Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection; Comment Request; Extension, 87575-87578 [2024-25559]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 213 / Monday, November 4, 2024 / Notices
standards enumerated in paragraph 7 of
the Act.
Comments received are subject to
public disclosure. In general, comments
received will be made available without
change and will not be modified to
remove personal or business
information including confidential,
contact, or other identifying
information. Comments should not
include any information such as
confidential information that would not
be appropriate for public disclosure.
Comments regarding each of these
applications must be received at the
Reserve Bank indicated or the offices of
the Board of Governors, Ann E.
Misback, Secretary of the Board, 20th
Street and Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington DC 20551–0001, not later
than November 19, 2024.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
(Erien O. Terry, Assistant Vice
President), 1000 Peachtree Street NE,
Atlanta, Georgia 30309. Comments can
also be sent electronically to
Applications.Comments@atl.frb.org:
1. Dominik Mjartan and Georgia
Miller Mjartan, both of Columbia, South
Carolina; as a group acting in concert,
to acquire voting shares of American
Bancorp, Inc., and thereby indirectly
acquire voting shares of American Pride
Bank, both of Macon, Georgia.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Michele Taylor Fennell,
Associate Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2024–25593 Filed 11–1–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
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Formations of, Acquisitions by, and
Mergers of Bank Holding Companies
The companies listed in this notice
have applied to the Board for approval,
pursuant to the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.)
(BHC Act), Regulation Y (12 CFR part
225), and all other applicable statutes
and regulations to become a bank
holding company and/or to acquire the
assets or the ownership of, control of, or
the power to vote shares of a bank or
bank holding company and all of the
banks and nonbanking companies
owned by the bank holding company,
including the companies listed below.
The public portions of the
applications listed below, as well as
other related filings required by the
Board, if any, are available for
immediate inspection at the Federal
Reserve Bank(s) indicated below and at
the offices of the Board of Governors.
This information may also be obtained
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on an expedited basis, upon request, by
contacting the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank and from the Board’s
Freedom of Information Office at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/foia/
request.htm. Interested persons may
express their views in writing on the
standards enumerated in the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1842(c)). If the proposal also
involves the acquisition of a nonbanking
company, the review also includes
whether the acquisition of the
nonbanking company complies with the
standards in section 4 of the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1843), and interested persons
may express their views in writing on
the standards enumerated in section 4.
Unless otherwise noted, nonbanking
activities will be conducted throughout
the United States.
Comments received are subject to
public disclosure. In general, comments
received will be made available without
change and will not be modified to
remove personal or business
information including confidential,
contact, or other identifying
information. Comments should not
include any information such as
confidential information that would not
be appropriate for public disclosure.
Comments regarding each of these
applications must be received at the
Reserve Bank indicated or the offices of
the Board of Governors, Ann E.
Misback, Secretary of the Board, 20th
Street and Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20551–0001, not later
than December 4, 2024.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
(Brent B. Hassell, Assistant Vice
President) P.O. Box 27622, Richmond,
Virginia 23261. Comments can also be
sent electronically to
Comments.applications@rich.frb.org:
1. Southern Bancshares (N.C.), Inc.,
Mount Olive, North Carolina; to acquire
up to 19.9 percent of the voting shares
of Old Point Financial Corporation,
Hampton, Virginia, and thereby
indirectly acquire voting shares of The
Old Point National Bank of Phoebus,
Hampton, Virginia, and Old Point Trust
& Financial Services, N.A., Newport
News, Virginia. In addition, Southern
Bancshares (N.C.), Inc., through the
acquisition of Old Point Trust &
Financial Services, N.A., will engage in
providing trust company functions and
securities brokerage services pursuant to
sections 225.28(b)(5) and (b)(7)(i) of the
Board’s Regulation Y.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Michele Taylor Fennell,
Associate Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2024–25595 Filed 11–1–24; 8:45 am]
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87575
FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT
INVESTMENT BOARD
Notice of Meeting of the Employee
Thrift Advisory Council
November 14, 2024 at 10 a.m.
Telephonic. Dial-in (listen
only) information: Number: 1–202–599–
1426, Code: 504 721 370#; or via web:
https://www.frtib.gov/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kimberly Weaver, Director, Office of
External Affairs, (202) 942–1640.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
ADDRESSES:
ETAC Meeting Agenda
1. Approval of the minutes of the May
21, 2024, Joint Board/ETAC
Meeting
2. Investment Program Review
3. 2024 FISMA Report
4. 2024 Participant Satisfaction Survey
Results
5. 2024 Full Withdrawal Participant Exit
Survey
6. Office of Participant Experience
Update
7. Social Science Program Update
8. Legislative Update
9. New Business
Written Statements: Pursuant to 41
CFR 102–3.105(j) and 102–3.140 and
section 10(a)(3) of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, interested parties may
submit written statements in response to
the stated agenda of the meeting, or to
the Employee Thrift Advisory Council
(ETAC), in general. Individuals may
submit their comments to
ETACComments@frtib.gov. Written
comments or statements received less
than 5 days before ETAC’s meeting may
not be provided to the Committee until
its next meeting.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552b(e)(1).
Dated: October 30, 2024.
Dharmesh Vashee,
General Counsel, Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board.
[FR Doc. 2024–25566 Filed 11–1–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 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
SUMMARY:
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extend for an additional three years the
Office of Management and Budget
clearance for information collection
requirements contained in the rules and
regulations under the Pay-Per-Call Rule
(Rule). This clearance expires on
January 30, 2024.
DATES: Comments must be filed by
January 3, 2025.
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 ‘‘Pay-Per-Call Rule, PRA
Comment, P085405,’’ 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.
P.
Connell McNulty, Attorney, Division of
Marketing Practices, Bureau of
Consumer Protection, Federal Trade
Commission, (202) 326–2061,
pmcnulty@ftc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Trade Regulation Rule Pursuant
to the Telephone Disclosure and
Dispute Resolution Act of 1992 (‘‘PayPer-Call Rule’’), 16 CFR part 308.
OMB Control Number: 3084–0102.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Abstract: The existing reporting and
disclosure requirements of the Pay-PerCall Rule are mandated by the
Telephone Disclosure and Dispute
Resolution Act of 1992 (TDDRA) to help
prevent unfair and deceptive acts and
practices in the advertising and
operation of pay-per-call services and in
the collection of charges for telephonebilled purchases. The information
obtained by the Commission pursuant to
the reporting requirement is used for
law enforcement purposes. The
disclosure requirements ensure that
consumers are told about the costs of
using a pay-per-call service, that they
will not be liable for unauthorized nontoll charges on their telephone bills, and
how to deal with disputes about
telephone-billed purchases.
Likely Respondents:
telecommunications common carriers
(subject to the reporting requirement
only, unless acting as a billing entity),
information providers (vendors) offering
one or more pay-per-call services or
programs, and billing entities.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Estimated Annual Hours Burden:
949,536 hours (24 + 949,512).
Reporting: 24 hours for reporting by
common carriers
Disclosure: 949,512 [(19,440 hours for
advertising by vendors + 19,992 hours
for preamble disclosure which applies
to every pay-per-call service + 6,480
burden hours for telephone-billed
charges in billing statements (applies
to vendors; applies to common
carriers if acting as billing entity) +
13,000 burden hours for dispute
resolution procedures in billing
statements (applies to billing entities)
+ 890,600 hours for disclosures
related to consumers reporting a
billing error (applies to billing
entities)]
Estimated annual cost burden:
$49,402,048 (solely relating to labor
costs).1
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 Commission’s Pay-PerCall Rule.
Burden Estimates
Brief description of the need for and
proposed use of the information:
The existing reporting and disclosure
requirements are mandated by the
TDDRA to help prevent unfair and
deceptive acts and practices in the
advertising and operation of pay-percall services and in the collection of
charges for telephone-billed purchases.
The information obtained by the
Commission pursuant to the reporting
requirement is used for law enforcement
purposes. The disclosure requirements
ensure that consumers are told about the
costs of using a pay-per-call service, that
they will not be liable for unauthorized
non-toll charges on their telephone bills,
and how to deal with disputes about
telephone-billed purchases.
Likely respondents and their
estimated number:
Respondents are telecommunications
common carriers (subject to the
1 Non-labor (e.g., capital/other start-up) costs are
generally subsumed in activities otherwise
undertaken in the ordinary course of business (e.g.,
business records from which only existing
information must be reported to the Commission,
pay-per-call advertisements or audiotext to which
cost or other disclosures are added, etc.). To the
extent that entities incur operating or maintenance
expenses, or purchase outside services to satisfy the
Rule’s requirements, staff believe those expenses
are also included in (or, if contracted out, would be
comparable to) the annual burden hour and cost
estimates provided below (where such costs are
labor-related), or are otherwise included in the
ordinary cost of doing business (regarding non-labor
costs).
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reporting requirement only, unless
acting as a billing entity), information
providers (vendors) offering one or more
pay-per-call services or programs, and
billing entities. Staff estimates that there
are 8 common carriers, approximately
5,400 vendors, and approximately 2,600
possible billing entities. The FTC seeks
public comment or data on these
estimates and those stated below.
Estimated annual reporting and
disclosure burden: 949,536 hours;
$49,402,048 in associated labor costs.
The burden hour estimate for each
reporting and disclosure requirement
has been multiplied by a ‘‘blended’’
mean wage rate (expressed in dollars
per hour), based on the particular skill
mix needed to carry out that
requirement, to determine its total
annual cost. The blended rate
calculations are based on the following
skill categories and average wage rates
and/or labor costs: $131/hour for
professional (attorney) services; $23/
hour for skilled clerical workers; $52/
hour for computer programmers; and
$62/hour for management time. These
figures are averages, based on the most
currently available Bureau of Labor
Statistics (‘‘BLS’’) cost figures posted
online. The attorney figure is based in
part on BLS estimates and on other
sources. FTC staff calculated labor costs
by applying appropriate hourly cost
figures to the burden hours discussed
further below.
(1) Reporting burden (applies to
common carriers):
The Rule provides that common
carriers must make available to the
Commission, upon written request, any
records and financial information
maintained by such carrier relating to
the arrangements between the carrier
and any vendor or service bureau (other
than for the provision of local exchange
service). See 16 CFR 308.6. Staff
believes that the resulting burden on
this segment of the industry will be
minimal, since OMB’s definition of
‘‘burden’’ for PRA purposes excludes
any business effort that would be
expended regardless of a regulatory
requirement. 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2).
Because this reporting requirement
permits staff to seek information limited
to that which is already maintained by
the carriers, the only burden would be
the time an entity expends to compile
and provide the information to the
Commission. Because the Commission
has seldom needed to rely on this
requirement, staff estimates the annual
time for reporting at 3 hours per entity.
In obtaining OMB clearance for this
reporting requirement in 2021, staff
estimated a total reporting burden of 18
hours. For 2024, staff is increasing the
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total burden estimate to 24 hours, based
on an average estimate of 3 hours
expended by 8 common carriers. Using
a $61/hour blended wage rate, the FTC
now estimates an annual cost of $1,464.
(2) Disclosure burden:
(a) Advertising (applies to vendors).
FTC staff estimates that the annual
burden on the industry for the Rule’s
advertising disclosure requirements is
19,440 hours. The estimate reflects the
burden on approximately 5,400 vendors
who must make cost disclosures for all
pay-per-call services and additional
disclosures if the advertisement is (a)
directed to individuals under 18 or (b)
for certain pay-per-call services.
Because of continued industry changes
and the fact that the Commission has
seldom needed to rely on this
requirement, staff is retaining its prior
estimate that each vendor would have
three advertisements requiring basic
disclosures, and that 20 percent of these
advertisements would require an
additional disclosure. FTC staff
estimates that each disclosure mandated
by the Rule requires approximately one
hour of compliance time. The total
estimated annual cost of these burden
hours is $1,010,880, applying a blended
wage rate of $52/hour.
(b) The Rule’s preamble disclosure
(applies to every pay-per-call service).
To comply with the Act, the Pay-PerCall Rule also requires that every payper-call service be preceded by a free
preamble and that four different
disclosures be made in each preamble.
Additionally, preambles to sweepstakes
pay-per-call services and services that
offer information on federal programs
must provide additional disclosures.
Each preamble need only be prepared
one time, unless the cost or other
information is changed. There is no
additional burden on the vendor to
make the disclosures for each telephone
call, because the preambles are taped
and play automatically when a caller
dials the pay-per-call number.
Staff believes that the industry has
had at least an 8 percent reduction in
size since 2021 (when there were an
estimated 18,110 pay-per-call services).
Accordingly, staff now estimates that
there are no more than 16,660
advertised pay-per-call services.
As with advertising disclosures,
preambles for certain pay-per-call
services require additional preamble
disclosures. Consistent with the
estimates of advertised pay-per-call
services discussed above, staff estimates
that 20 percent of all such pay-per-call
services (3,332) relating to certain types
of pay-per-call services would require
such additional disclosures. Staff
estimates that it would require no more
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than one hour to draft each type of
disclosure because the disclosures
applicable to the preamble closely
approximate in content and volume the
advertising disclosures discussed above.
Accordingly, staff estimates a total of
19,992 burden hours (16,660 + 3,332) to
comply with these requirements. At one
hour each, cumulative labor cost
associated with these disclosures is
$1,039,584, using a blended wage rate of
$52/hour (i.e., the same blended rate
used for advertising disclosures).
(c) Telephone-billed charges in billing
statements (applies to vendors; applies
to common carriers if acting as billing
entity). Section 308.5(j) of the Rule, 16
CFR 308.5(j), requires that vendors
ensure that certain disclosures appear
on each billing statement that contains
a charge for a call to a pay-per-call
service. Because these disclosures
appear on telephone bills already
generated by the local telephone
companies, and because the carriers are
already subject to nearly identical
requirements pursuant to the FCC’s
rules, FTC staff estimated that the
burden to comply would be minimal. At
most, the burden on the vendor would
be limited to spot checking telephone
bills to ensure that the charges are
displayed in the manner required by the
Rule.
As it had in the 2021 PRA
submission, FTC staff estimates that
only 10 percent of vendors would
monitor billing statements in this
manner and that it would take 12 hours
per year to conduct such checks. Using
the total estimated number of vendors
(5,400), this results in a total of 6,480
burden hours. The total annual cost
would be at most $349,920, using a
blended rate of $54/hour.
(d) Dispute resolution procedures in
billing statements (applies to billing
entities). This disclosure requirement is
set forth in 16 CFR 308.7(c). The
blended rate used for these disclosures
is $53/hour. FTC staff previously
estimated that the billing entities would
spend approximately 5 hours each to
review, revise, and provide the
disclosures on an annual basis. The
estimated hour burden for the annual
notice component of this requirement is
13,000 burden hours (based on 2,600
possible billing entities each requiring 5
hours), or a total cost of $689,000.
(e) Further disclosures related to
consumers reporting a billing error
(applies to billing entities).
As in the 2021 PRA submission for
this Rule, FTC staff estimates that the
incremental disclosure obligations
related to consumers reporting a billing
error under section 308.7(d) requires, on
average, about one hour per each billing
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error. In 2021, staff projected that
approximately 5 percent of an estimated
19,360,880 calls made to pay-per-call
services each year involves such a
billing error. The staff is now reducing
its prior estimate of the number of those
calls by approximately 8 percent (to
17,812,010 calls) to reflect recent
changes in the amount of pay-per-call
services and their billing. Assuming the
same apportionment (5 percent) of
overall calls to pay-per-call services,
this amounts to 890,600 hours,
cumulatively. Applying the $52/hour
blended wage rate, the estimated annual
cost is $46,311,200.
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 January
3, 2025. 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 ‘‘Pay-Per-Call Rule, PRA
Comment, P085405,’’ 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
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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
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 January 3, 2025. 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.
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
Josephine Liu,
Assistant General Counsel for Legal Counsel.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
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BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
[Notice–IEB–2024–08; Docket No. 2024–
0002; Sequence No. 50]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records
Office of Information
Technology (GSA–IT), General Services
Administration (GSA).
ACTION: Notice of a new system of
records.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the provisions of
the Privacy Act of 1974, notice is given
that the GSA proposes to establish a
new system of records, entitled GSA/
PBS–11, GSA Real Estate Sales (G–RES).
This system of records is for the GSA
Real Estate Sales (G–RES) site, a public
real estate bidding web application,
hosted by GSA Public Buildings Service
(PBS).
DATES: Submit comments on or before
December 4, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted to the Federal eRulemaking
Portal, https://www.regulations.gov.
Submit comments by searching for
Notice–IEB–2024–08.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Call
or email Richard Speidel, Chief Privacy
Officer at 202–969–5830, or
gsa.privacyact@gsa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: GSA
proposes to establish a system of records
subject to the Privacy Act of 1974, 5
U.S.C. 552a. The system of records is
being created to support the new GSA
Real Estate Sales system, the records of
which currently fall under the SORN
GSA/FSS–13. The present system of
records (GSA/PBS–11) will not include
records previously covered by GSA/
FSS–13. All records under GSA/PBS–11
will be newly-created for use in this
system.
SUMMARY:
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
GSA Real Estate Sales (G–RES), GSA/
PBS–11.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified.
This cloud system is managed by GSA
and Amazon. GSA is located at 1800 F
Street NW, Washington, DC 20405. The
headquarters for Amazon is located at
410 Terry Avenue North, Seattle, WA
98109.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Dr. Jacqueline Rodriguez, IT Project
Manager, GSA, 1800 F Street NW,
Washington, DC 20405.
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Federal Property and Administrative
Services Act Of 1949, as amended;
Public Law 107–217, ch. 288, 63 Stat.
377 (40 U.S.C. 121(c) and 40 U.S.C. 541,
et seq.).
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
To establish and maintain a system of
records for conducting public sales of
Federal real property by GSA.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
The system includes individuals who
request to be added to GSA bidders
mailing lists, register to bid on GSA
sales, and/or enter into contracts to buy
Federal real property at sales conducted
by GSA. Such individuals may be
members of the public or represent
public or private interests. In addition,
GSA employees who administer the
system and process are also included.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
The system contains information
needed to identify potential and actual
bidders and awardees, and transaction
information involving real property
sales. System records include:
Personal information provided by
bidders, including, but not limited to,
names, phone numbers, addresses,
email addresses, birth dates, and
financial information. Additionally, real
estate agent profiles containing first and
last names, email, phone number, and
address. Finally, information about GSA
employees who administer the system,
including name and business contact
information.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information is provided by
individuals who wish to participate in
the GSA real property sales program,
and system transactions designed to
gather and maintain data and to manage
and evaluate the Federal real property
disposal program.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or a
portion of the records or information
contained in this system may be
disclosed to authorized entities, as is
determined to be relevant and
necessary, outside GSA as a routine use
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as
follows:
a. In any legal proceeding, where
pertinent, to which GSA, a GSA
employee, or the United States is a party
before a court or administrative body.
b. To a Federal, State, local, or foreign
agency responsible for investigating,
E:\FR\FM\04NON1.SGM
04NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 213 (Monday, November 4, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 87575-87578]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-25559]
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FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request; Extension
AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: 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
[[Page 87576]]
extend for an additional three years the Office of Management and
Budget clearance for information collection requirements contained in
the rules and regulations under the Pay-Per-Call Rule (Rule). This
clearance expires on January 30, 2024.
DATES: Comments must be filed by January 3, 2025.
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 ``Pay-Per-Call Rule, PRA
Comment, P085405,'' 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: P. Connell McNulty, Attorney, Division
of Marketing Practices, Bureau of Consumer Protection, Federal Trade
Commission, (202) 326-2061, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Trade Regulation Rule Pursuant to the Telephone Disclosure
and Dispute Resolution Act of 1992 (``Pay-Per-Call Rule''), 16 CFR part
308.
OMB Control Number: 3084-0102.
Type of Review: Extension of a currently approved collection.
Abstract: The existing reporting and disclosure requirements of the
Pay-Per-Call Rule are mandated by the Telephone Disclosure and Dispute
Resolution Act of 1992 (TDDRA) to help prevent unfair and deceptive
acts and practices in the advertising and operation of pay-per-call
services and in the collection of charges for telephone-billed
purchases. The information obtained by the Commission pursuant to the
reporting requirement is used for law enforcement purposes. The
disclosure requirements ensure that consumers are told about the costs
of using a pay-per-call service, that they will not be liable for
unauthorized non-toll charges on their telephone bills, and how to deal
with disputes about telephone-billed purchases.
Likely Respondents: telecommunications common carriers (subject to
the reporting requirement only, unless acting as a billing entity),
information providers (vendors) offering one or more pay-per-call
services or programs, and billing entities.
Estimated Annual Hours Burden: 949,536 hours (24 + 949,512).
Reporting: 24 hours for reporting by common carriers
Disclosure: 949,512 [(19,440 hours for advertising by vendors + 19,992
hours for preamble disclosure which applies to every pay-per-call
service + 6,480 burden hours for telephone-billed charges in billing
statements (applies to vendors; applies to common carriers if acting as
billing entity) + 13,000 burden hours for dispute resolution procedures
in billing statements (applies to billing entities) + 890,600 hours for
disclosures related to consumers reporting a billing error (applies to
billing entities)]
Estimated annual cost burden: $49,402,048 (solely relating to labor
costs).\1\
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\1\ Non-labor (e.g., capital/other start-up) costs are generally
subsumed in activities otherwise undertaken in the ordinary course
of business (e.g., business records from which only existing
information must be reported to the Commission, pay-per-call
advertisements or audiotext to which cost or other disclosures are
added, etc.). To the extent that entities incur operating or
maintenance expenses, or purchase outside services to satisfy the
Rule's requirements, staff believe those expenses are also included
in (or, if contracted out, would be comparable to) the annual burden
hour and cost estimates provided below (where such costs are labor-
related), or are otherwise included in the ordinary cost of doing
business (regarding non-labor costs).
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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 Commission's Pay-
Per-Call Rule.
Burden Estimates
Brief description of the need for and proposed use of the
information:
The existing reporting and disclosure requirements are mandated by
the TDDRA to help prevent unfair and deceptive acts and practices in
the advertising and operation of pay-per-call services and in the
collection of charges for telephone-billed purchases. The information
obtained by the Commission pursuant to the reporting requirement is
used for law enforcement purposes. The disclosure requirements ensure
that consumers are told about the costs of using a pay-per-call
service, that they will not be liable for unauthorized non-toll charges
on their telephone bills, and how to deal with disputes about
telephone-billed purchases.
Likely respondents and their estimated number:
Respondents are telecommunications common carriers (subject to the
reporting requirement only, unless acting as a billing entity),
information providers (vendors) offering one or more pay-per-call
services or programs, and billing entities. Staff estimates that there
are 8 common carriers, approximately 5,400 vendors, and approximately
2,600 possible billing entities. The FTC seeks public comment or data
on these estimates and those stated below.
Estimated annual reporting and disclosure burden: 949,536 hours;
$49,402,048 in associated labor costs.
The burden hour estimate for each reporting and disclosure
requirement has been multiplied by a ``blended'' mean wage rate
(expressed in dollars per hour), based on the particular skill mix
needed to carry out that requirement, to determine its total annual
cost. The blended rate calculations are based on the following skill
categories and average wage rates and/or labor costs: $131/hour for
professional (attorney) services; $23/hour for skilled clerical
workers; $52/hour for computer programmers; and $62/hour for management
time. These figures are averages, based on the most currently available
Bureau of Labor Statistics (``BLS'') cost figures posted online. The
attorney figure is based in part on BLS estimates and on other sources.
FTC staff calculated labor costs by applying appropriate hourly cost
figures to the burden hours discussed further below.
(1) Reporting burden (applies to common carriers):
The Rule provides that common carriers must make available to the
Commission, upon written request, any records and financial information
maintained by such carrier relating to the arrangements between the
carrier and any vendor or service bureau (other than for the provision
of local exchange service). See 16 CFR 308.6. Staff believes that the
resulting burden on this segment of the industry will be minimal, since
OMB's definition of ``burden'' for PRA purposes excludes any business
effort that would be expended regardless of a regulatory requirement. 5
CFR 1320.3(b)(2). Because this reporting requirement permits staff to
seek information limited to that which is already maintained by the
carriers, the only burden would be the time an entity expends to
compile and provide the information to the Commission. Because the
Commission has seldom needed to rely on this requirement, staff
estimates the annual time for reporting at 3 hours per entity.
In obtaining OMB clearance for this reporting requirement in 2021,
staff estimated a total reporting burden of 18 hours. For 2024, staff
is increasing the
[[Page 87577]]
total burden estimate to 24 hours, based on an average estimate of 3
hours expended by 8 common carriers. Using a $61/hour blended wage
rate, the FTC now estimates an annual cost of $1,464.
(2) Disclosure burden:
(a) Advertising (applies to vendors). FTC staff estimates that the
annual burden on the industry for the Rule's advertising disclosure
requirements is 19,440 hours. The estimate reflects the burden on
approximately 5,400 vendors who must make cost disclosures for all pay-
per-call services and additional disclosures if the advertisement is
(a) directed to individuals under 18 or (b) for certain pay-per-call
services. Because of continued industry changes and the fact that the
Commission has seldom needed to rely on this requirement, staff is
retaining its prior estimate that each vendor would have three
advertisements requiring basic disclosures, and that 20 percent of
these advertisements would require an additional disclosure. FTC staff
estimates that each disclosure mandated by the Rule requires
approximately one hour of compliance time. The total estimated annual
cost of these burden hours is $1,010,880, applying a blended wage rate
of $52/hour.
(b) The Rule's preamble disclosure (applies to every pay-per-call
service). To comply with the Act, the Pay-Per-Call Rule also requires
that every pay-per-call service be preceded by a free preamble and that
four different disclosures be made in each preamble. Additionally,
preambles to sweepstakes pay-per-call services and services that offer
information on federal programs must provide additional disclosures.
Each preamble need only be prepared one time, unless the cost or other
information is changed. There is no additional burden on the vendor to
make the disclosures for each telephone call, because the preambles are
taped and play automatically when a caller dials the pay-per-call
number.
Staff believes that the industry has had at least an 8 percent
reduction in size since 2021 (when there were an estimated 18,110 pay-
per-call services). Accordingly, staff now estimates that there are no
more than 16,660 advertised pay-per-call services.
As with advertising disclosures, preambles for certain pay-per-call
services require additional preamble disclosures. Consistent with the
estimates of advertised pay-per-call services discussed above, staff
estimates that 20 percent of all such pay-per-call services (3,332)
relating to certain types of pay-per-call services would require such
additional disclosures. Staff estimates that it would require no more
than one hour to draft each type of disclosure because the disclosures
applicable to the preamble closely approximate in content and volume
the advertising disclosures discussed above. Accordingly, staff
estimates a total of 19,992 burden hours (16,660 + 3,332) to comply
with these requirements. At one hour each, cumulative labor cost
associated with these disclosures is $1,039,584, using a blended wage
rate of $52/hour (i.e., the same blended rate used for advertising
disclosures).
(c) Telephone-billed charges in billing statements (applies to
vendors; applies to common carriers if acting as billing entity).
Section 308.5(j) of the Rule, 16 CFR 308.5(j), requires that vendors
ensure that certain disclosures appear on each billing statement that
contains a charge for a call to a pay-per-call service. Because these
disclosures appear on telephone bills already generated by the local
telephone companies, and because the carriers are already subject to
nearly identical requirements pursuant to the FCC's rules, FTC staff
estimated that the burden to comply would be minimal. At most, the
burden on the vendor would be limited to spot checking telephone bills
to ensure that the charges are displayed in the manner required by the
Rule.
As it had in the 2021 PRA submission, FTC staff estimates that only
10 percent of vendors would monitor billing statements in this manner
and that it would take 12 hours per year to conduct such checks. Using
the total estimated number of vendors (5,400), this results in a total
of 6,480 burden hours. The total annual cost would be at most $349,920,
using a blended rate of $54/hour.
(d) Dispute resolution procedures in billing statements (applies to
billing entities). This disclosure requirement is set forth in 16 CFR
308.7(c). The blended rate used for these disclosures is $53/hour. FTC
staff previously estimated that the billing entities would spend
approximately 5 hours each to review, revise, and provide the
disclosures on an annual basis. The estimated hour burden for the
annual notice component of this requirement is 13,000 burden hours
(based on 2,600 possible billing entities each requiring 5 hours), or a
total cost of $689,000.
(e) Further disclosures related to consumers reporting a billing
error (applies to billing entities).
As in the 2021 PRA submission for this Rule, FTC staff estimates
that the incremental disclosure obligations related to consumers
reporting a billing error under section 308.7(d) requires, on average,
about one hour per each billing error. In 2021, staff projected that
approximately 5 percent of an estimated 19,360,880 calls made to pay-
per-call services each year involves such a billing error. The staff is
now reducing its prior estimate of the number of those calls by
approximately 8 percent (to 17,812,010 calls) to reflect recent changes
in the amount of pay-per-call services and their billing. Assuming the
same apportionment (5 percent) of overall calls to pay-per-call
services, this amounts to 890,600 hours, cumulatively. Applying the
$52/hour blended wage rate, the estimated annual cost is $46,311,200.
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
January 3, 2025. 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 ``Pay-Per-Call Rule, PRA
Comment, P085405,'' 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
[[Page 87578]]
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 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 January 3,
2025. 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. 2024-25559 Filed 11-1-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750-01-P