Notice of Availability and Request for Comments: Data Regarding Incidents Associated With Nursing Pillows, 30294-30295 [2024-08606]
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30294
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 23, 2024 / Proposed Rules
miles south of the airport; and within a 6.3mile radius of Bridgeport Municipal Airport;
and within 1.6 miles each side of the 040°
bearing from Bridgeport Municipal Airport
extending from the 6.3-mile radius to 10.6
miles northeast of the airport; and within 4
miles each side of the 001° bearing from
Bridgeport Municipal Airport extending from
the 6.3-mile radius to 10.7 miles north of the
airport; and within a 6.3-mile radius of
Decatur Municipal Airport; and within 1.5
miles each side of the 263° bearing from
Decatur Municipal Airport extending from
the 6.3-mile radius to 9.2 miles west of the
airport.
*
*
*
*
*
Issued in Fort Worth, Texas, on April 18,
2024.
Martin A. Skinner,
Acting Manager, Operations Support Group,
ATO Central Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2024–08611 Filed 4–22–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1242
[Docket No. CPSC–2023–0037]
Notice of Availability and Request for
Comments: Data Regarding Incidents
Associated With Nursing Pillows
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; availability of
supplemental information; request for
comment.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission (Commission or
CPSC) published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR) in September 2023 to
address the risk of death and injury
associated with infant suffocations,
entrapments, falls, and other hazards
associated with nursing pillows. CPSC
is announcing the availability of, and
seeking comment on, details about
incident data relevant to the rulemaking
that are associated with infants and the
use of nursing pillows. The Commission
is also seeking comments on how a final
rule should address nursing pillow
covers.
DATES: Submit comments by May 23,
2024.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CPSC–2023–
0037, by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit
electronic comments to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
CPSC does not accept comments
submitted by email, except as described
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:44 Apr 22, 2024
Jkt 262001
below. CPSC encourages you to submit
electronic comments by using the
Federal eRulemaking Portal.
Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier Written
Submissions: Submit comments by
mail/hand delivery/courier to: Office of
the Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: (301) 504–7479. If you wish
to submit confidential business
information, trade secret information, or
other sensitive or protected information
that you do not want to be available to
the public, you may submit such
comments by mail, hand delivery, or
courier, or you may email them to: cpscos@cpsc.gov.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number for this notice. CPSC may post
all comments without change, including
any personal identifiers, contact
information, or other personal
information provided, to: https://
www.regulations.gov. Do not submit
electronically: confidential business
information, trade secret information, or
other sensitive or protected information
that you do not want to be available to
the public. If you wish to submit such
information, please submit it according
to the instructions for mail/hand
delivery/courier written submissions.
Docket: To read background
documents or comments regarding this
proposed rulemaking, go to: https://
www.regulations.gov, insert Docket No.
CPSC–2023–0037 in the ‘‘Search’’ box,
and follow the prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Timothy Smith, Project Manager,
Directorate for Engineering Sciences,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 5 Research Place,
Rockville, MD 20850; email: tsmith@
cpsc.gov; telephone: (301) 987–2557.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
104 of the Consumer Product Safety
Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA)
requires the Commission to promulgate
consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products.
Under this statutory direction, in
September 2023, the Commission
published an NPR, Safety Standard for
Nursing Pillows, to reduce the risk of
death and injury associated with
nursing pillows. 88 FR 65865 (Sept. 26,
2023).
A nursing pillow is any product
intended, marketed, or designed to
position and support an infant close to
a caregiver’s body while breastfeeding
or bottle feeding. These products rest
upon, wrap around, or are worn by a
caregiver in a seated or reclined
position. The Commission is
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
considering how slipcovers (i.e.,
removable nursing pillow covers)
should be regulated as part of nursing
pillows. For instance, should the
definition of ‘‘nursing pillow’’
specifically state that a slipcover sold as
part of the nursing pillow is included
within definition of a nursing pillow?
Additionally, slipcovers sold with the
nursing pillows can consist of those that
are only intended to fit over the nursing
pillow to change its look, or it can
contain buckles or straps needed to
attach or wear the nursing pillow.
Should the Commission distinguish
between slipcovers that do or do not
contain functional attachments such as
buckles and straps? Manufacturers of
nursing pillows often sell replacement
slipcovers. Should these replacement
slipcovers, sold by the original
manufacturer of the nursing pillow, be
included within the definition of
‘‘nursing pillow’’? The Commission
invites public comments answering
these questions and discussing how
slipcovers should be regulated in the
final rule.
In addition, the Commission is now
making available incident reports
underlying the data discussed in the
NPR.1 These reports have been redacted
to protect personal information,
confidential medical information, and
other information protected from
disclosure by section 6 of the CPSA. 15
U.S.C. 2055.
The NPR contains information about
incidents from two databases: the
Consumer Product Safety Risk
Management System (CPSRMS) 2 and
the National Electronic Injury
Surveillance System (NEISS).3 Staff
1 The Commission voted 5–0 on April 16, 2024,
to publish this document. Commissioners Feldman
and Dziak voted to take other action to change the
comment period from 30 to 60 days, if a majority
supported the change, and if a majority did not
support the change, to approve a 30-day comment
period. No other Commissioner voted to change the
30-day comment period, so the comment period
remains 30 days.
2 CPSRMS includes data primarily from three
groups of sources: incident reports, death
certificates, and in-depth follow-up investigation
reports. A large portion of CPSRMS data consists of
incident reports from consumer complaints, media
reports, medical examiner or coroner reports,
retailer or manufacturer reports (incident reports
received from a retailer or manufacturer involving
a product they sell or make), safety advocacy
groups, law firms, and federal, state, or local
authorities, among others. It also contains death
certificates that CPSC purchases from all 50 states,
based on selected external cause of death codes
(ICD–10). The third major component of CPSRMS
is the collection of in-depth follow-up investigation
reports. Based on the incident reports, death
certificates, or NEISS injury reports, CPSC field staff
conduct IDIs (on-site, via telephone, or online) of
incidents, deaths, and injuries, which are then
stored in CPSRMS.
3 NEISS is the source of the injury estimates; it
is a statistically valid injury surveillance system.
E:\FR\FM\23APP1.SGM
23APP1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 23, 2024 / Proposed Rules
searched these databases for fatalities
and incidents associated with nursing
pillows and involving infants up to 12
months old (where the age was known),
reported to have occurred between
January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2022.
For this timeframe, staff identified 154
fatal and 34 nonfatal incidents reported
to CPSC. The NPR included information
about the hazard patterns of fatal and
nonfatal incidents, such as infants’ ages,
hazard scenarios, nursing pillow/infant
placement, and product-specific
concerns.
Relevant data from CPSRMS include
incident reports from medical
examiners, consumers, death
certificates, and manufacturers. Some of
the incident data are obtained from 124
in-depth investigations (IDIs) conducted
by CPSC. Among these IDIs, 122
involved fatal incidents, and two
involved nonfatal incidents. Other
incident data was reported by firms to
CPSC under section 15(b) of the CPSA,
15 U.S.C. 2064(b), which included 13
non-fatal incidents. CPSC also relied on
incidents received from the public and
state and local government agencies as
well as medical examiner/coroner
reports, which included 24 fatal
incidents and one nonfatal incident. In
addition, the data includes information
obtained from eight death certificates.
Data from NEISS contain incidents
and injuries treated in U.S. hospital
emergency departments. CPSC staff
performed multiple searches consisting
of a combination of product codes and
narrative keyword searches to find
nursing pillow incidents in NEISS. The
first data search included all reports
with the product code that includes
nursing pillows (code 4050 Pillows excl.
water pillows). The second data search
looked for specific keywords 4 in the
narrative field across all product codes.
Subsequent searches included several
infant-related product codes 5 and
searches in the narrative field for
keywords related to known
manufacturer names.6 Staff then
analyzed the results and determined
that an event was in-scope if the
product involved was identified as a
nursing pillow that played a
contributing role in the incident. Staff
also included events as in-scope only if
the infant was up to 12 months of age,
or age was unknown but the incident
likely involved an infant based on the
description of the incident. The data
were extracted in January 2023. The
Commission relied on 18 records of
nonfatal incidents from NEISS,
associated with nursing pillows, all
involving injuries resulting from falls.
The Commission invites comments on
the incident data and analysis of this
data in the NPR. CPSC is making
available for review and comment the
incident reports relied upon and
discussed in the NPR, to the extent
allowed by applicable law, along with
the associated IDIs. To obtain access to
the data, submit a request to: https://
forms.office.com/g/jrUSbYnWGx. You
will then receive a website link to
access the data for this rulemaking at
the email address you provide.
Information on how to submit
comments and contact information for
CPSC’s Office of the Secretary are in the
ADDRESSES section of this notice.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024–08606 Filed 4–22–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1243
[Docket No. CPSC–2023–0047]
Notice of Availability and Request for
Comment: Data Regarding Incidents
Associated With Infant Support
Cushions
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; availability of
supplemental information; request for
comment.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
AGENCY:
NEISS injury data are gathered from emergency
departments of about 100 hospitals, with 24-hour
emergency departments and at least six beds,
selected as a probability sample of all U.S.
hospitals. The surveillance data gathered from the
sample hospitals enable CPSC to make timely
national estimates of the number of injuries
associated with specific consumer products.
4 Nurse pillo/nursi/feeding pillo/feed pillo/shape
pillo/shaped pillo/support pillo/boppy/docka/dock
a/atot/baby nest/flathead/flat head/pillow/pilow/
feeding/bop.
5 Code 1513 Playpens and play yards, code 1529
Portable cribs, code 1537 Bassinets or cradles, code
1542 Baby mattresses or pads, code 1543 Cribs,
nonportable, code 1545 Cribs, not specified, code
1552 Cribs, nonportable or not specified, code 1562
Other soft baby carriers, code 4002 Bedding, not
specified, code 4010 Mattresses, not specified, code
4082 Toddler beds, and code 9101 No clerical
coding—retailer report.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:44 Apr 22, 2024
Jkt 262001
6 Pilo/pillo/bop/shape/shappe/nurs/loung/docka/
dock a/atot/nest/tofoan/to foan/frida/brest frien/
breast frien/bamibi/bambi/balboa/mombo/lat nurs/
miracl/minky/kids n such/snuggle/tillyou/till you/
maman/doc a/occo/leach/cuddle/podster/nogg/
tummy/choice/elephant/horsesh/horse sho/donut/
circular/plush/peanut/doc-a comfy/kaki/iblin/lyu/
yumo/onr/majik/cheer/lovel/humble bee/humblebee/graco/luna lul/ergob/ergo b/Infantin/chilling
home/chillinghome/blublu/twinz/twin z/lansino/
Beaba/MomCozy/miracle baby/Ingenuity/
Babestellar/Babymoov/Kushies/nesting pill/
ecohealth pill/Sustainable Baby/zzzpal/zzz pal/
Feeding Friend.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
30295
The U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission (Commission or
CPSC) published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR) in January 2024
regarding a rulemaking to address
suffocation, entrapment, fall, and other
hazards associated with infant support
cushions. CPSC is announcing the
availability of, and seeking comment on,
details about incident data relevant to
the rulemaking that are associated with
infants and the use of infant support
cushions.
DATES: Submit comments by May 23,
2024.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CPSC–2023–
0047, by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit
electronic comments to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
CPSC does not accept comments
submitted by email, except as described
below. CPSC encourages you to submit
electronic comments by using the
Federal eRulemaking Portal.
Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier Written
Submissions: Submit comments by
mail/hand delivery/courier to: Office of
the Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: (301) 504–7479. If you wish
to submit confidential business
information, trade secret information, or
other sensitive or protected information
that you do not want to be available to
the public, you may submit such
comments by mail, hand delivery, or
courier, or you may email them to cpscos@cpsc.gov.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number for this notice. CPSC may post
all comments without change, including
any personal identifiers, contact
information, or other personal
information provided, to: https://
www.regulations.gov. Do not submit
electronically: confidential business
information, trade secret information, or
other sensitive or protected information
that you do not want to be available to
the public. If you wish to submit such
information, please submit it according
to the instructions for mail/hand
delivery/courier written submissions.
Docket: To read background
documents or comments regarding this
proposed rulemaking, go to: https://
www.regulations.gov, insert Docket No.
CPSC–2023–0047 in the ‘‘Search’’ box,
and follow the prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ashley Johnson, Project Manager,
Directorate for Health Sciences, U.S.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\23APP1.SGM
23APP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 79 (Tuesday, April 23, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 30294-30295]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08606]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1242
[Docket No. CPSC-2023-0037]
Notice of Availability and Request for Comments: Data Regarding
Incidents Associated With Nursing Pillows
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule; availability of supplemental information;
request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (Commission or
CPSC) published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) in September 2023
to address the risk of death and injury associated with infant
suffocations, entrapments, falls, and other hazards associated with
nursing pillows. CPSC is announcing the availability of, and seeking
comment on, details about incident data relevant to the rulemaking that
are associated with infants and the use of nursing pillows. The
Commission is also seeking comments on how a final rule should address
nursing pillow covers.
DATES: Submit comments by May 23, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments, identified by Docket No. CPSC-2023-0037, by
any of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit electronic comments to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. CPSC does not accept comments
submitted by email, except as described below. CPSC encourages you to
submit electronic comments by using the Federal eRulemaking Portal.
Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier Written Submissions: Submit comments by
mail/hand delivery/courier to: Office of the Secretary, U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: (301) 504-7479. If you wish to submit confidential business
information, trade secret information, or other sensitive or protected
information that you do not want to be available to the public, you may
submit such comments by mail, hand delivery, or courier, or you may
email them to: [email protected].
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number for this notice. CPSC may post all comments without
change, including any personal identifiers, contact information, or
other personal information provided, to: https://www.regulations.gov.
Do not submit electronically: confidential business information, trade
secret information, or other sensitive or protected information that
you do not want to be available to the public. If you wish to submit
such information, please submit it according to the instructions for
mail/hand delivery/courier written submissions.
Docket: To read background documents or comments regarding this
proposed rulemaking, go to: https://www.regulations.gov, insert Docket
No. CPSC-2023-0037 in the ``Search'' box, and follow the prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Timothy Smith, Project Manager,
Directorate for Engineering Sciences, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 5 Research Place, Rockville, MD 20850; email:
[email protected]; telephone: (301) 987-2557.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 104 of the Consumer Product Safety
Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA) requires the Commission to promulgate
consumer product safety standards for durable infant or toddler
products. Under this statutory direction, in September 2023, the
Commission published an NPR, Safety Standard for Nursing Pillows, to
reduce the risk of death and injury associated with nursing pillows. 88
FR 65865 (Sept. 26, 2023).
A nursing pillow is any product intended, marketed, or designed to
position and support an infant close to a caregiver's body while
breastfeeding or bottle feeding. These products rest upon, wrap around,
or are worn by a caregiver in a seated or reclined position. The
Commission is considering how slipcovers (i.e., removable nursing
pillow covers) should be regulated as part of nursing pillows. For
instance, should the definition of ``nursing pillow'' specifically
state that a slipcover sold as part of the nursing pillow is included
within definition of a nursing pillow? Additionally, slipcovers sold
with the nursing pillows can consist of those that are only intended to
fit over the nursing pillow to change its look, or it can contain
buckles or straps needed to attach or wear the nursing pillow. Should
the Commission distinguish between slipcovers that do or do not contain
functional attachments such as buckles and straps? Manufacturers of
nursing pillows often sell replacement slipcovers. Should these
replacement slipcovers, sold by the original manufacturer of the
nursing pillow, be included within the definition of ``nursing
pillow''? The Commission invites public comments answering these
questions and discussing how slipcovers should be regulated in the
final rule.
In addition, the Commission is now making available incident
reports underlying the data discussed in the NPR.\1\ These reports have
been redacted to protect personal information, confidential medical
information, and other information protected from disclosure by section
6 of the CPSA. 15 U.S.C. 2055.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Commission voted 5-0 on April 16, 2024, to publish this
document. Commissioners Feldman and Dziak voted to take other action
to change the comment period from 30 to 60 days, if a majority
supported the change, and if a majority did not support the change,
to approve a 30-day comment period. No other Commissioner voted to
change the 30-day comment period, so the comment period remains 30
days.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NPR contains information about incidents from two databases:
the Consumer Product Safety Risk Management System (CPSRMS) \2\ and the
National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS).\3\ Staff
[[Page 30295]]
searched these databases for fatalities and incidents associated with
nursing pillows and involving infants up to 12 months old (where the
age was known), reported to have occurred between January 1, 2010, and
December 31, 2022. For this timeframe, staff identified 154 fatal and
34 nonfatal incidents reported to CPSC. The NPR included information
about the hazard patterns of fatal and nonfatal incidents, such as
infants' ages, hazard scenarios, nursing pillow/infant placement, and
product-specific concerns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ CPSRMS includes data primarily from three groups of sources:
incident reports, death certificates, and in-depth follow-up
investigation reports. A large portion of CPSRMS data consists of
incident reports from consumer complaints, media reports, medical
examiner or coroner reports, retailer or manufacturer reports
(incident reports received from a retailer or manufacturer involving
a product they sell or make), safety advocacy groups, law firms, and
federal, state, or local authorities, among others. It also contains
death certificates that CPSC purchases from all 50 states, based on
selected external cause of death codes (ICD-10). The third major
component of CPSRMS is the collection of in-depth follow-up
investigation reports. Based on the incident reports, death
certificates, or NEISS injury reports, CPSC field staff conduct IDIs
(on-site, via telephone, or online) of incidents, deaths, and
injuries, which are then stored in CPSRMS.
\3\ NEISS is the source of the injury estimates; it is a
statistically valid injury surveillance system. NEISS injury data
are gathered from emergency departments of about 100 hospitals, with
24-hour emergency departments and at least six beds, selected as a
probability sample of all U.S. hospitals. The surveillance data
gathered from the sample hospitals enable CPSC to make timely
national estimates of the number of injuries associated with
specific consumer products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Relevant data from CPSRMS include incident reports from medical
examiners, consumers, death certificates, and manufacturers. Some of
the incident data are obtained from 124 in-depth investigations (IDIs)
conducted by CPSC. Among these IDIs, 122 involved fatal incidents, and
two involved nonfatal incidents. Other incident data was reported by
firms to CPSC under section 15(b) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2064(b), which
included 13 non-fatal incidents. CPSC also relied on incidents received
from the public and state and local government agencies as well as
medical examiner/coroner reports, which included 24 fatal incidents and
one nonfatal incident. In addition, the data includes information
obtained from eight death certificates.
Data from NEISS contain incidents and injuries treated in U.S.
hospital emergency departments. CPSC staff performed multiple searches
consisting of a combination of product codes and narrative keyword
searches to find nursing pillow incidents in NEISS. The first data
search included all reports with the product code that includes nursing
pillows (code 4050 Pillows excl. water pillows). The second data search
looked for specific keywords \4\ in the narrative field across all
product codes. Subsequent searches included several infant-related
product codes \5\ and searches in the narrative field for keywords
related to known manufacturer names.\6\ Staff then analyzed the results
and determined that an event was in-scope if the product involved was
identified as a nursing pillow that played a contributing role in the
incident. Staff also included events as in-scope only if the infant was
up to 12 months of age, or age was unknown but the incident likely
involved an infant based on the description of the incident. The data
were extracted in January 2023. The Commission relied on 18 records of
nonfatal incidents from NEISS, associated with nursing pillows, all
involving injuries resulting from falls.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Nurse pillo/nursi/feeding pillo/feed pillo/shape pillo/
shaped pillo/support pillo/boppy/docka/dock a/atot/baby nest/
flathead/flat head/pillow/pilow/feeding/bop.
\5\ Code 1513 Playpens and play yards, code 1529 Portable cribs,
code 1537 Bassinets or cradles, code 1542 Baby mattresses or pads,
code 1543 Cribs, nonportable, code 1545 Cribs, not specified, code
1552 Cribs, nonportable or not specified, code 1562 Other soft baby
carriers, code 4002 Bedding, not specified, code 4010 Mattresses,
not specified, code 4082 Toddler beds, and code 9101 No clerical
coding--retailer report.
\6\ Pilo/pillo/bop/shape/shappe/nurs/loung/docka/dock a/atot/
nest/tofoan/to foan/frida/brest frien/breast frien/bamibi/bambi/
balboa/mombo/lat nurs/miracl/minky/kids n such/snuggle/tillyou/till
you/maman/doc a/occo/leach/cuddle/podster/nogg/tummy/choice/
elephant/horsesh/horse sho/donut/circular/plush/peanut/doc-a comfy/
kaki/iblin/lyu/yumo/onr/majik/cheer/lovel/humble bee/humble-bee/
graco/luna lul/ergob/ergo b/Infantin/chilling home/chillinghome/
blublu/twinz/twin z/lansino/Beaba/MomCozy/miracle baby/Ingenuity/
Babestellar/Babymoov/Kushies/nesting pill/ecohealth pill/Sustainable
Baby/zzzpal/zzz pal/Feeding Friend.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission invites comments on the incident data and analysis
of this data in the NPR. CPSC is making available for review and
comment the incident reports relied upon and discussed in the NPR, to
the extent allowed by applicable law, along with the associated IDIs.
To obtain access to the data, submit a request to: https://forms.office.com/g/jrUSbYnWGx. You will then receive a website link to
access the data for this rulemaking at the email address you provide.
Information on how to submit comments and contact information for
CPSC's Office of the Secretary are in the ADDRESSES section of this
notice.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024-08606 Filed 4-22-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P