Exemption for Active-Duty Uniformed Service Members From Merchant Mariner Credentialing Fees, 68042-68055 [2023-21660]
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68042
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
(i) Operating a motor vehicle in
violation of a posted sign or traffic
control device.
■ 9. Amend § 261.15 by revising
paragraphs (e) and (g) to read as follows:
§ 261.15
Use of vehicles off roads.
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(e) While under the influence of an
alcoholic beverage or a controlled
substance in violation of State law.
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(g) Carelessly, recklessly, or in a
manner or at a speed that endangers or
is likely to endanger any person or
property.
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■ 10. Amend § 261.50 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
Orders.
(a) The Chief, each Regional Forester,
each Experiment Station Director, the
head of each administrative unit, their
deputies, or persons acting in these
positions may issue orders, consistent
with their delegations of authority, that
close or restrict the use of described
areas by applying the prohibitions
authorized in this subpart, individually
or in combination.
(b) The Chief, each Regional Forester,
each Experiment Station Director, the
head of each administrative unit, their
deputies, or persons acting in these
positions may issue orders, consistent
with their delegations of authority, that
close or restrict the use of any National
Forest System road or National Forest
System trail.
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■ 11. Revise § 261.52 to read as follows:
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§ 261.52
Fire.
When provided by an order, the
following are prohibited:
(a) Building, maintaining, attending,
or using a fire, campfire, or stove fire.
(b) Using an explosive.
(c) Smoking.
(d) Smoking, except within an
enclosed vehicle or building, at a
recreation site, or while stopped in an
area at least 3 feet in diameter that is
barren or cleared of all flammable
material.
(e) Entering or being in an area.
(f) Entering an area without any
firefighting tool prescribed by the order.
(g) Operating an internal combustion
engine.
(h) Welding or operating an acetylene
or other torch with open flame.
■ 12. Amend § 261.53 by revising the
title and introductory text to read as
follows:
§ 261.53
Special closures or restrictions.
When provided by an order, it is
prohibited to go into or be in any area
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§ 261.54
[Amended]
13. Amend § 261.54 by removing
paragraph (f).
■ 14. Amend § 261.58 by revising
paragraphs (b), (d), and (bb) to read as
follows:
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§ 261.50
which is closed or restricted for the
protection of:
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§ 261.58
Occupancy and use.
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(b) Entering or using a recreation site
or portion thereof.
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(d) Occupying a recreation site with
prohibited camping equipment
prescribed by the order.
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(bb) Possessing an alcoholic beverage.
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Homer Wilkes,
Under Secretary, Natural Resources and
Environment.
[FR Doc. 2023–21563 Filed 10–2–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
46 CFR Part 10
[Docket No. USCG–2021–0288]
RIN 1625–AC83
Exemption for Active-Duty Uniformed
Service Members From Merchant
Mariner Credentialing Fees
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is proposing
to exempt certain members of the
uniformed services from Merchant
Mariner Credential (MMC) fees for the
evaluation of an MMC application, the
administration of an examination
required for an MMC endorsement, and
the issuance of an MMC. This proposal
is in response to Executive Order 13860,
‘‘Supporting the Transition of ActiveDuty Service Members and Military
Veterans Into the Merchant Marine,’’
and section 3511 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2020. Under this proposal,
members of the uniformed services
would be exempt from paying fees for
an MMC.
DATES: Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before January 2, 2024.
SUMMARY:
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You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2021–0288 using the Federal Decision
Making Portal at www.regulations.gov.
See the ‘‘Public Participation and
Request for Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
further instructions on submitting
comments.
Collection of information. Submit
comments on the collection of
information discussed in section VI.D of
this preamble both to the Coast Guard’s
online docket and to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA) in the White House Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) using
their website www.reginfo.gov/public/
do/PRAMain. Comments sent to OIRA
on the collection of information must
reach OMB on or before the comment
due date listed on their website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
information about this document, call or
email Mr. James Cavo, U.S. Coast Guard
Office of Merchant Mariner
Credentialing; telephone 202–372–1205,
email James.D.Cavo@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
II. Abbreviations
III. Background
IV. Legal Authority
V. Discussion of Proposed Rule
VI. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
The Coast Guard views public
participation as essential to effective
rulemaking and will consider all
comments and material received during
the comment period. Your comment can
help shape the outcome of this
rulemaking. If you submit a comment,
please include the docket number for
this rulemaking, indicate the specific
section of this document to which each
comment applies, and provide a reason
for each suggestion or recommendation.
Submitting comments. We encourage
you to submit comments through the
Federal Decision Making Portal at
www.regulations.gov. To do so, go to
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
www.regulations.gov, type USCG–2021–
0288 in the search box, and click
‘‘Search.’’ Next, look for this document
in the Search Results column, and click
on it. Then click on the Comment
option. If you cannot submit your
material by using www.regulations.gov,
call or email the person in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this proposed rule for alternate
instructions.
Viewing material in docket. To view
documents mentioned in this proposed
rule as being available in the docket,
find the docket as described in the
previous paragraph, and then select
‘‘Supporting & Related Material’’ in the
Document Type column. Public
comments will also be placed in our
online docket and can be viewed by
following instructions on the
www.regulations.gov Frequently Asked
Questions web page. That FAQ page
also explains how to subscribe for email
alerts that will notify you when
comments are posted or if a final rule is
published. We review all comments
received, but we will only post
comments that address the topic of the
proposed rule. We may choose not to
post off-topic, inappropriate, or
duplicate comments that we receive.
Personal information. We accept
anonymous comments. Comments we
post to www.regulations.gov will
include any personal information you
have provided. For more about privacy
and submissions to the docket in
response to this document, see the
DHS’s eRulemaking System of Records
notice (85 FR 14226, March 11, 2020).
Public meeting. We do not plan to
hold a public meeting, but we will
consider doing so if we determine from
public comments that a meeting would
be helpful. We would issue a separate
Federal Register notice to announce the
date, time, and location of such a
meeting.
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II. Abbreviations
CATEX Categorical exclusion
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CG–MMC U.S. Coast Guard Office of
Merchant Mariner Credentialing
DHS Department of Homeland Security
GS General Schedule
MMC Merchant Mariner Credential
MMLD Merchant Mariner Licensing
Documentation
NDAA 2020 National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
NMC National Maritime Center
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OPM Office of Personnel Management
RA Regulatory analysis
§ Section
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STCW International Convention on
Standards of Training, Certification and
Watchkeeping for Seafarers
USPHS U.S. Public Health Service
U.S.C. United States Code
III. Background
As described in title 46 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), section
10.107, a Coast Guard-issued Merchant
Mariner Credential (MMC) serves as a
mariner’s qualification document and
certificate of identification. Mariners
employed aboard most U.S. merchant
vessels are required to hold a valid
MMC.
As mandated by title 46 of the United
States Code (U.S.C.), section 2110, and
in accordance with the Independent
Offices Appropriations Act (31 U.S.C.
9701), the Coast Guard has established
fees associated with MMC applications,
which are codified in table 1 to 46 CFR
10.219(a). There are three types of
credentialing fees: an evaluation fee, an
examination fee, and an issuance fee.
The fee amount varies based on the
individual credential transaction that an
applicant seeks.
Evaluation fees for MMCs range from
$50 to $100, and the applicant must pay
the fee at the time an application is
submitted to the Coast Guard.
Examination fees range from $45 to
$140, depending on the endorsement
sought, and must be paid before the
professional examination for an
endorsement is taken.1 If an applicant
applies for an MMC with both a rating
and an officer endorsement, the higher
evaluation fee is charged. Issuance fees
are $45 and must be paid before an
MMC is issued.2
The original issuance of an MMC, as
well as any subsequent credential
transactions, such as increasing the
scope of authority, raising the grade of
authority, or renewing an MMC, all
require a fee.3 MMCs are valid for a
period of 5 years and may be renewed
at any time during the validity period of
the credential and for 1 year after
expiration.
Mariners typically seek additional
endorsements after accruing the
required sea service and completing
required training. There are no fees
1 An endorsement is a ‘‘statement of a mariner’s
qualifications.’’ 46 CFR 10.107(b). The particular
endorsement(s) on each mariner’s MMC indicate
what capacities they may serve in, such as a ‘‘barge
supervisor’’ or a ‘‘lifeboatman.’’ See id.; 46 CFR
10.109(a)–(b).
2 A rating endorsement is an annotation on an
MMC that allows a mariner to serve in those
capacities set out in 46 CFR 10.109(b). 46 CFR
10.107(b). Officer endorsement means an
annotation on an MMC that allows a mariner to
serve in the capacities listed in 46 CFR 10.109. Id.
3 ‘‘Increase in scope’’ and ‘‘raise of grade’’ are
defined at 46 CFR 10.107.
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associated with the issuance of mariner
medical certificates or International
Convention on Standards of Training,
Certification and Watchkeeping for
Seafarers (STCW) endorsements.
The Coast Guard does not require a
fee for MMC transactions if one of the
following three conditions is met:
(1) The application is for a Document
of Continuity, as specified in 46 CFR
10.219(e)(3).
(2) The credential is a duplicate of a
credential lost in a shipwreck or other
casualty under 46 CFR 10.229(c) and
reflected in table 1 to § 10.219(a).
(3) The applicant qualifies for a ‘‘nofee’’ Merchant Mariner Credential under
46 CFR 10.219(h).
Currently, an applicant only qualifies
for a ‘‘no-fee’’ MMC if they are a
volunteer for or an employee of an
organization that is youth-oriented, notfor-profit, and charitable, 46 CFR
10.219(j). The holder of a ‘‘no fee’’ MMC
is restricted to using vessels owned or
operated by the sponsoring
organization, 46 CFR 10.219(k).
In March 2019, Executive Order
13860, ‘‘Supporting the Transition of
Active-Duty Service Members and
Military Veterans Into the Merchant
Marine,’’ directed the Coast Guard to
waive the fees associated with MMC
applications ‘‘for active duty service
members, if a waiver is authorized and
appropriate.’’ 4 The Executive Order
applied only to members of the armed
forces.
Subsequently, in December 2019,
Congress enacted the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
(NDAA 2020).5 Building upon Executive
Order 13860, section 3511(c)(1) of the
NDAA 2020 directed the Coast Guard to
waive evaluation, examination, and
issuance fees associated with MMCs, if
a waiver is authorized and appropriate,
not just for the armed forces (Army,
Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Space
Force, and Coast Guard), but for all
‘‘members of the uniformed services on
active duty.’’ The uniformed services
include the Commissioned Corps of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the
Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public
Health Service (USPHS) in addition to
the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine
Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard.6
In accordance with Executive Order
13860 and section 3511 of the NDAA
2020, on May 26, 2020, the Coast
Guard’s Office of Merchant Mariner
4 E.O 13860, section 3, paragraph (a)(ii) (84 FR
8407 (Mar. 7, 2019)).
5 Public Law 116–92, Dec. 20, 2019.
6 Section 3511of the NDAA 2020 is codified as a
note to 46 U.S.C. 7302; ‘‘Uniformed services’’
defined at 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(5).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
Credentialing (CG–MMC) issued Policy
Letter 02–20, ‘‘Waiver of Fees
Associated with Merchant Mariner
Credential Applications for Active Duty
Members of the Uniformed Services.’’ 7
CG–MMC Policy Letter 02–20 provides
guidance for the waiver of MMC fees for
active duty members of the uniformed
services. The policy provided a waiver
of fees for mariners who provide
documentation evidencing their
eligibility for the fee waiver. This
documentation may include active-duty
orders or a letter from their command or
personnel office on official letterhead
that states the applicant is a current
member of the uniformed services on
active duty or a member of the Selected
Reserve of the Ready Reserve of any of
the armed forces or the Ready Reserve
Corps of the USPHS.
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IV. Legal Authority
Section 3511(c)(1) of the NDAA 2020
directed the Coast Guard to waive
evaluation, examination, and issuance
fees associated with MMCs for members
of the uniformed services on active
duty, if a waiver is authorized and
appropriate. The Coast Guard has found
that such a waiver is authorized and
appropriate. Under 46 U.S.C. 2110(g),
the Secretary of the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) may exempt
a person from paying such a fee if the
Secretary determines that it is in the
public interest to do so. The Secretary
has delegated this authority to the Coast
Guard through article II, paragraph 92,
subparagraph (a) of DHS Delegation No.
00170.1, Revision No. 01.3. The Coast
Guard concludes that it is in the public
interest to exempt members of the
uniformed services (Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, Coast
Guard, Commissioned Corps of the
NOAA, and Commissioned Corps of
USPHS) on active duty; members of the
Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
of any of the armed forces (Army
National Guard of the United States,
Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Marine
Corps Reserve, Air National Guard of
the United States, Air Force Reserve,
and Coast Guard Reserve); and the
Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS from
fees associated with obtaining an MMC.
As discussed in Executive Order 13860,
it is the policy of the United States to
establish and maintain an effective
merchant marine and to provide
sufficient support and resources to
active duty and separating service
members who pursue or possess MMCs.
7 CG–MMC Policy Letter 02–20 is available at
https://www.dco.uscg.mil/Portals/9/
DCO%20Documents/5p/5ps/MMC/CG-MMC2%20Policies/CG-MMC-Policy-Letter-02-20.pdf.
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The goals of not requiring these fees are
to: (1) help attract active-duty service
members with the appropriate skills and
expertise to obtain an MMC for
employment in the maritime industry;
(2) support U.S. national security
requirements; and (3) provide
meaningful, well-paying jobs to U.S.
veterans.8
V. Discussion of Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard is proposing to
amend 46 CFR 10.219 and codify this
MMC fee waiver in the regulations.
Specifically, the Coast Guard proposes
to exempt members of the uniformed
services on active duty, members of the
Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
of any of the armed forces (Army
National Guard of the United States,
Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Marine
Corps Reserve, Air National Guard of
the United States, Air Force Reserve and
Coast Guard Reserve), and the Ready
Reserve Corps of the USPHS from
paying evaluation, examination, or
issuance fees for an MMC.
For purposes of this rule, ‘‘uniformed
services’’ would have the same meaning
as defined at 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(5): the
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
Space Force, and Coast Guard, as well
as members of the NOAA and USPHS
Commissioned Corps. Members of the
Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
of a reserve component named in 10
U.S.C. 10101 and members of the Ready
Reserve Corps of the USPHS would also
be eligible for the exemption. (The
NOAA Commissioned Corps does not
have a reserve component.)
For members of the armed forces,
‘‘active duty’’ would have the same
meaning as under 10 U.S.C. 101(d)(1).
For members of the NOAA
commissioned corps, ‘‘active duty’’
would have the same meaning as under
33 U.S.C. 3002(b)(1). For members of the
USPHS Commissioned Corps, ‘‘active
duty’’ would have the same meaning as
‘‘active service’’ under 42 U.S.C. 212(d).
‘‘Selected Reserve’’ would have the
same meaning as under 10 U.S.C.
10143(a).
This fee exemption would be located
in a new paragraph, paragraph (m), in
46 CFR 10.219.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
We developed this proposed rule after
considering numerous statutes and
Executive orders related to rulemaking.
A summary of our analyses based on
these statutes and Executive orders
follows.
8 Executive
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A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review), as amended by
Executive Order 14094 (Modernizing
Regulatory Review), and 13563
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review) direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has not designated this rule a
significant regulatory action under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866, as
amended by Executive Order 14094.
Accordingly, OMB has not reviewed
this rule.
The Coast Guard has developed an
analysis of the costs and benefits of the
proposed rule to assess its impacts. The
regulatory analysis (RA) follows.
The rule is being proposed in
response to two items. The first is
section 3, paragraph (a)(ii) of Executive
Order 13860, ‘‘Supporting the
Transition of Active-Duty Service
Members and Military Veterans Into the
Merchant Marine,’’ signed March 4,
2019.9 The second is section 3511(c)(1)
of the NDAA 2020.10
For purposes of the analysis, this RA
is presented in two parts. Part I
examines the impacts of CG–MMC
Policy Letter 02–20, which was issued
on May 26, 2020.11 Part II examines the
impacts of the proposed rulemaking
post the issuance of the CG–MMC
Policy Letter 02–20. The policy letter
and the proposed rulemaking cover
different populations. The difference
between the two populations arises from
which components of the reserves are
eligible for a waiver of fees under the
policy letter and which would be
eligible under this proposed rule. The
policy letter covers all reservists on
active duty currently and in the past.
The proposed rulemaking, however,
would cover only those reservists who
are currently members of the Selected
Reserve, as described in 10 U.S.C.
9 84 FR 8407 (Mar. 7, 2019) (‘‘With respect to
National Maritime Center license evaluation,
issuance, and examination, [the Coast Guard shall]
take all necessary and appropriate actions to
provide for the waiver of fees for active-duty service
members.’’).
10 Public Law 116–92, Dec. 20, 2019.
11 Section 5e of the policy letter. A copy of the
policy letter can be found in the docket.
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10143(a), or a reserve component named
in 10 U.S.C. 10101, or the Ready
Reserve of the USPHS. The in-scope
population of the proposed rulemaking
is a subset of that of the policy letter.
The Coast Guard does not have data
on the number of Selected Reservists or
Ready Reservists who were granted fee
exemptions under the policy letter, nor
does it have data on the number of the
reservists who were granted fee
exemptions while on active-duty status.
Due to this lack of data, it is not possible
to estimate the differences in the
affected populations between the policy
letter and the proposed rulemaking.12
Therefore, the Coast Guard is treating
the estimated difference as an
unquantified impact of the proposed
rule, though the Coast Guard explores
potential cost savings effects in its
analysis. Further discussion can be
found below.
Since the policy letter and proposed
rulemakings are implemented at
different time periods (the policy letter
was implemented in 2020, and the
proposed rulemaking is expected to be
implemented in 2024), two different
baselines need to be examined. The first
is that associated with the pre-policy
baseline (covering 2020–2033), and the
second is that associated with the
proposed rulemaking baseline (covering
2024–2033). The pre-policy baseline
analyzes the effects of the Policy Letter
02–20 published in 2020 which allowed
certain eligible applicants to receive an
MMC fee exemption. The pre-policy
baseline estimates the costs and savings
that applicants and the Coast Guard
received as a result of the policy letter
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as well as the costs and savings from
this proposed rulemaking. The second
baseline, the proposed rulemaking
baseline, estimates the costs and savings
that would occur as the result of this
proposed rulemaking only. However,
since we are unable to determine the
change in population there are no
additional costs or savings that can be
attributed to the proposed rulemaking
baseline.
Table 1, below, provides a summary
of all impacts from Policy Letter 02–20
and the proposed rulemaking on a perapplicant basis. Section 1a of that table
discusses the impacts of the policy
letter, and section 1b discusses those of
the proposed rulemaking. The dollar
figures are presented in both nominal
and discounted terms (7 percent on an
annualized basis) for a 10-year period.
TABLE 1a—SUMMARY OF THE IMPACTS OF POLICY LETTER 02–20
Category
Impacts
Applicability .........................................
Affected Population ............................
46 U.S.C. 2110, Executive Order 13860, and NDAA 2020.
Members of the uniformed services (Army, Navy, Air Force, Space Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard,
Commissioned Corps of NOAA, Commissioned Corps of USPHS), including reservists and members
of the National Guard, who are on active duty at the time of application, or are current members of the
reserve forces and were previously on active duty.
The estimated number of fee waivers in the future is 622 (annually).
$9.87 per application.
The 14-year documentation cost for the 622 yearly applicants is $85,948 (in total nominal dollars) and
$61,468 and $6,139 annualized (discounted at 7%).
$7.82 per application.
The 14-year cost to the Coast Guard is $68,097 (in total nominal dollars) and $48,702 and $4,864
annualized (discounted at 7%).
The mean estimated transfer is $159.38 per MMC.
Over the 14-year period, the transfers are estimated at $1,387,881 (in total nominal dollars) and
$992,601 and $99,134 on an annualized basis (discounted at 7%).
May provide uniformed services members greater flexibility with respect to pursuing careers after leaving
the uniformed services.
Estimated Fee Waivers (annually) .....
Labor costs for applicants to provide
documentation of eligibility for an
MMC fee exemption.
Labor costs to the Coast Guard to
evaluate applicant’s eligibility for
MMC fee exemption.
Transfer payments (eliminated applicant’s MMC fees paid to the Federal Government).
Unquantified benefits ..........................
TABLE 1b—SUMMARY OF THE IMPACTS OF PROPOSED RULE
Category
Impacts
Applicability .........................................
Affected Population ............................
46 U.S.C. 2110, Executive Order 13860, and NDAA 2020.
The proposed rulemaking covers only uniformed service members and reservists on active duty, members of the Selected Reserve, and members of the Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service.
The proposed rulemaking involves a narrower in-scope population, as Policy Letter 02–20 covers reservists currently on active duty as well as those who were on active duty in the past.
The number of fee waivers in the future is estimated, for purposes of our analysis, at 622 (annually).
However, as the only change from Policy Letter 02–20 involves a potential decrease in the reservist
population, the actual number may be smaller. Due to a lack of data, it is not possible to quantify this
number.
$9.87 per application.
There are no labor costs to the applicants to provide documentation as the proposed rulemaking codifies
the already existing Policy Letter 02–20.
$7.82 per application.
There are no labor costs expected from the implementation of the proposed rulemaking as it codifies the
already existing Policy Letter 02–20.
Codifies MMC Fee Waiver. The mean estimated transfer is $159.38 per MMC.
There are no transfer payments expected from the implementation of the proposed rulemaking as it
codifies the already existing Policy Letter 02–20.
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Estimated Fee Waivers (annually) .....
Labor costs for applicants to provide
documentation of eligibility for an
MMC fee exemption.
Labor costs to the Coast Guard to
evaluate applicant’s eligibility for
MMC fee exemption.
Transfer payments (eliminated applicant’s MMC fees paid to the Federal Government).
12 Although the NMC has data on the aggregate
number of applicants for the fee waiver, it does not
have data on the applicants broken out by subcategories such as what service they are in (or were
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in) or their active or reserve status. Executive Order
13860 does not require the Coast Guard to collect
this data. As a result, the Coast Guard does not
collect it. In addition, the Department of Defense,
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as of when this proposed rule was written, did not
publish data on the number of Selected Reservists
or Ready Reservists who are currently on active
duty or who were in the recent past.
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TABLE 1b—SUMMARY OF THE IMPACTS OF PROPOSED RULE—Continued
Category
Impacts
Unquantified benefits ..........................
May provide increased clarity and transparency to the affected public as a published rule in the CFR as
opposed to a standalone guidance document.1
Note: all dollar figures are rounded to the closest whole dollar.
1 The proposed rulemaking also incorporates the greater flexibility with respect to pursuing careers. Due to the fact that this has already been
achieved by the policy letter, independent of the proposed rulemaking, we only list the increased clarity and transparency obtained through the
codification of the MMC Fee Waiver. These are the additional benefits obtained through the creation of the proposed rulemaking.
Part I. CG–MMC Policy Letter 02–20
(Pre-Policy Baseline)
A policy letter was published to
immediately implement Executive
Order 13860, section 3511(c)(1) of the
NDAA 2020. The implementation of the
policy letter had three impacts. The first
impact is the time that applicants are
required to provide documentation to
show eligibility for the MMC fee
exemption.13 Prior to the
implementation of the policy letter,
applicants did not need to provide such
documentation. The second impact
involves the labor costs to the Coast
Guard to evaluate documentation for
eligibility of the fee exemption. Prior to
the policy letter, the Coast Guard did
not have to evaluate such
documentation, so there was no cost to
the Government. The third impact of the
policy letter was in the form of transfer
payments, which are monetary
payments from one group to another
that do not affect the total resources
available to society. Prior to the
implementation of the policy letter, the
affected population were required to
pay the MMC fees. Following
publication of the Policy Letter, the
Federal Government incurs the cost of
those fees. These three factors comprise
the effects of the of Policy Letter 02–20.
The population will be discussed in
greater detail below in the ‘‘Affected
Population’’ section of this RA.
Affected Population for Policy Letter
02–20
In accordance with Executive Order
13860 and section 3511 of the NDAA
2020, and the authority under 46 U.S.C.
2110(g), the Coast Guard waived MMC
fees for members of the uniformed
services (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine
Corps, Space Force, Coast Guard, and
the Commissioned Corps of NOAA and
the USPHS), including reservists and
members of the National Guard, if they
are currently on active duty at the time
of application, or are a current member
of the reserve forces and were
previously on active duty.14 The waiver
was implemented through Policy Letter
02–20. This policy letter took effect on
May 26, 2020. Data is available for all
these categories of personnel except the
Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS. The
Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS was
authorized and funded by the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic
Security Act and signed into law on
March 27, 2020. It only began to accept
applications in the fall of 2020.15 With
respect to the other groups mentioned
above, the maximum potentially
affected population is 2,145,035. This is
the total number of personnel who may
be eligible for an MMC fee exemption.
A detailed breakdown of this population
can be found below in Table 2.
TABLE 2—MAXIMUM TOTAL POTENTIALLY AFFECTED POPULATION BY POLICY LETTER 02–20
Service branch
Number
Source
Notes
Members of Uniformed Services
Army ..............................
466,172
Navy ...............................
Air Force and Space
Force.
Marines ..........................
Coast Guard ..................
Commissioned Corps of
NOAA.
Commissioned Corps of
USPHS.
340,390
329,257
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Total Active Uniformed
Service Members.
176,259
40,308
327
6,100
Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) website, (https://
dwp.dmdc.osd.mil/dwp/app/dod-data-reports/workforce-reports,
downloaded September 1, 2022). Downloaded from section ‘‘military
personal, Military and civilian personnel by service/agency by state/
country, March 2022’’.
Information from NOAA, provided May 27, 2021.
Department of Health and Human Services website (https://www.hhs.gov/
about/news/2020/06/30/trump-administration-re-establishes-ready-reserve-corps-as-part-of-the-us-phs.html, downloaded January 4, 2021).
1,358,813
13 Applicants must submit documentation
consistent with CG–MMC Policy Letter 02–20 to
show that they are eligible for the fee exemption.
This may include a copy of active-duty orders citing
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:38 Oct 02, 2023
This data is as of the
quarter ending March
2022.1
Jkt 262001
Titles 10 or 14 of the United States Code or a letter
from the relevant command or personnel office on
official letterhead stating that the applicant is a
current member of the uniformed services.
PO 00000
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14 The legal authority is discussed in greater
detail in section III of this preamble, ‘‘Background’’.
15 https://www.usphs.gov/ready-reserve, accessed
June 20, 2023.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2—MAXIMUM TOTAL POTENTIALLY AFFECTED POPULATION BY POLICY LETTER 02–20—Continued
Service branch
Number
Source
Notes
Members of Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
Army Reserve ................
180,647
Army National Guard of
the U.S.
Navy Reserve ................
Air Force Reserve .........
Air National Guard of the
U.S.
Marine Corps Reserves
Coast Guard Reserves ..
Commissioned Corps of
USPHS (Ready Reserve).
Space Force Reserve ....
Total Members of Selected Reserve of the
Ready Reserve.
Total Active Uniformed
Service Members +
Members of Selected
Reserve of the Ready
Reserve.
333,182
Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) website, (https://
dwp.dmdc.osd.mil/dwp/app/dod-data-reports/workforce-reports,
downloaded September 1, 2022). Downloaded from section ‘‘military
personal, Military and civilian personnel by service/agency by state/
country, March 2022’’.
This data is as of March
2022.2
56,017
69,697
106,964
33,607
6,108
N.A.3
04
786,222
2,145,035
1 The table does not include personnel on temporary duty or deployed in support of contingency operations. The data is the latest available as
of June 2022.
2 Latest available data as of the search date, September 1, 2022.
3 USPHS Ready Reserve was created in March 2020 and only started to take applications in the Fall of 2020.
4 Space Force, as of September 1, 2022, does not have a reserve element.
Of the 2,145,035 eligible persons, only
a small number applied for an MMC and
received a fee waiver. Based on
available data, 2020 through 2022
(inclusively), an average of 622 eligible
persons were granted a waiver of MMC
fees (per year). The Coast Guard
assumes that, in the 10-year period
following implementation of Policy
Letter 02–20, an average of 622 persons
will continue to annually request and
receive a waiver of MMC fees.
MMC Fees To Be Exempted
Table 3 provides the MMC evaluation,
examination, and issuance fees waived
for qualifying individuals for the policy
letter.16 The column on the right side
shows the aggregated evaluation,
examination, and issuance fees for each
type of credential transaction. The
average fee for an MMC, as can be seen
at the bottom of table 3, is $159.38.
TABLE 3—FEE FOR MMCS AND ASSOCIATED ENDORSEMENTS FROM TABLE 1 OF 46 CFR 10.219(a)
Evaluation,
then the fee
is . . .
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
If you apply for
MMC with officer endorsement:
Original:
Upper level 1 ............................................................................................
Lower level 2 ............................................................................................
Renewal ....................................................................................................
Raise of grade ..........................................................................................
Modification or removal of limitation or scope .........................................
Radio officer endorsement:
Original .....................................................................................................
Renewal ....................................................................................................
Staff officer endorsements: ......................................................................
Original .....................................................................................................
Renewal ...........................................................................................................
MMC with rating endorsement:
Original endorsement for ratings other than qualified ratings .................
Original endorsement for qualified rating .................................................
Upgrade or raise of grade ........................................................................
Renewal endorsement for ratings other than qualified ratings ................
Renewal endorsement for qualified rating ...............................................
Modification or removal of limitation or scope .........................................
16 Table
Examination,
then the fee
is . . .
20:19 Oct 02, 2023
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Total
$100
100
50
100
50
$110
95
45
45
45
$45 .................
45 ...................
45 ...................
45 ...................
45 ...................
$255
240
140
190
140
50
50
45
n/a
45 ...................
45 ...................
140
95
90
50
n/a
n/a
45 ...................
45 ...................
135
95
95
95
95
50
50
50
n/a
140
140
n/a
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
45
140
280
280
95
140
140
1 of 46 CFR 10.219(a).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Issuance,
then the fee
is . . .
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...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
...................
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 190 / Tuesday, October 3, 2023 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 3—FEE FOR MMCS AND ASSOCIATED ENDORSEMENTS FROM TABLE 1 OF 46 CFR 10.219(a)—Continued
Evaluation,
then the fee
is . . .
If you apply for
STCW endorsement:
Original ............................................................................................................
Renewal ....................................................................................................
Reissue, replacement, and duplicate .......................................................
Examination,
then the fee
is . . .
0
0
n/a
0
0
n/a
Issuance,
then the fee
is . . .
Total
0 .....................
0 .....................
45 ...................
n/a
n/a
45
Summation Statistics
Mean ..............
Lower Bound
Upper Bound
Credential
transaction
types that
require Fees.
(1) Labor Costs to Applicants Providing
Documentation Showing Eligibility for
MMC Fee Waiver
Applicants for an MMC fee waiver,
under Policy Letter 02–20, need to
provide documentation to show
eligibility. Examples of documentation
include, but are not limited to, activeduty orders citing Titles 10 or 14 of the
United States Code, a letter from the
command or personnel office on official
letterhead stating that the applicant is
currently serving under Titles 10 or 14,
or similar documentation. The applicant
should submit the documentation with
their application for an MMC.17
The National Maritime Center (NMC)
estimates that it would take applicants
15 minutes to obtain eligibility
documentation and include it with an
MMC application.18 19 The Coast Guard
estimates the mean hourly rate of active
duty uniformed service members at
$39.48 per hour.20 The Coast Guard
estimates the mean monthly pay of
active duty uniformed service members
at $6,865.77.21 That figure, $6,865.77, is
multiplied by 12 to obtain an annual
figure of $82,389.24 ($6,865.77 × 12). To
estimate hourly rates, the Coast Guard
divides $82,389.24 by 2,087, which the
Office of Personnel and Management
(OPM) uses as the number of working
hours in a year, per 5 U.S.C. 5504(b)(1).
Hence, the Coast Guard estimates the
average hourly rate of active-duty
uniformed service members at $39.48 22
($82,389.24 ÷ 2,087) and estimates the
cost to this population to provide
documentation showing eligibility for
the fee waiver at $9.87 ((15 minutes ÷
60 minutes) × $39.48 = $9.87). As the
Coast Guard forecasts 622 applicants per
year, the total nominal cost is estimated
at $6,139 per annum (622 × $9.87 =
$6,139.14, rounded to $6,139). Table 4
shows the estimated nominal cost over
a 14-year period, including discounted
and annualized figures. As the policy
letter became effective in 2020, table 4
shows the estimated costs for the 14year period covering 2020 through 2033
(the 14-year period following the
implementation of the policy letter).23
Table 4 is showing the pre-policy letter
baseline. All dollar figures in Table 4,
and all other tables in this regulatory
analysis, are in 2021 terms unless
otherwise stated.
17 In order to provide maximum flexibility to
applicants, for the proposed rulemaking the
acceptable forms of documentation will be provided
in updated guidance that the Coast Guard is
planning to publish when a final rule is published.
18 The NMC is responsible for receiving and
evaluating MMC applications and issuing MMCs to
qualified mariners.
19 The Coast Guard, in its calculations, has
assumed that applicants provide their own
documentation as opposed to command personnel
providing the documentation on their behalf. The
Coast Guard does not have information on the
breakdown between the two groups.
20 This dollar figure for uniformed service
members is provided in nominal terms, as opposed
to a loaded rate (adjusted for benefits). This is due
to the complexity of measuring and obtaining
readily available data on the uniformed service
members benefit compensation package. We
compared civilian employees and uniformed
service members and concluded that the
comparison is not appropriate, since civilian
employees and uniformed service members receive
significantly different benefits. Uniformed
personnel, for example, are provided full housing
(or equivalent financial compensation), food or
partial food stipend, full medical coverage for
themselves and their families, significant
educational benefits during their time in service
and, upon completing terms of military service,
pensions (for those who complete the requisite
amount of service) complete moving expenses
throughout their careers, and other benefits that are
dependent upon an individual’s assignment. By
comparison, few employees in the private sector
receive such benefits.
21 We calculated this figure using the Jan. 2021
Monthly Basic Pay Table on the Department of
Defense website, https://militarypay.defense.gov/
Portals/3/Documents/
2021%20Pay%20Table%203%20percent%20%20FINAL.pdf (accessed Nov. 10, 2021), which in
turn was found under ‘‘active-duty pay’’ at https://
militarypay.defense.gov/Pay/Basic-Pay/ActiveDuty-Pay/. In calculating this average, we excluded
all zero cells in the table, as they are fields for
which wages cannot exist. For example, it is not
possible to obtain a 0–10 rating with fewer than 20
years of experience. Hence the zeros in the table for
that rating, for years of experience under 20, were
excluded from our calculations.
22 Rounded to nearest whole cent.
23 It should be noted that for the 3 years 2020–
2022 (inclusively), we are implicitly applying our
assumptions regarding in-scope population
numbers and costs for the years 2022 and going
forward. The same reasoning applies to analysis
later on in this RA on the 2020–2022 periods
examined for Policy Letter 02–20.
Cost and Transfer Impacts of Policy
Letter 02–20
As stated previously, there were three
impacts of the policy letter. The first
was that it resulted in a cost to
applicants to provide the
documentation needed to show
eligibility for the MMC fee exemption.
The second was the cost to the Coast
Guard to process this documentation.
The third was the transfer price
associated with the costs of the fees
being shifted from individual applicants
to the Federal Government. The costs to
applicants are discussed in detail in
section (1), below. Costs to the Coast
Guard are discussed in section (2).
Section (3) discusses the combined costs
to applicants and the Coast Guard, and
section (4) details the transfer costs.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
$159.38
$45.00
$280.00
16
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68049
TABLE 4—LABOR COSTS TO IN-SCOPE APPLICANTS OF COMPLETING MMC FEE WAIVER DOCUMENTATION (POLICY
LETTER 02–20 IMPACT) (PRE-POLICY LETTER IMPLEMENTATION BASELINE)
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Nominal
3%
7%
1 (2020) .............................................................................................................
2 (2021) .............................................................................................................
3 (2022) .............................................................................................................
4 (2023) .............................................................................................................
5 (2024) .............................................................................................................
6 (2025) .............................................................................................................
7 (2026) .............................................................................................................
8 (2027) .............................................................................................................
9 (2028) .............................................................................................................
10 (2029) ...........................................................................................................
11 (2030) ...........................................................................................................
12 (2031) ...........................................................................................................
13 (2032) ...........................................................................................................
14 (2033) ...........................................................................................................
$6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
6,139
$6,323
6,139
5,960
5,787
5,618
5,454
5,296
5,141
4,992
4,846
4,705
4,568
4,435
4,306
$6,569
6,139
5,737
5,362
5,011
4,683
4,377
4,091
3,823
3,573
3,339
3,121
2,917
2,726
Total ....................................................................................................................
Annualized ...................................................................................................
85,948
..............................
73,570
6,139
61,468
6,139
(2) Labor Costs to the Coast Guard To
Evaluate and Process Documentation
Showing Eligibility for MMC Fee
Waivers
Just as there are labor costs for
applicants to submit documentation,
there are labor costs to the Coast Guard
to evaluate and process the
documentation showing eligibility for
an MMC fee waiver. The NMC estimates
that the time to process the typical
documentation is 10 minutes, or 0.17
hours (10 ÷ 60). The processing is
performed by personnel holding
positions at the government General
Schedule (GS) pay scale of GS–07.
According to Commandant Instruction
7310.1U, the hourly loaded rate for a
GS–07 Coast Guard employee is $46.24
Thus, the labor cost to the Coast Guard
to process the eligibility documentation
is $7.82 (0.17 hours × $46 per hour) per
applicant. As stated previously, the
Coast Guard assumes 622 applicants
would receive a MMC fee waiver each
year. Given this, the Coast Guard
predicts it would spend $4,864 per year
to evaluate and process documentation
provided by applicants showing
eligibility for fee exemptions (622 ×
$7.82 = $4,864.04, rounded to the
nearest whole dollar). The Coast Guard
estimates that the aggregate 14-year cost
to the Government is $48,702, with an
annualized figure of $4,864, discounted
at 7 percent. These numbers can be seen
in table 5.
TABLE 5—LABOR COSTS TO COAST GUARD TO EVALUATE ELIGIBILITY FOR MMC FEE WAIVER (POLICY LETTER 02–20
IMPACT) (PRE-POLICY LETTER IMPLEMENTATION BASELINE)
Year
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Nominal
3%
7%
1 (2020) .............................................................................................................
2 (2021) .............................................................................................................
3 (2022) .............................................................................................................
4 (2023) .............................................................................................................
5 (2024) .............................................................................................................
6 (2025) .............................................................................................................
7 (2026) .............................................................................................................
8 (2027) .............................................................................................................
9 (2028) .............................................................................................................
10 (2029) ...........................................................................................................
11 (2030) ...........................................................................................................
12 (2031) ...........................................................................................................
13 (2032) ...........................................................................................................
14 (2033) ...........................................................................................................
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
4,864
5,010
4,864
4,722
4,585
4,451
4,322
4,196
4,074
3,955
3,840
3,728
3,619
3,514
3,412
5,205
4,864
4,546
4,248
3,971
3,711
3,468
3,241
3,029
2,831
2,646
2,473
2,311
2,160
Total ....................................................................................................................
Annualized ...................................................................................................
68,097
..............................
58,291
4,864
48,702
4,864
24 Page two of enclosure 2 to Commandant
Instruction 7310.1U (https://www.uscg.mil/Portals/
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(3) Aggregated Labor Costs of
Applicants and the Coast Guard
Associated With Documentation of
Eligibility for an MMC Fee Waiver
table 6. The estimated total costs to
evaluate and process the documentation
for the applicants and the Coast Guard
for the 14-year period is $110,171, with
an annualized cost of $11,003,
discounted at 7 percent.
The Coast Guard estimates the total
costs related to the documentation of
eligibility, for applicants and the Coast
Guard (shown in tables 4 and 5), for the
14-year period following the
implementation of the policy letter, in
TABLE 6—TOTAL COSTS TO APPLICANTS AND COAST GUARD TO EVALUATE AND PROCESS DOCUMENTATION OF
ELIGIBILITY FOR MMC FEE WAIVER (IMPACT OF POLICY LETTER 02–20) (PRE-POLICY LETTER IMPLEMENTATION BASELINE)
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Nominal
3%
7%
1 (2020) .............................................................................................................
2 (2021) .............................................................................................................
3 (2022) .............................................................................................................
4 (2023) .............................................................................................................
5 (2024) .............................................................................................................
6 (2025) .............................................................................................................
7 (2026) .............................................................................................................
8 (2027) .............................................................................................................
9 (2028) .............................................................................................................
10 (2029) ...........................................................................................................
11 (2030) ...........................................................................................................
12 (2031) ...........................................................................................................
13 (2032) ...........................................................................................................
14 (2033) ...........................................................................................................
$11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
11,003
$11,333
11,003
10,683
10,372
10,069
9,776
9,491
9,215
8,947
8,686
8,433
8,187
7,949
7,717
$11,773
11,003
10,283
9,611
8,982
8,394
7,845
7,332
6,852
6,404
5,985
5,593
5,228
4,886
Total ....................................................................................................................
Annualized ...................................................................................................
154,045
..............................
131,862
11,003
110,171
11,003
(4) Elimination of Transfer Payments to
Federal Government of Providing MMC
Fee Waivers
Prior to the implementation of the
policy letter, applicants had to pay
evaluation, examination, and issuance
fees to obtain an MMC.25 The
implementation of the policy letter
eliminated this requirement for
applicants eligible for a fee waiver. The
elimination of the payment of MMC fees
represents a loss of revenue to the
Federal Government and an equal gain
to eligible MMC applicants. This is
referred to as a transfer payment. For
those MMC fees that were eliminated by
the policy letter, the Federal
Government will face a shortfall in
revenues. The revenues from those fees
will need to be made up through
alternative means (i.e., increased taxes,
new or increased fees for other services
or similar sources of revenue or in some
other manner). Thus, there would be no
net social benefit or cost with respect to
transfer payments.
As stated previously, the average
annual number of uniformed service
members who received a waiver of
MMC fees between 2020 and 2022
(inclusively) was 622. The estimated
average fee associated with the
applications for these MMCs was $159
each.26 For this population, the cost was
$99,134 per year in nominal terms (622
× $159.38 = $99,134.36, rounded to the
nearest whole number). Thus, for the 14
years after the implementation of the
policy letter, the Coast Guard estimates
transfer payments would total $992,601,
with an annualized amount of $99,134,
discounted at 7 percent. These estimates
can be seen in table 7.
TABLE 7—TRANSFER PAYMENTS—ELIMINATED (IMPACT OF POLICY LETTER 02–20) (PRE-POLICY LETTER IMPLEMENTATION
BASELINE)
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Year
Nominal
3%
7%
1 (2020) .............................................................................................................
2 (2021) .............................................................................................................
3 (2022) .............................................................................................................
4 (2023) .............................................................................................................
5 (2024) .............................................................................................................
6 (2025) .............................................................................................................
7 (2026) .............................................................................................................
8 (2027) .............................................................................................................
9 (2028) .............................................................................................................
10 (2029) ...........................................................................................................
11 (2030) ...........................................................................................................
12 (2031) ...........................................................................................................
13 (2032) ...........................................................................................................
14 (2033) ...........................................................................................................
$99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
99,134
$102,108
99,134
96,247
93,444
90,722
88,080
85,514
83,023
80,605
78,258
75,978
73,765
71,617
69,531
$106,074
99,134
92,649
86,588
80,923
75,629
70,681
66,057
61,736
57,697
53,923
50,395
47,098
44,017
Total ....................................................................................................................
1,387,881
1,188,027
992,601
25 Listed
in table 3 of this RA.
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26 This number is rounded to the closest whole
number. The number can be found in table 3 of this
RA.
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TABLE 7—TRANSFER PAYMENTS—ELIMINATED (IMPACT OF POLICY LETTER 02–20) (PRE-POLICY LETTER IMPLEMENTATION
BASELINE)—Continued
Year
Nominal
Annualized ...................................................................................................
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
Benefits of Policy Letter 02–20
The Coast Guard has identified one
qualitative benefit of Policy Letter 02–20
stemming from the elimination of the
MMC fees referred to in Executive Order
13860. The fee waiver may provide
eligible uniformed service members
greater flexibility with respect to
pursuing careers after leaving the
uniformed services.
Part II. Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard expects the proposed
rulemaking to have an impact for two
reasons. First, it would implement
Policy Letter 02–20 in terms of required
actions.27 Second, the proposed
rulemaking only covers a subset of the
affected population of the policy letter.
The proposed rulemaking covers
Selected or Ready Reservists while the
policy letter covered all reservists who
were on active duty in the past. As a
result, the proposed rule covers a
smaller portion of the affected
population than the policy letter.
However, as discussed previously, there
is no available data to accurately
estimate this difference. The reason
there is no available data is because the
NMC only collects data, on those
receiving the NMC fee exemptions, on
an aggregate basis. The NMC only
collects data on the number of those
who receive the fee exemption. The
NMC does not collect more detailed
data such as what branch they are in or
whether they are in the reserves or not.
Due to the smaller number of eligible
applicants, the Coast Guard surmises
that, when compared to the policy
letter, the proposed rule would result in
a small cost savings to the applicant and
the Coast Guard for no longer needing
to provide and review the
documentation for the fee waiver.
The following cost analysis discusses
the impact of the difference in the
reservist populations on the number of
MMC applications. However, due to a
lack of data, it is not possible to quantify
the cost difference.
Affected Population for Proposed Rule
As the proposed rulemaking covers a
narrower definition of reservists than
Policy Letter 02–20, it may cover fewer
27 This
is as opposed to in-scope population. The
issues regarding the in-scope population are
discussed below.
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..............................
than 622 persons per year. Due to a lack
of data, the Coast Guard assumes that,
for the proposed rulemaking, the
number of applicants for MMC
exemptions is 622.
Cost Analysis for Proposed Rule
Since the proposed rule covers a
narrower population of reservists, it
may decrease the number of MMC
exemptions per year. Therefore, the
Coast Guard assumes that the aggregate
reduction in exemptions between the
policy letter and the proposed
rulemaking is unquantifiable and could
be zero.28 In other words, the proposed
rulemaking may have no impact on the
number of exemption requests.
If the number of applicants seeking
exemptions under the proposed
rulemaking is fewer than under the
policy letter, there will be a decrease in
the costs of the proposed rulemaking
when compared to the costs of the
policy letter. For every applicant that
does not seek an exemption under the
proposed rulemaking (as opposed to the
policy letter), the proposed rule would
result in a cost savings of $9.87 per
applicant related to providing the
necessary documentation, and a cost
savings of $7.82, per applicant, for the
Coast Guard related to reviewing that
documentation. If the proposed rule
results in any decrease in the number of
individuals seeking an exemption from
MMC fees, that amount would be $159
per applicant (the average MMC fee paid
by an applicant).
As stated previously, the proposed
rulemaking is codifying an already
existing policy letter. The only
differences between the policy letter
and the proposed rulemaking is that the
proposed rulemaking covers a subset of
the reserve forces that the policy letter
covers. Due to a lack of data regarding
this potential difference it is not
possible to estimate differences in costs
or benefits. The lack of data also makes
it impossible to even determine whether
there actually is a difference in
populations between the proposed
rulemaking and the policy letter. If there
is a difference between the policy letter
and proposed rulemaking in
28 See the cost difference discussions between the
proposed rulemaking and the policy letter in the
‘‘Cost and Transfer Impacts of Cost Analysis of
Policy Letter 02–20’’ section of the RA.
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3%
7%
99,134
99,134
populations, the costs and cost savings
differences would amount to the figures
cited in the previous paragraph on a per
individual basis.
Benefits of the Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard believes the
proposed rulemaking may reduce the
burden on the affected public by
increasing efficiency and transparency
as a result of being in the Code of
Federal Regulations, as opposed to
being a standalone policy letter.29
Regulatory Alternatives Considered
In developing this proposed rule, the
Coast Guard considered three
alternatives to the proposed exemption.
The first alternative would be to not
exempt the MMC fees listed in table 1
of 46 CFR 10.219(a), as shown in table
3 of this proposal. As this alternative
would not fulfill the requirements of
Executive Order 13860 or NDAA 2020,
the Coast Guard rejected this alternative.
The second alternative would be to
make no change to the user fee schedule
for members of the uniformed services,
but to establish an MMC fee
reimbursement program for uniformed
service members. Under this alternative,
the population applying for MMCs
would initially pay MMC fees and then
file a request for reimbursement with
their service in order to be compensated
for the cost. Under this alternative, the
fee compensation process would be a
greater burden than the proposed rule’s
framework for eligible applicants, who
would pay MMC fees out of pocket and
then request compensation through
their service. Filing a request for
reimbursement would increase the
amount of documentation applicants
would be required to file and would add
an administrative burden to the services
in establishing and implementing
reimbursement programs. The Coast
Guard rejected this alternative.
The third alternative would be to
extend the exemption only to the
portion of the population consisting of
members of the Selected Reserve of the
29 The proposed rulemaking would also
incorporates greater flexibility with respect to
pursuing careers. As this has already been achieved
by issuance of the policy letter, independent of the
proposed rulemaking, we only list the increased
clarity and transparency that would be obtained
through codification of the Coast Guard’s MMC fee
exemption policy through the proposed rulemaking.
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Ready Reserve of any of the armed
forces (Army National Guard of the
United States, Army Reserve, Navy
Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, Air
National Guard of the United States, Air
Force Reserve and Coast Guard
Reserve), and the Ready Reserve Corps
of the USPHS who are on ‘‘active
duty,’’ 30 while excluding those simply
in an ‘‘active status.’’ 31 The Coast Guard
rejected this alternative, as it does not
best support the intent of Executive
Order 13860 and NDAA 2020 to help
attract active duty service members to
obtain an MMC, and provide
meaningful, well-paying jobs to U.S.
veterans in support of U.S. national
security requirements.
The Coast Guard believes that the
intent of Executive Order 13860 and
NDAA 2020 is best supported through a
fourth alternative—extending the
eligibility for MMC fee exemptions to
members of the Selected Reserve of the
Reserves of the Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marines, Coast Guard and Space Force
(such as Selected and Ready Reservists)
and not limiting eligibility to only
members of the uniformed services on
active duty. This alternative best
supports the intent of Executive Order
13860 and the NDAA 2020 by ensuring
a wide range of service members who
wish to pursue an MMC are provided
support and by expanding the
population eligible to receive an
exemption from MMC fees, and
ultimately resulting in a larger number
of credentialed mariners available to
support U.S national security
requirements and provide meaningful,
well-paying jobs to U.S. veterans.
Small Business Impacts of Policy Letter
02–20
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601–612, the Coast Guard has
considered whether Policy Letter 02–20
would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The term ‘‘small entities’’
comprises small businesses, not-for-
Small Business Impacts of the Proposed
Rulemaking
This proposed rulemaking codifies
certain actions taken in the previously
implemented Policy Letter 02–20. In
addition, the population in the
proposed rulemaking is defined more
narrowly than in the policy letter.
However, due to the fact that the
proposed rulemaking, like the policy
letter, only affects individuals and not
business (firms), not-for-profit entities
and State or Local governmental
jurisdictions, the proposed rule would
not impact small entities as defined by
the Small Business Administration in 13
CFR 121.201. Based on this analysis,
this proposed rule would not affect a
substantial number of small entities.
For the aforementioned reasons, the
Coast Guard certifies under 5 U.S.C.
605(b) that Policy Letter 02–20 and this
proposed rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. If
you think that your business,
organization, or governmental
jurisdiction qualifies as a small entity
and that this proposed rule would have
a significant economic impact on it,
please submit a comment to the docket
at the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this preamble. In your
comment, explain why you think it
qualifies and how and to what degree
this proposed rule would economically
affect it.
30 Active duty is defined here as under 10 U.S.C.
101(d)(1). Under that section it means ‘‘full-time
duty in the active military service of the United
States. Such term includes full-time training duty,
annual training duty, and attendance, while in the
active military service, at a school designated as a
service school by law or by the Secretary of the
military department concerned. Such term does not
include full-time National Guard duty.’’
31 All members of the Ready Reserve are in active
status. Selected Reserves are only part of that group.
Individual ready reserves are also active status.
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Public Law 104–
121, we want to assist small entities in
understanding this proposed rule so that
they can better evaluate its effects on
them and participate in the rulemaking.
If the proposed rule would affect your
small business, organization, or
B. Small Entities
Below are the small business entity
impacts for Policy Letter 02–20 and for
the proposed rulemaking on a separate
basis.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
profit organizations that are
independently owned and operated and
are not dominant in their fields, and
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.
The Policy Letter waived fees for the
evaluation of an MMC application, the
administration of a required
examination, and the issuance of an
MMC for members of the uniformed
services. Since the impacts discussed
above in the RA affect individuals and
not business (firms), not-for-profit
entities and State or Local governmental
jurisdictions, the proposed rule would
not impact small entities as defined by
the Small Business Administration in 13
CFR 121.201. Based on this analysis,
this proposed rule would not affect a
substantial number of small entities.
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governmental jurisdiction and you have
questions concerning its provisions or
options for compliance, please call or
email the person in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
proposed rule. The Coast Guard will not
retaliate against small entities that
question or complain about this
proposed rule or any policy or action of
the Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of Federal employees
who enforce, or otherwise determine
compliance with, Federal regulations to
the Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and the Regional Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
Ombudsman evaluates these actions
annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of the Coast Guard, call 1–
888–REG–FAIR (1–888–734–3247).
D. Collection of Information
Policy Letter 02–20 called for a
change to an existing collection of
information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3520. As defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(c),
‘‘collection of information’’ comprises
reporting, recordkeeping, monitoring,
posting, labeling, and other similar
actions. The title and description of the
information collections, a description of
those who must collect the information,
and an estimate of the total annual
burden follow. The estimate covers the
time for reviewing instructions,
searching existing sources of data,
gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection.
The information collection associated
with Policy Letter 02–20 is the currently
approved collection, OMB Control
Number 1625–0040, ‘‘Application for
Merchant Mariner Credential (MMC),
Application for Merchant Mariner
Medical Certificate, Application for
Merchant Mariner Medical Certificate
for Entry Level Ratings, Small Vessel
Sea Service Form, DOT/USCG Periodic
Drug Testing Form, Disclosure
Statement for Narcotics, DWI/DUI, and/
or Other Convictions, Merchant Mariner
Medical Certificate, Recognition of
Foreign Certificate.’’ In order to process
the fee exemptions proposed in this
rule, the Coast Guard would require
eligible applicants for an MMC to
provide documentation of their
eligibility for a fee exemption.32 In
32 In order to provide maximum flexibility to
applicants, for the proposed rulemaking the
acceptable forms of documentation will be provided
in updated guidance that the Coast Guard is
planning to publish when a final rule is published.
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addition, it would require the NMC to
evaluate and process this
documentation part of an evaluation for
an MMC.
With respect to the proposed
rulemaking, no new or additional
documentation related to collection of
information would be required (relative
to the policy letter). The number of
respondents may decrease from the
policy letter. This is because the
proposed rulemaking codifies what the
policy letter currently requires in terms
of collection of information
documentation and applies to a
potentially narrower in-scope
population.
Title: Application for Merchant
Mariner Credential (form CG–719B),
Application for Medical Certificate
(form CG–719K), Application for
Medical Certificate, Short Form (form
719K/E), Small Vessel Sea Service Form
(form CF–719S), DOT/USCG Periodic
Drug Testing Form (form CG–719P),
Disclosure Statement for Narcotics,
DWI/DUI, and/or Other Convictions
(form CG–719C).
OMB Control Number: 1625–0040.
Summary of the Collection of
Information: The Coast Guard currently
collects information from individuals
seeking to obtain an MMC, renew an
MMC, and obtain a merchant mariner
medical certificate. Policy Letter 02–20
would require applicants who are
members of the uniformed services (622
persons per year), and who wish to be
exempted from MMC fees, to provide
documentation of eligibility for the
MMC fee exemption as part of an MMC
application (form CG–719B).
As the proposed regulation only
currently codifies current practices,
regarding the collection of information,
stated in Policy Letter 02–20 (and makes
no changes to these requirements), as
well as having between the same or
fewer applicants than the MMC fee
waivers, it would be expected to have
no impact on the collection of
information. The only reason for any
reduction in documentation would be
due to the fact that the proposed
rulemaking covers a narrower in-scope
definition than does the policy letter.
However, there is no data available to
the Coast Guard to determine how small
the decrease would be or even, for that
matter, if there even is one.
Need for Information: Title 46 CFR,
section 10.217(a), requires MMC
applicants to apply at one of the Coast
Guard’s 17 Regional Exam Centers,
located nationwide or any other location
designated by the Coast Guard. MMCs
are established for individuals who are
required to hold a credential under 46
U.S.C, subtitle II. The Coast Guard has
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the responsibility of issuing MMCs to
applicants found qualified as to age,
character, and habits of life, experience,
professional qualifications, and physical
fitness. The instruments contained
within OMB Control No. 1625–0040
serve as a means for the applicant to
apply for an MMC and a merchant
mariner medical certificate.
Proposed Use of Information: The
Coast Guard conducts this collection of
information solely for the purposes of
determining eligibility for issuance of an
MMC in accordance with applicable
statutes and regulations. This evaluation
is performed on occasion, meaning as
submitted by the respondents when
they apply for an MMC. Applicants for
an MMC must apply using the Form
CG–719–B for an original MMC and
every 5 years for renewal, or when
seeking a new endorsement or a raise of
grade of an existing endorsement. The
Coast Guard evaluates the collected
information to determine whether
applicants are qualified to serve under
the authority of the requested credential
with respect to their professional
qualifications and suitability.
Description of the Respondents: All
applicants for an MMC, whether
original, renewal, duplicate, raise of
grade, or to add a new endorsement on
a previously issued MMC, are included
in this collection. The population
covered by Policy Letter 02–20 includes
the number of uniformed service
members applying for MMCs who
receive an exemption of MMC fees (622
annually). The population covered by
the proposed rulemaking is expected to
remain the same or be less, because the
proposed rulemaking codifies the Policy
Letter in terms of documentation
requirements but applies to a narrower
in-scope population.
Number of Respondents: The number
of respondents from the policy letter are
estimated at 622 per year. The proposed
rule would either not increase the
annual number of respondents or be
expected to only decrease them.33
Frequency of Response: The
frequency of response is once per year.
Burden of Response: The collection of
information from both the policy letter
and the proposed rule requires the
population to spend 15 minutes (0.25
hours) to provide evidence of eligibility
for an MMC fee exemption (622 persons
33 Information collections normally list the total
number of annual respondents. However, there is
currently a periodic renewal under review at OMB,
and another proposed rulemaking expected to
change the number of annual respondents is
expected to be submitted to OMB. Therefore, the
total number of annual respondents is not included
in this RA.
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68053
per year), which would be submitted
with the requisite Form CG–719B.
Estimate of Total Annual Burden: The
Coast Guard estimates that the total
annual burden, for the implementation
of the policy letter, has increased by 156
(0.25 × 622 = 155.5, rounded up to
nearest whole number) hours.34
As the proposed rulemaking covers
the same documentation and has a
narrower definition with respect to inscope population, it is expected to have
either no impact on these hours or to
reduce the burden level already existing
under the policy letter.
As required by 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), we
will submit a copy of this proposed rule
to OMB for its review of the collection
of information. We ask for public
comment on the proposed collection of
information to help us determine,
among other things—
• How useful the information is;
• Whether the information can help
us perform our functions better;
• How we can improve the quality,
usefulness, and clarity of the
information;
• Whether the information is readily
available elsewhere;
• How accurate our estimate is of the
burden of collection;
• How valid our methods are for
determining the burden of collection;
and
• How we can minimize the burden
of collection.
If you submit comments on the
collection of information, submit them
to both the OMB and to the docket
where indicated under ADDRESSES.
You need not respond to a collection
of information unless it displays a
currently valid control number from
OMB. Before the Coast Guard could
enforce the collection of information
requirements in this proposed rule,
OMB would need to approve the Coast
Guard’s request to collect this
information.
E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism
under Executive Order 13132
(Federalism) if it has a substantial direct
effect on 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. We have
analyzed this proposed rule under
Executive Order 13132 and have
determined that it is consistent with the
fundamental federalism principles and
34 As there is currently a periodic renewal under
review at OMB, and another proposed rulemaking
that is expected to change the total annual burden
is expected to be submitted to OMB, it is not
possible to list the total current annual burden.
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preemption requirements described in
Executive Order 13132. Our analysis
follows.
It is well settled that States may not
regulate in categories reserved for
regulation by the Coast Guard. It is also
well settled that all of the categories
covered in 46 U.S.C. 3306, 3703, 7101,
and 8101 (design, construction,
alteration, repair, maintenance,
operation, equipping, personnel
qualification, and manning of vessels),
as well as the reporting of casualties and
any other category in which Congress
intended the Coast Guard to be the sole
source of a vessel’s obligations, are
within the field foreclosed from
regulation by the States. See United
States v. Locke, 529 U.S. 89, 99–101
(2000).
Additionally, for rules with
federalism implications and preemptive
effect, Executive Order 13132
specifically directs agencies to consult
with State and local governments during
the rulemaking process. If you believe
this proposed rule would have
implications for federalism under
Executive Order 13132, please call or
email the person listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this preamble.
F. Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531; 1538, requires
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their discretionary regulatory actions. In
particular, the Act addresses actions
that may result in the expenditure by a
State, local, or tribal government, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector of
$100 million (adjusted for inflation) or
more in any one year. Although this
proposed rule would not result in such
an expenditure, we do discuss the
potential effects of this proposed rule
elsewhere in this preamble.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
G. Taking of Private Property
This proposed rule would not cause a
taking of private property or otherwise
have taking implications under
Executive Order 12630 (Governmental
Actions and Interference with
Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights).
H. Civil Justice Reform
This proposed rule meets applicable
standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform) to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce
burden.
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this proposed rule
under Executive Order 13045
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(Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks). This proposed rule is not an
economically significant rule and would
not create an environmental risk to
health or risk to safety that might
disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This proposed rule does not have
tribal implications under Executive
Order 13175 (Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments) because it would not
have a substantial direct effect on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this proposed rule
under Executive Order 13211 (Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use). We have
determined that it is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ under that order because
it is not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
under Executive Order 12866 and is not
likely to have a significant adverse effect
on the supply, distribution, or use of
energy.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act, codified as a
note to 15 U.S.C. 272, directs agencies
to use voluntary consensus standards in
their regulatory activities unless the
agency provides Congress, through
OMB, with an explanation of why using
these standards would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (for
example, specifications of materials,
performance, design, or operation; test
methods; sampling procedures; and
related management systems practices)
that are developed or adopted by
voluntary consensus standards bodies.
This proposed rule does not use
technical standards. Therefore, we did
not consider the use of voluntary
consensus standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this proposed rule
under Department of Homeland
Security Management Directive 023–01,
Rev. 1, associated implementing
instructions, and Environmental
Planning COMDTINST 5090.1 (series),
which guide the Coast Guard in
complying with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321–4370f), and have made a
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preliminary determination that this
action is one of a category of actions that
do not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the human
environment. A preliminary Record of
Environmental Consideration
supporting this determination is
available in the docket. For instructions
on locating the docket, see the
ADDRESSES section of this preamble.
This proposed rule would be
categorically excluded under paragraphs
L54 and L56 of Appendix A, Table 1 of
DHS Instruction Manual 023–01–001–
01, Rev. 1. The categorical exclusion
(CATEX) L54 pertains to regulations
which are editorial or procedural; and
CATEX L56 pertains to regulations
concerning the training, qualifying,
licensing, and disciplining of maritime
personnel.
This proposed rule involves the fees
for MMCs and associated endorsements.
We seek any comments or information
that may lead to the discovery of a
significant environmental impact from
this proposed rule.
List of Subjects in 46 CFR Part 10
Penalties, Personally identifiable
information, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Seamen.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard proposes to
amend 46 CFR part 10 as follows:
■ 1. The authority citation for part 10 is
revised to read as follows:
Authority: 14 U.S.C. 503; 31 U.S.C. 9701;
46 U.S.C. 2101, 2103, 2104, 2110; 46 U.S.C.
chapters 71, 73, and 75; 46 U.S.C. 7701, 8903,
8904, and 70105; Executive Order 10173;
DHS Delegation No. 00170.1, Revision No.
01.3.
2. Amend § 10.219 by adding
paragraph (m) to read as follows:
■
§ 10.219
Fees.
*
*
*
*
*
(m) Members of the uniformed
services. A qualified applicant under
this subsection is exempt from paying
evaluation, examination, or issuance
fees for an MMC as described in (b)(2)
of this section.
(1) For purposes of paragraph (m) of
this section, qualified applicant means
an individual who, at the time of
submission of an application, is:
(i) A member of the uniformed
services listed in 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(5) on
active duty;
(ii) A member of the Selected Reserve,
as described in 10 U.S.C. 10143(a), of a
reserve component named in 10 U.S.C.
10101; or
(iii) A member of the Ready Reserve
Corps of the Public Health Service
established in 42 U.S.C. 204(a)(1).
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(2) For purposes of paragraph (m)(1)(i)
of this section:
(i) For the members of the armed
forces, as defined in 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(4),
active duty is defined by 10 U.S.C.
101(d)(1);
(ii) For the commissioned corps of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, active duty has the
same meaning as found in 33 U.S.C.
3002(b)(1); and
(iii) For the members of the
commissioned corps of the Public
Health Service, active duty has the
meaning defined in 42 CFR 21.72(f).
Dated: September 21, 2023.
W.R. Arguin,
Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard, Assistant
Commandant for Prevention Policy.
[FR Doc. 2023–21660 Filed 10–2–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
48 CFR Parts 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 11, 12, 39,
and 52
[FAR Case 2021–017; Docket No. FAR–
2021–0017; Sequence No. 1]
RIN 9000–AO34
Federal Acquisition Regulation: Cyber
Threat and Incident Reporting and
Information Sharing
Department of Defense (DoD),
General Services Administration (GSA),
and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
DoD, GSA, and NASA are
proposing to amend the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to
partially implement an Executive order
on cyber threats and incident reporting
and information sharing for Federal
contractors and to implement related
cybersecurity policies.
DATES: Interested parties should submit
written comments to the Regulatory
Secretariat Division at the address
shown below on or before December 4,
2023 to be considered in the formation
of the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments in
response to FAR Case 2021–017 to the
Federal eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
‘‘FAR Case 2021–017’’. Select the link
‘‘Comment Now’’ that corresponds with
‘‘FAR Case 2021–017’’. Follow the
instructions provided on the ‘‘Comment
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:19 Oct 02, 2023
Jkt 262001
Now’’ screen. Please include your name,
company name (if any), and ‘‘FAR Case
2021–017’’ on your attached document.
If your comment cannot be submitted
using https://www.regulations.gov, call
or email the points of contact in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document for alternate instructions.
Instructions: Please submit comments
only and cite ‘‘FAR Case 2021–017’’ in
all correspondence related to this case.
Comments received generally will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal and/or business confidential
information provided. Public comments
may be submitted as an individual, as
an organization, or anonymously (see
frequently asked questions at https://
www.regulations.gov/faq). To confirm
receipt of your comment(s), please
check https://www.regulations.gov,
approximately two to three days after
submission to verify posting.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
clarification of content, contact Ms.
Marissa Ryba, Procurement Analyst, at
314–586–1280 or by email at
Marissa.Ryba@gsa.gov. For information
pertaining to status, publication
schedules, or alternate instructions for
submitting comments if https://
www.regulations.gov cannot be used,
contact the Regulatory Secretariat
Division at 202–501–4755 or
GSARegSec@gsa.gov. Please cite FAR
Case 2021–017.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
DoD, GSA, and NASA are proposing
to revise the FAR to increase the sharing
of information about cyber threats and
incident information between the
Government and information
technology and operational technology
service providers, pursuant to Executive
Order (E.O.) 14028, Improving the
Nation’s Cybersecurity. The E.O. was
signed by the President on May 12,
2021, and published in the Federal
Register at 86 FR 26633 on May 17,
2021.
The E.O. is focused on improving the
nation’s cybersecurity, in part through
increased protection of Government
networks. As directed in sections 2(d)
and 2(g)(ii) of the E.O., this proposed
rule implements Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) recommendations
from section 2(b) of the E.O., and
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency (CISA)
recommendations from section 2(g)(i) of
the E.O. This proposed rule considers
recommendations issued by the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) pursuant to section 8(b). CISA is
an agency within DHS. Additionally,
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
68055
this proposed rule supports
implementation of the National Cyber
Strategy by strengthening and
standardizing contract requirements for
cybersecurity and by providing
mechanisms to help ensure that entities
or individuals that knowingly put U.S.
information or systems at risk, by
violating these cybersecurity
requirements, are held accountable.
Finally, this proposed rule implements
OMB Memorandum M–21–07,
Completing the Transition to internet
Protocol Version 6 (IPv6), dated
November 19, 2020.
Recent cybersecurity incidents such
as those involving SolarWinds,
Microsoft Exchange, and the Colonial
Pipeline incident are a sobering
reminder that U.S. public and private
sector entities increasingly face
sophisticated malicious cyber activity
from both nation-state actors and cyber
criminals. These incidents share
commonalities, including insufficient
cybersecurity defenses that leave public
and private sector entities more
vulnerable to incidents. The E.O. makes
a significant contribution toward
modernizing cybersecurity defenses by
protecting Federal networks, improving
information sharing between the U.S.
Government and the private sector on
cyber issues, and strengthening the
United States’ ability to respond to
incidents when they occur. This
proposed rule underscores that the
compliance with information-sharing
and incident-reporting requirements are
material to eligibility and payment
under Government contracts.
II. Discussion and Analysis
The following summarizes the
proposed changes to the FAR:
FAR 2.101 currently defines
information and communication
technology as information technology
and other equipment, systems,
technologies, or processes, for which the
principal function is the creation,
manipulation, storage, display, receipt,
or transmission of electronic data and
information, as well as any associated
content. Examples include, but are not
limited to, the following: Computers
and peripheral equipment; information
kiosks and transaction machines;
telecommunications equipment;
customer premises equipment;
multifunction office machines; software;
applications; websites; videos; and
electronic documents. This definition
was implemented in FAR case 2017–011
(August 11, 2021, 86 FR 44229, effective
September 10, 2021). It has examples
primarily aimed at section 508 of the
E:\FR\FM\03OCP1.SGM
03OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 190 (Tuesday, October 3, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 68042-68055]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-21660]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard
46 CFR Part 10
[Docket No. USCG-2021-0288]
RIN 1625-AC83
Exemption for Active-Duty Uniformed Service Members From Merchant
Mariner Credentialing Fees
AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is proposing to exempt certain members of the
uniformed services from Merchant Mariner Credential (MMC) fees for the
evaluation of an MMC application, the administration of an examination
required for an MMC endorsement, and the issuance of an MMC. This
proposal is in response to Executive Order 13860, ``Supporting the
Transition of Active-Duty Service Members and Military Veterans Into
the Merchant Marine,'' and section 3511 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020. Under this proposal, members of
the uniformed services would be exempt from paying fees for an MMC.
DATES: Comments and related material must be received by the Coast
Guard on or before January 2, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments identified by docket number USCG-
2021-0288 using the Federal Decision Making Portal at
www.regulations.gov. See the ``Public Participation and Request for
Comments'' portion of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for further
instructions on submitting comments.
Collection of information. Submit comments on the collection of
information discussed in section VI.D of this preamble both to the
Coast Guard's online docket and to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in the White House Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) using their website www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Comments sent to OIRA on the collection of information must reach OMB
on or before the comment due date listed on their website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information about this document,
call or email Mr. James Cavo, U.S. Coast Guard Office of Merchant
Mariner Credentialing; telephone 202-372-1205, email
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Public Participation and Request for Comments
II. Abbreviations
III. Background
IV. Legal Authority
V. Discussion of Proposed Rule
VI. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Public Participation and Request for Comments
The Coast Guard views public participation as essential to
effective rulemaking and will consider all comments and material
received during the comment period. Your comment can help shape the
outcome of this rulemaking. If you submit a comment, please include the
docket number for this rulemaking, indicate the specific section of
this document to which each comment applies, and provide a reason for
each suggestion or recommendation.
Submitting comments. We encourage you to submit comments through
the Federal Decision Making Portal at www.regulations.gov. To do so, go
to
[[Page 68043]]
www.regulations.gov, type USCG-2021-0288 in the search box, and click
``Search.'' Next, look for this document in the Search Results column,
and click on it. Then click on the Comment option. If you cannot submit
your material by using www.regulations.gov, call or email the person in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this proposed rule for
alternate instructions.
Viewing material in docket. To view documents mentioned in this
proposed rule as being available in the docket, find the docket as
described in the previous paragraph, and then select ``Supporting &
Related Material'' in the Document Type column. Public comments will
also be placed in our online docket and can be viewed by following
instructions on the www.regulations.gov Frequently Asked Questions web
page. That FAQ page also explains how to subscribe for email alerts
that will notify you when comments are posted or if a final rule is
published. We review all comments received, but we will only post
comments that address the topic of the proposed rule. We may choose not
to post off-topic, inappropriate, or duplicate comments that we
receive.
Personal information. We accept anonymous comments. Comments we
post to www.regulations.gov will include any personal information you
have provided. For more about privacy and submissions to the docket in
response to this document, see the DHS's eRulemaking System of Records
notice (85 FR 14226, March 11, 2020).
Public meeting. We do not plan to hold a public meeting, but we
will consider doing so if we determine from public comments that a
meeting would be helpful. We would issue a separate Federal Register
notice to announce the date, time, and location of such a meeting.
II. Abbreviations
CATEX Categorical exclusion
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CG-MMC U.S. Coast Guard Office of Merchant Mariner Credentialing
DHS Department of Homeland Security
GS General Schedule
MMC Merchant Mariner Credential
MMLD Merchant Mariner Licensing Documentation
NDAA 2020 National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NMC National Maritime Center
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OPM Office of Personnel Management
RA Regulatory analysis
Sec. Section
STCW International Convention on Standards of Training,
Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers
USPHS U.S. Public Health Service
U.S.C. United States Code
III. Background
As described in title 46 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),
section 10.107, a Coast Guard-issued Merchant Mariner Credential (MMC)
serves as a mariner's qualification document and certificate of
identification. Mariners employed aboard most U.S. merchant vessels are
required to hold a valid MMC.
As mandated by title 46 of the United States Code (U.S.C.), section
2110, and in accordance with the Independent Offices Appropriations Act
(31 U.S.C. 9701), the Coast Guard has established fees associated with
MMC applications, which are codified in table 1 to 46 CFR 10.219(a).
There are three types of credentialing fees: an evaluation fee, an
examination fee, and an issuance fee. The fee amount varies based on
the individual credential transaction that an applicant seeks.
Evaluation fees for MMCs range from $50 to $100, and the applicant
must pay the fee at the time an application is submitted to the Coast
Guard. Examination fees range from $45 to $140, depending on the
endorsement sought, and must be paid before the professional
examination for an endorsement is taken.\1\ If an applicant applies for
an MMC with both a rating and an officer endorsement, the higher
evaluation fee is charged. Issuance fees are $45 and must be paid
before an MMC is issued.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ An endorsement is a ``statement of a mariner's
qualifications.'' 46 CFR 10.107(b). The particular endorsement(s) on
each mariner's MMC indicate what capacities they may serve in, such
as a ``barge supervisor'' or a ``lifeboatman.'' See id.; 46 CFR
10.109(a)-(b).
\2\ A rating endorsement is an annotation on an MMC that allows
a mariner to serve in those capacities set out in 46 CFR 10.109(b).
46 CFR 10.107(b). Officer endorsement means an annotation on an MMC
that allows a mariner to serve in the capacities listed in 46 CFR
10.109. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The original issuance of an MMC, as well as any subsequent
credential transactions, such as increasing the scope of authority,
raising the grade of authority, or renewing an MMC, all require a
fee.\3\ MMCs are valid for a period of 5 years and may be renewed at
any time during the validity period of the credential and for 1 year
after expiration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ ``Increase in scope'' and ``raise of grade'' are defined at
46 CFR 10.107.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mariners typically seek additional endorsements after accruing the
required sea service and completing required training. There are no
fees associated with the issuance of mariner medical certificates or
International Convention on Standards of Training, Certification and
Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) endorsements.
The Coast Guard does not require a fee for MMC transactions if one
of the following three conditions is met:
(1) The application is for a Document of Continuity, as specified
in 46 CFR 10.219(e)(3).
(2) The credential is a duplicate of a credential lost in a
shipwreck or other casualty under 46 CFR 10.229(c) and reflected in
table 1 to Sec. 10.219(a).
(3) The applicant qualifies for a ``no-fee'' Merchant Mariner
Credential under 46 CFR 10.219(h).
Currently, an applicant only qualifies for a ``no-fee'' MMC if they
are a volunteer for or an employee of an organization that is youth-
oriented, not-for-profit, and charitable, 46 CFR 10.219(j). The holder
of a ``no fee'' MMC is restricted to using vessels owned or operated by
the sponsoring organization, 46 CFR 10.219(k).
In March 2019, Executive Order 13860, ``Supporting the Transition
of Active-Duty Service Members and Military Veterans Into the Merchant
Marine,'' directed the Coast Guard to waive the fees associated with
MMC applications ``for active duty service members, if a waiver is
authorized and appropriate.'' \4\ The Executive Order applied only to
members of the armed forces.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ E.O 13860, section 3, paragraph (a)(ii) (84 FR 8407 (Mar. 7,
2019)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsequently, in December 2019, Congress enacted the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (NDAA 2020).\5\ Building
upon Executive Order 13860, section 3511(c)(1) of the NDAA 2020
directed the Coast Guard to waive evaluation, examination, and issuance
fees associated with MMCs, if a waiver is authorized and appropriate,
not just for the armed forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
Space Force, and Coast Guard), but for all ``members of the uniformed
services on active duty.'' The uniformed services include the
Commissioned Corps of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public
Health Service (USPHS) in addition to the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine
Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Public Law 116-92, Dec. 20, 2019.
\6\ Section 3511of the NDAA 2020 is codified as a note to 46
U.S.C. 7302; ``Uniformed services'' defined at 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with Executive Order 13860 and section 3511 of the
NDAA 2020, on May 26, 2020, the Coast Guard's Office of Merchant
Mariner
[[Page 68044]]
Credentialing (CG-MMC) issued Policy Letter 02-20, ``Waiver of Fees
Associated with Merchant Mariner Credential Applications for Active
Duty Members of the Uniformed Services.'' \7\ CG-MMC Policy Letter 02-
20 provides guidance for the waiver of MMC fees for active duty members
of the uniformed services. The policy provided a waiver of fees for
mariners who provide documentation evidencing their eligibility for the
fee waiver. This documentation may include active-duty orders or a
letter from their command or personnel office on official letterhead
that states the applicant is a current member of the uniformed services
on active duty or a member of the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
of any of the armed forces or the Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ CG-MMC Policy Letter 02-20 is available at https://www.dco.uscg.mil/Portals/9/DCO%20Documents/5p/5ps/MMC/CG-MMC-2%20Policies/CG-MMC-Policy-Letter-02-20.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Legal Authority
Section 3511(c)(1) of the NDAA 2020 directed the Coast Guard to
waive evaluation, examination, and issuance fees associated with MMCs
for members of the uniformed services on active duty, if a waiver is
authorized and appropriate. The Coast Guard has found that such a
waiver is authorized and appropriate. Under 46 U.S.C. 2110(g), the
Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) may exempt a
person from paying such a fee if the Secretary determines that it is in
the public interest to do so. The Secretary has delegated this
authority to the Coast Guard through article II, paragraph 92,
subparagraph (a) of DHS Delegation No. 00170.1, Revision No. 01.3. The
Coast Guard concludes that it is in the public interest to exempt
members of the uniformed services (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
Space Force, Coast Guard, Commissioned Corps of the NOAA, and
Commissioned Corps of USPHS) on active duty; members of the Selected
Reserve of the Ready Reserve of any of the armed forces (Army National
Guard of the United States, Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Marine Corps
Reserve, Air National Guard of the United States, Air Force Reserve,
and Coast Guard Reserve); and the Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS from
fees associated with obtaining an MMC. As discussed in Executive Order
13860, it is the policy of the United States to establish and maintain
an effective merchant marine and to provide sufficient support and
resources to active duty and separating service members who pursue or
possess MMCs. The goals of not requiring these fees are to: (1) help
attract active-duty service members with the appropriate skills and
expertise to obtain an MMC for employment in the maritime industry; (2)
support U.S. national security requirements; and (3) provide
meaningful, well-paying jobs to U.S. veterans.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Executive Order 13860, section 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Discussion of Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard is proposing to amend 46 CFR 10.219 and codify this
MMC fee waiver in the regulations. Specifically, the Coast Guard
proposes to exempt members of the uniformed services on active duty,
members of the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve of any of the
armed forces (Army National Guard of the United States, Army Reserve,
Navy Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, Air National Guard of the United
States, Air Force Reserve and Coast Guard Reserve), and the Ready
Reserve Corps of the USPHS from paying evaluation, examination, or
issuance fees for an MMC.
For purposes of this rule, ``uniformed services'' would have the
same meaning as defined at 10 U.S.C. 101(a)(5): the Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard, as well as members
of the NOAA and USPHS Commissioned Corps. Members of the Selected
Reserve of the Ready Reserve of a reserve component named in 10 U.S.C.
10101 and members of the Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS would also be
eligible for the exemption. (The NOAA Commissioned Corps does not have
a reserve component.)
For members of the armed forces, ``active duty'' would have the
same meaning as under 10 U.S.C. 101(d)(1). For members of the NOAA
commissioned corps, ``active duty'' would have the same meaning as
under 33 U.S.C. 3002(b)(1). For members of the USPHS Commissioned
Corps, ``active duty'' would have the same meaning as ``active
service'' under 42 U.S.C. 212(d). ``Selected Reserve'' would have the
same meaning as under 10 U.S.C. 10143(a).
This fee exemption would be located in a new paragraph, paragraph
(m), in 46 CFR 10.219.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
We developed this proposed rule after considering numerous statutes
and Executive orders related to rulemaking. A summary of our analyses
based on these statutes and Executive orders follows.
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), as amended
by Executive Order 14094 (Modernizing Regulatory Review), and 13563
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review) direct agencies to assess
the costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has not designated this
rule a significant regulatory action under section 3(f) of Executive
Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order 14094. Accordingly, OMB has
not reviewed this rule.
The Coast Guard has developed an analysis of the costs and benefits
of the proposed rule to assess its impacts. The regulatory analysis
(RA) follows.
The rule is being proposed in response to two items. The first is
section 3, paragraph (a)(ii) of Executive Order 13860, ``Supporting the
Transition of Active-Duty Service Members and Military Veterans Into
the Merchant Marine,'' signed March 4, 2019.\9\ The second is section
3511(c)(1) of the NDAA 2020.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 84 FR 8407 (Mar. 7, 2019) (``With respect to National
Maritime Center license evaluation, issuance, and examination, [the
Coast Guard shall] take all necessary and appropriate actions to
provide for the waiver of fees for active-duty service members.'').
\10\ Public Law 116-92, Dec. 20, 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For purposes of the analysis, this RA is presented in two parts.
Part I examines the impacts of CG-MMC Policy Letter 02-20, which was
issued on May 26, 2020.\11\ Part II examines the impacts of the
proposed rulemaking post the issuance of the CG-MMC Policy Letter 02-
20. The policy letter and the proposed rulemaking cover different
populations. The difference between the two populations arises from
which components of the reserves are eligible for a waiver of fees
under the policy letter and which would be eligible under this proposed
rule. The policy letter covers all reservists on active duty currently
and in the past. The proposed rulemaking, however, would cover only
those reservists who are currently members of the Selected Reserve, as
described in 10 U.S.C.
[[Page 68045]]
10143(a), or a reserve component named in 10 U.S.C. 10101, or the Ready
Reserve of the USPHS. The in-scope population of the proposed
rulemaking is a subset of that of the policy letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Section 5e of the policy letter. A copy of the policy
letter can be found in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Coast Guard does not have data on the number of Selected
Reservists or Ready Reservists who were granted fee exemptions under
the policy letter, nor does it have data on the number of the
reservists who were granted fee exemptions while on active-duty status.
Due to this lack of data, it is not possible to estimate the
differences in the affected populations between the policy letter and
the proposed rulemaking.\12\ Therefore, the Coast Guard is treating the
estimated difference as an unquantified impact of the proposed rule,
though the Coast Guard explores potential cost savings effects in its
analysis. Further discussion can be found below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Although the NMC has data on the aggregate number of
applicants for the fee waiver, it does not have data on the
applicants broken out by sub-categories such as what service they
are in (or were in) or their active or reserve status. Executive
Order 13860 does not require the Coast Guard to collect this data.
As a result, the Coast Guard does not collect it. In addition, the
Department of Defense, as of when this proposed rule was written,
did not publish data on the number of Selected Reservists or Ready
Reservists who are currently on active duty or who were in the
recent past.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the policy letter and proposed rulemakings are implemented at
different time periods (the policy letter was implemented in 2020, and
the proposed rulemaking is expected to be implemented in 2024), two
different baselines need to be examined. The first is that associated
with the pre-policy baseline (covering 2020-2033), and the second is
that associated with the proposed rulemaking baseline (covering 2024-
2033). The pre-policy baseline analyzes the effects of the Policy
Letter 02-20 published in 2020 which allowed certain eligible
applicants to receive an MMC fee exemption. The pre-policy baseline
estimates the costs and savings that applicants and the Coast Guard
received as a result of the policy letter as well as the costs and
savings from this proposed rulemaking. The second baseline, the
proposed rulemaking baseline, estimates the costs and savings that
would occur as the result of this proposed rulemaking only. However,
since we are unable to determine the change in population there are no
additional costs or savings that can be attributed to the proposed
rulemaking baseline.
Table 1, below, provides a summary of all impacts from Policy
Letter 02-20 and the proposed rulemaking on a per-applicant basis.
Section 1a of that table discusses the impacts of the policy letter,
and section 1b discusses those of the proposed rulemaking. The dollar
figures are presented in both nominal and discounted terms (7 percent
on an annualized basis) for a 10-year period.
Table 1a--Summary of the Impacts of Policy Letter 02-20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Impacts
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicability............................................. 46 U.S.C. 2110, Executive Order 13860, and NDAA
2020.
Affected Population....................................... Members of the uniformed services (Army, Navy, Air
Force, Space Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard,
Commissioned Corps of NOAA, Commissioned Corps of
USPHS), including reservists and members of the
National Guard, who are on active duty at the time
of application, or are current members of the
reserve forces and were previously on active duty.
Estimated Fee Waivers (annually).......................... The estimated number of fee waivers in the future is
622 (annually).
Labor costs for applicants to provide documentation of $9.87 per application.
eligibility for an MMC fee exemption. The 14-year documentation cost for the 622 yearly
applicants is $85,948 (in total nominal dollars)
and $61,468 and $6,139 annualized (discounted at
7%).
Labor costs to the Coast Guard to evaluate applicant's $7.82 per application.
eligibility for MMC fee exemption. The 14-year cost to the Coast Guard is $68,097 (in
total nominal dollars) and $48,702 and $4,864
annualized (discounted at 7%).
Transfer payments (eliminated applicant's MMC fees paid to The mean estimated transfer is $159.38 per MMC.
the Federal Government). Over the 14-year period, the transfers are estimated
at $1,387,881 (in total nominal dollars) and
$992,601 and $99,134 on an annualized basis
(discounted at 7%).
Unquantified benefits..................................... May provide uniformed services members greater
flexibility with respect to pursuing careers after
leaving the uniformed services.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 1b--Summary of the Impacts of Proposed Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category Impacts
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicability............................................. 46 U.S.C. 2110, Executive Order 13860, and NDAA
2020.
Affected Population....................................... The proposed rulemaking covers only uniformed
service members and reservists on active duty,
members of the Selected Reserve, and members of the
Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service.
The proposed rulemaking involves a narrower in-scope
population, as Policy Letter 02-20 covers
reservists currently on active duty as well as
those who were on active duty in the past.
Estimated Fee Waivers (annually).......................... The number of fee waivers in the future is
estimated, for purposes of our analysis, at 622
(annually).
However, as the only change from Policy Letter 02-20
involves a potential decrease in the reservist
population, the actual number may be smaller. Due
to a lack of data, it is not possible to quantify
this number.
Labor costs for applicants to provide documentation of $9.87 per application.
eligibility for an MMC fee exemption. There are no labor costs to the applicants to
provide documentation as the proposed rulemaking
codifies the already existing Policy Letter 02-20.
Labor costs to the Coast Guard to evaluate applicant's $7.82 per application.
eligibility for MMC fee exemption. There are no labor costs expected from the
implementation of the proposed rulemaking as it
codifies the already existing Policy Letter 02-20.
Transfer payments (eliminated applicant's MMC fees paid to Codifies MMC Fee Waiver. The mean estimated transfer
the Federal Government). is $159.38 per MMC.
There are no transfer payments expected from the
implementation of the proposed rulemaking as it
codifies the already existing Policy Letter 02-20.
[[Page 68046]]
Unquantified benefits..................................... May provide increased clarity and transparency to
the affected public as a published rule in the CFR
as opposed to a standalone guidance document.\1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: all dollar figures are rounded to the closest whole dollar.
\1\ The proposed rulemaking also incorporates the greater flexibility with respect to pursuing careers. Due to
the fact that this has already been achieved by the policy letter, independent of the proposed rulemaking, we
only list the increased clarity and transparency obtained through the codification of the MMC Fee Waiver.
These are the additional benefits obtained through the creation of the proposed rulemaking.
Part I. CG-MMC Policy Letter 02-20 (Pre-Policy Baseline)
A policy letter was published to immediately implement Executive
Order 13860, section 3511(c)(1) of the NDAA 2020. The implementation of
the policy letter had three impacts. The first impact is the time that
applicants are required to provide documentation to show eligibility
for the MMC fee exemption.\13\ Prior to the implementation of the
policy letter, applicants did not need to provide such documentation.
The second impact involves the labor costs to the Coast Guard to
evaluate documentation for eligibility of the fee exemption. Prior to
the policy letter, the Coast Guard did not have to evaluate such
documentation, so there was no cost to the Government. The third impact
of the policy letter was in the form of transfer payments, which are
monetary payments from one group to another that do not affect the
total resources available to society. Prior to the implementation of
the policy letter, the affected population were required to pay the MMC
fees. Following publication of the Policy Letter, the Federal
Government incurs the cost of those fees. These three factors comprise
the effects of the of Policy Letter 02-20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Applicants must submit documentation consistent with CG-MMC
Policy Letter 02-20 to show that they are eligible for the fee
exemption. This may include a copy of active-duty orders citing
Titles 10 or 14 of the United States Code or a letter from the
relevant command or personnel office on official letterhead stating
that the applicant is a current member of the uniformed services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The population will be discussed in greater detail below in the
``Affected Population'' section of this RA.
Affected Population for Policy Letter 02-20
In accordance with Executive Order 13860 and section 3511 of the
NDAA 2020, and the authority under 46 U.S.C. 2110(g), the Coast Guard
waived MMC fees for members of the uniformed services (Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, Coast Guard, and the Commissioned
Corps of NOAA and the USPHS), including reservists and members of the
National Guard, if they are currently on active duty at the time of
application, or are a current member of the reserve forces and were
previously on active duty.\14\ The waiver was implemented through
Policy Letter 02-20. This policy letter took effect on May 26, 2020.
Data is available for all these categories of personnel except the
Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS. The Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS
was authorized and funded by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic
Security Act and signed into law on March 27, 2020. It only began to
accept applications in the fall of 2020.\15\ With respect to the other
groups mentioned above, the maximum potentially affected population is
2,145,035. This is the total number of personnel who may be eligible
for an MMC fee exemption. A detailed breakdown of this population can
be found below in Table 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The legal authority is discussed in greater detail in
section III of this preamble, ``Background''.
\15\ https://www.usphs.gov/ready-reserve, accessed June 20,
2023.
Table 2--Maximum Total Potentially Affected Population by Policy Letter 02-20
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Service branch Number Source Notes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Members of Uniformed Services
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Army............................... 466,172 Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) This data is as of
website, (https://dwp.dmdc.osd.mil/ the quarter ending
dwp/app/dod-data-reports/workforce- March 2022.\1\
reports, downloaded September 1,
2022). Downloaded from section
``military personal, Military and
civilian personnel by service/
agency by state/country, March
2022''.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Navy............................... 340,390
Air Force and Space Force.......... 329,257
Marines............................ 176,259
Coast Guard........................ 40,308
Commissioned Corps of NOAA......... 327 Information from NOAA, provided May
27, 2021.
Commissioned Corps of USPHS........ 6,100 Department of Health and Human
Services website (https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2020/06/30/trump-administration-re-establishes-ready-reserve-corps-as-part-of-the-us-phs.html, downloaded January 4,
2021).
Total Active Uniformed Service 1,358,813
Members.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 68047]]
Members of Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Army Reserve....................... 180,647 Defense Manpower Data Center (DMDC) This data is as of
website, (https://dwp.dmdc.osd.mil/ March 2022.\2\
dwp/app/dod-data-reports/workforce-
reports, downloaded September 1,
2022). Downloaded from section
``military personal, Military and
civilian personnel by service/
agency by state/country, March
2022''.
Army National Guard of the U.S. 333,182
Navy Reserve....................... 56,017
Air Force Reserve.................. 69,697
Air National Guard of the U.S. 106,964
Marine Corps Reserves.............. 33,607
Coast Guard Reserves............... 6,108
Commissioned Corps of USPHS (Ready N.A.\3\
Reserve).
Space Force Reserve................ 0 \4\
Total Members of Selected Reserve 786,222
of the Ready Reserve.
Total Active Uniformed Service 2,145,035
Members + Members of Selected
Reserve of the Ready Reserve.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The table does not include personnel on temporary duty or deployed in support of contingency operations. The
data is the latest available as of June 2022.
\2\ Latest available data as of the search date, September 1, 2022.
\3\ USPHS Ready Reserve was created in March 2020 and only started to take applications in the Fall of 2020.
\4\ Space Force, as of September 1, 2022, does not have a reserve element.
Of the 2,145,035 eligible persons, only a small number applied for
an MMC and received a fee waiver. Based on available data, 2020 through
2022 (inclusively), an average of 622 eligible persons were granted a
waiver of MMC fees (per year). The Coast Guard assumes that, in the 10-
year period following implementation of Policy Letter 02-20, an average
of 622 persons will continue to annually request and receive a waiver
of MMC fees.
MMC Fees To Be Exempted
Table 3 provides the MMC evaluation, examination, and issuance fees
waived for qualifying individuals for the policy letter.\16\ The column
on the right side shows the aggregated evaluation, examination, and
issuance fees for each type of credential transaction. The average fee
for an MMC, as can be seen at the bottom of table 3, is $159.38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Table 1 of 46 CFR 10.219(a).
Table 3--Fee for MMCs and Associated Endorsements From Table 1 of 46 CFR 10.219(a)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Evaluation, Examination,
If you apply for then the fee then the fee Issuance, then the fee is Total
is . . . is . . . . . .
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MMC with officer endorsement:
Original:
Upper level 1................... $100 $110 $45....................... $255
Lower level 2................... 100 95 45........................ 240
Renewal......................... 50 45 45........................ 140
Raise of grade.................. 100 45 45........................ 190
Modification or removal of 50 45 45........................ 140
limitation or scope.
Radio officer endorsement:
Original........................ 50 45 45........................ 140
Renewal......................... 50 n/a 45........................ 95
Staff officer endorsements:.....
Original........................ 90 n/a 45........................ 135
Renewal............................. 50 n/a 45........................ 95
MMC with rating endorsement:
Original endorsement for ratings 95 n/a 45........................ 140
other than qualified ratings.
Original endorsement for 95 140 45........................ 280
qualified rating.
Upgrade or raise of grade....... 95 140 45........................ 280
Renewal endorsement for ratings 50 n/a 45........................ 95
other than qualified ratings.
Renewal endorsement for 50 45 45........................ 140
qualified rating.
Modification or removal of 50 45 45........................ 140
limitation or scope.
[[Page 68048]]
STCW endorsement:
Original............................ 0 0 0......................... n/a
Renewal......................... 0 0 0......................... n/a
Reissue, replacement, and n/a n/a 45........................ 45
duplicate.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summation Statistics
-------------------------------------------
Mean...................... $159.38
Lower Bound............... $45.00
Upper Bound............... $280.00
Credential transaction 16
types that require Fees.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost and Transfer Impacts of Policy Letter 02-20
As stated previously, there were three impacts of the policy
letter. The first was that it resulted in a cost to applicants to
provide the documentation needed to show eligibility for the MMC fee
exemption. The second was the cost to the Coast Guard to process this
documentation. The third was the transfer price associated with the
costs of the fees being shifted from individual applicants to the
Federal Government. The costs to applicants are discussed in detail in
section (1), below. Costs to the Coast Guard are discussed in section
(2). Section (3) discusses the combined costs to applicants and the
Coast Guard, and section (4) details the transfer costs.
(1) Labor Costs to Applicants Providing Documentation Showing
Eligibility for MMC Fee Waiver
Applicants for an MMC fee waiver, under Policy Letter 02-20, need
to provide documentation to show eligibility. Examples of documentation
include, but are not limited to, active-duty orders citing Titles 10 or
14 of the United States Code, a letter from the command or personnel
office on official letterhead stating that the applicant is currently
serving under Titles 10 or 14, or similar documentation. The applicant
should submit the documentation with their application for an MMC.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ In order to provide maximum flexibility to applicants, for
the proposed rulemaking the acceptable forms of documentation will
be provided in updated guidance that the Coast Guard is planning to
publish when a final rule is published.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The National Maritime Center (NMC) estimates that it would take
applicants 15 minutes to obtain eligibility documentation and include
it with an MMC application.18 19 The Coast Guard estimates
the mean hourly rate of active duty uniformed service members at $39.48
per hour.\20\ The Coast Guard estimates the mean monthly pay of active
duty uniformed service members at $6,865.77.\21\ That figure,
$6,865.77, is multiplied by 12 to obtain an annual figure of $82,389.24
($6,865.77 x 12). To estimate hourly rates, the Coast Guard divides
$82,389.24 by 2,087, which the Office of Personnel and Management (OPM)
uses as the number of working hours in a year, per 5 U.S.C. 5504(b)(1).
Hence, the Coast Guard estimates the average hourly rate of active-duty
uniformed service members at $39.48 \22\ ($82,389.24 / 2,087) and
estimates the cost to this population to provide documentation showing
eligibility for the fee waiver at $9.87 ((15 minutes / 60 minutes) x
$39.48 = $9.87). As the Coast Guard forecasts 622 applicants per year,
the total nominal cost is estimated at $6,139 per annum (622 x $9.87 =
$6,139.14, rounded to $6,139). Table 4 shows the estimated nominal cost
over a 14-year period, including discounted and annualized figures. As
the policy letter became effective in 2020, table 4 shows the estimated
costs for the 14-year period covering 2020 through 2033 (the 14-year
period following the implementation of the policy letter).\23\ Table 4
is showing the pre-policy letter baseline. All dollar figures in Table
4, and all other tables in this regulatory analysis, are in 2021 terms
unless otherwise stated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ The NMC is responsible for receiving and evaluating MMC
applications and issuing MMCs to qualified mariners.
\19\ The Coast Guard, in its calculations, has assumed that
applicants provide their own documentation as opposed to command
personnel providing the documentation on their behalf. The Coast
Guard does not have information on the breakdown between the two
groups.
\20\ This dollar figure for uniformed service members is
provided in nominal terms, as opposed to a loaded rate (adjusted for
benefits). This is due to the complexity of measuring and obtaining
readily available data on the uniformed service members benefit
compensation package. We compared civilian employees and uniformed
service members and concluded that the comparison is not
appropriate, since civilian employees and uniformed service members
receive significantly different benefits. Uniformed personnel, for
example, are provided full housing (or equivalent financial
compensation), food or partial food stipend, full medical coverage
for themselves and their families, significant educational benefits
during their time in service and, upon completing terms of military
service, pensions (for those who complete the requisite amount of
service) complete moving expenses throughout their careers, and
other benefits that are dependent upon an individual's assignment.
By comparison, few employees in the private sector receive such
benefits.
\21\ We calculated this figure using the Jan. 2021 Monthly Basic
Pay Table on the Department of Defense website, https://militarypay.defense.gov/Portals/3/Documents/2021%20Pay%20Table%203%20percent%20-%20FINAL.pdf (accessed Nov. 10,
2021), which in turn was found under ``active-duty pay'' at https://militarypay.defense.gov/Pay/Basic-Pay/Active-Duty-Pay/. In
calculating this average, we excluded all zero cells in the table,
as they are fields for which wages cannot exist. For example, it is
not possible to obtain a 0-10 rating with fewer than 20 years of
experience. Hence the zeros in the table for that rating, for years
of experience under 20, were excluded from our calculations.
\22\ Rounded to nearest whole cent.
\23\ It should be noted that for the 3 years 2020-2022
(inclusively), we are implicitly applying our assumptions regarding
in-scope population numbers and costs for the years 2022 and going
forward. The same reasoning applies to analysis later on in this RA
on the 2020-2022 periods examined for Policy Letter 02-20.
[[Page 68049]]
Table 4--Labor Costs to In-Scope Applicants of Completing MMC Fee Waiver Documentation (Policy Letter 02-20
Impact) (Pre-Policy Letter Implementation Baseline)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Nominal 3% 7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 1 (2020).......................................... $6,139 $6,323 $6,569
Year 2 (2021).......................................... 6,139 6,139 6,139
Year 3 (2022).......................................... 6,139 5,960 5,737
Year 4 (2023).......................................... 6,139 5,787 5,362
Year 5 (2024).......................................... 6,139 5,618 5,011
Year 6 (2025).......................................... 6,139 5,454 4,683
Year 7 (2026).......................................... 6,139 5,296 4,377
Year 8 (2027).......................................... 6,139 5,141 4,091
Year 9 (2028).......................................... 6,139 4,992 3,823
Year 10 (2029)......................................... 6,139 4,846 3,573
Year 11 (2030)......................................... 6,139 4,705 3,339
Year 12 (2031)......................................... 6,139 4,568 3,121
Year 13 (2032)......................................... 6,139 4,435 2,917
Year 14 (2033)......................................... 6,139 4,306 2,726
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 85,948 73,570 61,468
Annualized..................................... ................. 6,139 6,139
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Labor Costs to the Coast Guard To Evaluate and Process
Documentation Showing Eligibility for MMC Fee Waivers
Just as there are labor costs for applicants to submit
documentation, there are labor costs to the Coast Guard to evaluate and
process the documentation showing eligibility for an MMC fee waiver.
The NMC estimates that the time to process the typical documentation is
10 minutes, or 0.17 hours (10 / 60). The processing is performed by
personnel holding positions at the government General Schedule (GS) pay
scale of GS-07. According to Commandant Instruction 7310.1U, the hourly
loaded rate for a GS-07 Coast Guard employee is $46.\24\ Thus, the
labor cost to the Coast Guard to process the eligibility documentation
is $7.82 (0.17 hours x $46 per hour) per applicant. As stated
previously, the Coast Guard assumes 622 applicants would receive a MMC
fee waiver each year. Given this, the Coast Guard predicts it would
spend $4,864 per year to evaluate and process documentation provided by
applicants showing eligibility for fee exemptions (622 x $7.82 =
$4,864.04, rounded to the nearest whole dollar). The Coast Guard
estimates that the aggregate 14-year cost to the Government is $48,702,
with an annualized figure of $4,864, discounted at 7 percent. These
numbers can be seen in table 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Page two of enclosure 2 to Commandant Instruction 7310.1U
(https://www.uscg.mil/Portals/0/NPFC/docs/7310/CI_7310_1U.pdf?ver=2020-04-06-135219-117).
Table 5--Labor Costs to Coast Guard To Evaluate Eligibility for MMC Fee Waiver (Policy Letter 02-20 Impact) (Pre-
Policy Letter Implementation Baseline)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Nominal 3% 7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 1 (2020).......................................... 4,864 5,010 5,205
Year 2 (2021).......................................... 4,864 4,864 4,864
Year 3 (2022).......................................... 4,864 4,722 4,546
Year 4 (2023).......................................... 4,864 4,585 4,248
Year 5 (2024).......................................... 4,864 4,451 3,971
Year 6 (2025).......................................... 4,864 4,322 3,711
Year 7 (2026).......................................... 4,864 4,196 3,468
Year 8 (2027).......................................... 4,864 4,074 3,241
Year 9 (2028).......................................... 4,864 3,955 3,029
Year 10 (2029)......................................... 4,864 3,840 2,831
Year 11 (2030)......................................... 4,864 3,728 2,646
Year 12 (2031)......................................... 4,864 3,619 2,473
Year 13 (2032)......................................... 4,864 3,514 2,311
Year 14 (2033)......................................... 4,864 3,412 2,160
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 68,097 58,291 48,702
Annualized..................................... ................. 4,864 4,864
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 68050]]
(3) Aggregated Labor Costs of Applicants and the Coast Guard Associated
With Documentation of Eligibility for an MMC Fee Waiver
The Coast Guard estimates the total costs related to the
documentation of eligibility, for applicants and the Coast Guard (shown
in tables 4 and 5), for the 14-year period following the implementation
of the policy letter, in table 6. The estimated total costs to evaluate
and process the documentation for the applicants and the Coast Guard
for the 14-year period is $110,171, with an annualized cost of $11,003,
discounted at 7 percent.
Table 6--Total Costs to Applicants and Coast Guard To Evaluate and Process Documentation of Eligibility for MMC
Fee Waiver (Impact of Policy Letter 02-20) (Pre-Policy Letter Implementation Baseline)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Nominal 3% 7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 1 (2020).......................................... $11,003 $11,333 $11,773
Year 2 (2021).......................................... 11,003 11,003 11,003
Year 3 (2022).......................................... 11,003 10,683 10,283
Year 4 (2023).......................................... 11,003 10,372 9,611
Year 5 (2024).......................................... 11,003 10,069 8,982
Year 6 (2025).......................................... 11,003 9,776 8,394
Year 7 (2026).......................................... 11,003 9,491 7,845
Year 8 (2027).......................................... 11,003 9,215 7,332
Year 9 (2028).......................................... 11,003 8,947 6,852
Year 10 (2029)......................................... 11,003 8,686 6,404
Year 11 (2030)......................................... 11,003 8,433 5,985
Year 12 (2031)......................................... 11,003 8,187 5,593
Year 13 (2032)......................................... 11,003 7,949 5,228
Year 14 (2033)......................................... 11,003 7,717 4,886
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 154,045 131,862 110,171
Annualized..................................... ................. 11,003 11,003
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) Elimination of Transfer Payments to Federal Government of Providing
MMC Fee Waivers
Prior to the implementation of the policy letter, applicants had to
pay evaluation, examination, and issuance fees to obtain an MMC.\25\
The implementation of the policy letter eliminated this requirement for
applicants eligible for a fee waiver. The elimination of the payment of
MMC fees represents a loss of revenue to the Federal Government and an
equal gain to eligible MMC applicants. This is referred to as a
transfer payment. For those MMC fees that were eliminated by the policy
letter, the Federal Government will face a shortfall in revenues. The
revenues from those fees will need to be made up through alternative
means (i.e., increased taxes, new or increased fees for other services
or similar sources of revenue or in some other manner). Thus, there
would be no net social benefit or cost with respect to transfer
payments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Listed in table 3 of this RA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As stated previously, the average annual number of uniformed
service members who received a waiver of MMC fees between 2020 and 2022
(inclusively) was 622. The estimated average fee associated with the
applications for these MMCs was $159 each.\26\ For this population, the
cost was $99,134 per year in nominal terms (622 x $159.38 = $99,134.36,
rounded to the nearest whole number). Thus, for the 14 years after the
implementation of the policy letter, the Coast Guard estimates transfer
payments would total $992,601, with an annualized amount of $99,134,
discounted at 7 percent. These estimates can be seen in table 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ This number is rounded to the closest whole number. The
number can be found in table 3 of this RA.
Table 7--Transfer Payments--Eliminated (Impact of Policy Letter 02-20) (Pre-Policy Letter Implementation
Baseline)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year Nominal 3% 7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year 1 (2020).......................................... $99,134 $102,108 $106,074
Year 2 (2021).......................................... 99,134 99,134 99,134
Year 3 (2022).......................................... 99,134 96,247 92,649
Year 4 (2023).......................................... 99,134 93,444 86,588
Year 5 (2024).......................................... 99,134 90,722 80,923
Year 6 (2025).......................................... 99,134 88,080 75,629
Year 7 (2026).......................................... 99,134 85,514 70,681
Year 8 (2027).......................................... 99,134 83,023 66,057
Year 9 (2028).......................................... 99,134 80,605 61,736
Year 10 (2029)......................................... 99,134 78,258 57,697
Year 11 (2030)......................................... 99,134 75,978 53,923
Year 12 (2031)......................................... 99,134 73,765 50,395
Year 13 (2032)......................................... 99,134 71,617 47,098
Year 14 (2033)......................................... 99,134 69,531 44,017
--------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................................. 1,387,881 1,188,027 992,601
[[Page 68051]]
Annualized..................................... ................. 99,134 99,134
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits of Policy Letter 02-20
The Coast Guard has identified one qualitative benefit of Policy
Letter 02-20 stemming from the elimination of the MMC fees referred to
in Executive Order 13860. The fee waiver may provide eligible uniformed
service members greater flexibility with respect to pursuing careers
after leaving the uniformed services.
Part II. Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard expects the proposed rulemaking to have an impact
for two reasons. First, it would implement Policy Letter 02-20 in terms
of required actions.\27\ Second, the proposed rulemaking only covers a
subset of the affected population of the policy letter. The proposed
rulemaking covers Selected or Ready Reservists while the policy letter
covered all reservists who were on active duty in the past. As a
result, the proposed rule covers a smaller portion of the affected
population than the policy letter. However, as discussed previously,
there is no available data to accurately estimate this difference. The
reason there is no available data is because the NMC only collects
data, on those receiving the NMC fee exemptions, on an aggregate basis.
The NMC only collects data on the number of those who receive the fee
exemption. The NMC does not collect more detailed data such as what
branch they are in or whether they are in the reserves or not. Due to
the smaller number of eligible applicants, the Coast Guard surmises
that, when compared to the policy letter, the proposed rule would
result in a small cost savings to the applicant and the Coast Guard for
no longer needing to provide and review the documentation for the fee
waiver.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ This is as opposed to in-scope population. The issues
regarding the in-scope population are discussed below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following cost analysis discusses the impact of the difference
in the reservist populations on the number of MMC applications.
However, due to a lack of data, it is not possible to quantify the cost
difference.
Affected Population for Proposed Rule
As the proposed rulemaking covers a narrower definition of
reservists than Policy Letter 02-20, it may cover fewer than 622
persons per year. Due to a lack of data, the Coast Guard assumes that,
for the proposed rulemaking, the number of applicants for MMC
exemptions is 622.
Cost Analysis for Proposed Rule
Since the proposed rule covers a narrower population of reservists,
it may decrease the number of MMC exemptions per year. Therefore, the
Coast Guard assumes that the aggregate reduction in exemptions between
the policy letter and the proposed rulemaking is unquantifiable and
could be zero.\28\ In other words, the proposed rulemaking may have no
impact on the number of exemption requests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ See the cost difference discussions between the proposed
rulemaking and the policy letter in the ``Cost and Transfer Impacts
of Cost Analysis of Policy Letter 02-20'' section of the RA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the number of applicants seeking exemptions under the proposed
rulemaking is fewer than under the policy letter, there will be a
decrease in the costs of the proposed rulemaking when compared to the
costs of the policy letter. For every applicant that does not seek an
exemption under the proposed rulemaking (as opposed to the policy
letter), the proposed rule would result in a cost savings of $9.87 per
applicant related to providing the necessary documentation, and a cost
savings of $7.82, per applicant, for the Coast Guard related to
reviewing that documentation. If the proposed rule results in any
decrease in the number of individuals seeking an exemption from MMC
fees, that amount would be $159 per applicant (the average MMC fee paid
by an applicant).
As stated previously, the proposed rulemaking is codifying an
already existing policy letter. The only differences between the policy
letter and the proposed rulemaking is that the proposed rulemaking
covers a subset of the reserve forces that the policy letter covers.
Due to a lack of data regarding this potential difference it is not
possible to estimate differences in costs or benefits. The lack of data
also makes it impossible to even determine whether there actually is a
difference in populations between the proposed rulemaking and the
policy letter. If there is a difference between the policy letter and
proposed rulemaking in populations, the costs and cost savings
differences would amount to the figures cited in the previous paragraph
on a per individual basis.
Benefits of the Proposed Rule
The Coast Guard believes the proposed rulemaking may reduce the
burden on the affected public by increasing efficiency and transparency
as a result of being in the Code of Federal Regulations, as opposed to
being a standalone policy letter.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ The proposed rulemaking would also incorporates greater
flexibility with respect to pursuing careers. As this has already
been achieved by issuance of the policy letter, independent of the
proposed rulemaking, we only list the increased clarity and
transparency that would be obtained through codification of the
Coast Guard's MMC fee exemption policy through the proposed
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regulatory Alternatives Considered
In developing this proposed rule, the Coast Guard considered three
alternatives to the proposed exemption.
The first alternative would be to not exempt the MMC fees listed in
table 1 of 46 CFR 10.219(a), as shown in table 3 of this proposal. As
this alternative would not fulfill the requirements of Executive Order
13860 or NDAA 2020, the Coast Guard rejected this alternative.
The second alternative would be to make no change to the user fee
schedule for members of the uniformed services, but to establish an MMC
fee reimbursement program for uniformed service members. Under this
alternative, the population applying for MMCs would initially pay MMC
fees and then file a request for reimbursement with their service in
order to be compensated for the cost. Under this alternative, the fee
compensation process would be a greater burden than the proposed rule's
framework for eligible applicants, who would pay MMC fees out of pocket
and then request compensation through their service. Filing a request
for reimbursement would increase the amount of documentation applicants
would be required to file and would add an administrative burden to the
services in establishing and implementing reimbursement programs. The
Coast Guard rejected this alternative.
The third alternative would be to extend the exemption only to the
portion of the population consisting of members of the Selected Reserve
of the
[[Page 68052]]
Ready Reserve of any of the armed forces (Army National Guard of the
United States, Army Reserve, Navy Reserve, Marine Corps Reserve, Air
National Guard of the United States, Air Force Reserve and Coast Guard
Reserve), and the Ready Reserve Corps of the USPHS who are on ``active
duty,'' \30\ while excluding those simply in an ``active status.'' \31\
The Coast Guard rejected this alternative, as it does not best support
the intent of Executive Order 13860 and NDAA 2020 to help attract
active duty service members to obtain an MMC, and provide meaningful,
well-paying jobs to U.S. veterans in support of U.S. national security
requirements.
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\30\ Active duty is defined here as under 10 U.S.C. 101(d)(1).
Under that section it means ``full-time duty in the active military
service of the United States. Such term includes full-time training
duty, annual training duty, and attendance, while in the active
military service, at a school designated as a service school by law
or by the Secretary of the military department concerned. Such term
does not include full-time National Guard duty.''
\31\ All members of the Ready Reserve are in active status.
Selected Reserves are only part of that group. Individual ready
reserves are also active status.
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The Coast Guard believes that the intent of Executive Order 13860
and NDAA 2020 is best supported through a fourth alternative--extending
the eligibility for MMC fee exemptions to members of the Selected
Reserve of the Reserves of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast
Guard and Space Force (such as Selected and Ready Reservists) and not
limiting eligibility to only members of the uniformed services on
active duty. This alternative best supports the intent of Executive
Order 13860 and the NDAA 2020 by ensuring a wide range of service
members who wish to pursue an MMC are provided support and by expanding
the population eligible to receive an exemption from MMC fees, and
ultimately resulting in a larger number of credentialed mariners
available to support U.S national security requirements and provide
meaningful, well-paying jobs to U.S. veterans.
B. Small Entities
Below are the small business entity impacts for Policy Letter 02-20
and for the proposed rulemaking on a separate basis.
Small Business Impacts of Policy Letter 02-20
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, the Coast
Guard has considered whether Policy Letter 02-20 would have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The term ``small entities'' comprises small businesses, not-for-profit
organizations that are independently owned and operated and are not
dominant in their fields, and governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.
The Policy Letter waived fees for the evaluation of an MMC
application, the administration of a required examination, and the
issuance of an MMC for members of the uniformed services. Since the
impacts discussed above in the RA affect individuals and not business
(firms), not-for-profit entities and State or Local governmental
jurisdictions, the proposed rule would not impact small entities as
defined by the Small Business Administration in 13 CFR 121.201. Based
on this analysis, this proposed rule would not affect a substantial
number of small entities.
Small Business Impacts of the Proposed Rulemaking
This proposed rulemaking codifies certain actions taken in the
previously implemented Policy Letter 02-20. In addition, the population
in the proposed rulemaking is defined more narrowly than in the policy
letter. However, due to the fact that the proposed rulemaking, like the
policy letter, only affects individuals and not business (firms), not-
for-profit entities and State or Local governmental jurisdictions, the
proposed rule would not impact small entities as defined by the Small
Business Administration in 13 CFR 121.201. Based on this analysis, this
proposed rule would not affect a substantial number of small entities.
For the aforementioned reasons, the Coast Guard certifies under 5
U.S.C. 605(b) that Policy Letter 02-20 and this proposed rule would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. If you think that your business, organization, or
governmental jurisdiction qualifies as a small entity and that this
proposed rule would have a significant economic impact on it, please
submit a comment to the docket at the address listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this preamble. In your comment, explain why you think it
qualifies and how and to what degree this proposed rule would
economically affect it.
C. Assistance for Small Entities
Under section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, Public Law 104-121, we want to assist small
entities in understanding this proposed rule so that they can better
evaluate its effects on them and participate in the rulemaking. If the
proposed rule would affect your small business, organization, or
governmental jurisdiction and you have questions concerning its
provisions or options for compliance, please call or email the person
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this proposed rule.
The Coast Guard will not retaliate against small entities that question
or complain about this proposed rule or any policy or action of the
Coast Guard.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal
employees who enforce, or otherwise determine compliance with, Federal
regulations to the Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory
Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small Business Regulatory
Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these actions annually and
rates each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to
comment on actions by employees of the Coast Guard, call 1-888-REG-FAIR
(1-888-734-3247).
D. Collection of Information
Policy Letter 02-20 called for a change to an existing collection
of information under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
3501-3520. As defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(c), ``collection of information''
comprises reporting, recordkeeping, monitoring, posting, labeling, and
other similar actions. The title and description of the information
collections, a description of those who must collect the information,
and an estimate of the total annual burden follow. The estimate covers
the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing sources of
data, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection.
The information collection associated with Policy Letter 02-20 is
the currently approved collection, OMB Control Number 1625-0040,
``Application for Merchant Mariner Credential (MMC), Application for
Merchant Mariner Medical Certificate, Application for Merchant Mariner
Medical Certificate for Entry Level Ratings, Small Vessel Sea Service
Form, DOT/USCG Periodic Drug Testing Form, Disclosure Statement for
Narcotics, DWI/DUI, and/or Other Convictions, Merchant Mariner Medical
Certificate, Recognition of Foreign Certificate.'' In order to process
the fee exemptions proposed in this rule, the Coast Guard would require
eligible applicants for an MMC to provide documentation of their
eligibility for a fee exemption.\32\ In
[[Page 68053]]
addition, it would require the NMC to evaluate and process this
documentation part of an evaluation for an MMC.
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\32\ In order to provide maximum flexibility to applicants, for
the proposed rulemaking the acceptable forms of documentation will
be provided in updated guidance that the Coast Guard is planning to
publish when a final rule is published.
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With respect to the proposed rulemaking, no new or additional
documentation related to collection of information would be required
(relative to the policy letter). The number of respondents may decrease
from the policy letter. This is because the proposed rulemaking
codifies what the policy letter currently requires in terms of
collection of information documentation and applies to a potentially
narrower in-scope population.
Title: Application for Merchant Mariner Credential (form CG-719B),
Application for Medical Certificate (form CG-719K), Application for
Medical Certificate, Short Form (form 719K/E), Small Vessel Sea Service
Form (form CF-719S), DOT/USCG Periodic Drug Testing Form (form CG-
719P), Disclosure Statement for Narcotics, DWI/DUI, and/or Other
Convictions (form CG-719C).
OMB Control Number: 1625-0040.
Summary of the Collection of Information: The Coast Guard currently
collects information from individuals seeking to obtain an MMC, renew
an MMC, and obtain a merchant mariner medical certificate. Policy
Letter 02-20 would require applicants who are members of the uniformed
services (622 persons per year), and who wish to be exempted from MMC
fees, to provide documentation of eligibility for the MMC fee exemption
as part of an MMC application (form CG-719B).
As the proposed regulation only currently codifies current
practices, regarding the collection of information, stated in Policy
Letter 02-20 (and makes no changes to these requirements), as well as
having between the same or fewer applicants than the MMC fee waivers,
it would be expected to have no impact on the collection of
information. The only reason for any reduction in documentation would
be due to the fact that the proposed rulemaking covers a narrower in-
scope definition than does the policy letter. However, there is no data
available to the Coast Guard to determine how small the decrease would
be or even, for that matter, if there even is one.
Need for Information: Title 46 CFR, section 10.217(a), requires MMC
applicants to apply at one of the Coast Guard's 17 Regional Exam
Centers, located nationwide or any other location designated by the
Coast Guard. MMCs are established for individuals who are required to
hold a credential under 46 U.S.C, subtitle II. The Coast Guard has the
responsibility of issuing MMCs to applicants found qualified as to age,
character, and habits of life, experience, professional qualifications,
and physical fitness. The instruments contained within OMB Control No.
1625-0040 serve as a means for the applicant to apply for an MMC and a
merchant mariner medical certificate.
Proposed Use of Information: The Coast Guard conducts this
collection of information solely for the purposes of determining
eligibility for issuance of an MMC in accordance with applicable
statutes and regulations. This evaluation is performed on occasion,
meaning as submitted by the respondents when they apply for an MMC.
Applicants for an MMC must apply using the Form CG-719-B for an
original MMC and every 5 years for renewal, or when seeking a new
endorsement or a raise of grade of an existing endorsement. The Coast
Guard evaluates the collected information to determine whether
applicants are qualified to serve under the authority of the requested
credential with respect to their professional qualifications and
suitability.
Description of the Respondents: All applicants for an MMC, whether
original, renewal, duplicate, raise of grade, or to add a new
endorsement on a previously issued MMC, are included in this
collection. The population covered by Policy Letter 02-20 includes the
number of uniformed service members applying for MMCs who receive an
exemption of MMC fees (622 annually). The population covered by the
proposed rulemaking is expected to remain the same or be less, because
the proposed rulemaking codifies the Policy Letter in terms of
documentation requirements but applies to a narrower in-scope
population.
Number of Respondents: The number of respondents from the policy
letter are estimated at 622 per year. The proposed rule would either
not increase the annual number of respondents or be expected to only
decrease them.\33\
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\33\ Information collections normally list the total number of
annual respondents. However, there is currently a periodic renewal
under review at OMB, and another proposed rulemaking expected to
change the number of annual respondents is expected to be submitted
to OMB. Therefore, the total number of annual respondents is not
included in this RA.
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Frequency of Response: The frequency of response is once per year.
Burden of Response: The collection of information from both the
policy letter and the proposed rule requires the population to spend 15
minutes (0.25 hours) to provide evidence of eligibility for an MMC fee
exemption (622 persons per year), which would be submitted with the
requisite Form CG-719B.
Estimate of Total Annual Burden: The Coast Guard estimates that the
total annual burden, for the implementation of the policy letter, has
increased by 156 (0.25 x 622 = 155.5, rounded up to nearest whole
number) hours.\34\
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\34\ As there is currently a periodic renewal under review at
OMB, and another proposed rulemaking that is expected to change the
total annual burden is expected to be submitted to OMB, it is not
possible to list the total current annual burden.
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As the proposed rulemaking covers the same documentation and has a
narrower definition with respect to in-scope population, it is expected
to have either no impact on these hours or to reduce the burden level
already existing under the policy letter.
As required by 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), we will submit a copy of this
proposed rule to OMB for its review of the collection of information.
We ask for public comment on the proposed collection of information to
help us determine, among other things--
How useful the information is;
Whether the information can help us perform our functions
better;
How we can improve the quality, usefulness, and clarity of
the information;
Whether the information is readily available elsewhere;
How accurate our estimate is of the burden of collection;
How valid our methods are for determining the burden of
collection; and
How we can minimize the burden of collection.
If you submit comments on the collection of information, submit
them to both the OMB and to the docket where indicated under ADDRESSES.
You need not respond to a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid control number from OMB. Before the Coast
Guard could enforce the collection of information requirements in this
proposed rule, OMB would need to approve the Coast Guard's request to
collect this information.
E. Federalism
A rule has implications for federalism under Executive Order 13132
(Federalism) if it has a substantial direct effect on 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. We have analyzed this proposed rule under Executive Order
13132 and have determined that it is consistent with the fundamental
federalism principles and
[[Page 68054]]
preemption requirements described in Executive Order 13132. Our
analysis follows.
It is well settled that States may not regulate in categories
reserved for regulation by the Coast Guard. It is also well settled
that all of the categories covered in 46 U.S.C. 3306, 3703, 7101, and
8101 (design, construction, alteration, repair, maintenance, operation,
equipping, personnel qualification, and manning of vessels), as well as
the reporting of casualties and any other category in which Congress
intended the Coast Guard to be the sole source of a vessel's
obligations, are within the field foreclosed from regulation by the
States. See United States v. Locke, 529 U.S. 89, 99-101 (2000).
Additionally, for rules with federalism implications and preemptive
effect, Executive Order 13132 specifically directs agencies to consult
with State and local governments during the rulemaking process. If you
believe this proposed rule would have implications for federalism under
Executive Order 13132, please call or email the person listed in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of this preamble.
F. Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C. 1531; 1538,
requires Federal agencies to assess the effects of their discretionary
regulatory actions. In particular, the Act addresses actions that may
result in the expenditure by a State, local, or tribal government, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector of $100 million (adjusted for
inflation) or more in any one year. Although this proposed rule would
not result in such an expenditure, we do discuss the potential effects
of this proposed rule elsewhere in this preamble.
G. Taking of Private Property
This proposed rule would not cause a taking of private property or
otherwise have taking implications under Executive Order 12630
(Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected
Property Rights).
H. Civil Justice Reform
This proposed rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform) to minimize
litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.
I. Protection of Children
We have analyzed this proposed rule under Executive Order 13045
(Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks). This proposed rule is not an economically significant rule and
would not create an environmental risk to health or risk to safety that
might disproportionately affect children.
J. Indian Tribal Governments
This proposed rule does not have tribal implications under
Executive Order 13175 (Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments) because it would not have a substantial direct effect on
one or more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
K. Energy Effects
We have analyzed this proposed rule under Executive Order 13211
(Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use). We have determined that it is not a
``significant energy action'' under that order because it is not a
``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866 and is
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
L. Technical Standards
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act, codified as a
note to 15 U.S.C. 272, directs agencies to use voluntary consensus
standards in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides
Congress, through OMB, with an explanation of why using these standards
would be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards are technical standards (for example,
specifications of materials, performance, design, or operation; test
methods; sampling procedures; and related management systems practices)
that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies.
This proposed rule does not use technical standards. Therefore, we
did not consider the use of voluntary consensus standards.
M. Environment
We have analyzed this proposed rule under Department of Homeland
Security Management Directive 023-01, Rev. 1, associated implementing
instructions, and Environmental Planning COMDTINST 5090.1 (series),
which guide the Coast Guard in complying with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321-4370f), and have made
a preliminary determination that this action is one of a category of
actions that do not individually or cumulatively have a significant
effect on the human environment. A preliminary Record of Environmental
Consideration supporting this determination is available in the docket.
For instructions on locating the docket, see the ADDRESSES section of
this preamble. This proposed rule would be categorically excluded under
paragraphs L54 and L56 of Appendix A, Table 1 of DHS Instruction Manual
023-01-001-01, Rev. 1. The categorical exclusion (CATEX) L54 pertains
to regulations which are editorial or procedural; and CATEX L56
pertains to regulations concerning the training, qualifying, licensing,
and disciplining of maritime personnel.
This proposed rule involves the fees for MMCs and associated
endorsements. We seek any comments or information that may lead to the
discovery of a significant environmental impact from this proposed
rule.
List of Subjects in 46 CFR Part 10
Penalties, Personally identifiable information, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Seamen.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Coast Guard proposes
to amend 46 CFR part 10 as follows:
0
1. The authority citation for part 10 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 14 U.S.C. 503; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 46 U.S.C. 2101, 2103,
2104, 2110; 46 U.S.C. chapters 71, 73, and 75; 46 U.S.C. 7701, 8903,
8904, and 70105; Executive Order 10173; DHS Delegation No. 00170.1,
Revision No. 01.3.
0
2. Amend Sec. 10.219 by adding paragraph (m) to read as follows:
Sec. 10.219 Fees.
* * * * *
(m) Members of the uniformed services. A qualified applicant under
this subsection is exempt from paying evaluation, examination, or
issuance fees for an MMC as described in (b)(2) of this section.
(1) For purposes of paragraph (m) of this section, qualified
applicant means an individual who, at the time of submission of an
application, is:
(i) A member of the uniformed services listed in 10 U.S.C.
101(a)(5) on active duty;
(ii) A member of the Selected Reserve, as described in 10 U.S.C.
10143(a), of a reserve component named in 10 U.S.C. 10101; or
(iii) A member of the Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health
Service established in 42 U.S.C. 204(a)(1).
[[Page 68055]]
(2) For purposes of paragraph (m)(1)(i) of this section:
(i) For the members of the armed forces, as defined in 10 U.S.C.
101(a)(4), active duty is defined by 10 U.S.C. 101(d)(1);
(ii) For the commissioned corps of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, active duty has the same meaning as found
in 33 U.S.C. 3002(b)(1); and
(iii) For the members of the commissioned corps of the Public
Health Service, active duty has the meaning defined in 42 CFR 21.72(f).
Dated: September 21, 2023.
W.R. Arguin,
Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard, Assistant Commandant for Prevention
Policy.
[FR Doc. 2023-21660 Filed 10-2-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-04-P