Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request; Extension, 3655-3657 [2024-01005]
Download as PDF
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 13 / Friday, January 19, 2024 / Notices
USA, Inc. (the ‘‘Complainant’’) against
Dependable Highway Express, Inc.
(‘‘DHE’’) and Mediterranean Shipping
Company, (USA) Inc., on behalf of
Mediterranean Shipping Company, S.A.
(‘‘MSC’’). Complainant states that the
Commission has subject matter
jurisdiction over the complaint under
the Shipping Act of 1998, as amended,
46 U.S.C. 40101 et seq. Complainant
states that the Commission has personal
jurisdiction over Respondent DHE as a
party for the purposes of this proceeding
when it acted directly or indirectly in
conjunction with Respondent MSC in
some instances and personal
jurisdiction over Respondent MSC as an
ocean common carrier as this term is
defined at 46 U.S.C. 40102(18).
Complainant ICL USA, Inc. is a
corporation organized and existing
under the laws of the New York with its
principal place of business in Rosedale,
New York and acts as a destination
agent in the United States for various
affiliated Commission registered nonvessel-operating common carriers.
Complainant identifies Respondent
DHE as a corporation organized and
existing under the laws of California
with a principal place of business in Los
Angeles, California and as a Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration
motor carrier.
Complainant identified Respondent
MSC as an entity headquartered in
Geneva, Switzerland with an agent in
the United States located in New York
and as a vessel-operating common
carrier.
Complainant alleges that the
Respondents violated 46 U.S.C.
41104(a)(2)(A) and 41102(c) and 46 CFR
545.5, because Respondent DHE acted
directly or indirectly in conjunction
with Respondent MSC to assess
unauthorized per diem related charges,
including Admin Fees.
An answer to the complaint must be
filed with the Commission within 25
days after the date of service.
The full text of the complaint can be
found in the Commission’s electronic
Reading Room at https://www2.fmc.gov/
readingroom/proceeding/24-04/. This
proceeding has been assigned to the
Office of Administrative Law Judges.
The initial decision of the presiding
judge shall be issued by January 13,
2025, and the final decision of the
Commission shall be issued by July 28,
2025.
Alanna Beck,
Federal Register Alternate Liaison Officer,
Federal Maritime Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024–01008 Filed 1–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6730–02–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:42 Jan 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Extension
Federal Trade Commission.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Federal Trade
Commission (‘‘FTC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
is seeking public comments on its
proposal to extend for an additional
three years the current Paperwork
Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’) clearance for
information collection requirements
contained in the Commission’s rules
and regulations under the Wool
Products Labeling Act of 1939 (‘‘Wool
Rules’’). That clearance expires on June
30, 2024.
DATES: Comments must be filed by
March 19, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may file a
comment online or on paper, by
following the instructions in the
Request for Comment part of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Write ‘‘Wool Rules; PRA
Comment: FTC File No. P072108’’ on
your comment, and file your comment
online at https://www.regulations.gov by
following the instructions on the webbased form. If you prefer to file your
comment on paper, mail your comment
to the following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary,
600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite
CC–5610 (Annex J), Washington, DC
20580.
SUMMARY:
Jock
K. Chung, Attorney, Division of
Enforcement, Bureau of Consumer
Protection, Federal Trade Commission,
Mail Code CC–9528, 600 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20580,
(202) 326–2984.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title of Collection: Rules and
Regulations under the Wool Products
Labeling Act of 1939, 16 CFR part 300.
OMB Control Number: 3084–0100.
Type of Review: Extension without
change of currently approved collection.
Abstract: The Wool Products Labeling
Act of 1939 (Wool Act) prohibits the
misbranding of wool products. The
Wool Rules establish disclosure
requirements that assist consumers in
making informed purchasing decisions
and recordkeeping requirements that
assist the Commission in enforcing the
Rules.
Likely Respondents: Manufacturers,
importers, processors, and marketers of
wool products.
Frequency of Response: Third party
disclosure; recordkeeping requirement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3655
Estimated Annual Burden Hours:
2,046,667 hours (160,000 recordkeeping
hours + 1,886,667 disclosure hours).
Recordkeeping: 160,000 hours (4,000
wool firms incur an average 40 hours
per firm).
Disclosure: 1,886,667 hours (240,000
hours for determining label content +
480,000 hours to draft and order labels
+ 1,166,667 hours to attach labels).
Estimated Annual Cost Burden:
$28,258,668.84 (solely relating to labor
costs).
As required by section 3506(c)(2)(A)
of the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A), the
FTC is providing this opportunity for
public comment before requesting that
OMB extend the existing clearance for
the information collection requirements
contained in the Wool Rules.
Burden Statement
FTC staff’s burden estimates for the
Wool Rules are based on data from the
Department of Commerce’s Bureau of
the Census, the International Trade
Commission, the Department of Labor’s
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and
data or other input from the main
industry association, the American
Apparel and Footwear Association
(AAFA), and from SICCode.com, which
specializes in the business classification
of SIC (Standard Industrial
Classification) and NAICS (North
American Industry Classification
System) codes for business
identification, verification, and
targeting. The AAFA, a national trade
association which represents U.S.
apparel, footwear and other sewn
products companies and their suppliers,
has stated that ‘‘[t]he use of labels on
textiles and apparels is beneficial to
consumers, manufacturers, and business
in general as it allows for the necessary
flow of information along the supply
chain.’’ 1
The relevant information collection
requirements in these rules and staff’s
corresponding burden estimates follow.
The estimates address the number of
hours needed and the labor costs
incurred to comply with the
requirements. FTC staff believes that a
significant portion of hours and labor
costs currently attributable to burden
below are time and financial resources
usually and customarily incurred by
persons in the course of their regular
activity (e.g., industry participants
already have and/or would have care
1 Page one from comment by Kevin M. Burke,
President and CEO, American Apparel & Footwear
Association, March 26, 2012, Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking; Request for Public Comment;
Rules and Regulations under the Wool Products
Labeling Act of 1939; 77 FR 4498 (Jan. 30, 2012).
E:\FR\FM\19JAN1.SGM
19JAN1
3656
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 13 / Friday, January 19, 2024 / Notices
labels regardless of the Rules) and could
be excluded from PRA-related burden.2
Estimated Annual Burden Hours:
2,046,667 hours (160,000 recordkeeping
hours + 1,886,667 disclosure hours).
Recordkeeping: FTC staff estimates
that approximately 4,000 wool firms are
subject to the Wool Rules’
recordkeeping requirements. Based on
an average annual burden of 40 hours
per firm, the total recordkeeping burden
is 160,000 hours.
Disclosure: Approximately 8,000 wool
firms, producing or importing about
700,000,000 wool products annually,
are subject to the Wool Rules’ disclosure
requirements. FTC staff estimates the
burden of determining label content to
be 30 hours per year per firm, or a total
of 240,000 hours, and the burden of
drafting and ordering labels to be 60
hours per firm per year, or a total of
480,000 hours. FTC staff believes that
the process of attaching labels is now
fully automated and integrated into
other production steps for about 40
percent of all affected products. For the
remaining 420,000,000 items (60
percent of 700,000,000), the process is
semi-automated and requires an average
of approximately ten seconds per item,
for a total of 1,166,667 hours per year.
Hourly
rate
Burden
hours
Determine label content .......................................................................................................................
Draft and order labels ..........................................................................................................................
Attach labels ........................................................................................................................................
Recordkeeping .....................................................................................................................................
$31.49 3
20.46 4
6.52 5
20.46 6
240,000
480,000
1,166,667
160,000
$7,557,600
9,820,800
7,606,668.84
3,273,600
Total ..............................................................................................................................................
................
....................
28,258,668.84
Task
Labor cost
Pursuant to section 3506(c)(2)(A) of
the PRA, the FTC invites comments on:
(1) whether the disclosure and
recordkeeping requirements are
necessary, including whether the
information will be practically useful;
(2) the accuracy of our burden estimates,
including whether the methodology and
assumptions used are valid; (3) ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information to be collected; and
(4) ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information.
For the FTC to consider a comment,
we must receive it on or before March
19, 2024. Your comment, including your
name and your state, will be placed on
the public record of this proceeding,
including the https://
www.regulations.gov website.
You can file a comment online or on
paper. Due to heightened security
screening, postal mail addressed to the
Commission will be subject to delay. We
encourage you to submit your comments
online through the https://
www.regulations.gov website.
If you file your comment on paper,
write ‘‘Wool Rules; PRA Comment: FTC
File No. P072108’’ on your comment
and on the envelope, and mail it to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary,
600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite
CC–5610 (Annex J), Washington, DC
20580.
Because your comment will become
publicly available at https://
www.regulations.gov, you are solely
responsible for making sure that your
comment does not include any sensitive
or confidential information. In
particular, your comment should not
include any sensitive personal
information, such as your or anyone
else’s Social Security number; date of
birth; driver’s license number or other
state identification number, or foreign
country equivalent; passport number;
financial account number; or credit or
debit card number. You are also solely
responsible for making sure that your
comment does not include any sensitive
health information, such as medical
records or other individually
identifiable health information. In
addition, your comment should not
include any ‘‘trade secret or any
commercial or financial information
which . . . is privileged or
confidential’’—as provided by section
6(f) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and
FTC Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2)—
including, in particular, competitively
sensitive information, such as costs,
sales statistics, inventories, formulas,
patterns, devices, manufacturing
processes, or customer names.
Comments containing material for
which confidential treatment is
requested must (1) be filed in paper
form, (2) be clearly labeled
‘‘Confidential,’’ and (3) comply with
FTC Rule 4.9(c). In particular, the
written request for confidential
treatment that accompanies the
comment must include the factual and
5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2).
wage rate for supervisors of office and
administrative support workers is based on data
through May 2022 from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics
Survey at https://www.bls.gov/news.release/
ocwage.htm (released on April 25, 2023).
4 The wage rate for correspondence clerks is
based on recent data from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics
Survey at https://www.bls.gov/news.release/
ocwage.htm.
5 For imported products, the labels generally are
attached in the country where the products are
manufactured. According to information compiled
by an industry trade association using data from the
U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade
Administration and the U.S. Census Bureau,
approximately 97.1% of apparel used in the United
States is imported. With the remaining 2.9%
attributable to U.S. production at an approximate
domestic hourly wage of $12 to attach labels, staff
has calculated a weighted average hourly wage of
$6.52 per hour attributable to U.S. and foreign labor
combined.
6 This estimate includes the wage rate for
correspondence clerks.
FTC staff believes that there are no
current start-up costs or other capital
costs associated with the Wool Rules.
Because the labeling of wool products
has been an integral part of the
manufacturing process for decades,
manufacturers have in place the capital
equipment necessary to comply with the
Rules. Based on knowledge of the
industry, staff believes that much of the
information required by the Wool Act
and Rules would be included on the
product label even absent their
requirements. Similarly, recordkeeping
and advertising disclosures are tasks
performed in the ordinary course of
business so that covered firms would
incur no additional capital or other nonlabor costs as a result of the Rules.
Request for Comment
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Thus, the total estimated annual burden
for all firms is 1,886,667 hours (240,000
hours for determining label content +
480,000 hours to draft and order labels
+ 1,166,667 hours to attach labels). FTC
staff believes that any additional burden
associated with advertising disclosure
requirements would be minimal (less
than 10,000 hours) and can be
subsumed within the burden estimates
set forth above.
Estimated Annual Cost Burden:
$28,258,668.84 (solely relating to labor
costs). The chart below summarizes the
total estimated costs.
2
3 The
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:42 Jan 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\19JAN1.SGM
19JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 13 / Friday, January 19, 2024 / Notices
legal basis for the request and must
identify the specific portions of the
comment to be withheld from the public
record. See FTC Rule 4.9(c). Your
comment will be kept confidential only
if the General Counsel grants your
request in accordance with the law and
the public interest. Once your comment
has been posted publicly at
www.regulations.gov, we cannot redact
or remove your comment unless you
submit a confidentiality request that
meets the requirements for such
treatment under FTC Rule 4.9(c), and
the General Counsel grants that request.
The FTC Act and other laws that the
Commission administers permit the
collection of public comments to
consider and use in this proceeding as
appropriate. The Commission will
consider all timely and responsive
public comments that it receives on or
before March 19, 2024. For information
on the Commission’s privacy policy,
including routine uses permitted by the
Privacy Act, see https://www.ftc.gov/
site-information/privacy-policy.
Josephine Liu,
Assistant General Counsel for Legal Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2024–01005 Filed 1–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Extension
Federal Trade Commission.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC or Commission) is seeking public
comment on its proposal to extend for
an additional three years the current
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
clearance for its information collection
requirements in the Privacy of
Consumer Financial Information Rule
(Privacy Rule or Rule). The current
clearance expires on January 31, 2024.
DATES: Comments must be filed by
February 20, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may file a
comment online or on paper, by
following the instructions in the
Request for Comment part of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:42 Jan 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function. The reginfo.gov web
link is a United States Government
website produced by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) and the
General Services Administration (GSA).
Under PRA requirements, OMB’s Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA) reviews Federal information
collections.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Rimm, Attorney, Division of
Privacy and Identity Protection, Bureau
of Consumer Protection, Federal Trade
Commission, (202) 326–2277, jrimm@
ftc.gov.
Title:
Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
Privacy Rule), 16 CFR part 313.
OMB Control Number: 3084–0121.
Type of Review: Extension without
change of currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Private Sector:
Businesses and other for-profit entities.
Abstract:
The Privacy Rule is designed to
ensure that customers and consumers,
subject to certain exceptions, will have
access to the privacy policies of the
covered financial institutions with
which they conduct business—namely,
motor vehicle dealers that do not
routinely extend credit to consumers
directly without assigning the credit to
unaffiliated third parties (hereafter,
‘‘motor vehicle dealers’’). As mandated
by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
(‘‘GLBA’’), 15 U.S.C. 6801–6809, the
Rule requires motor vehicle dealers to
disclose to consumers: (1) initial notice
of the financial institution’s privacy
policy when establishing a customer
relationship with a consumer and/or
before sharing a consumer’s nonpublic
personal information with certain
nonaffiliated third parties; (2) notice of
the consumer’s right to opt out of
information sharing with such parties;
(3) annual notice of the institution’s
privacy policy to any continuing
customer; 1 and (4) notice of changes in
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1 On December 4, 2015, Congress amended the
GLBA as part of the Fixing America’s Surface
Transportation Act (‘‘FAST Act’’). This amendment,
titled Eliminate Privacy Notice Confusion (FAST
Act, Pub. L. 114–94, section 75001) added new
GLBA section 503(f). This subsection provides an
exception under which financial institutions that
meet certain conditions are not required to provide
annual privacy notices to customers. Section 503(f)
requires that to qualify for this exception, a
financial institution must not share nonpublic
personal information about customers except as
described in certain statutory exceptions, under
which sharing does not trigger a customer’s
statutory right to opt out of the sharing. In addition,
section 503(f)(2) requires that the financial
institution must not have changed its policies and
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3657
the institution’s practices on
information sharing. These
requirements are subject to the PRA.
The Rule does not require
recordkeeping. For PRA burden
calculations, the FTC shares the PRA
burden with the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (CFPB) for financial
institutions over which both agencies
have enforcement authority under the
CFPB’s regulation corresponding to the
Privacy Rule, titled Privacy of Consumer
Financial Information (Regulation P), 12
CFR part 1016, and attributes to itself
the burden for all motor vehicle dealers.
See 12 U.S.C. 5519.
Estimated Annual Burden Hours:
1,454,850.
Estimated Annual Labor Costs:
$35,820,366.
Request for Comment
On October 18, 2023, the FTC sought
public comment on the information
collection requirements associated with
the Rule. 88 FR 71861. No germane
comments were received. Pursuant to
the OMB regulations, 5 CFR part 1320,
that implement the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq., the FTC is providing this second
opportunity for public comment while
seeking OMB approval to renew the preexisting clearance for the Rule.
Your comment—including your name
and your state—will be placed on the
public record of this proceeding.
Because your comment will be made
public, you are solely responsible for
making sure that your comment does
not include any sensitive personal
information, such as anyone’s Social
Security number; date of birth; driver’s
license number or other state
identification number, or foreign
country equivalent; passport number;
financial account number; or credit or
debit card number. You are also solely
responsible for making sure that your
comment does not include any sensitive
health information, such as medical
records or other individually
identifiable health information. In
addition, your comment should not
include any ‘‘trade secret or any
commercial or financial information
which . . . is privileged or
confidential’’ —as provided by section
6(f) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and
FTC Rule 4.10(a)(2), 16 CFR 4.10(a)(2)—
including in particular competitively
sensitive information such as costs,
practices with regard to disclosing nonpublic
personal information from those that the institution
disclosed in the most recent privacy notice the
customer received. On December 9, 2021, the
Privacy Rule was amended at 16 CFR 313.5(e) to
incorporate this exception. The amendments were
effective January 10, 2022. 86 FR 70020 (Dec. 9,
2021).
E:\FR\FM\19JAN1.SGM
19JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 13 (Friday, January 19, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3655-3657]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-01005]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Extension
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission (``FTC'' or ``Commission'') is
seeking public comments on its proposal to extend for an additional
three years the current Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA'') clearance for
information collection requirements contained in the Commission's rules
and regulations under the Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939 (``Wool
Rules''). That clearance expires on June 30, 2024.
DATES: Comments must be filed by March 19, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may file a comment online or on paper, by
following the instructions in the Request for Comment part of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below. Write ``Wool Rules; PRA
Comment: FTC File No. P072108'' on your comment, and file your comment
online at https://www.regulations.gov by following the instructions on
the web-based form. If you prefer to file your comment on paper, mail
your comment to the following address: Federal Trade Commission, Office
of the Secretary, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite CC-5610 (Annex J),
Washington, DC 20580.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jock K. Chung, Attorney, Division of
Enforcement, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal Trade Commission,
Mail Code CC-9528, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20580,
(202) 326-2984.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title of Collection: Rules and Regulations under the Wool Products
Labeling Act of 1939, 16 CFR part 300.
OMB Control Number: 3084-0100.
Type of Review: Extension without change of currently approved
collection.
Abstract: The Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939 (Wool Act)
prohibits the misbranding of wool products. The Wool Rules establish
disclosure requirements that assist consumers in making informed
purchasing decisions and recordkeeping requirements that assist the
Commission in enforcing the Rules.
Likely Respondents: Manufacturers, importers, processors, and
marketers of wool products.
Frequency of Response: Third party disclosure; recordkeeping
requirement.
Estimated Annual Burden Hours: 2,046,667 hours (160,000
recordkeeping hours + 1,886,667 disclosure hours).
Recordkeeping: 160,000 hours (4,000 wool firms incur an average 40
hours per firm).
Disclosure: 1,886,667 hours (240,000 hours for determining label
content + 480,000 hours to draft and order labels + 1,166,667 hours to
attach labels).
Estimated Annual Cost Burden: $28,258,668.84 (solely relating to
labor costs).
As required by section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA, 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A), the FTC is providing this opportunity for public comment
before requesting that OMB extend the existing clearance for the
information collection requirements contained in the Wool Rules.
Burden Statement
FTC staff's burden estimates for the Wool Rules are based on data
from the Department of Commerce's Bureau of the Census, the
International Trade Commission, the Department of Labor's Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS), and data or other input from the main industry
association, the American Apparel and Footwear Association (AAFA), and
from SICCode.com, which specializes in the business classification of
SIC (Standard Industrial Classification) and NAICS (North American
Industry Classification System) codes for business identification,
verification, and targeting. The AAFA, a national trade association
which represents U.S. apparel, footwear and other sewn products
companies and their suppliers, has stated that ``[t]he use of labels on
textiles and apparels is beneficial to consumers, manufacturers, and
business in general as it allows for the necessary flow of information
along the supply chain.'' \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Page one from comment by Kevin M. Burke, President and CEO,
American Apparel & Footwear Association, March 26, 2012, Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking; Request for Public Comment; Rules and
Regulations under the Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939; 77 FR 4498
(Jan. 30, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The relevant information collection requirements in these rules and
staff's corresponding burden estimates follow. The estimates address
the number of hours needed and the labor costs incurred to comply with
the requirements. FTC staff believes that a significant portion of
hours and labor costs currently attributable to burden below are time
and financial resources usually and customarily incurred by persons in
the course of their regular activity (e.g., industry participants
already have and/or would have care
[[Page 3656]]
labels regardless of the Rules) and could be excluded from PRA-related
burden.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Annual Burden Hours: 2,046,667 hours (160,000
recordkeeping hours + 1,886,667 disclosure hours).
Recordkeeping: FTC staff estimates that approximately 4,000 wool
firms are subject to the Wool Rules' recordkeeping requirements. Based
on an average annual burden of 40 hours per firm, the total
recordkeeping burden is 160,000 hours.
Disclosure: Approximately 8,000 wool firms, producing or importing
about 700,000,000 wool products annually, are subject to the Wool
Rules' disclosure requirements. FTC staff estimates the burden of
determining label content to be 30 hours per year per firm, or a total
of 240,000 hours, and the burden of drafting and ordering labels to be
60 hours per firm per year, or a total of 480,000 hours. FTC staff
believes that the process of attaching labels is now fully automated
and integrated into other production steps for about 40 percent of all
affected products. For the remaining 420,000,000 items (60 percent of
700,000,000), the process is semi-automated and requires an average of
approximately ten seconds per item, for a total of 1,166,667 hours per
year. Thus, the total estimated annual burden for all firms is
1,886,667 hours (240,000 hours for determining label content + 480,000
hours to draft and order labels + 1,166,667 hours to attach labels).
FTC staff believes that any additional burden associated with
advertising disclosure requirements would be minimal (less than 10,000
hours) and can be subsumed within the burden estimates set forth above.
Estimated Annual Cost Burden: $28,258,668.84 (solely relating to
labor costs). The chart below summarizes the total estimated costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The wage rate for supervisors of office and administrative
support workers is based on data through May 2022 from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics Survey at
https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ocwage.htm (released on April 25,
2023).
\4\ The wage rate for correspondence clerks is based on recent
data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment
Statistics Survey at https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ocwage.htm.
\5\ For imported products, the labels generally are attached in
the country where the products are manufactured. According to
information compiled by an industry trade association using data
from the U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade
Administration and the U.S. Census Bureau, approximately 97.1% of
apparel used in the United States is imported. With the remaining
2.9% attributable to U.S. production at an approximate domestic
hourly wage of $12 to attach labels, staff has calculated a weighted
average hourly wage of $6.52 per hour attributable to U.S. and
foreign labor combined.
\6\ This estimate includes the wage rate for correspondence
clerks.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hourly Burden
Task rate hours Labor cost
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Determine label content....... $31.49 240,000 $7,557,600
\3\
Draft and order labels........ 20.46 \4\ 480,000 9,820,800
Attach labels................. 6.52 \5\ 1,166,667 7,606,668.84
Recordkeeping................. 20.46 \6\ 160,000 3,273,600
-----------------------------------------
Total..................... ......... ........... 28,258,668.84
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FTC staff believes that there are no current start-up costs or
other capital costs associated with the Wool Rules. Because the
labeling of wool products has been an integral part of the
manufacturing process for decades, manufacturers have in place the
capital equipment necessary to comply with the Rules. Based on
knowledge of the industry, staff believes that much of the information
required by the Wool Act and Rules would be included on the product
label even absent their requirements. Similarly, recordkeeping and
advertising disclosures are tasks performed in the ordinary course of
business so that covered firms would incur no additional capital or
other non-labor costs as a result of the Rules.
Request for Comment
Pursuant to section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA, the FTC invites
comments on: (1) whether the disclosure and recordkeeping requirements
are necessary, including whether the information will be practically
useful; (2) the accuracy of our burden estimates, including whether the
methodology and assumptions used are valid; (3) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and
(4) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information.
For the FTC to consider a comment, we must receive it on or before
March 19, 2024. Your comment, including your name and your state, will
be placed on the public record of this proceeding, including the
https://www.regulations.gov website.
You can file a comment online or on paper. Due to heightened
security screening, postal mail addressed to the Commission will be
subject to delay. We encourage you to submit your comments online
through the https://www.regulations.gov website.
If you file your comment on paper, write ``Wool Rules; PRA Comment:
FTC File No. P072108'' on your comment and on the envelope, and mail it
to the following address: Federal Trade Commission, Office of the
Secretary, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite CC-5610 (Annex J),
Washington, DC 20580.
Because your comment will become publicly available at https://www.regulations.gov, you are solely responsible for making sure that
your comment does not include any sensitive or confidential
information. In particular, your comment should not include any
sensitive personal information, such as your or anyone else's Social
Security number; date of birth; driver's license number or other state
identification number, or foreign country equivalent; passport number;
financial account number; or credit or debit card number. You are also
solely responsible for making sure that your comment does not include
any sensitive health information, such as medical records or other
individually identifiable health information. In addition, your comment
should not include any ``trade secret or any commercial or financial
information which . . . is privileged or confidential''--as provided by
section 6(f) of the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. 46(f), and FTC Rule 4.10(a)(2),
16 CFR 4.10(a)(2)--including, in particular, competitively sensitive
information, such as costs, sales statistics, inventories, formulas,
patterns, devices, manufacturing processes, or customer names.
Comments containing material for which confidential treatment is
requested must (1) be filed in paper form, (2) be clearly labeled
``Confidential,'' and (3) comply with FTC Rule 4.9(c). In particular,
the written request for confidential treatment that accompanies the
comment must include the factual and
[[Page 3657]]
legal basis for the request and must identify the specific portions of
the comment to be withheld from the public record. See FTC Rule 4.9(c).
Your comment will be kept confidential only if the General Counsel
grants your request in accordance with the law and the public interest.
Once your comment has been posted publicly at www.regulations.gov, we
cannot redact or remove your comment unless you submit a
confidentiality request that meets the requirements for such treatment
under FTC Rule 4.9(c), and the General Counsel grants that request.
The FTC Act and other laws that the Commission administers permit
the collection of public comments to consider and use in this
proceeding as appropriate. The Commission will consider all timely and
responsive public comments that it receives on or before March 19,
2024. For information on the Commission's privacy policy, including
routine uses permitted by the Privacy Act, see https://www.ftc.gov/site-information/privacy-policy.
Josephine Liu,
Assistant General Counsel for Legal Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2024-01005 Filed 1-18-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-P