Schedule of Fees for Consular Services-Nonimmigrant and Special Visa Fees, 74018-74024 [2021-28010]
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74018
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 247 / Wednesday, December 29, 2021 / Proposed Rules
(‘‘inactive’’) baker’s yeast as a source of
vitamin D2 in specific food categories.
PART 784—[AMENDED]
10. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 784 is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 22 U.S.C. 8101–8181; Executive
Order 13458 (February 4, 2008).
11. Section 784.6 is revised to read as
follows:
■
§ 784.6 Post complementary access
activities.
Upon receiving the IAEA’s final
report on complementary access, BIS
will forward a copy of the report to the
location for its review, in accordance
with § 784.3(k)(2) of the APR. Locations
may submit comments concerning the
IAEA’s final report to BIS, and BIS will
consider them, as appropriate, when
preparing its comments to the IAEA on
the final report. BIS also will send
locations a post complementary access
letter detailing the issues that require
follow-up action (see § 783.2(d) of the
APR).
PART 785—[AMENDED]
12. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 785 is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 22 U.S.C. 8101–8181; Executive
Order 13458 (February 4, 2008).
PART 786—[AMENDED]
13. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 786 is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 22 U.S.C. 8101–8181; Executive
Order 13458 (February 4, 2008).
Matthew S. Borman,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Export
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2021–27836 Filed 12–28–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–33–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Part 172
[Docket No. FDA–2021–F–1157]
Lallemand Inc.; Filing of Food Additive
Petition
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
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HHS.
ACTION:
Notification of petition.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or we) is
announcing that we have filed a
petition, submitted by Lallemand Inc.,
proposing that the food additive
regulations be amended to provide for
the safe use of vitamin D2 heat-killed
SUMMARY:
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17:26 Dec 28, 2021
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The food additive petition was
filed on September 28, 2021.
DATES:
For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and insert the
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document into the
‘‘Search’’ box and follow the prompts,
and/or go to the Dockets Management
Staff, 5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061,
Rockville, MD 20852.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
22 CFR Part 22
[Public Notice: 11482]
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Katie Overbey, Center for Food Safety
and Applied Nutrition, Food and Drug
Administration, 5001 Campus Dr.,
College Park, MD 20740, 240–402–7536.
Under
section 409(b)(5) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C.
348(b)(5)), we are giving notice that we
have filed a food additive petition (FAP
1A4829), submitted by Lallemand Inc.,
1620 rue Prefontaine, Montreal, Quebec,
H1W 2N8, Canada. The petition
proposes to amend the food additive
regulations in 21 CFR part 172, Food
additives permitted for direct addition
to food for human consumption, to
allow for the safe use of vitamin D2 heatkilled bakers yeast as a nutrient
supplement in foods to which vitamin
D2 mushroom powder is currently
allowed to be added under § 172.382 (21
CFR 172.382), at the maximum level of
vitamin D2 authorized under § 172.382.
The petitioner has claimed a
categorical exclusion under 21 CFR
25.32(k) because the substance is
intended to remain in food through
ingestion by consumers and is not
intended to replace macronutrients in
food. In addition, the petitioner has
stated that, to their knowledge, no
extraordinary circumstances exist that
would warrant at least an environmental
assessment (see 21 CFR 25.21). If FDA
determines a categorical exclusion
applies, neither an environmental
assessment nor an environmental
impact statement is required. If FDA
determines a categorical exclusion does
not apply, we will request an
environmental assessment and make it
available for public inspection.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: December 21, 2021.
Lauren K. Roth,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2021–28162 Filed 12–28–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
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RIN 1400–AF33
Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services—Nonimmigrant and Special
Visa Fees
Department of State.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of State
(Department) proposes adjustments to
the Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services (Schedule of Fees) of the
Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) for
several nonimmigrant visa (NIV)
application processing fees, the Border
Crossing Card (BCC) for Mexican
citizens age 15 and over, and the waiver
of the two-year residency requirement
(J-Waiver) fee. The proposed changes
are based on the findings of the most
recently approved update to the Cost of
Service Model (CoSM). They ensure that
the fees for providing these consular
services better align with the costs of
providing the services.
DATES: The Department of State will
accept comments until February 28,
2022.
SUMMARY:
Interested parties may
submit comments to the Department by
any of the following methods:
• Visit the Regulations.gov website at:
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for the Regulatory Information Number
(RIN) 1400–AF33 or docket number
DOS–2021–0019.
• Email: fees@state.gov. You must
include the RIN (1400–AF33) in the
subject line of your message.
• All comments should include the
commenter’s name, the organization the
commenter represents (if applicable),
and the commenter’s address. If the
Department is unable to read your
comment for any reason, and cannot
contact you for clarification, the
Department may not be able to consider
your comment. After the conclusion of
the comment period, the Department
will publish a Final Rule that will
address relevant comments as
expeditiously as possible.
During the comment period, the
public may request an appointment to
review CoSM data on site if certain
conditions are met.1 To request an
appointment, please call 202–485–8915
ADDRESSES:
1 Members of the public meeting the conditions
would be permitted to see high-level information,
including total cost, total volume, and unit costs.
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and leave a message with your contact
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Johanna Cruz, Management Analyst,
Office of the Comptroller, Bureau of
Consular Affairs, Department of State;
phone: 202–485–8915, email:
fees@state.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The proposed rule makes changes to
the Schedule of Fees in 22 CFR 22.1.
The Department generally sets and
collects fees for consular services based
on the concept of full cost recovery to
the U.S. government. The Department’s
CoSM uses an Activity-Based Costing
(ABC) methodology to calculate
annually the direct and indirect costs to
the U.S. government associated with
each consular good and service the
Department provides. The fees are based
on these cost estimates and the
Department aims to update the
Schedule of Fees biennially unless a
significant change in costs warrants an
immediate recommendation to amend
the Schedule. The Department proposes
these fee changes based on the results of
the most recently approved update to
the CoSM, which indicates that the
increases are needed to fully recover the
costs of providing these services.
Specifically, the Department is
incurring additional costs attributable to
several NIV application processing fees,
the adult BCC fee, and the J-Waiver fee
that are not reflected in the current fees.
To recover the costs of providing these
specific consular services, the
Department utilized a 10-year demand
average to calculate the proposed fees.
This was done to reduce the short-term
volatility of demand because of the
COVID–19 pandemic and stabilize price
points for a longer duration of time.
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What is the authority for this action?
The Department of State derives the
general authority to set and collect fees
for consular services it provides from
the user charges statute, 31 U.S.C. 9701.
See, e.g. , 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A) (‘‘The
head of each agency . . . may prescribe
regulations establishing the charge for a
service or thing of value provided by the
agency . . . based on . . . the costs to
the government.’’). As implemented
through Executive Order 10718 of June
27, 1957, 22 U.S.C. 4219 further
authorizes the Department to establish
fees to be charged for official services
provided by U.S. embassies and
consulates.
Several statutes address specific fees
relating to nonimmigrant visas. For
instance, Sec. 140(a) of Public Law 103–
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236, 108 Stat. 382, as amended,
reproduced at 8 U.S.C. 1351 (note),
establishes a cost-based application
processing fee for nonimmigrant
machine-readable visas (MRV) and
BCCs. See also 8 U.S.C. 1713(b).
Additionally, Sec. 501 of Public Law
110–293, Title V, 122 Stat. 2968,
reproduced at 8 U.S.C. 1351 (note),
requires the Secretary of State to collect
an additional $2 surcharge (the ‘‘HIV/
AIDS/TB/Malaria surcharge’’) on all
MRVs and BCCs as part of the
application processing fee; this
surcharge must be deposited into the
Treasury and goes to support programs
to combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and
malaria. Furthermore, 8 U.S.C. 1351
establishes a reciprocal NIV issuance
fee, requiring that the fee charged an
applicant from a foreign country for
issuance of an NIV be based, insofar as
practicable, on the amount of visa or
other similar fees charged to U.S.
nationals by that foreign country.
Some people are exempted by law or
regulation from paying specific fees. For
example, certain individuals who
engage in charitable activities or who
qualify for diplomatic visas are exempt
from the NIV application processing fee.
See 8 U.S.C. 1351; 22 CFR 41.107(c).
Exemptions are included in the
Schedule of Fees.
Various statutes permit the
Department to retain some of the fee
revenue it collects, rather than
depositing it into the general fund of the
Treasury. As relevant, the Department
retains the MRV and BCC processing
fees, see Public Law 103–236, Title I,
Sec. 140(a)(2), 112 Stat. 2681–50,
reproduced at 8 U.S.C. 1351 (note) and
8 U.S.C. 1713(d), as well as the J-Waiver
fee, see 22 U.S.C. 1475e.
The Department last adjusted certain
NIV fees and the J-Waiver fee as part of
an interim final rule dated August 28,
2014, and those changes to the Schedule
of Fees went into effect September 6,
2014 (79 FR 51247). A final rule
regarding those fees was published on
August 25, 2015 (80 FR 51464). The fees
for non-petition-based NIVs (except E
category) and other petition-based NIVs
(H, L, O, P, Q, and R category NIVs),
have not been updated since April 13,
2012 (77 FR 18907). A final rule
adjusting these fees was published on
September 17, 2012 (FR 57012). Nonpetition-based NIVs constitute a
significant majority of the overall NIV
applications.
Why is the Department adjusting fees at
this time?
As a general policy, each recipient
should pay a reasonable user charge for
government services, resources, or
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goods from which he or she derives a
special benefit, at an amount sufficient
for the U.S. Government to recover the
full costs of providing the service,
resource, or good. See 31 U.S.C. 9701;
OMB Circular No. A–25, sec. 6(a)(2)(a).
In accordance with this policy, the
Department typically sets consular fees
at an amount calculated to achieve full
recovery of the costs to the U.S.
government of providing the service,
unless an exception applies. See, e.g. ,
8 U.S.C. 1351 (noting that NIV
reciprocity fees should be set in
amounts corresponding to the total
charges levied against nationals of the
United States by foreign countries). In
the case of the MRV fee, the Department
is statutorily required to set the fee at
cost if the actual cost is higher than $65.
See 8 U.S.C. 1713(b).
The Department reviews consular fees
periodically, including through the
annual update to its CoSM, to determine
each fee’s appropriateness in light of the
OMB guidance. The results of the most
recent update form the basis of the
changes proposed in this rule. The
proposed fees have been rounded up to
the nearest $5 consistent with accepted
government fee setting practices, to
account for and mitigate against the risk
of exchange rate fluctuations.
Activity-Based Costing
To set fees to ensure full cost
recovery, the Department must
determine the true cost to the U.S.
government of providing each consular
service. Following guidance provided in
‘‘Managerial Cost Accounting Concepts
and Standards for the Federal
Government,’’ OMB’s Statement #4 of
Federal Accounting Standards (SFFAS
#4), available at https://www.fasab.gov/
pdffiles/sffas-4.pdf, the Department
chose to develop its CoSM using an
ABC methodology to determine the true
cost of each consular service.
The Government Accountability
Office (GAO) defines ABC as a ‘‘set of
accounting methods used to identify
and describe costs and required
resources for activities within
processes.’’ Organizations can use the
same staff and resources (computer
equipment, production facilities, etc.) to
produce multiple products or services;
therefore, ABC models seek to identify
and assign costs to processes and
activities and then to individual
products and services through the
identification of key cost drivers
referred to as ‘‘resource drivers’’ and
‘‘activity drivers.’’ The goal is to
proportionally and accurately distribute
costs. ABC models require financial and
accounting analysis and modeling skills
combined with a detailed understanding
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of an organization’s business processes.
SFFAS #4 provides a detailed
discussion of the use of cost accounting
by the U.S. government.
The ABC approach focuses on the
activities required to produce a
particular service or product and uses
resource drivers to assign costs through
activities to services. Resource drivers
assign the organization’s costs
(resources including materials, supplies
and labor utilized in the production or
delivery of services and products) to
activities using business rules that
reflect the operational reality of CA and
the data available from consular
systems, surveys, and internal records.
Most resource drivers are based on time
spent on each activity. For example, the
Consular Overseas Data Collection
(CODaC) survey captures how different
categories of consular staff spend their
time on consular work performed
overseas. The information collected
through the CODaC is used to populate
the CODaC resource driver, which is a
model input for time spent on specific
activities for several different consular
employee types and assigned to
different categories of NIVs. Activity
drivers differentiate levels of effort
associated with activities (the work
performed by the organization such as
adjudication, printing of visa foils, and
performing data intake, etc.) that are
applied to each cost object and are often
volume driven. For example, the cost of
printing NIV visa foils is assigned to the
different categories of NIVs based on the
total number of NIVs issued for each
NIV type.
Here is an example: Imagine a
government agency that has a single
facility it uses to prepare and issue a
single product—a driver’s license. In
this simple scenario, every cost
associated with that facility (the salaries
of employees, the electricity to power
the computer terminals, the cost of a
blank driver’s license, etc.) can be
attributed directly to the cost of
producing that single item. If that
agency wants to ensure that it is
charging a ‘‘self-sustaining’’ price for
driver’s licenses, it only has to divide its
total costs for a given time period by an
estimate of the number of driver’s
licenses to be produced during that
same time period. However, if that
agency issues multiple products
(driver’s licenses, non-driver ID cards,
etc.), has employees that work on other
activities besides licenses (for example,
accepting payment for traffic tickets),
and operates out of multiple facilities it
shares with other agencies, it becomes
much more complex for the agency to
determine exactly how much it costs to
produce any single product. In those
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instances, the agency would need to
know what percent of time its
employees spend on each service and
how much of its overhead (rent,
utilities, facilities maintenance, etc.) can
be allocated to the delivery of each
service to determine the cost of
producing each of its various products—
the driver’s license, the non-driver ID
card, etc. Using an ABC model allows
the agency to develop those cost
estimates.
The Cost of Service Model (CoSM)
The Department has been conducting
periodic cost of service studies using an
ABC methodology to determine the
costs of its consular services since 2009.
In 2010, the Department moved to adopt
an annually updated CoSM that
measures all of its consular operations
and costs, including all of the activities
needed to provide consular services.
The CoSM provides a comprehensive
and detailed look at all consular
services as well as all services that the
Department performs for other agencies
in connection with its consular
operations. The CoSM now includes
approximately 112 distinct activities
and enables the Department to model its
consular-related costs with a higher
degree of precision.
The Department continues to refine
and improve the CoSM annually in
order to achieve full cost recovery for
the U.S. government. Because the CoSM
is a complex series of iterative computer
processes incorporating more than a
million calculations, it is not reducible
to a tangible form such as a document.
Inputs are formatted in spreadsheets for
entry into the ABC software package,
which is an industry standard
commercial off-the-shelf product
licensed through SAP Business Objects.
The software’s output includes
spreadsheets with raw unit costs,
validation reports, and management
reports.
The Department uses three methods
outlined in SFFAS Statement #4
(paragraph 149(2)) to assign resource
costs to activities in the model: (a)
Direct tracing; (b) assigning costs
through estimation based on surveys,
interviews, or statistical sampling; and
(c) allocations. The Department uses
direct tracing to assign the cost of, for
example, a physical passport book or
the visa foil placed in a visa applicant’s
passport, to the passport or visa service
respectively. Assigning costs to
activities such as adjudicating a visa
application requires estimation based on
surveys, interviews, or statistical
sampling to determine who performs an
activity and how long it takes (see below
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for additional details regarding
assigning labor costs).
Indirect costs (overhead) are allocated
according to the level of effort needed
for a particular activity. Level of effort
captures the time spent on an activity in
minutes, hours, or number of full-time
equivalent (FTE) employees, as
measured in the CODaC and domestic
task reports. Where possible, the model
uses overhead cost pools to assign
indirect costs only to related activities.
For instance, the cost of rent for
domestic visa offices is assigned only to
visas, not to passports or other services
the Department provides overseas. The
Department allocates indirect support
costs to each consular activity by the
level of effort needed by that consular
activity. For example, the model
allocates a portion of the cost of the
Department’s Bureau of Global Talent
Management (formerly known as the
Bureau of Human Resources) to
consular activities as this Bureau
supports CA by providing onboarding
and administrative support for domestic
and overseas consular employees,
including support for permanent change
of station (PCS) requirements for all
consular personnel that ensures timely
deployment of personnel, families, and
personal effects.
To assign labor costs, the Department
relies on a variety of industry-standard
estimation methodologies. To document
how consular staff divide their time
overseas, the Department conducts
CODaC surveys at a representative
sample of consular sections overseas
each year. In response to the survey,
consular officers indicate how much
time is spent on particular consular
activities overseas, such as data intake
and review, interview and adjudication,
and passback activities. The Department
uses survey data from over 200 consular
sections in consulates and embassies
worldwide in conjunction with volume
data from various consular workload
systems to develop resource drivers to
assign labor costs to activities. For
consular activities that take place in the
United States, the Department collects
volume data from periodic workload
reports provided by the directorates
managing these consular services.
Financial information is gathered from
reports in the Department’s Global
Financial Management System (GFMS)
managed by the Bureau of the
Comptroller and Global Financial
Services (CGFS). The Department
converts the cost and workload data into
resource drivers and activity drivers for
each resource and activity.
The CoSM uses historical workloads
(i.e. , demand for the service) as well as
projected workloads, which are based
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on demand projections produced by CA,
to estimate the costs of providing
consular services. The current model
update relied on FY 2019 actual costs
and level of effort (i.e. , time spent on
a specific activity) data, and applied a
10-year average for workload volumes,
using historic workload actuals from
FYs 2015–2019 and projected workload
volumes for FYs 2020–2024. Unit costs
for each NIV service are calculated by
taking the total calculated costs for the
particular service and dividing that cost
by the total 10-year average volumes for
each particular service. Using a 10-year
average of volumes for NIV services
reduces the impact of volatility in
demand resulting from COVID–19 on
the model results, given that the
significant reduction in NIV demand
resulting from the COVID–19 pandemic
is expected to continue for the next few
years. Over time, use of a 10-year
average is expected to result in full cost
recovery once the fee is updated,
provided the demand projections used
to calculate this average are mostly in
line with actual demand during this
period and costs remain relatively
stable.
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Proposed Visa Fee Changes:
Nonimmigrant Visa Services
Nonimmigrant Visa Application and
Border Crossing Card Processing Fees
The Department proposes to increase
the non-petition based NIV fee from
$160 to $245 per application. Nonpetition-based NIVs include a variety of
nonimmigrant visas, such as those for
business and tourist travel (B1/B2);
students and exchange visitors (F, M,
and J); crew and transit visas (C and D);
representatives of foreign media (I), and
other country-specific visa classes, as
well as BCCs for applicants age 15 or
older who are citizens of and resident in
Mexico. ‘‘Non-petition’’ means that
these visas do not require separate
requests known as ‘‘petitions’’ to be
adjudicated prior to the visa application
to establish that the individual meets
certain qualifying criteria for the
relevant status (e.g. , that the beneficiary
of the petition has the relevant familial
relationship to the petitioner). Nonpetition based NIVs make up nearly 90
percent of all NIV workload.
The Department also proposes to
increase fees for all petition based NIVs
related to employment in the United
States from $190 to $310. Petition-based
NIVs include categories for temporary
workers and trainees (H); intracompany
transferees (L); aliens of extraordinary
ability (O); athletes, artists, and
entertainers (P); international cultural
exchange participants (Q); and religious
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workers (R). These NIVs require an
approved petition from U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services (USCIS) prior
to applying for a visa and demand
significantly more work by the consular
officer than non-petition based NIVs.
The Department last updated the nonpetition-based and the petition-based
NIV fees noted above through
rulemaking in 2012, based on the results
of the 2011 CoSM. Costs have increased
modestly for non-petition based NIVs
each year since 2012, an increase of 1.9
percent per year since the fee was last
adjusted. Compensation costs for these
services have decreased and noncompensation costs have increased.
Compensation costs include the salary,
benefits, and costs associated with
direct-hire full-time domestic and
overseas employees including Foreign
Service Officers (FSOs), Locally
Employed (LE) staff, Eligible Family
Members (EFMs), Consular Agents, and
Civil Service employees. Noncompensation costs include operating
costs like rent, technology costs,
contract costs (including contract staff
costs, and large support contracts like
the Global Support Strategy (GSS)
contract), materials (e.g., visa foils) and
International Cooperative
Administrative Support Services
(ICASS) costs. The changes to these
categories of costs are largely due to a
shift from FSO and LE staff overseas to
GSS contract staff spending time on
activities associated with this service.
GSS provides support services for
nonimmigrant and immigrant visa
operations at United States consulates
and embassies abroad, including but not
limited to public inquiry services,
appointment services, fee collection
services, biometric enrollment services,
document delivery services, and data
collection services.
Costs have increased slightly for
petition-based categories since the last
fee updates, from $149 million to $175
million, a 1.6 percent increase per year
since the fee was last adjusted. As with
non-petition based NIVs, compensation
costs for these services have decreased
and non-compensation costs have
increased, largely the result of the shift
of certain support activities to the GSS
contract as noted above. The expansion
of the GSS contract helped reduce time
spent by consular officers on nonadjudication tasks, which in turn
reduced overall compensation costs
while raising the non-compensation
costs with increased time spent by
contract staff on these tasks.
While costs for the non-petition-based
NIV service and the petition-based NIVs
noted above have increased steadily and
modestly since the last adjustment to
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these fees, actual demand has fluctuated
more dramatically from year to year and
has a greater impact on unit costs.
Fiscal year
FY2000 .................................
FY2001 .................................
FY2002 .................................
FY2003 .................................
FY2004 .................................
FY2005 .................................
FY2006 .................................
FY2007 .................................
FY2008 .................................
FY2009 .................................
FY2010 .................................
FY2011 .................................
FY2012 .................................
FY2013 .................................
FY2014 .................................
FY2015 .................................
FY2016 .................................
FY2017 .................................
FY2018 .................................
FY2019 .................................
FY2020 * ...............................
FY2021 * ...............................
FY2022 * ...............................
FY2023 * ...............................
FY2024 * ...............................
Demand
9,555,828
10,373,274
7,965,703
6,557,265
6,643,800
6,941,519
7,331,518
8,091,366
8,169,792
7,130,164
7,670,062
8,832,102
10,343,241
10,722,905
11,734,749
13,307,973
13,343,570
12,339,180
11,965,382
11,657,163
5,783,251
2,200,000
3,080,000
4,774,000
5,967,500
* Projected Demand, in accordance with
model, which included predicted volumes for
FY 2020–2024.
It is important to capture and analyze
these fluctuations in demand to reflect
visa demand trends while also
approaching fee setting in a moderate
and sustainable way. Therefore, as
noted above, the proposed NIV fee
recommendations use a 10-year average
for demand to reduce volatility in unit
costs and to prevent the extreme spikes
in unit costs that would result if the
Department used only demand figures
from the lowest levels during the
pandemic to set the fee. Because of the
dramatic drop in visa demand
experienced in FY 2020 due to the
pandemic and projected to continue in
the coming years, the 10-year average
volume used in this calculation is still
much lower than demand figures used
to calculate this fee in prior models. As
a result, the calculated unit cost for
these services, which is the total service
cost divided by the total service volume,
has increased, and has led to the
proposed visa application processing fee
increases.
The Department also proposes to
increase the E category NIV fee from
$205 to $485. This fee was last adjusted
through an interim final rule in 2014
based on the results of the 2012 CoSM.
The E category NIV is for traders,
investors, and their employees who are
in executive and supervisory positions,
as well as those who possess skills
essential to the firm’s operations from
countries that have a qualifying treaty of
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commerce and navigation with the
United States. These NIV applications
have complex requirements that
demand extensive review by
adjudicators overseas. E visas are used
to engage in trade primarily between the
United States and the home country and
represent less than one percent of all
NIVs. The costs for this service have
increased significantly while demand
has only slightly increased since this fee
was last adjusted.
The significant increase in the cost of
E Visas is attributable to increased level
of effort on the part of the adjudicator
as well as refined data collection
techniques, which established that
consular staff spend significantly more
time (level of effort) to provide this
service than previously captured.
Following updates to the Foreign Affairs
Manual, E visa adjudication guidelines
now require more extensive officer
scrutiny of applicant case files, which
increases case-processing times.
Applicant interviews are also much
longer than the standard interview for
non-petition based NIVs.
In addition, the CODaC was moved
from a paper-based survey to an online
platform in 2017, to remedy errors and
difficulties in the user experience. The
online platform collects more accurate
data because the responses go directly to
the online database rather than being
manually entered by a person. This, in
turn, yields a more precise cost
estimate, which better reflects the
increased staff resources needed to
process and adjudicate E visas. Because
the associated costs of providing this
service have increased significantly and
demand for this service has remained
relatively stable, the calculated unit cost
increased significantly. As a result, the
Department proposes to increase this fee
to recover the cost of providing this
service. See 8 U.S.C. 1713(b) requiring
the fee for MRVs, which include E visas,
to be set at the higher of $65 or the
actual cost of providing the service).
beyond the end date of their program or
if they want to submit an application to
USCIS for a change in visa status.
Otherwise, the exchange visitor is
required to return to their home country
for an aggregate of at least two years
before applying for another visa to the
United States. This two-year residency
requirement upon request and approval
may be waived in certain circumstances
and the Department proposes increasing
the associated fee for processing these
waiver requests.
The costs for this service have
increased while demand has decreased
since the last fee adjustment. Since this
fee was last updated, CA discovered that
not all costs for J-Waivers were being
recorded correctly in the Department’s
GFMS. As a result, the Visa Office
worked with CA’s Comptroller offices to
identify and assign costs correctly. Prior
to this update, no operating costs,
particularly those for contractors
spending time on this service, were
recorded and assigned to the Visa
Office’s Waiver Review division, the
division responsible for adjudicating
these waivers.
After identifying and properly
assigning these costs, all operating costs
for J-Waivers have now been properly
recorded, including contract costs
related to this service. This update has
resulted in more accurate cost
assignment to this service and has led
to an increase of related compensation
and non-compensation costs. These cost
increases are primarily attributed to the
increases in level of effort that have
recently been identified and properly
assigned to this service. That combined
with a significant decrease in demand
led to an increase in the calculated unit
cost. The unit cost increase is significant
because of the increased costs and the
relatively low volume for this service
during the 10-year demand timeframe
used to calculate this fee.
Proposed Visa Fee Changes: Special
Visa Services
Administrative Procedure Act
Waiver of Two-Year Residency
Requirement
The Department proposes to increase
the J-Waiver fee from $120 to $510. This
fee was last adjusted through
rulemaking in 2014 based on the results
of the 2012 CoSM. Certain categories of
exchange visitors (J–1) are subject to a
two-year home-country physical
presence requirement. Exchange visitor
program participants who are subject to
the two-year home-country physical
requirement must apply for a waiver
either to stay in the United States
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Regulatory Findings
The Department is publishing this
rule as a proposed rule, with a 60-day
provision for public comments.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department has reviewed this
rule and, by approving it, certifies that
it will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities as defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
This rule will not result in the
expenditure by state, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
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Sfmt 4702
in any year, and it will not significantly
or uniquely affect small governments.
Therefore, no actions were deemed
necessary under the provisions of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995, 2 U.S.C. 1501–1504.
Executive Order 12866
Under Executive Order (E.O.) 12866,
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) determines whether a
regulatory action is significant and,
therefore, subject to the requirements of
the E.O. and review by OMB. 58 FR
51735. Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 defines
a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ as an
action that is likely to result in a rule
that: (1) Has an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely affects in a material way a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local,
or tribal governments or communities
(also referred to as economically
significant); (2) creates serious
inconsistency or otherwise interferes
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially alters the
budgetary impacts of entitlement grants,
user fees, or loan programs, or the rights
and obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) raises novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
set forth in the E.O. Id. OIRA reviewed
this proposed rule and has determined
that it is economically significant under
E.O. 12866.
The Department has reviewed this
rule to ensure its consistency with the
regulatory philosophy and principles set
forth in E.O. 12866. This proposed rule
is necessary in light of the CoSM’s result
that the cost of providing consular
services has changed significantly since
the last adjustment to these fees and
justifies the implementation of new fees
through the rulemaking process. The
Department is setting the fees in
accordance with 31 U.S.C. 9701 and
other applicable authorities, as
described in more detail above. See, e.g.,
31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A) (‘‘The head of
each agency . . . may prescribe
regulations establishing the charge for a
service or thing of value provided by the
agency . . . based on . . . the costs to
the Government.’’).
The Department has reviewed the
potential impact that these NIV
application processing fee increases will
have on demand and has determined
that the impact on those who seek NIVs
will be de minimis over the lifetime of
the approved visa. The Department does
not believe that the increased NIV
application processing costs will deter
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non-U.S. citizens from applying for
tourist, work, and business visas.
74023
The following table summarizes the
impact of this proposed rule:
TABLE 1—IMPACT OF PROPOSED FEE CHANGES
Proposed
fee
Item No.
Current
fee
Change in
fee
Estimated
change in
annual fees
collected 2
Projected
annual
number of
applications 1
Percentage
increase
Change in
state retained
fees
Change in
remittance
to treasury
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Nonimmigrant Visa Services
*
21. Nonimmigrant Visa Application
and Border Crossing Card Processing Fees (per person)
(a)
Non-petition-based
nonimmigrant visa (except E category) .......................................
(b) H, L, O, P, Q, and R category
nonimmigrant visa ...................
(c) E category nonimmigrant visa
(e) Border Crossing Card—age
15 and over (10 year validity)
*
*
*
$245
$160
$85
53
2,377,236
$202,065,060
$202,065,060
$0
310
485
190
205
120
280
63
137
239,529
17,902
28,743,480
5,012,560
28,743,480
5,012,560
0
0
$245
160
85
53
388,320
33,007,200
33,007,200
0
Immigrant and Special Visa Services
*
35. Special Visa Services
(b) Waiver of two year residency
requirement ..............................
Total .....................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
510
120
390
325
6,291
2,453,490
2,453,490
0
....................
....................
....................
........................
........................
271,281,790
271,281,790
0
1 Application
2 Change
volume based on FY 2022 projected workload. FY 2022 is the likely year of implementation.
in fee collection is based on FY 2022 projected workload x change to fee.
Economic Impact
In anticipation of questions from the
public and various other stakeholders,
the Department commissioned a price
elasticity of demand study on the
proposal for these fee increases. From
the perspective of a tourist coming to
the United States, the study found that
the average cost to travel to the country
is $4,834 by air. This information came
from correspondence with the National
Travel & Tourism Office at the
Department of Commerce. Assuming
that figure does not include the cost of
a visa, the proposed fee increase for
non-petition based NIVs would raise the
total cost of a trip from $4,994 ($4,834
+ $160) to $5,079 ($4,834 + $245). This
reflects a minimal increase of less than
two percent of the cost of the trip,
assuming only one trip is taken during
the visa’s validity. If two trips are taken,
the total cost increase is less than one
percent; if more than two trips are
taken, the increase is even less.
Therefore, we expect this fee increase to
have a de minimis effect on the demand
for travel (see Table 2 below).
TABLE 2—ECONOMIC IMPACT OF NON-PETITION-BASED NIV FEE INCREASE
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
Number of trips
1
2
5
7
10
Cost Per Trip ........................................................................
Current Consular Fee ..........................................................
$4,834.21
$160.00
$4,834.21
$80.00
$4,834.21
$32.00
$4,834.21
$22.86
$4,834.21
$16.00
Total Cost of Trip ..........................................................
Cost per Trip ........................................................................
$4,994.21
$4,834.21
$4,914.21
$4,834.21
$4,866.21
$4,834.21
$4,857.07
$4,834.21
$4,850.21
$4,834.21
Proposed Consular Fee .......................................................
$245.00
$122.50
$49.00
$35.00
$24.50
Total Cost of Trip ..........................................................
$5,079.21
$4,956.71
$4,883.21
$4,869.21
$4,858.71
$ Increase ............................................................................
% Increase ...........................................................................
$85.00
1.70%
$42.50
0.86%
$17.00
0.35%
$12.14
0.25%
$8.50
0.18%
In a similar manner, the Department
assessed the impact on demand that the
fee increase might have on individuals
coming over on a particular type of
petition-based NIV, the H–2A Visa
(Temporary Worker Performing
Agricultural Services Unavailable in the
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United States). The total cost to bring
over an agricultural worker is estimated
to be $10,177, or $10,367 with the
current visa fee of $190. This
information came from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. The
proposed new fee raises the total cost
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from $10,367 ($10,177 + $190) to
$10,487 ($10,177 + $310). This increases
the total cost of bringing a worker over
by just over one percent.
While the study did not cover the
increases for other petition-based NIVs,
E visas, or J-Waiver requests, similar
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 247 / Wednesday, December 29, 2021 / Proposed Rules
logic can be followed. Individuals use a
J-Waiver, for example, to transfer to a
work visa or a fiancé´ visa without
having to go back to their home
countries for two years. Given that the
waiver confers a significant economic
benefit and that the average cost of
international travel to the United States
is more than $510, we expect this fee
increase to also have a de minimis effect
on demand.
Executive Orders 12372 and 13132
This regulation will not have
substantial direct effects on the states,
on the relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in
accordance with section 6 of E.O. 13132,
it is determined that this rule does not
have sufficient federalism implications
to require consultations or warrant the
preparation of a federalism summary
impact statement. The regulations
implementing E.O. 12372 regarding
intergovernmental consultation on
federal programs and activities do not
apply to this regulation.
Executive Order 13175
The Department has determined that
this rulemaking will not have tribal
implications, will not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
Indian tribal governments, and will not
preempt tribal law. Accordingly, the
requirements of E.O. 13175 do not apply
to this rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not impose any new
reporting or record-keeping
requirements subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
List of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 22
Consular services, Fees.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in
the preamble, 22 CFR part 22 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 22—SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR
CONSULAR SERVICES—
DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND
FOREIGN SERVICE
1. The authority citation for part 22
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 note, 1153 note,
1157 note, 1183a note, 1184(c)(12), 1201(c),
1351, 1351 note, 1713, 1714, 1714 note; 10
U.S.C. 2602(c); 22 U.S.C. 214, 214 note,
1475e, 2504(h), 2651a, 4206, 4215, 4219,
6551; 31 U.S.C. 9701; E.O. 10718, 22 FR 4632
(1957); Exec. Order 11295, 31 FR 10603, 3
CFR 1966–1970 Comp. p. 570.
2. Amend the table in 22.1 by revising
entries 21 and 35 to read as follows:
■
§ 22.1
Schedule of Fees.
The following table sets forth the
proposed change to the following
category listed on the U.S. Department
of State’s Schedule of Fees for Consular
Services:
TABLE 1 TO § 22.1—SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
Item No.
Fee
Nonimmigrant Visa Services
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
21. Nonimmigrant Visa Application and Border Crossing Card Processing Fees (per person)
(a) Non-petition-based nonimmigrant visa (except E category) ...............................................................................................
(b) H, L, O, P, Q and R category nonimmigrant visa ..............................................................................................................
(c) E category nonimmigrant visa ............................................................................................................................................
(e) Border crossing card—age 15 and over (10 year validity) .................................................................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
$245
310
485
245
Immigrant and Special Visa Services
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
35. Special visa services:
(b) Waiver of two-year residency requirement .........................................................................................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Kevin E. Bryant,
Deputy Director, Office of Directives
Management, U.S. Department of State.
ACTION:
BILLING CODE 4710–06–P
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 1
[WT Docket No. 19–38; FCC 21–120; FR ID
62114]
Federal Communications
Commission.
AGENCY:
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Interested parties may file
comments on or before February 28,
2022, and reply comments on or before
March 29, 2022.
DATES:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission or FCC) proposed an
Enhanced Competition Incentive
Program to encourage licensees to offer
opportunities for small carriers, Tribal
Nations, and entities committing to
serve rural areas to obtain spectrum via
lease, partition, or disaggregation. The
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
seeks comment on the proposed
Enhanced Competition Incentive
Program, its incentives, and waste,
fraud, and abuse protections, as well as
additional proposals including
alternative construction benchmarks for
all wireless radio service licensees and
flexibility to reaggregate licenses.
SUMMARY:
[FR Doc. 2021–28010 Filed 12–28–21; 8:45 am]
Partitioning, Disaggregation, and
Leasing of Spectrum
Proposed rule.
510
You may submit comments,
identified by WT Docket No. 19–38, by
any of the following methods:
• Electronic Filers: Comments may be
filed electronically using the internet by
accessing the ECFS: https://apps.fcc.gov/
ecfs/.
• Paper Filers: Parties who choose to
file by paper must file an original and
one copy of each filing. If more than one
docket or rulemaking number appears in
the caption of this proceeding, filers
must submit two additional copies for
each additional docket or rulemaking
number.
ADDRESSES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 247 (Wednesday, December 29, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 74018-74024]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-28010]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
22 CFR Part 22
[Public Notice: 11482]
RIN 1400-AF33
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services--Nonimmigrant and Special
Visa Fees
AGENCY: Department of State.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of State (Department) proposes adjustments to
the Schedule of Fees for Consular Services (Schedule of Fees) of the
Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) for several nonimmigrant visa (NIV)
application processing fees, the Border Crossing Card (BCC) for Mexican
citizens age 15 and over, and the waiver of the two-year residency
requirement (J-Waiver) fee. The proposed changes are based on the
findings of the most recently approved update to the Cost of Service
Model (CoSM). They ensure that the fees for providing these consular
services better align with the costs of providing the services.
DATES: The Department of State will accept comments until February 28,
2022.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may submit comments to the Department by
any of the following methods:
Visit the Regulations.gov website at: https://www.regulations.gov and search for the Regulatory Information Number
(RIN) 1400-AF33 or docket number DOS-2021-0019.
Email: [email protected]. You must include the RIN (1400-
AF33) in the subject line of your message.
All comments should include the commenter's name, the
organization the commenter represents (if applicable), and the
commenter's address. If the Department is unable to read your comment
for any reason, and cannot contact you for clarification, the
Department may not be able to consider your comment. After the
conclusion of the comment period, the Department will publish a Final
Rule that will address relevant comments as expeditiously as possible.
During the comment period, the public may request an appointment to
review CoSM data on site if certain conditions are met.\1\ To request
an appointment, please call 202-485-8915
[[Page 74019]]
and leave a message with your contact information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Members of the public meeting the conditions would be
permitted to see high-level information, including total cost, total
volume, and unit costs.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Johanna Cruz, Management Analyst,
Office of the Comptroller, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Department of
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
State; phone: 202-485-8915, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The proposed rule makes changes to the Schedule of Fees in 22 CFR
22.1. The Department generally sets and collects fees for consular
services based on the concept of full cost recovery to the U.S.
government. The Department's CoSM uses an Activity-Based Costing (ABC)
methodology to calculate annually the direct and indirect costs to the
U.S. government associated with each consular good and service the
Department provides. The fees are based on these cost estimates and the
Department aims to update the Schedule of Fees biennially unless a
significant change in costs warrants an immediate recommendation to
amend the Schedule. The Department proposes these fee changes based on
the results of the most recently approved update to the CoSM, which
indicates that the increases are needed to fully recover the costs of
providing these services. Specifically, the Department is incurring
additional costs attributable to several NIV application processing
fees, the adult BCC fee, and the J-Waiver fee that are not reflected in
the current fees. To recover the costs of providing these specific
consular services, the Department utilized a 10-year demand average to
calculate the proposed fees. This was done to reduce the short-term
volatility of demand because of the COVID-19 pandemic and stabilize
price points for a longer duration of time.
What is the authority for this action?
The Department of State derives the general authority to set and
collect fees for consular services it provides from the user charges
statute, 31 U.S.C. 9701. See, e.g. , 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A) (``The
head of each agency . . . may prescribe regulations establishing the
charge for a service or thing of value provided by the agency . . .
based on . . . the costs to the government.''). As implemented through
Executive Order 10718 of June 27, 1957, 22 U.S.C. 4219 further
authorizes the Department to establish fees to be charged for official
services provided by U.S. embassies and consulates.
Several statutes address specific fees relating to nonimmigrant
visas. For instance, Sec. 140(a) of Public Law 103-236, 108 Stat. 382,
as amended, reproduced at 8 U.S.C. 1351 (note), establishes a cost-
based application processing fee for nonimmigrant machine-readable
visas (MRV) and BCCs. See also 8 U.S.C. 1713(b). Additionally, Sec. 501
of Public Law 110-293, Title V, 122 Stat. 2968, reproduced at 8 U.S.C.
1351 (note), requires the Secretary of State to collect an additional
$2 surcharge (the ``HIV/AIDS/TB/Malaria surcharge'') on all MRVs and
BCCs as part of the application processing fee; this surcharge must be
deposited into the Treasury and goes to support programs to combat HIV/
AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria. Furthermore, 8 U.S.C. 1351 establishes
a reciprocal NIV issuance fee, requiring that the fee charged an
applicant from a foreign country for issuance of an NIV be based,
insofar as practicable, on the amount of visa or other similar fees
charged to U.S. nationals by that foreign country.
Some people are exempted by law or regulation from paying specific
fees. For example, certain individuals who engage in charitable
activities or who qualify for diplomatic visas are exempt from the NIV
application processing fee. See 8 U.S.C. 1351; 22 CFR 41.107(c).
Exemptions are included in the Schedule of Fees.
Various statutes permit the Department to retain some of the fee
revenue it collects, rather than depositing it into the general fund of
the Treasury. As relevant, the Department retains the MRV and BCC
processing fees, see Public Law 103-236, Title I, Sec. 140(a)(2), 112
Stat. 2681-50, reproduced at 8 U.S.C. 1351 (note) and 8 U.S.C. 1713(d),
as well as the J-Waiver fee, see 22 U.S.C. 1475e.
The Department last adjusted certain NIV fees and the J-Waiver fee
as part of an interim final rule dated August 28, 2014, and those
changes to the Schedule of Fees went into effect September 6, 2014 (79
FR 51247). A final rule regarding those fees was published on August
25, 2015 (80 FR 51464). The fees for non-petition-based NIVs (except E
category) and other petition-based NIVs (H, L, O, P, Q, and R category
NIVs), have not been updated since April 13, 2012 (77 FR 18907). A
final rule adjusting these fees was published on September 17, 2012 (FR
57012). Non-petition-based NIVs constitute a significant majority of
the overall NIV applications.
Why is the Department adjusting fees at this time?
As a general policy, each recipient should pay a reasonable user
charge for government services, resources, or goods from which he or
she derives a special benefit, at an amount sufficient for the U.S.
Government to recover the full costs of providing the service,
resource, or good. See 31 U.S.C. 9701; OMB Circular No. A-25, sec.
6(a)(2)(a). In accordance with this policy, the Department typically
sets consular fees at an amount calculated to achieve full recovery of
the costs to the U.S. government of providing the service, unless an
exception applies. See, e.g. , 8 U.S.C. 1351 (noting that NIV
reciprocity fees should be set in amounts corresponding to the total
charges levied against nationals of the United States by foreign
countries). In the case of the MRV fee, the Department is statutorily
required to set the fee at cost if the actual cost is higher than $65.
See 8 U.S.C. 1713(b).
The Department reviews consular fees periodically, including
through the annual update to its CoSM, to determine each fee's
appropriateness in light of the OMB guidance. The results of the most
recent update form the basis of the changes proposed in this rule. The
proposed fees have been rounded up to the nearest $5 consistent with
accepted government fee setting practices, to account for and mitigate
against the risk of exchange rate fluctuations.
Activity-Based Costing
To set fees to ensure full cost recovery, the Department must
determine the true cost to the U.S. government of providing each
consular service. Following guidance provided in ``Managerial Cost
Accounting Concepts and Standards for the Federal Government,'' OMB's
Statement #4 of Federal Accounting Standards (SFFAS #4), available at
https://www.fasab.gov/pdffiles/sffas-4.pdf, the Department chose to
develop its CoSM using an ABC methodology to determine the true cost of
each consular service.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) defines ABC as a ``set
of accounting methods used to identify and describe costs and required
resources for activities within processes.'' Organizations can use the
same staff and resources (computer equipment, production facilities,
etc.) to produce multiple products or services; therefore, ABC models
seek to identify and assign costs to processes and activities and then
to individual products and services through the identification of key
cost drivers referred to as ``resource drivers'' and ``activity
drivers.'' The goal is to proportionally and accurately distribute
costs. ABC models require financial and accounting analysis and
modeling skills combined with a detailed understanding
[[Page 74020]]
of an organization's business processes. SFFAS #4 provides a detailed
discussion of the use of cost accounting by the U.S. government.
The ABC approach focuses on the activities required to produce a
particular service or product and uses resource drivers to assign costs
through activities to services. Resource drivers assign the
organization's costs (resources including materials, supplies and labor
utilized in the production or delivery of services and products) to
activities using business rules that reflect the operational reality of
CA and the data available from consular systems, surveys, and internal
records. Most resource drivers are based on time spent on each
activity. For example, the Consular Overseas Data Collection (CODaC)
survey captures how different categories of consular staff spend their
time on consular work performed overseas. The information collected
through the CODaC is used to populate the CODaC resource driver, which
is a model input for time spent on specific activities for several
different consular employee types and assigned to different categories
of NIVs. Activity drivers differentiate levels of effort associated
with activities (the work performed by the organization such as
adjudication, printing of visa foils, and performing data intake, etc.)
that are applied to each cost object and are often volume driven. For
example, the cost of printing NIV visa foils is assigned to the
different categories of NIVs based on the total number of NIVs issued
for each NIV type.
Here is an example: Imagine a government agency that has a single
facility it uses to prepare and issue a single product--a driver's
license. In this simple scenario, every cost associated with that
facility (the salaries of employees, the electricity to power the
computer terminals, the cost of a blank driver's license, etc.) can be
attributed directly to the cost of producing that single item. If that
agency wants to ensure that it is charging a ``self-sustaining'' price
for driver's licenses, it only has to divide its total costs for a
given time period by an estimate of the number of driver's licenses to
be produced during that same time period. However, if that agency
issues multiple products (driver's licenses, non-driver ID cards,
etc.), has employees that work on other activities besides licenses
(for example, accepting payment for traffic tickets), and operates out
of multiple facilities it shares with other agencies, it becomes much
more complex for the agency to determine exactly how much it costs to
produce any single product. In those instances, the agency would need
to know what percent of time its employees spend on each service and
how much of its overhead (rent, utilities, facilities maintenance,
etc.) can be allocated to the delivery of each service to determine the
cost of producing each of its various products--the driver's license,
the non-driver ID card, etc. Using an ABC model allows the agency to
develop those cost estimates.
The Cost of Service Model (CoSM)
The Department has been conducting periodic cost of service studies
using an ABC methodology to determine the costs of its consular
services since 2009. In 2010, the Department moved to adopt an annually
updated CoSM that measures all of its consular operations and costs,
including all of the activities needed to provide consular services.
The CoSM provides a comprehensive and detailed look at all consular
services as well as all services that the Department performs for other
agencies in connection with its consular operations. The CoSM now
includes approximately 112 distinct activities and enables the
Department to model its consular-related costs with a higher degree of
precision.
The Department continues to refine and improve the CoSM annually in
order to achieve full cost recovery for the U.S. government. Because
the CoSM is a complex series of iterative computer processes
incorporating more than a million calculations, it is not reducible to
a tangible form such as a document. Inputs are formatted in
spreadsheets for entry into the ABC software package, which is an
industry standard commercial off-the-shelf product licensed through SAP
Business Objects. The software's output includes spreadsheets with raw
unit costs, validation reports, and management reports.
The Department uses three methods outlined in SFFAS Statement #4
(paragraph 149(2)) to assign resource costs to activities in the model:
(a) Direct tracing; (b) assigning costs through estimation based on
surveys, interviews, or statistical sampling; and (c) allocations. The
Department uses direct tracing to assign the cost of, for example, a
physical passport book or the visa foil placed in a visa applicant's
passport, to the passport or visa service respectively. Assigning costs
to activities such as adjudicating a visa application requires
estimation based on surveys, interviews, or statistical sampling to
determine who performs an activity and how long it takes (see below for
additional details regarding assigning labor costs).
Indirect costs (overhead) are allocated according to the level of
effort needed for a particular activity. Level of effort captures the
time spent on an activity in minutes, hours, or number of full-time
equivalent (FTE) employees, as measured in the CODaC and domestic task
reports. Where possible, the model uses overhead cost pools to assign
indirect costs only to related activities. For instance, the cost of
rent for domestic visa offices is assigned only to visas, not to
passports or other services the Department provides overseas. The
Department allocates indirect support costs to each consular activity
by the level of effort needed by that consular activity. For example,
the model allocates a portion of the cost of the Department's Bureau of
Global Talent Management (formerly known as the Bureau of Human
Resources) to consular activities as this Bureau supports CA by
providing onboarding and administrative support for domestic and
overseas consular employees, including support for permanent change of
station (PCS) requirements for all consular personnel that ensures
timely deployment of personnel, families, and personal effects.
To assign labor costs, the Department relies on a variety of
industry-standard estimation methodologies. To document how consular
staff divide their time overseas, the Department conducts CODaC surveys
at a representative sample of consular sections overseas each year. In
response to the survey, consular officers indicate how much time is
spent on particular consular activities overseas, such as data intake
and review, interview and adjudication, and passback activities. The
Department uses survey data from over 200 consular sections in
consulates and embassies worldwide in conjunction with volume data from
various consular workload systems to develop resource drivers to assign
labor costs to activities. For consular activities that take place in
the United States, the Department collects volume data from periodic
workload reports provided by the directorates managing these consular
services. Financial information is gathered from reports in the
Department's Global Financial Management System (GFMS) managed by the
Bureau of the Comptroller and Global Financial Services (CGFS). The
Department converts the cost and workload data into resource drivers
and activity drivers for each resource and activity.
The CoSM uses historical workloads (i.e. , demand for the service)
as well as projected workloads, which are based
[[Page 74021]]
on demand projections produced by CA, to estimate the costs of
providing consular services. The current model update relied on FY 2019
actual costs and level of effort (i.e. , time spent on a specific
activity) data, and applied a 10-year average for workload volumes,
using historic workload actuals from FYs 2015-2019 and projected
workload volumes for FYs 2020-2024. Unit costs for each NIV service are
calculated by taking the total calculated costs for the particular
service and dividing that cost by the total 10-year average volumes for
each particular service. Using a 10-year average of volumes for NIV
services reduces the impact of volatility in demand resulting from
COVID-19 on the model results, given that the significant reduction in
NIV demand resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to continue
for the next few years. Over time, use of a 10-year average is expected
to result in full cost recovery once the fee is updated, provided the
demand projections used to calculate this average are mostly in line
with actual demand during this period and costs remain relatively
stable.
Proposed Visa Fee Changes: Nonimmigrant Visa Services
Nonimmigrant Visa Application and Border Crossing Card Processing Fees
The Department proposes to increase the non-petition based NIV fee
from $160 to $245 per application. Non-petition-based NIVs include a
variety of nonimmigrant visas, such as those for business and tourist
travel (B1/B2); students and exchange visitors (F, M, and J); crew and
transit visas (C and D); representatives of foreign media (I), and
other country-specific visa classes, as well as BCCs for applicants age
15 or older who are citizens of and resident in Mexico. ``Non-
petition'' means that these visas do not require separate requests
known as ``petitions'' to be adjudicated prior to the visa application
to establish that the individual meets certain qualifying criteria for
the relevant status (e.g. , that the beneficiary of the petition has
the relevant familial relationship to the petitioner). Non-petition
based NIVs make up nearly 90 percent of all NIV workload.
The Department also proposes to increase fees for all petition
based NIVs related to employment in the United States from $190 to
$310. Petition-based NIVs include categories for temporary workers and
trainees (H); intracompany transferees (L); aliens of extraordinary
ability (O); athletes, artists, and entertainers (P); international
cultural exchange participants (Q); and religious workers (R). These
NIVs require an approved petition from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS) prior to applying for a visa and demand significantly
more work by the consular officer than non-petition based NIVs.
The Department last updated the non-petition-based and the
petition-based NIV fees noted above through rulemaking in 2012, based
on the results of the 2011 CoSM. Costs have increased modestly for non-
petition based NIVs each year since 2012, an increase of 1.9 percent
per year since the fee was last adjusted. Compensation costs for these
services have decreased and non-compensation costs have increased.
Compensation costs include the salary, benefits, and costs associated
with direct-hire full-time domestic and overseas employees including
Foreign Service Officers (FSOs), Locally Employed (LE) staff, Eligible
Family Members (EFMs), Consular Agents, and Civil Service employees.
Non-compensation costs include operating costs like rent, technology
costs, contract costs (including contract staff costs, and large
support contracts like the Global Support Strategy (GSS) contract),
materials (e.g., visa foils) and International Cooperative
Administrative Support Services (ICASS) costs. The changes to these
categories of costs are largely due to a shift from FSO and LE staff
overseas to GSS contract staff spending time on activities associated
with this service. GSS provides support services for nonimmigrant and
immigrant visa operations at United States consulates and embassies
abroad, including but not limited to public inquiry services,
appointment services, fee collection services, biometric enrollment
services, document delivery services, and data collection services.
Costs have increased slightly for petition-based categories since
the last fee updates, from $149 million to $175 million, a 1.6 percent
increase per year since the fee was last adjusted. As with non-petition
based NIVs, compensation costs for these services have decreased and
non-compensation costs have increased, largely the result of the shift
of certain support activities to the GSS contract as noted above. The
expansion of the GSS contract helped reduce time spent by consular
officers on non-adjudication tasks, which in turn reduced overall
compensation costs while raising the non-compensation costs with
increased time spent by contract staff on these tasks.
While costs for the non-petition-based NIV service and the
petition-based NIVs noted above have increased steadily and modestly
since the last adjustment to these fees, actual demand has fluctuated
more dramatically from year to year and has a greater impact on unit
costs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fiscal year Demand
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY2000.................................................. 9,555,828
FY2001.................................................. 10,373,274
FY2002.................................................. 7,965,703
FY2003.................................................. 6,557,265
FY2004.................................................. 6,643,800
FY2005.................................................. 6,941,519
FY2006.................................................. 7,331,518
FY2007.................................................. 8,091,366
FY2008.................................................. 8,169,792
FY2009.................................................. 7,130,164
FY2010.................................................. 7,670,062
FY2011.................................................. 8,832,102
FY2012.................................................. 10,343,241
FY2013.................................................. 10,722,905
FY2014.................................................. 11,734,749
FY2015.................................................. 13,307,973
FY2016.................................................. 13,343,570
FY2017.................................................. 12,339,180
FY2018.................................................. 11,965,382
FY2019.................................................. 11,657,163
FY2020 *................................................ 5,783,251
FY2021 *................................................ 2,200,000
FY2022 *................................................ 3,080,000
FY2023 *................................................ 4,774,000
FY2024 *................................................ 5,967,500
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Projected Demand, in accordance with model, which included predicted
volumes for FY 2020-2024.
It is important to capture and analyze these fluctuations in demand
to reflect visa demand trends while also approaching fee setting in a
moderate and sustainable way. Therefore, as noted above, the proposed
NIV fee recommendations use a 10-year average for demand to reduce
volatility in unit costs and to prevent the extreme spikes in unit
costs that would result if the Department used only demand figures from
the lowest levels during the pandemic to set the fee. Because of the
dramatic drop in visa demand experienced in FY 2020 due to the pandemic
and projected to continue in the coming years, the 10-year average
volume used in this calculation is still much lower than demand figures
used to calculate this fee in prior models. As a result, the calculated
unit cost for these services, which is the total service cost divided
by the total service volume, has increased, and has led to the proposed
visa application processing fee increases.
The Department also proposes to increase the E category NIV fee
from $205 to $485. This fee was last adjusted through an interim final
rule in 2014 based on the results of the 2012 CoSM. The E category NIV
is for traders, investors, and their employees who are in executive and
supervisory positions, as well as those who possess skills essential to
the firm's operations from countries that have a qualifying treaty of
[[Page 74022]]
commerce and navigation with the United States. These NIV applications
have complex requirements that demand extensive review by adjudicators
overseas. E visas are used to engage in trade primarily between the
United States and the home country and represent less than one percent
of all NIVs. The costs for this service have increased significantly
while demand has only slightly increased since this fee was last
adjusted.
The significant increase in the cost of E Visas is attributable to
increased level of effort on the part of the adjudicator as well as
refined data collection techniques, which established that consular
staff spend significantly more time (level of effort) to provide this
service than previously captured. Following updates to the Foreign
Affairs Manual, E visa adjudication guidelines now require more
extensive officer scrutiny of applicant case files, which increases
case-processing times. Applicant interviews are also much longer than
the standard interview for non-petition based NIVs.
In addition, the CODaC was moved from a paper-based survey to an
online platform in 2017, to remedy errors and difficulties in the user
experience. The online platform collects more accurate data because the
responses go directly to the online database rather than being manually
entered by a person. This, in turn, yields a more precise cost
estimate, which better reflects the increased staff resources needed to
process and adjudicate E visas. Because the associated costs of
providing this service have increased significantly and demand for this
service has remained relatively stable, the calculated unit cost
increased significantly. As a result, the Department proposes to
increase this fee to recover the cost of providing this service. See 8
U.S.C. 1713(b) requiring the fee for MRVs, which include E visas, to be
set at the higher of $65 or the actual cost of providing the service).
Proposed Visa Fee Changes: Special Visa Services
Waiver of Two-Year Residency Requirement
The Department proposes to increase the J-Waiver fee from $120 to
$510. This fee was last adjusted through rulemaking in 2014 based on
the results of the 2012 CoSM. Certain categories of exchange visitors
(J-1) are subject to a two-year home-country physical presence
requirement. Exchange visitor program participants who are subject to
the two-year home-country physical requirement must apply for a waiver
either to stay in the United States beyond the end date of their
program or if they want to submit an application to USCIS for a change
in visa status. Otherwise, the exchange visitor is required to return
to their home country for an aggregate of at least two years before
applying for another visa to the United States. This two-year residency
requirement upon request and approval may be waived in certain
circumstances and the Department proposes increasing the associated fee
for processing these waiver requests.
The costs for this service have increased while demand has
decreased since the last fee adjustment. Since this fee was last
updated, CA discovered that not all costs for J-Waivers were being
recorded correctly in the Department's GFMS. As a result, the Visa
Office worked with CA's Comptroller offices to identify and assign
costs correctly. Prior to this update, no operating costs, particularly
those for contractors spending time on this service, were recorded and
assigned to the Visa Office's Waiver Review division, the division
responsible for adjudicating these waivers.
After identifying and properly assigning these costs, all operating
costs for J-Waivers have now been properly recorded, including contract
costs related to this service. This update has resulted in more
accurate cost assignment to this service and has led to an increase of
related compensation and non-compensation costs. These cost increases
are primarily attributed to the increases in level of effort that have
recently been identified and properly assigned to this service. That
combined with a significant decrease in demand led to an increase in
the calculated unit cost. The unit cost increase is significant because
of the increased costs and the relatively low volume for this service
during the 10-year demand timeframe used to calculate this fee.
Regulatory Findings
Administrative Procedure Act
The Department is publishing this rule as a proposed rule, with a
60-day provision for public comments.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department has reviewed this rule and, by approving it,
certifies that it will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
This rule will not result in the expenditure by state, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more in any year, and it will not significantly or uniquely
affect small governments. Therefore, no actions were deemed necessary
under the provisions of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2
U.S.C. 1501-1504.
Executive Order 12866
Under Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) determines whether a regulatory action is
significant and, therefore, subject to the requirements of the E.O. and
review by OMB. 58 FR 51735. Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 defines a
``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result
in a rule that: (1) Has an annual effect on the economy of $100 million
or more, or adversely affects in a material way a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities
(also referred to as economically significant); (2) creates serious
inconsistency or otherwise interferes with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially alters the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs, or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raises novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the E.O. Id. OIRA reviewed this proposed
rule and has determined that it is economically significant under E.O.
12866.
The Department has reviewed this rule to ensure its consistency
with the regulatory philosophy and principles set forth in E.O. 12866.
This proposed rule is necessary in light of the CoSM's result that the
cost of providing consular services has changed significantly since the
last adjustment to these fees and justifies the implementation of new
fees through the rulemaking process. The Department is setting the fees
in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 9701 and other applicable authorities, as
described in more detail above. See, e.g., 31 U.S.C. 9701(b)(2)(A)
(``The head of each agency . . . may prescribe regulations establishing
the charge for a service or thing of value provided by the agency . . .
based on . . . the costs to the Government.'').
The Department has reviewed the potential impact that these NIV
application processing fee increases will have on demand and has
determined that the impact on those who seek NIVs will be de minimis
over the lifetime of the approved visa. The Department does not believe
that the increased NIV application processing costs will deter
[[Page 74023]]
non-U.S. citizens from applying for tourist, work, and business visas.
The following table summarizes the impact of this proposed rule:
Table 1--Impact of Proposed Fee Changes
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Projected
annual number Estimated Change in Change in
Item No. Proposed Current Change in Percentage of change in state retained remittance
fee fee fee increase applications annual fees fees to treasury
\1\ collected \2\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nonimmigrant Visa Services
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
21. Nonimmigrant Visa Application
and Border Crossing Card Processing
Fees (per person)
(a) Non-petition-based $245 $160 $85 53 2,377,236 $202,065,060 $202,065,060 $0
nonimmigrant visa (except E
category)......................
(b) H, L, O, P, Q, and R 310 190 120 63 239,529 28,743,480 28,743,480 0
category nonimmigrant visa.....
(c) E category nonimmigrant visa 485 205 280 137 17,902 5,012,560 5,012,560 0
(e) Border Crossing Card--age 15 $245 160 85 53 388,320 33,007,200 33,007,200 0
and over (10 year validity)....
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Immigrant and Special Visa Services
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
35. Special Visa Services
(b) Waiver of two year residency 510 120 390 325 6,291 2,453,490 2,453,490 0
requirement....................
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................... ........... ........... ........... .............. .............. 271,281,790 271,281,790 0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Application volume based on FY 2022 projected workload. FY 2022 is the likely year of implementation.
\2\ Change in fee collection is based on FY 2022 projected workload x change to fee.
Economic Impact
In anticipation of questions from the public and various other
stakeholders, the Department commissioned a price elasticity of demand
study on the proposal for these fee increases. From the perspective of
a tourist coming to the United States, the study found that the average
cost to travel to the country is $4,834 by air. This information came
from correspondence with the National Travel & Tourism Office at the
Department of Commerce. Assuming that figure does not include the cost
of a visa, the proposed fee increase for non-petition based NIVs would
raise the total cost of a trip from $4,994 ($4,834 + $160) to $5,079
($4,834 + $245). This reflects a minimal increase of less than two
percent of the cost of the trip, assuming only one trip is taken during
the visa's validity. If two trips are taken, the total cost increase is
less than one percent; if more than two trips are taken, the increase
is even less. Therefore, we expect this fee increase to have a de
minimis effect on the demand for travel (see Table 2 below).
Table 2--Economic Impact of Non-Petition-Based NIV Fee Increase
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of trips 1 2 5 7 10
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost Per Trip................... $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21
Current Consular Fee............ $160.00 $80.00 $32.00 $22.86 $16.00
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost of Trip.......... $4,994.21 $4,914.21 $4,866.21 $4,857.07 $4,850.21
Cost per Trip................... $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21 $4,834.21
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Consular Fee........... $245.00 $122.50 $49.00 $35.00 $24.50
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost of Trip.......... $5,079.21 $4,956.71 $4,883.21 $4,869.21 $4,858.71
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$ Increase...................... $85.00 $42.50 $17.00 $12.14 $8.50
% Increase...................... 1.70% 0.86% 0.35% 0.25% 0.18%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a similar manner, the Department assessed the impact on demand
that the fee increase might have on individuals coming over on a
particular type of petition-based NIV, the H-2A Visa (Temporary Worker
Performing Agricultural Services Unavailable in the United States). The
total cost to bring over an agricultural worker is estimated to be
$10,177, or $10,367 with the current visa fee of $190. This information
came from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The proposed new fee
raises the total cost from $10,367 ($10,177 + $190) to $10,487 ($10,177
+ $310). This increases the total cost of bringing a worker over by
just over one percent.
While the study did not cover the increases for other petition-
based NIVs, E visas, or J-Waiver requests, similar
[[Page 74024]]
logic can be followed. Individuals use a J-Waiver, for example, to
transfer to a work visa or a fiancé visa without having to go back to
their home countries for two years. Given that the waiver confers a
significant economic benefit and that the average cost of international
travel to the United States is more than $510, we expect this fee
increase to also have a de minimis effect on demand.
Executive Orders 12372 and 13132
This regulation will not have substantial direct effects on the
states, on the relationship between the national government and the
states, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with section 6
of E.O. 13132, it is determined that this rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to require consultations or warrant the
preparation of a federalism summary impact statement. The regulations
implementing E.O. 12372 regarding intergovernmental consultation on
federal programs and activities do not apply to this regulation.
Executive Order 13175
The Department has determined that this rulemaking will not have
tribal implications, will not impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian tribal governments, and will not preempt tribal law.
Accordingly, the requirements of E.O. 13175 do not apply to this
rulemaking.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not impose any new reporting or record-keeping
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
List of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 22
Consular services, Fees.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in the preamble, 22 CFR part 22
is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 22--SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR CONSULAR SERVICES--DEPARTMENT OF
STATE AND FOREIGN SERVICE
0
1. The authority citation for part 22 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101 note, 1153 note, 1157 note, 1183a note,
1184(c)(12), 1201(c), 1351, 1351 note, 1713, 1714, 1714 note; 10
U.S.C. 2602(c); 22 U.S.C. 214, 214 note, 1475e, 2504(h), 2651a,
4206, 4215, 4219, 6551; 31 U.S.C. 9701; E.O. 10718, 22 FR 4632
(1957); Exec. Order 11295, 31 FR 10603, 3 CFR 1966-1970 Comp. p.
570.
0
2. Amend the table in 22.1 by revising entries 21 and 35 to read as
follows:
Sec. 22.1 Schedule of Fees.
The following table sets forth the proposed change to the following
category listed on the U.S. Department of State's Schedule of Fees for
Consular Services:
Table 1 to Sec. 22.1--Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Schedule of Fees for Consular Services
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Item No. Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nonimmigrant Visa Services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
21. Nonimmigrant Visa Application and Border Crossing
Card Processing Fees (per person)
(a) Non-petition-based nonimmigrant visa (except E $245
category)........................................
(b) H, L, O, P, Q and R category nonimmigrant visa 310
(c) E category nonimmigrant visa.................. 485
(e) Border crossing card--age 15 and over (10 year 245
validity)........................................
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Immigrant and Special Visa Services
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
35. Special visa services:
(b) Waiver of two-year residency requirement...... 510
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kevin E. Bryant,
Deputy Director, Office of Directives Management, U.S. Department of
State.
[FR Doc. 2021-28010 Filed 12-28-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-06-P