Notice of Listening Sessions: Broadening Public Participation and Community Engagement in the Regulatory Process, 53657-53658 [2024-13730]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 124 / Thursday, June 27, 2024 / Notices
require payment of prevailing wages on
federal funded or assisted construction
projects. The Family and Medical Leave
Act (FMLA) was enacted to help
workers balance family and work
responsibilities and help keep middle
class families in the middle class by
providing job protection, and the child
labor provisions of the FLSA ensure the
safe employment of young workers;
encourage their educational endeavors;
and provide a path to future
employment. The Department also
administers portions of the Consumer
Credit Protection Act, various Executive
Orders such as E.O. 13658, E.O. 14026,
and E.O. 14055.
In FY 2023, WHD concluded 955
investigations that found child labor
violations, a 14% increase from the
previous year. WHD found nearly 5,800
children employed in violation of the
law, an 88% increase since 2019, and
assessed more than $8 million in
penalties, an 83% increase from the
previous year. At the Wage and Hour
Division, safeguarding children at work
has always been our top priority. Wage
and Hour Division investigations found
a significant increase in children being
employed illegally and in 2023
launched a National Strategic
Enforcement Initiative on Child Labor to
put additional emphasis on addressing
this critical issue. As part of this
initiative, the Department has designed
a WHD contact form to better respond
to potential child labor issues and
potential complaints. This revision
proposes to implement the contact form
to better streamline Department
responsiveness to child labor issues.
This contact form will replace any
existing contact form on the WHD
website.
WHD has prepared a new landing
page, a general inquiry form as well as
a form specific to child labor. The
respondent will only submit one
response as if they click child labor on
the general inquiry form, the child labor
form will appear.
Interested parties are encouraged to
send comments to the Department at the
address shown in the ADDRESSES section
within 60 days of publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. To help
ensure appropriate consideration,
comments should reference OMB
Control Number 1235–0021.
II. Review Focus: The Department of
Labor is particularly interested in
comments which:
• Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
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20:13 Jun 26, 2024
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• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submissions
of responses.
III. Current Actions: The Department
of Labor seeks an approval for the
revision of this information collection to
ensure effective administration of the
laws administered by the WHD.
Type of Review: Revision.
Agency: Wage and Hour Division.
Title: Employment Information Form.
OMB Control Number: 1235–0021
Agency Numbers: WH–3.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit, non-profits, individuals.
Total Respondents: 133,803.
Total Annual Responses: 133,803
Estimated Total Burden Hours:
26,802.
Estimated Time per Response: 20
minutes per complaint, 10 minutes per
Contact US submission.
Frequency: On occasion.
Dated: June 21, 2024.
Daniel Navarrete,
Acting Director, Division of Regulations,
Legislation, and Interpretation.
[FR Doc. 2024–14158 Filed 6–26–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–27–P
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND
BUDGET
Notice of Listening Sessions:
Broadening Public Participation and
Community Engagement in the
Regulatory Process
Office of Management and
Budget, Executive Office of the
President.
ACTION: Notice of listening sessions.
AGENCY:
On July 19, 2023, the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA) in the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) issued a Memorandum,
Broadening Public Participation and
Community Engagement in the
Regulatory Process, providing guidance
to agencies on how to promote equitable
and meaningful participation by a range
of interested and affected parties,
including members of underserved
SUMMARY:
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53657
communities, during the regulatory
process. The Memorandum also
established guidance for agencies to
implement the Executive Order on
Modernizing Regulatory Review’s call
for proactive engagement to inform the
development of regulatory actions and
plans, with a focus on early engagement
in agency priority-setting. In developing
the Memorandum, OIRA drew on
extensive engagement with the public,
including four listening sessions and
two public comment periods. In the
Memorandum, OIRA anticipated
organizing a follow-up listening session
approximately twelve months from its
issuance, to hear from members of the
public about implementation of this
guidance and opportunities for
improvement. OIRA will hold three
listening sessions to receive public
input on the public’s experience
engaging with agency’s rulemaking
processes since the Memorandum’s
release.
The listening sessions will be
held on July 10, 2024, at 3 to 4 p.m.,
Eastern Time, and July 17, 2024, at 1 to
1:30 p.m., Eastern Time. Members of the
public who cannot attend the listening
sessions and wish to submit written
comments should do so by sending
comments to publicparticipation@
omb.eop.gov before July 17, 2024.
ADDRESSES:
Listening Sessions: Information to
access the virtual listening sessions will
be provided upon registration. Members
of the public may register by sending an
email to publicparticipation@
omb.eop.gov, noting the session they
would like to attend.
Written Comments: In an effort to
improve accessibility, OMB is offering
multiple options to provide feedback.
Responses can be submitted via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://
www.regulations.gov/). Alternatively,
public comments can be submitted via
email at publicparticipation@
omb.eop.gov.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Please email the Office of Management
and Budget at publicparticipation@
omb.eop.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Public involvement in the
development of regulations can lead to
more effective and equitable regulations,
greater trust in government and
democratic accountability, and
increased public understanding of the
regulatory process.
Recognizing the importance of public
participation, Executive Order 14094 of
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27JNN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
53658
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 124 / Thursday, June 27, 2024 / Notices
April 6, 2023, Modernizing Regulatory
Review, encourages Federal agencies, to
the extent practicable and consistent
with applicable law, to inform their
regulatory actions through meaningful
and equitable opportunities for public
input from a range of interested or
affected parties, including underserved
communities.
To assist agencies in implementing
the public participation provisions of
Executive Order 14094, OIRA published
a Memorandum, Broadening Public
Participation and Community
Engagement in the Regulatory Process.1
Among other things, the Memorandum
offered a review of actions agencies
should take, where practicable and
appropriate, to support greater
participation and engagement in the
regulatory process. In particular, it
discussed: (1) ‘‘[l]everaging the release
of the biannual Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulatory Actions . . . to
discuss agencies’ past, ongoing, and
upcoming participation and engagement
with the public, including underserved
communities’’; and (2) ‘‘[e]nsuring that
agency policies on communication
during the rulemaking process promote
accessible, equitable, and meaningful
participation and engagement,
especially early on in setting regulatory
priorities and in the early stages of rule
development before a proposed
regulation is issued for comment.’’ The
Memorandum identified leading
practices for participation and
engagement that agencies can consider
using, such as taking affirmative steps to
promote engagement where members of
the public may face obstacles to
participation; making regulatory
material more accessible,
understandable, and usable by the
public; holding listening sessions,
including online or technology-enabled
session, while agencies are still defining
regulatory priorities; or providing
multiple means of submitting comments
and feedback.
Since releasing the Memorandum,
OIRA has worked with agencies to make
effective use of the Unified Agenda of
Federal Regulatory Actions (Regulatory
Agenda) to expand public awareness of
the opportunities agencies have
provided, and potentially will provide,
for public participation and community
engagement. The Fall 2023 Regulatory
Agenda included descriptions of agency
efforts to engage with the public.
Notable instances of public
participation include the following:
1 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2023/07/Broadening-Public-Participationand-Community-Engagement-in-the-RegulatoryProcess.pdf.
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Jkt 262001
• The Small Business Administration
conducted four Tribal consultations and
a listening session related to aspects of
a proposed rule that would change the
Native community benefits-reporting
requirements in SBA’s 8(a) Business
Development program; that feedback
contributed to SBA’s decision to remove
these provisions from the final rule.
• The Environmental Protection
Agency held over forty external
meetings, including directly engaging
with Tribes, small businesses, and other
entities, to inform its ongoing work to
develop a proposed rule addressing
risks posed by the chemical
1-bromopropane.
• The Department of Transportation’s
proposal to ensure air carriers and ticket
agents provide prompt ticket refunds
(including ancillary fees) to passengers
when a flight is cancelled or
significantly changed was informed by
four public meetings, including a public
hearing.
• The Office of Management and
Budget’s revision to Statistical Policy
Directive No. 15: Standards for
Maintaining, Collecting, and Presenting
Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity, was
informed by more than 20,000
comments, 94 listening sessions hosted
by the Interagency Technical Working
Group on Race and Ethnicity Standards,
3 public virtual townhalls, and a Tribal
consultation.
II. Topics and Key Questions
OMB particularly seeks feedback on
the following three topic areas: (1) the
Regulatory Agenda as a platform for
highlighting past and future
opportunities for public participation;
(2) experience with effective
opportunities for public engagement in
the regulatory process; and (3)
opportunities for strengthening public
participation and community
engagement in the regulatory process.
1. The Regulatory Agenda as a Platform
for Public Participation
• Are there entries in the Regulatory
Agenda that you think have been
particularly helpful in describing how
public participation informed an
agency’s regulatory process?
• Are there entries in the Regulatory
Agenda that you think have been
particularly helpful in offering
information regarding forthcoming
opportunities for public participation
and engagement?
• What further improvements would
you like to see regarding how public
participation is discussed in the
Regulatory Agenda?
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2. Effective Opportunities for Public
Engagement
• Did you find any agency actions
that were particularly helpful in
facilitating participation in an agency’s
regulatory process? Please include any
specific examples.
Æ Did you attend an online or
technology-enabled session, and, if so,
did you find this an effective way of
engaging with the agency?
Æ Did the agency provide multiple
means of submitting comments and
feedback in multiple formats, and were
any especially effective?
Æ Did the agency offer plain language
summaries, infographics, or short videos
regarding the relevant issue, that
sufficiently prepared you to provide
effective input?
• Did you find the agency was asking
for your input at the right time, such
that feedback could be effectively
incorporated?
3. Opportunities for Strengthening
Public Participation and Community
Engagement
• Are there any actions agencies
could take to make it easier to
participate in opportunities for public
engagement? Please include any specific
examples.
Æ Could an agency better inform the
public of opportunities for public
engagement?
Æ Could an agency make
opportunities for public engagement
more accessible?
Æ Are there any resources that would
better prepare members of the public to
provide effective feedback?
• Are there any actions agencies
could take to better engage with
members of affected and underserved
communities?
• Are there any changes to OMB
guidance that would help strengthen
public participation in agency
regulatory processes?
Richard L. Revesz,
Administrator, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2024–13730 Filed 6–26–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3110–01–P
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[Notice: 24–043]
Interagency Nuclear Safety Review
Board; Meeting
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 124 (Thursday, June 27, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 53657-53658]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-13730]
=======================================================================
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OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
Notice of Listening Sessions: Broadening Public Participation and
Community Engagement in the Regulatory Process
AGENCY: Office of Management and Budget, Executive Office of the
President.
ACTION: Notice of listening sessions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On July 19, 2023, the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued a
Memorandum, Broadening Public Participation and Community Engagement in
the Regulatory Process, providing guidance to agencies on how to
promote equitable and meaningful participation by a range of interested
and affected parties, including members of underserved communities,
during the regulatory process. The Memorandum also established guidance
for agencies to implement the Executive Order on Modernizing Regulatory
Review's call for proactive engagement to inform the development of
regulatory actions and plans, with a focus on early engagement in
agency priority-setting. In developing the Memorandum, OIRA drew on
extensive engagement with the public, including four listening sessions
and two public comment periods. In the Memorandum, OIRA anticipated
organizing a follow-up listening session approximately twelve months
from its issuance, to hear from members of the public about
implementation of this guidance and opportunities for improvement. OIRA
will hold three listening sessions to receive public input on the
public's experience engaging with agency's rulemaking processes since
the Memorandum's release.
DATES: The listening sessions will be held on July 10, 2024, at 3 to 4
p.m., Eastern Time, and July 17, 2024, at 1 to 1:30 p.m., Eastern Time.
Members of the public who cannot attend the listening sessions and wish
to submit written comments should do so by sending comments to
[email protected] before July 17, 2024.
ADDRESSES:
Listening Sessions: Information to access the virtual listening
sessions will be provided upon registration. Members of the public may
register by sending an email to [email protected], noting
the session they would like to attend.
Written Comments: In an effort to improve accessibility, OMB is
offering multiple options to provide feedback. Responses can be
submitted via the Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://www.regulations.gov/). Alternatively, public comments can be submitted
via email at [email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Please email the Office of Management
and Budget at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Public involvement in the development of regulations can lead to
more effective and equitable regulations, greater trust in government
and democratic accountability, and increased public understanding of
the regulatory process.
Recognizing the importance of public participation, Executive Order
14094 of
[[Page 53658]]
April 6, 2023, Modernizing Regulatory Review, encourages Federal
agencies, to the extent practicable and consistent with applicable law,
to inform their regulatory actions through meaningful and equitable
opportunities for public input from a range of interested or affected
parties, including underserved communities.
To assist agencies in implementing the public participation
provisions of Executive Order 14094, OIRA published a Memorandum,
Broadening Public Participation and Community Engagement in the
Regulatory Process.\1\ Among other things, the Memorandum offered a
review of actions agencies should take, where practicable and
appropriate, to support greater participation and engagement in the
regulatory process. In particular, it discussed: (1) ``[l]everaging the
release of the biannual Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory Actions .
. . to discuss agencies' past, ongoing, and upcoming participation and
engagement with the public, including underserved communities''; and
(2) ``[e]nsuring that agency policies on communication during the
rulemaking process promote accessible, equitable, and meaningful
participation and engagement, especially early on in setting regulatory
priorities and in the early stages of rule development before a
proposed regulation is issued for comment.'' The Memorandum identified
leading practices for participation and engagement that agencies can
consider using, such as taking affirmative steps to promote engagement
where members of the public may face obstacles to participation; making
regulatory material more accessible, understandable, and usable by the
public; holding listening sessions, including online or technology-
enabled session, while agencies are still defining regulatory
priorities; or providing multiple means of submitting comments and
feedback.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Broadening-Public-Participation-and-Community-Engagement-in-the-Regulatory-Process.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since releasing the Memorandum, OIRA has worked with agencies to
make effective use of the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulatory Actions
(Regulatory Agenda) to expand public awareness of the opportunities
agencies have provided, and potentially will provide, for public
participation and community engagement. The Fall 2023 Regulatory Agenda
included descriptions of agency efforts to engage with the public.
Notable instances of public participation include the following:
The Small Business Administration conducted four Tribal
consultations and a listening session related to aspects of a proposed
rule that would change the Native community benefits-reporting
requirements in SBA's 8(a) Business Development program; that feedback
contributed to SBA's decision to remove these provisions from the final
rule.
The Environmental Protection Agency held over forty
external meetings, including directly engaging with Tribes, small
businesses, and other entities, to inform its ongoing work to develop a
proposed rule addressing risks posed by the chemical 1-bromopropane.
The Department of Transportation's proposal to ensure air
carriers and ticket agents provide prompt ticket refunds (including
ancillary fees) to passengers when a flight is cancelled or
significantly changed was informed by four public meetings, including a
public hearing.
The Office of Management and Budget's revision to
Statistical Policy Directive No. 15: Standards for Maintaining,
Collecting, and Presenting Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity, was
informed by more than 20,000 comments, 94 listening sessions hosted by
the Interagency Technical Working Group on Race and Ethnicity
Standards, 3 public virtual townhalls, and a Tribal consultation.
II. Topics and Key Questions
OMB particularly seeks feedback on the following three topic areas:
(1) the Regulatory Agenda as a platform for highlighting past and
future opportunities for public participation; (2) experience with
effective opportunities for public engagement in the regulatory
process; and (3) opportunities for strengthening public participation
and community engagement in the regulatory process.
1. The Regulatory Agenda as a Platform for Public Participation
Are there entries in the Regulatory Agenda that you think
have been particularly helpful in describing how public participation
informed an agency's regulatory process?
Are there entries in the Regulatory Agenda that you think
have been particularly helpful in offering information regarding
forthcoming opportunities for public participation and engagement?
What further improvements would you like to see regarding
how public participation is discussed in the Regulatory Agenda?
2. Effective Opportunities for Public Engagement
Did you find any agency actions that were particularly
helpful in facilitating participation in an agency's regulatory
process? Please include any specific examples.
[cir] Did you attend an online or technology-enabled session, and,
if so, did you find this an effective way of engaging with the agency?
[cir] Did the agency provide multiple means of submitting comments
and feedback in multiple formats, and were any especially effective?
[cir] Did the agency offer plain language summaries, infographics,
or short videos regarding the relevant issue, that sufficiently
prepared you to provide effective input?
Did you find the agency was asking for your input at the
right time, such that feedback could be effectively incorporated?
3. Opportunities for Strengthening Public Participation and Community
Engagement
Are there any actions agencies could take to make it
easier to participate in opportunities for public engagement? Please
include any specific examples.
[cir] Could an agency better inform the public of opportunities for
public engagement?
[cir] Could an agency make opportunities for public engagement more
accessible?
[cir] Are there any resources that would better prepare members of
the public to provide effective feedback?
Are there any actions agencies could take to better engage
with members of affected and underserved communities?
Are there any changes to OMB guidance that would help
strengthen public participation in agency regulatory processes?
Richard L. Revesz,
Administrator, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2024-13730 Filed 6-26-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3110-01-P