
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
The Department of Agriculture has
submitted the following information
collection requirement(s) to OMB for
review and clearance under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13. Comments are
requested regarding; whether the
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of burden including
the validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; ways to enhance the
quality, utility and clarity of the
information to be collected; and ways to
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.
Comments regarding this information
collection received by September 9,
2021 will be considered. Written
comments and recommendations for the
proposed information collection should
be submitted within 30 days of the
publication of this notice on the
following website www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain. Find this
particular information collection by
selecting ‘‘Currently under 30-day
Review—Open for Public Comments’’ or
by using the search function.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a currently valid OMB control
number and the agency informs
potential persons who are to respond to
the collection of information that such
persons are not required to respond to
the collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
Title: Communicable Diseases in
Horses.
OMB Control Number: 0579–0127.
Summary of Collection: The Animal
Health Protection Act (AHPA) of 2002 is
the primary Federal law governing the
protection of animal health. The law
gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad
authority to detect, control, or eradicate
pests or diseases of livestock or poultry.
The Secretary may also prohibit or
restrict import or export of any animal
or related material if necessary, to
prevent the spread of any livestock or
poultry pest or disease. The AHPA is
contained in Title X, Subtitle E,
Sections 10401–18 of Public Law 107–
171, May 13, 2002, the Farm Security
and Rural Investment Act of 2002.
Veterinary Services (VS), a program
within USDA’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS), is
responsible for administering
regulations intended to ensure that
animals affected with EIA are identified
through proficient and reliable testing
and that appropriate reporting occurs.
Further, regulations ensure animals
testing positive are moved interstate in
a way that does not endanger the health
of the U.S. equine population. APHIS
regulations at title 9, Code of Federal
Regulations (9 CFR) 75.4 deal
specifically with regulating the
interstate movement of horses affected
with equine infectious anemia (EIA). VS
provides guidance on approval of
laboratories, diagnostic facilities, and
research facilities. Ensuring the safe
movement of these horses requires the
use of information collection activities,
including an EIA laboratory test form, a
certificate or permit for the interstate
movement of an EIA reactor, a
supplemental investigation form if a
horse tests positive for EIA, agreements,
request for hearing, and written
notification of withdrawal of approval.
Need and Use of the Information: The
information collected from forms,
APHIS VS 10–11, Equine Infectious
Anemia Laboratory Test; VS 10–12,
Equine Infectious Anemia Supplemental
Investigation; and VS 1–27, Permit for
the Movement of Restricted Animals,
VS–10–15, Agreement to Conduct
Equine Infectious Anemia Testing, VS–
10–16, Laboratory Inspection Checklist
for Equine Infectious Anemia Testing,
will be used to prevent the spread of
E:\FR\FM\10AUN1.SGM
10AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 10, 2021 / Notices
equine infectious anemia. Regulations
also require the use an Agreement for
Approved Livestock Facilities, Request
for Hearing, Written Notification of
Approval or Withdrawal, Review of
Requirements and Interview,
Memorandum of Recommendation and
Justification, Monthly Summary
Reporting, Denial or Withdrawal of
Laboratory Approval. Without the
information it would be impossible for
APHIS to effectively regulate the
interstate movement of horses infected
with EIA.
Description of Respondents: Farms;
Business or other for-profit; State, Local
and Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 235,018.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting:
On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 92,610.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
Title: Importation of Gypsy Moth Host
Materials from Canada.
OMB Control Number: 0579–0142.
Summary of Collection: The United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) is responsible for preventing
plant diseases or insect pests from
entering the United States, preventing
the spread of pests not widely
distributed in the United States, and
eradicating those imported pests when
eradication is feasible. Under the Plant
Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701– et seq.),
the Secretary of Agriculture is
authorized to regulate the importation of
plants, plant products, and other articles
to prevent the introduction of injurious
plant pests. The regulations
implementing this Act are contained in
Title 7 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR), Part 319 (Foreign
Quarantine Notices). The Plant
Protection and Quarantine, a program
within USDA’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) is
responsible for ensuring that these
regulations are enforced.
Need and Use of the Information:
APHIS will collect information from
individuals both within and outside the
United States using phytosanitary
certificates, certificates of origin, a
written statement, a compliance
agreement and an emergency Action
notice. Information collected will
ensure that importing foreign logs, trees,
shrubs, and other articles do not harbor
plant or insect pests such as the gypsy
moth. Failing to collect this information
would cripple APHIS’ ability to ensure
that trees (including Christmas trees),
shrubs, logs, and a variety of other items
imported from Canada do not harbor
gypsy moths.
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Jkt 253001
Description of Respondents: Business
or other for-profit; Individuals or
households; Federal Government.
Number of Respondents: 3,201.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting:
On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 4,358.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
Title: Control of Chronic Wasting
Disease.
OMB Control Number: 0579–0189.
Summary of Collection: The Animal
Health Protection Act (AHPA) of 2002 is
the primary Federal law governing the
protection of animal health. The law
gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad
authority to detect, control, and
eradicate pests or diseases of livestock
or poultry, and to pay claims arising
from destruction of animals. Disease
prevention is the most effective method
for maintaining a healthy animal
population and enhancing the Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) ability to complete in exporting
animals and animal products. Chronic
wasting disease (CWD) is a
transmissible spongiform
encephalopathy (TSE) of elk, deer and
moose typified by chronic weight loss
leading to death. The presence of CWD
disease in cervids causes significant
economic and market losses to U.S.
producers. To accelerate the control and
limit the spread of this disease in the
United States, APHIS created a
cooperative, voluntary Federal-Stateprivate sector CWD Herd Certification
Program. The program is designed to
identify farmed or captive herds
infected with CWD and provided for the
management of these herds in a way
that reduces the risk of spreading CWD.
Need and Use of the Information:
APHIS will collect information from
owners of elk, deer, and moose herds
who choose to participate in the CWD
Herd Certification program. They would
need to follow program requirements for
animal identification, testing, herd
management, and movement of animals
into and from herds. APHIS also
established requirements for the
interstate movement of cervids to
prevent movement of elk, deer, and
moose that pose a risk of spreading
CWD. Carrying out this program will
entail the use of several information
collection activities and three APHIS
forms. Failing to collect it would make
it impossible for APHIS to maintain its
CWD Herd Certification Program,
thereby hindering APHIS’ ability to
prevent and control the spread of CWD
in the United States.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
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43625
Description of Respondents: Business
or other for-profit and not-for-profit;
State, Local or Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 9,053.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting
and Recordkeeping: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 322,546.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service
Title: Infectious Salmon Anemia
(ISA)—Payment of Indemnity.
OMB Control Number: 0579–0192.
Summary of Collection: The Animal
Health Protection Act (AHPA) of 2002 is
the primary Federal law governing the
protection of animal health. The law
gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad
authority to detect, control, or eradicate
pest or diseases of livestock or poultry.
Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISA) is a
clinical disease resulting from infection
with the ISA virus and poses a
substantial threat to the economic
viability and sustainability of salmon
aquaculture in the United States and
abroad. This indemnity program entails
the use of several information collection
activities, including completing a
program enrollment form as well as an
appraisal and indemnity claim form;
developing biosecurity protocols;
conducting biosecurity audits;
developing site-specific ISA action
plans; compiling fish inventories and
mortality reports (and recordkeeping);
and disease surveillance to control ISA.
Program participants, who may include
certain aquaculture industry business
owners, managers, site employees, and
accredited veterinarians, and designated
laboratories, must also assist APHIS
with certain disease surveillance
activities. Without the information it
would be impossible for APHIS to
contain and prevent ISA outbreaks in
the United States.
Need and Use of the Information:
APHIS uses a form to enroll aquaculture
industry businesses, three others to
reimburse them for disease losses, and
other information activities to document
or conduct biosecurity, protocols, and
audits; develop site-specific ISA action
plans; compile fish inventories and
mortality reports (and keep records of
the inventories and reports); and
conduct disease surveillance.
Description of Respondents: Business
or other for-profit.
Number of Respondents: 13.
Frequency of Responses:
Recordkeeping; Reporting: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 549.
E:\FR\FM\10AUN1.SGM
10AUN1
43626
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 151 / Tuesday, August 10, 2021 / Notices
Dated: August 5, 2021.
Ruth Brown,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2021–17020 Filed 8–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
August 5, 2021.
The Department of Agriculture will
submit the following information
collection requirement(s) to OMB for
review and clearance under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 on or after the date
of publication of this notice. Comments
are requested regarding: (1) Whether the
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of burden including
the validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
ways to 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.
Comments regarding these
information collections are best assured
of having their full effect if received by
September 9, 2021. Written comments
and recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be
submitted within 30 days of the
publication of this notice on the
following website www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain. Find this
particular information collection by
selecting ‘‘Currently under 30-day
Review—Open for Public Comments’’ or
by using the search function.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a currently valid OMB control
number and the agency informs
potential persons who are to respond to
the collection of information that such
persons are not required to respond to
the collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
National Agricultural Statistics Service
(NASS)
Title: National Agroforestry Survey.
OMB Control Number: 0535–NEW.
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Jkt 253001
Summary of Collection: The primary
objective of the National Agricultural
Statistics Service (NASS) is to collect,
prepare and issue State and national
estimates of crop and livestock
production, prices, and disposition; as
well as economic statistics,
environmental statistics related to
agriculture and also to conduct the
Census of Agriculture.
The survey will collect data whether
the operator uses any of five agroforestry
practices typically used for
conservation: Windbreaks, Silvopasture,
Riparian Forest Buffers, Alley Cropping,
as well as Forest Farming & Multi-story
Cropping.
Windbreaks are linear plantings of
trees and shrubs designed to provide
economic, environmental and
community benefits. The primary
purpose of most windbreaks is to slow
the wind which creates a more
beneficial condition for soils, crops,
livestock, wildlife and people.
Silvopasture is the deliberate integration
of trees and grazing livestock operations
on the same land. These systems are
intensively managed for both forest
products and forage, providing both
short- and long-term income sources.
A riparian forest buffer is an area
adjacent to a stream, lake, or wetland
that contains a combination of trees,
shrubs, and/or other perennial plants
and is managed differently from the
surrounding landscape, primarily to
provide conservation benefits.
Forest farming is the cultivation of
high-value crops under the protection of
a managed tree canopy. In some parts of
the world, this is called multi-story
cropping and when used on a small
scale in the tropics it is sometimes
called home gardening.
Alley cropping is defined as the
planting of rows of trees and/or shrubs
to create alleys within which
agricultural or horticultural crops are
produced. The trees may include
valuable hardwood veneer or lumber
species; fruit, nut or other specialty crop
trees/shrubs; or desirable softwood
species for wood fiber production.
Need and Use of the Information:
NASS would plan and conduct the
survey and deliver access to a dataset or
responses to approved staff from USDAForestry Service, who will publish the
results of the survey. This project is
conducted as a cooperative effort with
the U. S. Department of Agriculture’s
Forestry Service—National Agroforestry
Center. Funding for this survey is being
provided by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Forestry Service—National
Agroforestry Center.
Description of Respondents: Farmers
and Ranchers.
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Number of Respondents: 11,800.
Frequency of Responses: Once.
Total Burden Hours: 9,550.
Levi S. Harrell,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2021–16996 Filed 8–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[C–552–805]
Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags From
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam:
Final Results of Expedited Second
Sunset Review of the Countervailing
Duty Order
Enforcement and Compliance,
International Trade Administration,
Department of Commerce.
SUMMARY: As a result of this sunset
review, the Department of Commerce
(Commerce) finds that revocation of the
countervailing duty (CVD) order on
polyethylene retail carrier bags (PRCBs)
from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
(Vietnam) would be likely to lead to
continuation or recurrence of
countervailable subsidies at the levels
indicated in the ‘‘Final Results of
Review’’ section of this notice.
DATES: Applicable August 10, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Alexander, AD/CVD Operations,
Office VII, Enforcement and
Compliance, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20230; telephone:
(202) 482–4313.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Background
On May 4, 2010, Commerce published
its CVD order on PRCBs from Vietnam
in the Federal Register.1 On March 31,
2021, Commerce published the notice of
initiation of the second sunset review of
the Order, pursuant to section 751(c) of
the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (the
Act).2 Commerce received a notice of
intent to participate from the
Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bag
Committee (the Committee), an ad hoc
association of U.S. producers of PRCBs,
within the deadline specified in 19 CFR
351.218(d)(1)(i).3 The Committee
1 See Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags from the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam: Countervailing Duty
Order, 75 FR 23670 (May 4, 2010) (Order).
2 See Initiation of Five-Year (Sunset) Review, 86
FR 16701 (March 31, 2021).
3 See Committee’s Letter, ‘‘Five-Year (‘Sunset’)
Review the Countervailing Duty Order On
E:\FR\FM\10AUN1.SGM
10AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 151 (Tuesday, August 10, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 43624-43626]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-17020]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request
The Department of Agriculture has submitted the following
information collection requirement(s) to OMB for review and clearance
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. Comments
are requested regarding; whether the collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility; the
accuracy of the agency's estimate of burden including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used; ways to enhance the quality,
utility and clarity of the information to be collected; and ways to
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.
Comments regarding this information collection received by
September 9, 2021 will be considered. Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed information collection should be
submitted within 30 days of the publication of this notice on the
following website www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this
particular information collection by selecting ``Currently under 30-day
Review--Open for Public Comments'' or by using the search function.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor a collection of information
unless the collection of information displays a currently valid OMB
control number and the agency informs potential persons who are to
respond to the collection of information that such persons are not
required to respond to the collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Title: Communicable Diseases in Horses.
OMB Control Number: 0579-0127.
Summary of Collection: The Animal Health Protection Act (AHPA) of
2002 is the primary Federal law governing the protection of animal
health. The law gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad authority to
detect, control, or eradicate pests or diseases of livestock or
poultry. The Secretary may also prohibit or restrict import or export
of any animal or related material if necessary, to prevent the spread
of any livestock or poultry pest or disease. The AHPA is contained in
Title X, Subtitle E, Sections 10401-18 of Public Law 107-171, May 13,
2002, the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002.
Veterinary Services (VS), a program within USDA's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS), is responsible for administering
regulations intended to ensure that animals affected with EIA are
identified through proficient and reliable testing and that appropriate
reporting occurs. Further, regulations ensure animals testing positive
are moved interstate in a way that does not endanger the health of the
U.S. equine population. APHIS regulations at title 9, Code of Federal
Regulations (9 CFR) 75.4 deal specifically with regulating the
interstate movement of horses affected with equine infectious anemia
(EIA). VS provides guidance on approval of laboratories, diagnostic
facilities, and research facilities. Ensuring the safe movement of
these horses requires the use of information collection activities,
including an EIA laboratory test form, a certificate or permit for the
interstate movement of an EIA reactor, a supplemental investigation
form if a horse tests positive for EIA, agreements, request for
hearing, and written notification of withdrawal of approval.
Need and Use of the Information: The information collected from
forms, APHIS VS 10-11, Equine Infectious Anemia Laboratory Test; VS 10-
12, Equine Infectious Anemia Supplemental Investigation; and VS 1-27,
Permit for the Movement of Restricted Animals, VS-10-15, Agreement to
Conduct Equine Infectious Anemia Testing, VS-10-16, Laboratory
Inspection Checklist for Equine Infectious Anemia Testing, will be used
to prevent the spread of
[[Page 43625]]
equine infectious anemia. Regulations also require the use an Agreement
for Approved Livestock Facilities, Request for Hearing, Written
Notification of Approval or Withdrawal, Review of Requirements and
Interview, Memorandum of Recommendation and Justification, Monthly
Summary Reporting, Denial or Withdrawal of Laboratory Approval. Without
the information it would be impossible for APHIS to effectively
regulate the interstate movement of horses infected with EIA.
Description of Respondents: Farms; Business or other for-profit;
State, Local and Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 235,018.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 92,610.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Title: Importation of Gypsy Moth Host Materials from Canada.
OMB Control Number: 0579-0142.
Summary of Collection: The United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) is responsible for preventing plant diseases or insect pests
from entering the United States, preventing the spread of pests not
widely distributed in the United States, and eradicating those imported
pests when eradication is feasible. Under the Plant Protection Act (7
U.S.C. 7701- et seq.), the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to
regulate the importation of plants, plant products, and other articles
to prevent the introduction of injurious plant pests. The regulations
implementing this Act are contained in Title 7 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR), Part 319 (Foreign Quarantine Notices). The Plant
Protection and Quarantine, a program within USDA's Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is responsible for ensuring that
these regulations are enforced.
Need and Use of the Information: APHIS will collect information
from individuals both within and outside the United States using
phytosanitary certificates, certificates of origin, a written
statement, a compliance agreement and an emergency Action notice.
Information collected will ensure that importing foreign logs, trees,
shrubs, and other articles do not harbor plant or insect pests such as
the gypsy moth. Failing to collect this information would cripple
APHIS' ability to ensure that trees (including Christmas trees),
shrubs, logs, and a variety of other items imported from Canada do not
harbor gypsy moths.
Description of Respondents: Business or other for-profit;
Individuals or households; Federal Government.
Number of Respondents: 3,201.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 4,358.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Title: Control of Chronic Wasting Disease.
OMB Control Number: 0579-0189.
Summary of Collection: The Animal Health Protection Act (AHPA) of
2002 is the primary Federal law governing the protection of animal
health. The law gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad authority to
detect, control, and eradicate pests or diseases of livestock or
poultry, and to pay claims arising from destruction of animals. Disease
prevention is the most effective method for maintaining a healthy
animal population and enhancing the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS) ability to complete in exporting animals and animal
products. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible spongiform
encephalopathy (TSE) of elk, deer and moose typified by chronic weight
loss leading to death. The presence of CWD disease in cervids causes
significant economic and market losses to U.S. producers. To accelerate
the control and limit the spread of this disease in the United States,
APHIS created a cooperative, voluntary Federal-State-private sector CWD
Herd Certification Program. The program is designed to identify farmed
or captive herds infected with CWD and provided for the management of
these herds in a way that reduces the risk of spreading CWD.
Need and Use of the Information: APHIS will collect information
from owners of elk, deer, and moose herds who choose to participate in
the CWD Herd Certification program. They would need to follow program
requirements for animal identification, testing, herd management, and
movement of animals into and from herds. APHIS also established
requirements for the interstate movement of cervids to prevent movement
of elk, deer, and moose that pose a risk of spreading CWD. Carrying out
this program will entail the use of several information collection
activities and three APHIS forms. Failing to collect it would make it
impossible for APHIS to maintain its CWD Herd Certification Program,
thereby hindering APHIS' ability to prevent and control the spread of
CWD in the United States.
Description of Respondents: Business or other for-profit and not-
for-profit; State, Local or Tribal Government.
Number of Respondents: 9,053.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting and Recordkeeping: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 322,546.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Title: Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISA)--Payment of Indemnity.
OMB Control Number: 0579-0192.
Summary of Collection: The Animal Health Protection Act (AHPA) of
2002 is the primary Federal law governing the protection of animal
health. The law gives the Secretary of Agriculture broad authority to
detect, control, or eradicate pest or diseases of livestock or poultry.
Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISA) is a clinical disease resulting from
infection with the ISA virus and poses a substantial threat to the
economic viability and sustainability of salmon aquaculture in the
United States and abroad. This indemnity program entails the use of
several information collection activities, including completing a
program enrollment form as well as an appraisal and indemnity claim
form; developing biosecurity protocols; conducting biosecurity audits;
developing site-specific ISA action plans; compiling fish inventories
and mortality reports (and recordkeeping); and disease surveillance to
control ISA. Program participants, who may include certain aquaculture
industry business owners, managers, site employees, and accredited
veterinarians, and designated laboratories, must also assist APHIS with
certain disease surveillance activities. Without the information it
would be impossible for APHIS to contain and prevent ISA outbreaks in
the United States.
Need and Use of the Information: APHIS uses a form to enroll
aquaculture industry businesses, three others to reimburse them for
disease losses, and other information activities to document or conduct
biosecurity, protocols, and audits; develop site-specific ISA action
plans; compile fish inventories and mortality reports (and keep records
of the inventories and reports); and conduct disease surveillance.
Description of Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
Number of Respondents: 13.
Frequency of Responses: Recordkeeping; Reporting: On occasion.
Total Burden Hours: 549.
[[Page 43626]]
Dated: August 5, 2021.
Ruth Brown,
Departmental Information Collection Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2021-17020 Filed 8-9-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-34-P