Certificates of Compliance, 1800-1845 [2024-30826]
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1110
[CPSC Docket No. 2013–0017]
Certificates of Compliance
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In consultation with U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP),
the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission (Commission or CPSC)
issues this final rule (the Final Rule) to
revise the agency’s regulation for
Certificates of Compliance (certificates).
The Final Rule aligns CPSC’s current
certificates rule with other CPSC rules
on testing and certification, and
implements, for importation of products
and substances regulated by CPSC,
electronic filing of certificates (eFiling)
with CBP.
DATES: For all CPSC regulated consumer
products and substances subject to the
Final Rule and required to be certified,
except for products and substances
imported into a foreign trade zone (FTZ)
and subsequently entered for
consumption or warehousing, the Final
Rule is effective on July 8, 2026. For
CPSC regulated products and substances
entered from an FTZ for consumption or
warehousing, the Final Rule is effective
on January 8, 2027.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kat
Rickerson, eFiling Program Specialist,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone 240–
429–4257; email: eFilingsupport@
cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission is issuing a final rule to
revise the requirements for certificates
of compliance (certificates) (the Final
Rule) in 16 CFR part 1110 (part 1110 or
the 1110 rule). The Final Rule applies
to importers, domestic manufacturers,
and private labelers who are required to
issue certificates for consumer products
and substances 1 regulated by CPSC that
are imported for consumption or
warehousing into the United States or
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SUMMARY:
1 Section 14(a) of the CPSA requires that
manufacturers, including importers, and private
labelers issue certificates for all consumer products
subject to a consumer product safety rule under the
CPSA, or a similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation
under any other law enforced by the Commission,
that are imported for consumption or warehousing
or distributed in commerce. 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)–
(12); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). In this Final Rule, all
consumer products and substances subject to a
CPSC rule, ban, standard, or regulation required to
be certified under section 14(a) of the CPSA are
referred to as ‘‘consumer products’’ or ‘‘products.’’
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are distributed in commerce in the
United States. The Commission
promulgated the existing part 1110 for
certificates in 2008. The existing rule
tracks the statutory requirements for
certificates in section 14 of the
Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA),
designates importers as the certifier for
imported products and manufacturers as
the certifier for domestically
manufactured products, and allows for
‘‘electronic’’ certificates to satisfy the
requirement that a certificate
‘‘accompany’’ the product or shipment
of products, meaning a URL to access
the certificate or a PDF file. 73 FR 68328
(Nov. 18, 2008); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a), (g).
In 2013, the Commission issued a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) to
revise part 1110 to align with rules for
testing children’s products under 16
CFR part 1107 (part 1107 or the 1107
rule) and component part testing under
16 CFR part 1109 (part 1109 or the 1109
rule). 78 FR 28080 (May 13, 2013) (2013
NPR). Consistent with section 222 of the
Consumer Product Safety Improvement
Act of 2008 (CPSIA), which requires the
Commission develop a Risk Assessment
Methodology (RAM) to identify
imported products likely to include
consumer products in violation of
section 17(a) of the Consumer Product
Safety Act (15 U.S.C. 2066(a)) or other
import provisions enforced by the
Commission, for imported consumer
products, the 2013 NPR also proposed
to require eFiling of certificates with
CBP at the time of filing the CBP entry,
or the time of filing the entry and entry
summary, if both are filed together.2 15
U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
Currently, CPSC collects certificates
only after staff identifies a shipment for
examination; certificate data are not
generally collected and therefore cannot
be used effectively to target shipments
for examination. The purpose of eFiling
is to allow CPSC to use data from a
certificate to assess the health and safety
risk of consumer products when they
2 CBP regulations define ‘‘entry’’ as the
documentation or data required to secure the
release of imported merchandise from CBP custody,
or the act of filing that documentation. See 19 CFR
141.0a(a). CBP regulations define an ‘‘entry
summary’’ as any other documentation or data
necessary for CBP to assess duties, collect statistics
on imported merchandise, and determine whether
other requirements of law or regulation have been
met. See 19 CFR 141.0a(b). An entry can be made
as either a 2-Step or 1-Step process. As a 2-Step
process, an entry is filed initially and an entry
summary is filed within 10 days of entry filing. As
a 1-Step process, an entry summary is filed which
serves as both the entry and entry summary filing.
See e.g., 19 CFR 141.68(b). Consequently, using the
term ‘‘entry’’ encompasses both processes,
irrespective of whether the entry/CBP Form 3461 is
filed for a 2-Step or a 1-Step entry process where
the entry summary/CBP Form 7501 serves as the
entry.
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are being imported into the United
States, and to better focus CPSC’s
resources for examinations and holds at
the ports on products that are more
likely to be non-complaint, while
reducing inspection delays for
compliant products. The RAM processes
data, including entry data and soon
certificate data as well, using algorithms
to increase or decrease RAM risk scores
for each product shipment. Risk scores
assist port staff in their assessment of
incoming shipments and in interdicting
non-compliant consumer products.
Using certificate data for more precise
targeting will maximize examination
efficiency for stakeholders and staff;
help CPSC to keep hazardous, violative
products out of consumer’s hands; and
reduce burden on industry by reducing
inspection delays for compliant
products.
Since 2013, the Commission has
undertaken a series of projects to
advance implementation of an eFiling
requirement, including conducting an
eFiling Alpha Pilot, a Certificate Study,
and an eFiling Beta Pilot. In December
2020, the Commission approved a
multi-year plan to implement an eFiling
program at CPSC.3 Moreover, since
2013, CBP has completed development
and implementation of the Automated
Commercial Environment (ACE), which
is the system through which the U.S.
government has implemented the
‘‘single window,’’ the primary system
for processing trade-related import and
export data required by government
agencies. The transition away from
paper-based procedures results in faster,
more streamlined processes for both
government and industry. Specifically,
CBP developed the Partner Government
Agency (PGA) Message Set as a way for
U.S. government agencies to
electronically collect additional importrelated data. The eFiling Alpha and Beta
Pilots were conducted in conjunction
with CBP and tested use of CPSC’s PGA
Message Sets.
On December 8, 2023, the
Commission published a supplemental
notice of proposed rulemaking (SNPR)
proposing to revise part 1110 to, among
other things: revise terminology to
incorporate concepts that had been
introduced in the 1107 and 1109 rules
but not yet included in part 1110;
broaden the definition of ‘‘importer’’ in
part 1110 to address commenters’
3 The 2020 staff briefing package to implement an
eFiling program at CPSC is available at: https://
www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/CPSC-Plan-to-Create-aneFiling-Program-for-Imported-ConsumerProducts.pdf. The record of commission action is
available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCACPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-forImported-Consumer-Products.pdf.
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concerns about the product certifier
having control over and knowledge of
the goods; allow private labelers to test
and certify products; and implement
eFiling for imported consumer products
regulated by CPSC. 88 FR 85760 (SNPR).
The Commission received 47
comments on the SNPR, addressed in
section IV of this preamble, and is now
finalizing the rule to revise part 1110,
with clarifications and modifications in
response to commenters’ concerns.4 5
The Final Rule specifies the entities that
must issue certificates for finished
products, including domestically
manufactured and imported products,
in accordance with section 14(a) of the
CPSA, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 2063(a);
specifies certificate content, form, and
availability requirements in section 14
of the CPSA; requires importers to eFile
certificate data with CBP for imported
finished products that must be certified;
and clarifies which provisions of part
1110 apply to voluntary component part
certificates.
I. Statutory Authority
Section 102 of the Consumer Product
Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA)
amended section 14(a) of the CPSA to
expand requirements for certificates of
compliance. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a). As
amended, section 14(a) of the CPSA
requires that manufacturers and private
labelers issue certificates for all
consumer products subject to a
consumer product safety rule under the
CPSA, or a similar rule, ban, standard,
or regulation under any other law
enforced by the Commission, that are
imported for consumption or
warehousing or distributed in
commerce. 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)–(12);
15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). The CPSA defines
the term ‘‘manufacturer’’ as ‘‘any person
who manufactures or imports a
consumer product.’’ 15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11). Thus, certificates must be
issued by a manufacturer, importer, or
private labeler. When a product has
more than one manufacturer, including
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4 On
December 18, 2024, the Commission voted
(3–0–2) to publish the Final Rule, with all five
Commissioners voting to approve the rule; and a
majority voting to approve the rule with an
amendment extending the general implementation
date from 12 months to 18 months. All
Commissioners issued a statement in connection
with their vote. The Record of Commission Action
and Commissioner statements are available at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-Final-Ruleto-Implement-eFiling-for-Certificates-ofCompliance.pdf?VersionId=
JN7iuAdHGzooHBnXpuU7xZB4aX4Dkada.
5 The information in this Final Rule is also based
on Staff’s November 15, 2024 Memorandum: Draft
Final Rule to Revise 16 CFR part 1110 for
Certificates of Compliance and to Implement
eFiling of Certificates for Regulated, Imported
Consumer Products (Staff’s Final Rule Memo).
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an importer, or private labeler, the
Commission may by rule designate one
or more of such entities as the certifier
and exempt the others. 15 U.S.C.
2063(a)(4).
Certificates for children’s products
(Children’s Product Certificates or CPCs)
must be based on testing performed by
a third party conformity assessment
body whose accreditation to perform
such testing has been accepted by the
Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(2); 16
CFR part 1107. Certificates for nonchildren’s products (General Certificates
of Conformity or GCCs) must be based
on a test of each product or a reasonable
testing program. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1)(A).
Section 14(a)(1)(B) of the CPSA requires
that certificates specify each rule, ban,
standard, or regulation applicable to the
product. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1)(B).
Section 14(g) of the CPSA contains
additional requirements for the form,
content, and availability of certificates.
15 U.S.C. 2063(g). Section 14(g)(1)
requires that each certificate must
identify the manufacturer (including
importer) or private labeler issuing the
certificate, as well as any third party
conformity assessment body on whose
testing the certificate depends. 15 U.S.C.
2063(g)(1). At a minimum, certificates
must include the date and place of
manufacture; the date and place where
the product was tested; each party’s
name, full mailing address, and
telephone number; and contact
information for the individual
responsible for maintaining records of
test results. Id. Section 14(g)(2) requires
that every certificate be legible and that
all contents be in English; contents can
additionally be in another language. 15
U.S.C. 2063(g)(2).
Certificates must accompany the
applicable product or shipment of
products covered by the certificate, and
a copy of the certificate must be
furnished to each distributor or retailer
of the product. Upon request, the
manufacturer (including importer) or
private labeler issuing the certificate
must provide a copy of the certificate to
the Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(3).
Finally, section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA
states that in consultation with the
Commissioner of Customs, CPSC may,
by rule, provide for the electronic filing
of certificates up to 24 hours before
arrival of an imported product. Upon
request, the manufacturer (including
importer) or private labeler issuing the
certificate must provide a copy of such
certificate to the Commission and to
CBP. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
In addition to the statutory authority
to require certificates for regulated
products, as outlined in sections 14(a)
and (g) of the CPSA, the Commission
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1801
has general authority to implement
testing and certification requirements
pursuant to section 3 of the CPSIA,
which provides that ‘‘the Commission
may issue regulations, as necessary, to
implement this Act and the
amendments made by this Act.’’ Notes
to 15 U.S.C. 2051 (citing Pub. L. 110–
314, 3, Aug. 14, 2008, 122 Stat. 3017).
II. Background on Certificates and
eFiling
Section II of the SNPR provided a
detailed background on the existing
1110 rule, the 2013 NPR to revise the
1110 rule, CPSC’s risk assessment and
targeting efforts for imported consumer
products, and CPSC’s eFiling-related
projects since the 2013 NPR. 88 FR
85760, 85761–63. In this section of the
preamble, we summarize the same
information and additionally describe
the 2023 SNPR.
A. The 1110 Rule
As stated in section I of this preamble,
the CPSIA expanded section 14 of the
CPSA to require testing and certification
of consumer products subject to a
consumer product safety rule, or to a
similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation
under any other act enforced by the
Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). The
existing 1110 rule tracks the statutory
requirements in section 14, allows for
certificates in paper, electronic (URL),
and PDF formats, and states that this
initial rule is ‘‘streamlined, at least in its
initial phase.’’ 73 FR 68328 (Nov. 18,
2008). The existing rule was not
expected to be permanent. As the
Commission explained when adopting
the rule, ‘‘with time CPSIA’s expanded
certification requirements will become
more routine, and [CPSC] then would
consider whether this rule needs to be
revised based on actual experience.’’ 73
FR 68328. The existing 1110 rule does
not implement the authority in section
14(g)(4) of the CPSA to require eFiling
of certificates for imported products. 15
U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
B. The 2013 Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
In 2011, as required by section 222 of
the CPSIA, CPSC launched a pilot
targeting system to test the effectiveness
of CPSC’s RAM. The purpose of the
RAM is to support identification and
interception of shipments containing
potentially hazardous products. The
pilot RAM system used a rules-based
approach and aggregate-scoring models
to highlight potential risks, patterns,
and targets. 15 U.S.C. 2066 Note. By
2012, staff had worked to refine the
RAM and had begun to grapple with the
rise of internet-based companies selling
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consumer products (eCommerce) and
direct-to-consumer shipments, which
made CPSC’s interdiction of noncompliant products more challenging.
To address those concerns, and to be
able to use certificate data for targeting
and enforcement of CPSC’s rules at the
ports, CPSC proposed in the 2013 NPR
to implement eFiling of certificates with
CBP for regulated, imported products,
pursuant to section 14(g)(4) of the
CPSA. The 2013 NPR also sought to
revise part 1110 to integrate the rule
into the testing and certification regime
contemplated in then-new parts 1107
and 1109.6 CPSC received over 500
comments from more than 70
commenters on the 2013 NPR.
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C. CPSC’s Risk Assessment and
Targeting Efforts for Imported Consumer
Products
In 2017, CPSC transitioned to the
RAM 2.0 system, which assesses more
data within CPSC’s jurisdiction than the
pilot RAM and uses analytic and
performance reports to aid staff in
modifying and fine-tuning risk
assessment and targeting rules to select
shipments for examination. CPSC’s
RAM currently receives an electronic
feed of import entry data collected by
CBP.7 The RAM is optimized to ingest
CBP’s data and uses algorithms to
identify potentially noncompliant
consumer product shipments for CPSC’s
inspection. However, the data ingested
by the RAM are collected by CBP for its
enforcement and tariff purposes, which
do not always align with CPSC’s risk
assessment purposes. Moreover, CPSC’s
current import enforcement
methodology is labor-intensive and
lacks an efficient means of using
product-specific data to identify
potentially non-compliant products.
Currently, CPSC collects certificates
only after staff identifies a shipment for
examination; certificate data are not
generally collected and therefore cannot
be used to target shipments for
examination. CPSC port staff identifies
shipments for examination, requesting
6 The 1107 rule sets forth requirements for
children’s product testing and certification,
including when and how products must be tested
and certified, and recordkeeping requirements. The
1109 rule sets forth conditions and requirements for
component part testing and certification for both
children’s and non-children’s products. Both rules
introduced new concepts and terminology related
to certificates that are not present in the existing
part 1110 rule published in 2008.
7 Currently, CPSC’s RAM system is limited to data
collected and provided by CBP and does not
contain CPSC-specific information that would help
enhance risk assessment. eFiling certificate data for
imported consumer products will allow the RAM to
use this data to further improve CPSC’s ability to
target noncompliant consumer products for
examination at the ports.
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that CBP place a shipment on hold and
transport the goods to an examination
station for CPSC inspection. An
examination hold creates a delay that
costs CPSC and businesses time and
money; thus, importers and CPSC have
a common interest in reducing
examinations of compliant products and
focusing instead on examinations of
products that are likely to be violative.
Using certificate data for more precise
targeting will maximize examination
efficiency for stakeholders and staff;
keep hazardous, violative products out
of consumer’s hands; and reduce burden
by not delaying compliant products and
not holding up shipments at the port
while waiting to receive a certificate.
Using certificate data can also
improve CPSC’s ability to target lowvalue shipments accorded a duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C.
1321(a)(2)(C), which are commonly
referred to as de minimis shipments.
CPSC’s port staff are currently unable to
pinpoint with a high degree of certainty
potentially non-compliant and
hazardous products in such low-value
shipments. De minimis shipments may
currently be entered under either the
‘‘release from manifest’’ process,8 or the
ACE Entry Type 86 Test (ET86). Of
these, only the latter is capable of
transmitting the PGA Message Set 9 data
required to effect release of CPSC
regulated merchandise.10 The Final
Rule requires de minimis shipments
containing finished products regulated
by CPSC to file CPSC’s PGA Message Set
via an entry type capable of transmitting
this message set, which is currently
limited to ET86. Accordingly, importers
may now use ET86 for de minimis
8 Merchandise
for which a duty exemption is
claimed under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) may be
entered by presenting the bill of lading or a
manifest listing each bill of lading. This type of
informal entry is termed the ‘‘release from
manifest’’ process. Generally, such shipments are
released from CBP custody based on the
information provided on the manifest or bill of
lading. 89 FR 2630, 2631–2632 (Jan. 16, 2024).
9 CBP created the PGA Message Set to collect
from importers additional agency-related import
data for partner government agencies and to allow
importers to transmit the data elements to ACE at
time of entry or entry summary. CPSC created two
PGA Message Sets: the Full Message Set and
Reference Message Set. When using a Full Message
Set, importers will provide all certificate data in the
form of data elements. When using a Reference
Message Set, importers will provide a reference ID
to certificate data entered into CPSC’s Product
Registry. The Product Registry is a certificate
database created and maintained by CPSC.
Importers can enter or upload certificate data for
regulated consumer products that can be referenced
in a short PGA Message Set each time the product
is imported without having to re-enter the same
certificate data elements.
10 Shipments that have PGA data reporting
requirements, or require the payment of any duties,
fees, or taxes may not use the ‘‘release from
manifest’’ process. 89 FR 2630, 2632.
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shipments to append the required CPSC
PGA Message Set. Once the Final Rule
is effective, CPSC’s RAM can receive
CBP’s entry data and CPSC’s PGA
Message Set containing certificate data
elements for risk scoring. Using
product-specific certificate information
will provide CPSC with greater insights
into all imported products, including de
minimis shipments. Millions of de
minimis shipments enter the United
States daily; although not all of these
shipments contain CPSC regulated
finished products, the ability to use
algorithms to assess certificate data and
identify higher-risk shipments, even
those of low value that occur frequently,
would enhance CPSC’s ability to focus
limited resources to identify and
interdict higher risk shipments.
Additionally, CBP does not collect
entry data for products imported into
the United States via international mail;
thus, these shipments cannot relay the
PGA Message Set required for products
regulated by CPSC. However, CPSC staff
inspect mail shipments; lack of productrelated data can lead to CPSC
inspections of compliant products that
delay their release. Although CBP is
unable to process any certificate data
collected for international mail
shipments via ACE,11 the Final Rule
requires a modified eFiling requirement
for international mail. Importers using
international mail to import consumer
products regulated by CPSC must enter
certificate data into the Product Registry
before arrival of the shipment in the
United States, so that staff can analyze
this data and work with CBP to target
mail shipments for examination.
D. CPSC eFiling Related Projects Since
the 2013 NPR
Since publication of the 2013 NPR,
CPSC has implemented RAM 2.0 and
CBP has implemented ACE and
developed the PGA Message Set. In
2016 and 2017, CPSC conducted an
eFiling Alpha Pilot, in coordination
with CBP, involving eight volunteer
participants who successfully eFiled a
limited set of targeting/enforcement data
for regulated products. Also in 2017,
CPSC conducted a Certificate Study to
assess CPSC’s ability to use certificates
and the information on them for risk
assessment and targeting of regulated,
imported consumer products. In
December 2020, the Commission
11 ACE is CBP’s system through which the U.S.
government has implemented the ‘‘single window,’’
the primary system for processing all trade-related
import and export data required by government
agencies. The ‘‘single window’’ transitions away
from paper-based procedures to provide
government and industry faster, more streamlined
processes.
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approved a multi-year plan to
implement an eFiling program at
CPSC.12 Following this eFiling plan,
CPSC began an eFiling Beta Pilot in the
fall of 2023 with 37 participants.13
Section II of the SNPR contains a
detailed description of each of these
initiatives. 88 FR 85760, 85762–63.
Most recently, on June 4, 2024, CPSC
announced an expansion of the Beta
Pilot to include up to an additional
2,000 participants, to further test the
eFiling IT infrastructure and to allow
more importers to prepare for full
implementation of an eFiling
requirement.14
To minimize burden on industry,
CPSC developed an eFiling System
through the Alpha and Beta Pilots that
allows importers to enter certificate data
through two means: Full PGA Message
Set or Reference PGA Message Set using
the Product Registry.15 When using the
Full PGA Message Set, the importer
submits all certificate data elements via
ACE. When using the Reference PGA
Message Set, the importer enters all
certificate data elements into CPSC’s
Product Registry prior to filing entry
with CBP, and then submits a unique
reference identifier (ID) via ACE as part
of their entry filing.16 The CBP and
Trade Automated Interface Requirement
(CATAIR), which details the technical
requirements to file each of CPSC’s PGA
Message Sets in ACE, is available in the
eFiling document library maintained on
CPSC’s website at https://www.cpsc.gov/
eFiling-Document-Library.
The Product Registry allows
importers, or their designees, to enter
the certificate data elements via a user
interface, batch upload, and/or
Application Programing Interface (API)
upload. The user interface is a step-bystep process in which the importer
submits one certificate at a time. The
12 The 2020 staff briefing package to implement
an eFiling program at CPSC is available at: https://
cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/CPSC-Plan-to-Create-aneFiling-Program-for-Imported-ConsumerProducts.pdf?BYXOLX2gJmF4NaAN1LCMmqiXRI
SuaRkr=. The record of commission action is
available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCACPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-forImported-Consumer-Products.pdf.
13 87 FR 35513 (June 10, 2022).
14 89 FR 47922 (June 4, 2024).
15 The eFiling system collectively refers to the
PGA Message Set and Product Registry and process
of filing certificate data. Finished product certifiers
(meaning importers, manufacturers, or private
labelers) are responsible for the certificate data
submitted, but brokers or other designated parties
can upload data and certify products on behalf of
a finished product certifier. See 16 CFR part 1109
and § 1110.15 of this Final Rule.
16 Other trade parties, such as brokers and
laboratories, may enter certificate data into the
Product Registry on behalf of a finished product
certifier, if given permission to do so in the Product
Registry.
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batch upload feature allows importers to
submit multiple certificates using a
Comma-Separated Value (CSV)
template. The API upload feature allows
importers to build an API connection
via the Product Registry and their data
systems to directly enter certificates.
Additionally, the Product Registry
provides multiple features to optimize
the importer’s interaction. Each
importer has a Business Account in the
Product Registry through which
individual users representing the
importer can view all certificates
submitted into the Product Registry
associated with the importer. An
importer can also provide other third
parties, such as a broker or testing
laboratory, with different levels of
permission to submit certificate data
into the Product Registry on their
behalf. The most recent user guide for
the Product Registry is attached as Tab
A to Staff’s Final Rule Memo and is also
available in the eFiling document
library maintained on CPSC’s website at
https://www.cpsc.gov/eFilingDocument-Library. Updates to the
Product Registry user guide and other
eFiling-related guidance documents will
continue to be placed in this document
library.
E. Supplemental Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking
On December 8, 2023, CPSC
published an SNPR that modified the
2013 NPR based on comments on the
2013 NPR, lessons learned, and
participant feedback from the Alpha
Pilot and the Certificate Study, as well
as feedback during preparation of the
Beta Pilot. 88 FR 85760. The SNPR
proposed to revise the 1110 rule to
clarify certificate requirements for all
regulated products. Among other
changes, the SNPR added 13 new
definitions to incorporate concepts used
in the 1107 and 1109 rules and to clarify
the requirements of part 1110;
broadened the definition of ‘‘importer’’
in part 1110 to include any entity CBP
allows to be an importer under the
Tariff Act; addressed which party is
responsible for certifying imported and
domestically manufactured products;
clarified the certificate format; provided
additional detail to the required data
elements; required that each certificate
describe a single product; specified that
the 1110 rule applies to de minimis
shipments, international mail
shipments, and to products entered for
consumption or warehousing from an
FTZ; clarified the legal responsibility for
certificate information; and expanded
the record retention period for GCCs to
five years.
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1803
III. Overview of the Final Rule
The Commission is finalizing the rule
largely as proposed in the SNPR. For
clarity, the Final Rule contains minor
grammar and syntax revisions that do
not change the substance of the rule.
Based on the comments, one of the
biggest changes to the Final Rule is the
effective date, extended from the
proposed 120 days after publication in
the Federal Register, to 18 months for
all imported and domestically
manufactured products (other than
those imported into an FTZ and
subsequently entered for consumption
or warehousing, for which the effective
date will be 24 months after
publication). Additionally, throughout
the Final Rule, we use the term
‘‘finished product certificate’’ or
‘‘finished product certifier’’ to clarify
that the requirement to certify regulated
products attaches to finished products
and not to component parts, and the
obligation to certify regulated finished
products rests with a finished product
certifier, as set forth in the rule. Using
these terms consistently throughout the
regulation text addresses several
comments received on the SNPR
demonstrating confusion regarding
which party has the obligation to certify
and which products must be
accompanied by a certificate. The Final
Rule also modifies the definition of
‘‘importer’’ to address commenters’
concerns, and to ensure that a party
eligible to make entry for imported,
regulated consumer products is legally
responsible for CPSC’s certificate
requirements. Finally, the Final Rule
clarifies the party that is legally
responsible for information on a
finished product certificate and the
requirements for component part
certificates.
In this section of the preamble, we
briefly describe the primary
modifications and clarifications made in
the Final Rule based on comments
received on the SNPR and experience
and feedback on the eFiling Beta Pilot.
Section V of this preamble contains a
more detailed explanation of the
requirements in the Final Rule.
A. Effective Date
As explained in section VI of this
preamble, the effective date is extended
from the proposed 120 days. For all
consumer products regulated by CPSC
subject to the Final Rule and required to
be certified, except for products
imported into an FTZ and subsequently
entered for consumption or
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warehousing,17 the Final Rule is
effective 18 months after publication of
the Final Rule in the Federal Register.
The 18-month effective date applies to
regulated consumer products subject to
the Final Rule that are imported, as well
as to those that are domestically
manufactured. For CPSC regulated
products imported into an FTZ and
subsequently entered for consumption
or warehousing, the Final Rule is
effective 24 months after publication of
the Final Rule in the Federal Register.
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B. Definitions (§ 1110.3)
Definitions in the Final Rule contain
the following changes from the SNPR:
Component part certificate—Clarifies
that component part certificates are
voluntary.
Consignee—Clarifies that this
definition is only for the purposes of
this rule and simplifies the definition to
mean a party who takes custody or
delivery of imported finished products
for which CPSC certificate data are
required. The definition informs that a
consignee may be held legally
responsible by CPSC for the required
certificate data as set forth in § 1110.15.
Although a consignee will not
necessarily be eligible to enter
certificate data into ACE, CPSC may
hold the consignee legally responsible
for CPSC’s certificate data as the
importer.
eFile—Modifies the defined term from
‘‘eFiled certificate’’ to ‘‘eFile’’ because
the term ‘‘eFiled certificate’’ is not used
in the rule, but the term ‘‘eFile’’ or
‘‘eFiled’’ is used nine times throughout
the regulation. The definition of ‘‘eFile’’
is consistent with the SNPR definition
of ‘‘eFiled certificate.’’
Finished product—Removes the
phrase ‘‘replacement parts’’ and clarifies
the three requirements that define a
‘‘finished product’’: (1) the product is
imported for consumption or
warehousing, or distributed in
commerce; (2) the product is subject to
a consumer product safety rule under
the CPSA, or similar rule, ban, standard,
or regulation under any other law
enforced by the Commission; and (3) the
product is packaged, sold, or held for
sale to, or use by, consumers.
Finished product certifier—For
clarity, adds the statutory requirement
that a finished product certifier must be
a manufacturer, importer, or private
labeler.
Importer—Clarifies that for purposes
of this rule, the importer is the Importer
of Record (IOR) eligible to make entry
17 Entry type 06 is used to enter for consumption
consumer products withdrawn from an FTZ for
entry for consumption.
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for imported finished products under
the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19
U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an
owner, purchaser, or authorized
customs broker. This modification is
consistent with the 2013 NPR and
comments stating that the SNPR
proposal to broaden the importer
definition was too broad and created
confusion about which party is required
to certify imported products. Pursuant
to CBP’s statute, entry documentation
must be transmitted by the owner or
purchaser of the merchandise or, when
appropriately designated by the owner,
purchaser, or consignee of the
merchandise, a person holding a valid
license under 19 U.S.C. 1641. The IOR
must be a party eligible to file such
entry documentation. 19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B). A valid license under 19
U.S.C. 1641 means a customs broker
licensed to conduct customs business.
19 U.S.C. 1641(a). Accordingly, the
Final Rule places responsibility to issue
a finished product certificate for
imported products on the IOR, and the
definition tracks the parties eligible to
be an IOR in the Tariff Act, as amended.
However, to address additional
comments stating that an IOR
authorized to make entry for a
shipment, such as a broker, may not
have sufficient knowledge of the
consumer products to be held
responsible for testing and certification,
the definition of ‘‘importer’’ in the Final
Rule provides that an authorized broker
may identify the owner, purchaser, or
consignee of the finished products who
authorized the customs broker to make
entry, as the party responsible for
compliance with CPSC certificate
requirements, as part of the certificate
data filed in CPSC’s PGA Message Set.
Accordingly, a broker may identify the
party responsible for certification by
filing CPSC’s required PGA Message Set
in ACE, and the Message Set should
identify the finished product certifier as
part of the certificate data required in
§ 1110.11(a)(3) of this Final Rule. This
owner, purchaser, or consignee that
authorized a broker to file entry is the
party that CPSC would expect to have
sufficient knowledge of the products
being imported and understand that
such finished products must now
comply with U.S. laws and regulations,
including compliance with CPSC’s
testing and certification requirements.18
Additionally, the Final Rule clarifies
that for finished products imported by
mail, or for which a de minimis duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C)
is claimed, the importer for purposes of
CPSC’s certificate requirements is a
party eligible to make entry for the
finished products pursuant to CBP
statutes and regulations, who may be an
owner, purchaser, consignee, or
authorized customs broker.19 Because a
consumer could fall within the
definition of a purchaser or consignee,
the definition of ‘‘importer’’ continues
to state, as proposed, that for purposes
of this rule, CPSC will not typically
consider a consumer purchasing or
receiving products for personal use or
enjoyment to be the importer
responsible for certification.
Manufacturer—For clarity, restates
the statutory definition of
‘‘manufacturer’’ in the regulatory text.
Owner or purchaser—Clarifies that
this definition is only for the purposes
of this rule and simplifies the definition
to mean a party who has a financial
interest in imported finished products
for which CPSC certificate data are
required, including the actual owner of
the merchandise. The definition informs
that an owner or purchaser of the
imported finished products may be held
legally responsible by CPSC for the
required certificate data as set forth in
§ 1110.15. This definition does not
signify which party is eligible to enter
certificate data into ACE but informs the
owner or purchaser that CPSC may hold
them legally responsible for CPSC’s
certificate data as the importer.
Private labeler—For clarity, restates
the statutory definition of ‘‘private
labeler’’ in the regulatory text.
Product Registry—Places the
responsibility to submit data into the
Product Registry on the finished
product certifier, meaning the importer
that is required to issue the finished
product certificate, as specified in
§ 1110.7(a), and who is also required to
eFile the certificate data as set forth in
§ 1110.13(a)(1).20
C. Certificate Content (§ 1110.11)
Requirements for certificate content in
the Final Rule contain the following
changes from the SNPR proposal:
Individual maintaining records
§ 1110.11(a)(4)—Moves the bulleted list
summarizing required testing and
certification records to the
recordkeeping requirement in § 1110.17,
because the data element in
19 Id.
18 We
note that the party that CPSC holds legally
responsible for certificate data does not signify that
this party is responsible for submitting such data
into ACE, given that this party is not necessarily an
IOR or other party eligible to make entry under CBP
statutes and regulations.
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20 Pursuant to § 1110.15, a finished product
certifier can rely on other parties to maintain
records, test, certify products, or enter data into the
Product Registry, but remains legally responsible
for the validity, accuracy, completeness, and
availability of finished product certificates.
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§ 1110.11(a)(4) requires a name and
contact information for the
recordkeeper; thus, the list of potential
records is more appropriately defined in
the Final Rule’s recordkeeping
requirement.
Attestations § 1110.11(a)(7)—Clarifies
that although all certificates require an
attestation, the written attestation only
applies to certificates provided in hard
copy or electronic formats, because
eFiled certificates already address the
attestation requirement through the
Product Registry (Reference Message
Set) and a data element in the Full
Message Set.
Duplicative testing not required
§ 1110.11(d)—Clarifies that the rule’s
provision on duplicative testing is
intended to prevent test laboratories
from conducting the same third party
test multiple times on the same sample
when the same test is required by
overlapping rules.
D. Legal Responsibility of Finished
Product Certifiers (§ 1110.15)
This provision modifies the heading
proposed in the SNPR, changing the
description from ‘‘Legal responsibility
for certificate information’’ to ‘‘Legal
responsibility of finished product
certifiers.’’ This modification better
reflects the content of § 1110.15, which
is broader than just the information on
a certificate and includes requirements
for finished product certifiers when they
rely on other parties to maintain
records, or to submit data into the
Product Registry, test, or certify.
E. Recordkeeping Requirements
(§ 1110.17)
The Final Rule simplifies the
presentation of the recordkeeping
requirements for all finished product
certificates by stating that required
records must be maintained for five
years from the date of creation, as
proposed, and moves the bulleted
recordkeeping requirements previously
contained in § 1110.11(a)(4) to this
section of the rule.
F. Disclaimer Message Sets
The SNPR proposed to require
Disclaimer Message Sets in
§ 1110.13(a)(1) by referencing CPSC’s
PGA Message Set requirements in
CPSC’s CATAIR. As explained in
section IV.F of this preamble, as a
matter of policy and to reduce burden,
1805
CPSC will not require importers to file
a Disclaimer Message Set with CBP for
products that do not require a
certificate. Accordingly, a Disclaimer
Message Set is not required when: (1)
the imported product is not within
CPSC’s jurisdiction; (2) the imported
product is within CPSC’s jurisdiction,
but no rule, ban, standard, or regulation
requiring a certificate applies; (3) the
imported product is a component of a
consumer product that is not packaged,
sold, or held for sale to, or for use by,
consumers, but rather the part will be
used in further assembly or
manufacturing in the United States; or
(4) the imported product is subject to an
enforcement discretion and no
certificate is required. Commission staff
have updated the CPSC’s CATAIR
accordingly.
IV. Response to Comments
This section of the preamble
summarizes and responds to the 47
comments received on the SNPR by
topic. Table 1 contains a key to the
acronyms used to describe each
commenter.
TABLE 1—COMMENTER KEY 21
84 .....
Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
108 ...
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
Tractor Supply Company (TSC)
Tractor Supply Company (TSC)
Tractor Supply Company (TSC)
Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
Galaxy Fireworks, Inc. (Galaxy)
Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
Bureau Veritas (BV)
Alta Cycling Group, LLC (Alta)
American Fireworks Standards Laboratory (AFSL)
National Fireworks Association (NFA)
National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones (NAFTZ)
Toy Association (TA)
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
121
122
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
Informational Technology Industry Council (ITI)
Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association (JPMA)
Outdoor Power Equipment Institute, Inc. (OPEI)
American Pyrotechnics Association (APA)
Ingram Enterprises, Inc. DBA Fireworks
Over America and Affiliated
Companies (FOA) (Comment 120 identical)
Consumer Technology Association (CTA)
UL Solutions (ULS)
American Promotional Events, Inc. d/b/a TNT Fireworks (APE)
Window Covering Manufacturers Association (WCMA)
Winco Fireworks International LLC (WFI)
123
124
125
126
127
...
...
...
...
...
National Foreign Trade Council and U.S. Chamber of Commerce (NFTC & USCC)
The Boppy Company, LLC (Boppy)
Newell Brands Inc. (Newell)
American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA)
PeopleForBikes Coalition (PeopleForBikes)
The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM)
Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA)
Law Offices of Steven W Hansen (Hansen)
Lighter Association (LA)
Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
Writing Instrument Manufacturer’s Association (WIMA)
Promotional Products Association International (PPAI)
National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones (NAFTZ)
National Customs Brokers and Forwarders Association of
America, Inc. (NCBFAA)
IKEA
IKEA
Informational Technology Industry Council (ITI)
Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA)
National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones (NAFTZ)
128
129
130
131
...
...
...
...
National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones (NAFTZ)
National Fireworks Association (NFA)
IKEA
Express Association of America (EAA)
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
.....
98 .....
99 .....
100 ...
101 ...
102, ..
120 ...
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103
104
105
106
107
...
...
...
...
...
A. Procedural Comments
Comment 1: Several commenters
(Galaxy (90), JPMA (99), NAM (113),
21 The commenter key is based on the document
ID that was assigned to the comment upon
submission to the Federal Register docket of the
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RILA (114), and NCBFAA (122)) argue
that the SNPR was proposed
prematurely, because CPSC assertedly
did not benefit from outcomes and
feedback from Beta Pilot participants;
SNPR. Several commenters submitted comments in
separate submissions and were assigned multiple
IDs. Acronyms and abbreviations for easier
reference of each commenter are in parentheses.
Comments on the SNPR begin with comment
number 84.
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these commenters noted general
concern about the impact of eFiling.
Response 1: When drafting the SNPR,
CPSC benefited from the outcomes and
feedback from comments to the 2013
NPR, the Alpha Pilot conducted in
2016, the Certificate Study conducted in
2017, preparation and development for
the Beta Pilot in 2023, and the initial
months of the Beta Pilot. Furthermore,
CPSC is drawing upon outcomes and
feedback from the Beta Pilot
participants in the Final Rule,
specifically with respect to
consideration of the effective date of the
Final Rule and finalizing the eFiling
burden analysis in sections VII and VIII
of this preamble. Finally, while the Beta
Pilot tests the mechanics of eFiling and
practical considerations, it does not
impact the Final Rule’s basic
requirement to eFile certificates.
Comment 2: Hansen (115) states that
the bicycle industry has not received
sufficient information about the eFiling
proposal, and that the SNPR was
sudden, considering the 10-year lapse
between the NPR and the SNPR. Hansen
complains that no company from the
bicycle industry is participating in the
Beta Pilot and that it will take many
months to set up testing laboratories
around the world and hire people to
manage the new data requirements.
Response 2: Because more than 10
years have passed since the NPR was
published in 2013, the Commission
issued the SNPR to provide additional
opportunity for notice and comment
and to describe proposed requirements
for the revisions to part 1110 based on
the Commission’s efforts since 2013 to
advance eFiling. The SNPR recounts
such efforts, including the Alpha Pilot
in 2016 and a Certificate Study in 2017.
88 FR 85760, 85762–62. The
Commission voted in December 2020 to
approve staff’s recommended fourphased approach to create an eFiling
program at CPSC 22 and began recruiting
for the Beta Pilot on June 10, 2022 (87
FR 35513). CPSC conducted the Beta
Pilot with 37 participants from October
2023 to June 2024. Most recently, CPSC
announced expansion of the Beta Pilot
test on June 4, 2024 (89 FR 47922).
CPSC has also conducted extensive
outreach via public events, such as a
workshop held on October 13, 2022 (87
FR 48162 (Aug. 8, 2022)), and
communication with a variety of trade
organizations.23 CPSC provided
22 Record of Commission Action available at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-CPSC-Planto-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-ImportedConsumer-Products.pdf.
23 Section XI of the October 30, 2024: Staff
Briefing Memorandum: Draft Final Rule to Revise
16 CFR part 1110 for Certificates of Compliance and
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industry with a wealth of information
about the Beta Pilot and eFiling and
provided numerous notices and
opportunities for bicycle importers to
participate; bicycle importers can still
participate in the expanded Beta Pilot.
Lastly, the Final Rule requires eFiling of
certificates that bicycle importers are
already responsible for creating and
maintaining; the Final Rule does not
add new testing-related data
requirements for certificates and does
not require the bicycle industry to set
up additional testing laboratories or
change their testing processes.
B. Effective Date
Comment 3: Many commenters (TSC
(87), BV (92), Alta (93), TA (97), ITI (98),
JPMA (99), OPEI (100), WCMA (106),
NFTC & USCC (108), Newell (110),
AAFA (111), NAM (113), RILA (114,
126), Hansen (115), LA (116), Comverex
(117), NAFTZ (127), EAA (131), and
IKEA (123, 130)) argue that an effective
date of 120 days after publication of the
Final Rule, as proposed, is inadequate
and recommend a longer
implementation period, ranging from six
to 24 months. The NCBFAA (122)
expresses concern about slow
participation by importers and potential
system bugs in development.24 The TA
(97) specifically recommends a
staggered phase-in period once the
effective date has elapsed. Commenters
argue that an extended implementation
period would allow industry to
implement the new changes, including
organizing resources, hiring data
personnel, integrating internal
technological systems, onboarding to
the eFiling system, reviewing existing
compliance programs, developing
internal procedures, and completing
additional legal agreements between
parties to assign certification
responsibilities.
The AAFA (111) states that an interim
manual entry process, which CPSC did
not propose, is not feasible for most
importers, because it would require
to Implement eFiling (Final Rule SBP), contains a
list of staff outreach and engagement efforts since
2013 regarding CPSC’s eFiling initiative. This list
demonstrates at least 121 staff engagements on
eFiling in the last 3 years.
24 During the Beta Pilot, between October 16,
2023 and June 30, 2024, the eFiling support team
provided real-time support using the Beta Pilot
Support Mailbox. The support team responded to
287 Tier 1 (basic troubleshooting, policy, and
process) incidents and 153 Tier 2 (advanced
technical issues) incidents with an average
resolution time of 21 hours. CPSC expects to have
a fully staffed service desk to assist with the
expanded Beta Pilot. Additionally, during the Beta
Pilot CPSC reviewed and assessed participant
feedback, analyzed their needs to adjust the eFiling
program, and implemented changes where needed.
CPSC will continue to incorporate participant
feedback throughout the eFiling voluntary stage.
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significant staff time. Commenters
recommend that CPSC host additional
workshops and training. IKEA (123,
130) claims that to secure a stable and
resilient supply chain, message sets
need to be ready at least three months
prior to import, suppliers require four
months to update their systems, each
new product requires at least 6 months
to mitigate any deviations from eFiling
requirements, and one month to correct
errors in the data flow. IKEA (130)
asserts that eFiling requires many
months of preparation with suppliers,
vendors, and brokers, recommending a
24-month effective date and a phased
approach to implementation. NAFTZ
(127) and EAA (131) recommend an
effective date of at least one year or
longer.
Response 3: Based on CPSC’s
experience with Beta Pilot, the
Commission agrees with the
commenters that additional time is
warranted for importers and their trade
partners to prepare for full
implementation of eFiling. Accordingly,
the Final Rule provides an effective date
of 18 months after publication of the
Final Rule, as described in section VI of
the preamble, to implement eFiling for
all entry types except products entered
for consumption or warehousing from
an FTZ, which will have a 24-month
effective date. This timeline is based on
comments received on the SNPR and
feedback from Beta Pilot participants
and their trade partners. CPSC will also
consider hosting additional workshops
and trainings before and during
implementation of the eFiling
requirement and will update guidance
materials as needed on CPSC’s eFiling
document library, available at https://
cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
Finally, to allow importers and the
Commission time to test and plan for
full implementation of eFiling, the
Commission is expanding the Beta Pilot
test to include up to 2,000 additional
participants, as described in a June 4,
2024, Federal Register notice. 89 FR
47922. Importers can apply to
participate in the expanded Beta Pilot as
stated in this notice. Id.
Comment 4: WCMA (106) alleges that
the 120-day implementation period in
the SNPR conflicts with the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI)/
WCMA 2022 custom window covering
safety standard (effective June 1, 2024)
and the approaching conclusion of the
Reese’s Law discretionary enforcement
period (on March 19, 2024). WCMA
(106) states that the window covering
industry will have to adapt to new
compliance requirements, while being
unfamiliar with the eFiling system.
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Response 4: The Commission
published 16 CFR part 1263 on
September 21, 2023 (88 FR 65274; 88 FR
65296) to implement Reese’s Law, 15
U.S.C. 2056e, which required the
Commission to issue a rule providing
performance and labeling requirements
for consumer products that contain
button cell or coin batteries, to eliminate
or adequately reduce the risk of injury
associated with children 6 years old and
younger ingesting these batteries. 15
U.S.C. 2056e(a)(1). Some motorized
window coverings contain button cell or
coin batteries.
The effective date of this Final Rule,
as revised, will occur about one and a
half years after the effective date of
Reese’s Law requirements for consumer
products containing button or coin cell
batteries. As of September 2024, testing
and certification of consumer products
containing button cell or coin batteries
has been in effect for six months.
Accordingly, the 18-month effective
date of the Final Rule will provide
window covering manufacturers and
importers with sufficient time to comply
with testing, certification, and eFiling
requirements.
Comment 5: Comverex (84) expresses
concern about the proposed 120-day
effective date, believing that test data
that is typically valid for 365 days
would need to be reconducted in 245
days (365 days¥120 days = 245 days)
to allow test laboratories to automate
test data submission into the Product
Registry. Comverex states that a 120-day
effective date would require testing to
be obtained up to 245 days in advance
of publication of the Final Rule,
potentially requiring importers to
reconduct testing or to coordinate
obtaining the necessary data from
previously issued test reports.
Response 5: Certificate data entered
into the Product Registry are the
responsibility of the importer, who can
allow a testing laboratory to submit test
data into the Product Registry on their
behalf. The decision to rely on a testing
laboratory for data entry is at the
discretion of the importer. The premise
of Comverex’s concern, that test data
must be entered at the time of testing,
is incorrect; in fact, importers or their
trade partners can enter test data into
the Product Registry at any time before
importation of the product, including
testing conducted before the effective
date of the Final Rule. Based on
comments and the experience of Beta
Pilot participants, the Final Rule now
has a 18-month effective date, which
also obviates Comverex’s concern. Note
that if an importer participates in the
expanded Beta Pilot, the importer can
begin submitting certificate data into the
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Product Registry before the effective
date of the Final Rule.
C. Section 1110.3 Definitions
Comment 6: Several commenters (Alta
(93), TA (97), Newell (110),
PeopleForBikes (112), and Hansen
(115)) oppose expanding the definition
of a ‘‘finished product’’ in § 1110.3 to
include replacement parts. These
commenters argue that replacement
parts are effectively covered by
certification for the full finished product
and are not tracked independently, so it
would be burdensome to create and
track certificates for replacement parts.
Furthermore, a change to any
replacement part would be considered a
‘‘material change’’ and trigger retesting
under an existing regulation. Lastly,
commenters state that component parts
are imported in bulk and the importer
has no way of knowing whether the
parts are intended for domestic
assembly, repair shops, or retail
customers. Commenters state that this
differs from parts sold with the intent
that they may be assembled to create
some larger item or ensemble, like doll
accessories for toys.
Additionally, PeopleForBikes (112)
and Hansen (115) write that CPSC’s
example that a handlebar sold as a
replacement part requires a certificate is
incorrect, because 16 CFR part 1512
(part 1512) is a complete product
standard and the handlebar must meet
the requirements in part 1512 after
assembly into complete bicycles.
PeopleForBikes (112) notes that in
response to comment 63 on the 2013
NPR, CPSC indicated that parts of a
bicycle could be tested and certified.
The commenter states that CPSC
provided as an example replacement
handbrakes, which the commenter
asserts cannot be tested individually,
but are covered under 16 CFR 1512.5.
Hansen (115) states that importers will
not know whether a part, such as
handlebars, will be used on a child’s
bike or not, and requests documentation
that CPSC has previously stated that
replacement bicycle parts must be tested
to part 1512.
JPMA (99) and NAM (113) claim the
proposed rule does not clearly define
‘‘component parts’’ and ‘‘component
part certificates.’’ These commenters
state that CPSC should clarify that
certification is only required for
component or replacement parts if they
are sold as fully independent, finished,
packaged consumer products subject to
a specific applicable regulation. The
OPEI (100) seeks clarity as to whether
replacement shields for power mowers
(as defined in 16 CFR part 1205.3)
require separate testing and certificates
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1807
if sold to consumers as replacement
parts.
Response 6: In the Final Rule, CPSC
amends the definition of ‘‘finished
product’’ and adds guidance in sections
V.B and V.C of this preamble to clarify
when a part of a consumer product is
considered a finished product. As
defined in 16 CFR part 1109 and this
revised part 1110, a ‘‘component part’’
is not, by definition, a finished product
that requires certification. A component
of a consumer product only requires
testing and certification if the part itself
is: (1) packaged, sold, or held for sale to,
or use by, consumers (in which case it
is a finished product); (2) regulated by
the Commission, meaning the part is
specifically regulated and not regulated
as a subsection of a final product
standard; and (3) imported for
consumption or warehousing or
distributed into commerce. To be a
finished product, components must be
sold independently, packaged for a
consumer, or intended for use by a
consumer.
CPSC incorrectly stated in the SNPR
that bicycle handbrakes sold separately
would require a certificate. The
commenter is correct that 16 CFR part
1512, as applied to non-children’s
products, is a finished product standard
and the individual components are
tested as part of the finished product.
Imported replacement parts for bicycles,
power mowers, or any non-children’s
product covered by a finished product
regulation are not subject to the eFiling
requirement unless a regulation applies
to the part, as sold. However, a part of
a children’s product that is sold
separately to consumers may be subject
to third party testing for CPSC rules
such as lead content, lead in paint, or
small parts. Lastly, per 16 CFR part
1109, a certifier can use component part
testing and certification to certify a
finished product, where applicable.
Comment 7: Several commenters
(JPMA (99), NFTC & USCC (108), AAFA
(111), NAM (113), and RILA (114))
disagree with the proposed expanded
definition of ‘‘importer’’ and urge using
‘‘importer of record (IOR),’’ as proposed
in the 2013 NPR. Commenters claim
that the industry is already familiar with
the definition of IOR and the expanded
definition will add complexity and
ambiguity to who is responsible for
eFiling certificate data. Commenters
argue that multiple entities may be held
responsible, or that retailers may be
improperly authorized to certify
products. JPMA (99) and NAM (113)
assert that the definition of ‘‘importer’’
cannot be changed, because it is already
legislatively defined, and the SNPR is
contrary to the plain language of the
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CPSA that specifies manufacturers as
the required certifier.
Response 7: The 2013 NPR proposed
to define ‘‘importer’’ as the ‘‘importer of
record as defined under the Tariff Act
of 1930 (19 U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B))’’ 78 FR
28080, 28107. The 2023 SNPR proposed
to broaden the definition to include the
importer of record, consignee, or owner,
purchaser, or party that has a financial
interest in the product or substance
being offered for import and effectively
caused the product or substance to be
imported into the United States. 88 FR
85760, 85789. For the Final Rule, the
Commission agrees with the
commenters that identifying a specific
party responsible for certifying
imported, finished products helps to
clarify the party responsible for
complying with CPSC’s certificate
requirements and ensures that
certificate data is eFiled at entry.
Accordingly, the Final Rule clarifies
that, as proposed in the 2013 NPR and
consistent with the SNPR and the
comments received, for purposes of this
rule, the ‘‘importer’’ means the importer
of record (IOR) eligible to make entry for
imported finished products under the
Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19
U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an
owner, purchaser, or authorized
customs broker.
The Final Rule also addresses the
concerns of commenters stating that an
IOR authorized to make entry for a
shipment, such as a broker, may not
have sufficient knowledge of the
consumer products to be held
responsible for testing and certification.
Accordingly, the definition of
‘‘importer’’ in the Final Rule provides
that an authorized broker may identify
the owner, purchaser, or consignee of
the finished products who authorized
the customs broker to make entry, as the
party responsible for compliance with
CPSC certificate requirements. A broker
would identify such party by eFiling
certificate data using CPSC’s PGA
Message Set, which will identify the
finished product certifier responsible for
product certification, as required in
§ 1110.11(a)(3).
If identified as the finished product
certifier in the PGA Message Set data,
the owner, purchaser, or consignee that
authorized the broker to file entry is the
party that CPSC would expect to have
sufficient knowledge of the finished
products being imported and
understand that such products must
now comply with U.S. laws and
regulations, including compliance with
CPSC’s testing and certification
requirements. We note that the party
that CPSC holds legally responsible for
certificate data does not mean that this
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party is responsible for submitting such
data into ACE, because this party may
not be the IOR for the shipment or be
another party eligible to make entry
under CBP statutes and regulations.
Thus, the Final Rule definition of
‘‘importer’’ is consistent with the parties
identified in the NPR and the SNPR and
addresses commenters concerns by
requiring the IOR to comply with
CPSC’s certificate requirements, but
allowing an IOR who is an authorized
broker to identify the owner, purchaser,
or consignee of the finished products
who authorized the customs broker to
make entry, as the party responsible for
compliance with CPSC certificate
requirements. However, for finished
products regulated by CPSC that are
required to be accompanied by a
certificate, if an authorized customs
broker fails to submit a PGA Message
Set containing CPSC’s certificate data
elements to identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee responsible for
product certification,25 CPSC can hold
such a broker legally responsible for
certificate data as set forth in
§ 1110.15.26 Practically speaking, a
broker will receive from the owner,
purchaser, or consignee authorizing
entry, either the Unique ID for the
Reference PGA Message Set, linking
certificate data in the Product Registry
with the shipment, or all certificate data
elements for submitting the Full PGA
Message Set at entry.
The Final Rule also clarifies, for
purposes of this rule, the importer who
is legally responsible for CPSC’s
certificate data for finished products
that must be accompanied by a
certificate that are imported by mail, or
for which a de minimis duty exemption
under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is
claimed. These shipments do not have
an IOR. The ‘‘importer’’ definition in the
Final Rule specifies that for finished
products imported by mail, or for which
a de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed, the
importer for purposes of CPSC’s
certificate requirement is a party eligible
to make entry for the merchandise
pursuant to CBP statutes and
regulations, who may be an owner,
purchaser, consignee, or authorized
customs broker. The Final Rule defines
‘‘owner or purchaser’’ and ‘‘consignee’’
25 Section 1110.11(a)(3) of the Final Rule requires
that the certificate identify the finished product
certifier that is certifying compliance of the finished
product(s), as set forth in § 1110.7, including the
party’s name, street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region, electronic mail
(email) address, and telephone number.
26 A licensed customs broker is required to
exercise responsible supervision and control over
the customs business that it conducts. 19 U.S.C.
1641(b)(4).
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consistent with the SNPR but
simplified. An authorized broker may
identify the owner, purchaser, or
consignee that authorized entry as the
finished product certifier in a PGA
Message Set for a de minimis shipment
as well. Because a consumer could fall
within the definition of a purchaser or
consignee, the definition of ‘‘importer’’
continues to state, as proposed, that for
purposes of this rule, CPSC will not
typically consider a consumer
purchasing or receiving products for
personal use or enjoyment to be the
importer responsible for certification.
The assertion by JPMA (99) and NAM
(113) that the plain language of the
CPSA specifies a manufacturer as the
required certifier is incorrect and comes
16 years after the CPSC first required
importers to certify imported consumer
products in the existing 1110 rule,
effective November 18, 2008. 73 FR
68328. Section 3(a)(11) of CPSA defines
a manufacturer as ‘‘any person who
manufactures or imports a consumer
product.’’ The CPSA does not define
‘‘importer,’’ and, pursuant to the
implementing authority in section 3 of
the CPSIA, CPSC has the authority to
define ‘‘importer’’ for the purposes of
this rule, and to effectuate the statutory
authority to require electronic filing of
certificates in section 14(g)(4) of the
CPSA. Moreover, CPSC has the
authority to designate the certifier
pursuant to section 14(a)(4) of the
CPSA, which states that when a product
has more than one manufacturer or
private labeler, the Commission may by
rule designate one or more of such
entities as the certifier and exempt the
others. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(4).
Accordingly, the Commission’s 1107
and 1109 rules both rely on the
requirement for importers to certify
imported consumer products, and these
rules have been effective since 2013 and
2011, respectively. 76 FR 69482
(November 8, 2011) (finalizing part
1107); 76 FR 69546 (November 8, 2011)
(finalizing part 1109). To address
importer concerns, for more than 13
years part 1109 has allowed importers,
or any finished product certifier, to rely
on another party’s testing or
certification, such as a manufacturer’s,
to issue their own finished product
certificate, provided the finished
product certifier meets the requirements
in part 1109.
Comment 8: The NFTC and USCC
(108) are concerned that the proposed
definition of ‘‘importer’’ would result in
a ‘‘diffusion of responsibility’’ across all
parties in the transaction of the
shipment, resulting in confusion. These
commenters propose that the IOR must
eFile the certificate, but another
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specified entity could prepare the
certificate, which could either be (1) an
entity that by mutual agreement is
responsible for preparing the certificate,
or (2) in the absence of agreement, a
hierarchy of entities within the
proposed definition of ‘‘importer.’’
Commenters state that in this case, if the
IOR does not have the requisite
knowledge to prepare the certificate,
another specified entity with direct
knowledge of the facts underlying the
certificate could be responsible for its
preparation.
The NCBFAA (122) questions why the
definition of ‘‘importer’’ specifically
highlights customs brokers, because
they are already subsumed in the
definition of IOR. They argue that this
adds confusion, because the customs
broker will rarely assume legal
responsibility for certification. The
NCBFAA (122) urges CPSC to make it
clear that a customs broker or other nonbeneficial owner will never be the
responsible importer by default merely
due to their role in the import process,
and to distinguish those roles.
Response 8: As described in response
to comment 7 and in section V.B of this
preamble, the Final Rule revises the
definition of ‘‘importer’’ proposed in the
SNPR, agreeing in part with the
commenters. The NFTC and USCC (108)
request that CPSC identify the IOR as
the importer but allow for another
specified party to be responsible in case
the IOR does not have the requisite
knowledge to prepare the certificate. As
stated in response to comment 7, the
Final Rule specifies that the IOR is the
importer responsible for certification of
a finished product. However, if the IOR
is an authorized customs broker, the
broker may identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee that authorized
entry, as the party responsible for
CPSC’s certificate requirements, as part
of the eFiled certificate data. If the
required certificate data is not eFiled,
CPSC can hold the broker legally
responsible as set forth in § 1110.15.
The revised definition limits
confusion by specifying the IOR as the
importer, while also addressing broker
concerns about not having sufficient
detailed knowledge about the consumer
products being imported to issue a
certificate, by allowing the broker to
specify the owner, purchaser, or
consignee that authorized the broker to
make entry. Use of the Product Registry
will aid brokers in obtaining the
requisite certificate information for
eFiling. Practically speaking, a broker
can identify the finished product
certifier responsible for certification
either by ensuring complete certificate
data is filed in a Full Message Set,
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including the required ‘‘certifying
entity’’ in § 1110.11(a)(3), or when
stating the ‘‘certifier ID’’ for the
Reference Message Set.
Comment 9: The TA (97) claims that
the proposed importer definition does
not adequately fulfill CPSC’s stated
intention to include products that are
‘‘imported as a mail shipment.’’
Response 9: As proposed in the SNPR,
§ 1110.13(a)(1) of the Final Rule requires
that mail shipments containing finished
products that are required to be
accompanied by a certificate submit the
finished product certificate data
elements required in § 1110.11 into
CPSC’s Product Registry before arrival
of the shipment in the United States.
Mail shipments do not have an IOR.
Accordingly, in response to the TA (97),
CPSC adds a clarifying sentence to the
definition of ‘‘importer’’ stating that for
the purposes of this rule, the importer
for purposes of CPSC’s certificate
requirements is a party eligible to make
entry for the finished products pursuant
to CBP statutes and regulations, who
may be an owner, purchaser, consignee,
or authorized customs broker.
Comment 10: The PPAI (119)
disagrees with the proposed ‘‘importer’’
definition and claims that the proposed
new definition will render distributors
primarily responsible for certification,
instead of the suppliers as it is today.
The PPAI (119) states that the proposed
rule would require distributors to retest
the same product for individual orders,
causing problems for companies with
multiple ‘‘operating as’’ or ‘‘dba’’
designations, and uncertainty when a
customs broker is involved.
Response 10: The Final Rule does not
disrupt CPSC’s current testing and
certification requirements. As is
currently the case, importers are the
finished product certifiers that must
certify imported finished products.
However, since 2011, importers have
been able to rely on a supplier’s testing
or certification to issue their own
finished product certificates, as allowed
by 16 CFR part 1109. The Product
Registry aids in this process by allowing
an importer to give a supplier
permission to upload certificate data
into the Product Registry, and to certify
such data, on their behalf. However, as
set forth in § 1110.15, the importer, who
is the defined finished product certifier
in § 1110.7, remains legally responsible
for the information in a finished product
certificate, including its validity,
accuracy, completeness, and
availability.
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D. Section 1110.5
To Be Certified
1809
Products Required
Comment 11: ULS (104) supports
CPSC’s focus on products required to be
certified and the content of the
certificates to be eFiled. Specifically,
ULS (104) agrees with the proposed
language for § 1110.5 and CPSC’s efforts
to make this process as efficient as
possible for users by listing the
applicable rules in the eFiling system.
Response 11: CPSC retains the
proposed § 1110.5 in the Final Rule.
Comment 12: JPMA (99) agrees with
the proposed § 1110.5 clarification that
certificates are only required for
finished products. However, JPMA (99)
also writes that proposed § 1110.5
requires greater definition to reflect that
the manufacturing of finished products
may involve multiple productions of
identical products or variations unique
to different customers that rely upon
baseline certificates.
Response 12: Finished product
certifiers may rely on applicable
component part test reports,
certification of component parts of
consumer products, or finished product
testing or certification procured or
issued by another party, per 16 CFR part
1109. However, the finished product
certifier must still issue its own
certificate, either based on their own
testing, or by relying on the underlying
test reports and certificates from other
parties, such as a manufacturer. As
described in response to comment 11,
the Product Registry aids in this process
by allowing an importer to give their
trade partners the ability to upload and
certify data on their behalf.
E. Section 1110.7
Products
Who Must Certify
Comment 13: Two commenters
(AAFA (111) and RILA (114)) prefer the
language in § 1110.7 of the existing 1110
rule, which requires importers and
domestic manufacturers to issue
certificates for imported and
domestically manufactured products,
respectively. The commenters argue that
these entities are better suited for
compliance than a private labeler,
because importers and domestic
manufacturers are most knowledgeable
of the product design and
manufacturing process, including
sourcing of materials, rather than the
private labeler, even if the private
labeler has influence on the product.
Commenters further claim that CPSC
provided no indication that the existing
certification process is not effectively
protecting consumers and that the
proposed change would improve safety.
RILA (114) raises concerns regarding the
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statement in the SNPR that ‘‘CPSC can
enforce the certificate requirement
against an importer or a private labeler,
even if neither firm is the entity
submitting the required certificate data’’
(88 FR 85790), because the current
allocation of responsibility amongst
domestic manufacturers and importers
appropriately ensures the products are
certified prior to entering commerce.
Three commenters (TA (97), JPMA
(99), and NAM (113)) do not support the
requirement that each importer is
responsible for submitting certificate
information for imported products.
Instead, these commenters assert that
responsibility should fall on the product
manufacturer or private labeler, unless
unavailable, in which case the importer
of record would be reasonably expected
to certify. The TA (97) asserts that CPSC
is not recognizing the real-world supply
chain, where multiple importers may
source from the same independent
manufacturer, who would ultimately be
responsible for product compliance.
JPMA (99) cites the CPSA that ‘‘every
manufacturer [. . .] shall issue a
certificate.’’ JPMA (99) and NAM (113)
further request that the rule clearly state
that downstream customers of
manufacturers and private labelers may
rely on such certificates without having
to independently file duplicative
certificates. JPMA (99) believes that
certification should be permitted from a
corporate representative.
Response 13: Pursuant to section
3(a)(11) of the CPSA, the term
‘‘manufacturer’’ means ‘‘any person who
manufactures or imports a consumer
product.’’ To address commenter
confusion, the Final Rule restates this
statutory definition in § 1110.3. Based
on this definition, importers have been
responsible for certifying imported
products since promulgation of the
original part 1110 rule in 2008. 73 FR
68328, 68331 (Nov. 18, 2008). CPSC
understands that manufacturers supply
products to different importers.
Accordingly, since 2011, under 16 CFR
part 1109, importers have been able to
rely upon testing and certification
conducted by another party, including a
manufacturer or private labeler, to issue
their own product certificates. 76 FR
69546, 69580 (Nov. 8, 2011). Therefore,
as explained in section V.D of this
preamble, CPSC maintains the existing
requirements, and as re-proposed in the
SNPR, that the importer be responsible
for certifying imported products.
Importers are in the best position to
certify imported consumer products
because importers know when a
consumer product is imported into the
United States and must comply with
U.S. laws and regulations, and
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importers are responsible for ensuring
that imported products comply with all
applicable requirements. We note that
CPSC generally holds responsible for
certification the party responsible for
importation, and not an individual
representing a certifying party.
For imported privately labeled
products, a private labeler can certify a
product if the private labeler falls
within the definition of ‘‘importer,’’ as
defined in § 1110.3. For privately
labeled domestically manufactured
products, the private labeler either must
certify the products, or ensure that the
manufacturer has certified the products.
Based on commenters’ apparent
confusion regarding when a product is
privately labeled, § 1110.3 of the Final
Rule restates the statutory definition of
‘‘private labeler,’’ to reiterate that a
privately labeled product has no
manufacturer information on the
product or packaging. In that case,
neither consumers nor CPSC know
whether any other party, besides the
private labeler, is responsible for
manufacturing or distributing the
product. CPSC appropriately places
testing and certifying requirements on
the private labeler in this scenario.
However, when a manufacturer’s name
is on the product or packaging, the
product is not privately labeled, and the
manufacturer is responsible for
certifying.
Lastly, we reiterate that pursuant to
16 CFR part 1109, any party responsible
for testing and certification can rely on
component part test reports, finished
product test reports, certification of
component parts of consumer products,
or finished product certifications that
are procured or issued by another party,
such as a manufacturer or private
labeler. However, the finished product
certifier, such as an importer, must still
issue their own certificate. As described
in response to comment 11, for
importers, the Product Registry aids in
this process by allowing an importer to
give their trade partners the ability to
upload and certify data on their behalf.
However, the importer remains legally
responsible for the certificate as stated
in § 1110.15.
F. Section 1110.9 Certificate Language
and Format
Comment 14: JPMA (99) agrees with
§ 1110.9 of the existing rule, which
provides that certificates may be in hard
copy or electronic form and must be
provided in English, but may also be
provided in any other language. JPMA
(99) disagrees with proposed format
requirements for electronic certificates
in § 1110.9(c), stating that a unique
identifier that can be accessed online
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via an URL or other electronic means be
identified prominently because the
product packaging is already often
cluttered.
Response 14: Section 1110.9(c)
regarding electronic certificates only
applies to domestically manufactured
products, not to imported products
where eFiling is required. The SNPR did
not propose to require that the unique
identifier be provided only on consumer
packaging. Rather, the SNPR proposed
that a unique identifier be identified
prominently on the finished product,
shipping carton, or invoice. The
requirement for a unique identifier that
is available via a URL or other electronic
means is not a new concept; this option
has been in the existing part 1110 since
2008. The Commission maintains
§ 1110.9(c) of the SNPR in the Final
Rule, because the proposal provides
three options for certifiers, stating that
‘‘an electronic certificate meets the
[availability] requirements of
§ 1110.13(b) and (c) if it is identified
prominently on the finished product,
shipping carton, or invoice by a unique
identifier. . . .’’ Hard copy certificates,
such as PDF and paper certificates,
remain an option for domestically
manufactured products pursuant to
§ 1110.9(b).
Comment 15: JPMA (99) requests that
CPSC affirmatively allow for password
protection in § 1110.9 to maintain the
confidentiality of proprietary
competitively sensitive information.
Response 15: The SNPR proposed to
allow for password protection of
certificates in § 1110.9(c), which
primarily applies to electronic
certificates for domestically
manufactured products. CPSC maintains
this allowance in the Final Rule, stating
‘‘[i]f the electronic certificate is
password protected, the password must
be provided at the same time as the
certificate when requested by CPSC or
CBP.’’
G. Section 1110.11 Certificate Content
Comment 16: JPMA (99) argues that
the unique ID and description required
in the SNPR should be permissible and
not mandatory, because eFiling should
be optional.
Response 16: The Final Rule requires
eFiling for imported products that are
regulated by CPSC. This is necessary to
achieve the objectives of eFiling,
including enabling more effective
targeting of violative imported products.
The Final Rule also maintains the
proposal in § 1110.11(a)(1) for the
unique ID and product description for
all certificates, for domestic and
imported products, so that CPSC can
better track certificates and match them
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to consumer products, including
certificates received in person, through
email, through the Product Registry, and
through the RAM (Full PGA Message
Set).
Comment 17: The AAFA (111) states
that the product descriptions on
customs documents, which are for
clarity of Harmonized Tariff Schedule
(HTS) codes, may not match the
descriptions on certificates.
Response 17: CPSC recognizes that
the product descriptions on customs
documents and certificates may not
match. HTS codes can be very broad
and capture many different products
under one code. For this reason, the
SNPR proposed that certificates contain
‘‘a sufficient description to match the
finished product to the certificate.’’ This
requirement, as finalized in this rule,
allows staff to determine whether the
attached certificate describes the
product being examined.
Comment 18: The WCMA (106) writes
that custom cordless window coverings
historically have not been subject to
CPSC rules that require testing and
certification, and therefore have not
been assigned unique identification
codes. To comply with this SNPR and
the Reese’s Law Direct Final Rule (88 FR
65274 (Sept. 21, 2023)), WCMA states,
the window covering industry will need
to invest significant resources in
upgrading software systems and
manufacturing processes to permanently
affix or imprint a new unique product
identifier.
Response 18: Window covering
requirements in 16 CFR part 1120 do
not require testing and certification,
however, window coverings that
contain a button cell or coin battery are
required to meet 16 CFR part 1263,
which requires testing and certification
of the battery compartment. Nothing in
the SNPR or this Final Rule requires a
product identifier that distinguishes
between products that contain a button
battery and those that do not, or that
products permanently affix or imprint
such a product identifier on the
product. Existing model numbers that
are placed on the certificate and found
somewhere on the product, shipping
carton, or invoice, that assist CPSC to
match certificates with a product, are
sufficient. Note that eFiled certificates
for imported window coverings will
already be matched to the shipment
using CPSC’s PGA Message Set. Only
electronic certificates for domestically
manufactured products need to meet
§ 1110.9(c).
Comment 19: Several commenters
(Boppy (109), Newell (110), LA (116),
WIMA (118)) disagree with the
requirement of providing the
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manufacturer’s name, street address,
and contact information, because this
information is highly confidential and
public disclosure could severely impact
business operations. Boppy (109) is
further concerned whether eFiled
certificates will be placed in a publicly
searchable database or available through
a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request. A commenter states that in the
event CPSC requires the name of the
foreign manufacturer, then the
Commission could always request that
the information be provided with a
CPSA section 6(a) submission.
Several commenters (AFSL (94), NFA
(95), APA (101), FOA (102), APE (105))
argue that the manufacturer email
address and phone number should not
be provided, because in the fireworks
industry, this information is protected
by a ‘‘middleman’’ to prevent customers
from purchasing directly from the
source. By requiring this information,
importers risk losing their current
relationship.
The AAFA (111) states that the
expansion to the full mailing address is
unnecessary and duplicative, because
the customs documentation already
contains the country of origin and
foreign manufacturer information on
entry documents and the certificate has
contact information.
Two commenters (TSC (85 and RILA
(114)) argue against including the
manufacturer email address and phone
number, because those contacts could
be unreliable, including potential
language barriers, and the contact may
change frequently. RILA (114)
recommends CPSC first contact the IOR
or the Product Registry Business
Account Administrator before
contacting the manufacturer.
Response 19: As explained in section
V.F of this preamble, CPSC maintains
the requirement for certifiers to provide
the manufacturer’s name, street address,
email address, and phone number,
because this is consistent with section
14(g)(1) of the CPSA, which requires
that each certificate contain ‘‘each
party’s name, full mailing address, [and]
telephone number.’’ We also note that
section 16(c)(1) of the CPSA (15 U.S.C.
2065(c)(1)), requires that when
requested by a ‘‘duly designated’’ CPSC
employee, every importer, retailer, or
distributor of a consumer product must
identify the manufacturer of that
product by name, address, or such other
identifying information as the officer or
employee may request, to the extent that
such information is known or can be
readily determined by the importer,
retailer, or distributor. In this case, the
Commission is requesting the
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manufacturer’s name, address, and
contact information by rule.
Accordingly, the Final Rule requires
certifiers to provide the manufacturer
name, full mailing address, phone
number, and email to CPSC on the
certificate. CPSC should not have to
request the information via a section
6(a) submission,27 because these data
elements are statutorily required and
necessary for CPSC’s risk assessment
and targeting. CPSC cannot conduct
effective risk assessments at the ports
without all relevant data points. The
country of origin and foreign
manufacturer information on entry
documents is not sufficient, because
CPSC has a different definition for
‘‘manufacturer’’ than CBP. CBP’s
required ‘‘Manufacturer Identification
Code’’ or ‘‘MID’’ is a code, not a name,
and is not necessarily linked to the
name of the foreign manufacturer. For
example, a MID can identify a foreign
supplier. Compare 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)
(CPSC’s definition of ‘‘manufacturer’’)
with 19 CFR part 102 (explaining how
to construct a MID code for entry
documents).
The certificate data provided is
secured by CPSC and neither the
Product Registry nor RAM are publicly
searchable databases. The Product
Registry has industry-standard security
features like encryption and token
authorization, as further explained in
the response to comment 49. When a
FOIA request is filed, importers,
domestic manufacturers, and private
labelers who are required to issue
certificates are first given the
opportunity to assert confidentiality
before such information is released.
Manufacturer information on a
certificate would not be released
pursuant to a FOIA request as long as
the certifier makes out that the
information is confidential under
section 6(a) of the CPSA.
Certificates must be furnished to
retailers and distributors in accordance
with section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA (15
U.S.C. 2063(g)(3)). Section 1110.13(b) of
the SNPR, which is maintained in the
Final Rule, simply restates this statutory
requirement. However, the Final Rule
does not dictate how a finished product
certifier must furnish a certificate to
retailers and distributors. Certifiers,
retailers, and distributors may decide,
based on business relationships and
needs, how to proceed. For example,
CPSC is aware that some certifiers
redact manufacturer information from
certificates before providing them to
retailers and distributors. As long as
27 See 15 U.S.C. 2055(a) (describing procedures
for potential disclosure of confidential information).
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certificates provided to CPSC are
complete and contain all required
information, CPSC takes no position at
this time on whether manufacturer
information must be provided to third
parties, unless safety or the testing and
certification regime is compromised in
some way.
Contact information for test data in
§ 1110.11(a)(4) may be a generic email
address and telephone number, as long
as it is actively monitored by a
knowledgeable person and the certifying
firm is responsive within 24 hours of
CPSC’s initial contact. Furthermore,
staff will primarily contact the finished
product certifier (who should be the
Business Account Administrator in the
Product Registry) first, but may need to
contact the manufacturer if the certifier
is non-responsive or if staff uncover a
greater product issue with the
manufacturer. Manufacturers often
supply consumer products to more than
one importer, retailer, or distributor.
Comment 20: The ASFL (94) states
that the ‘‘initial date of manufacture’’ in
§ 1110.11(a)(5) is unattainable and
recommends that the manufacturing
date listed on the receipt or similar
document should be the date provided.
Response 20: The ‘‘initial date of
manufacture’’ means the month and
year, at a minimum, for products
manufactured over a series of days.
Testing is typically conducted for a
batch or production lot of products;
therefore, the certifier should know
which production lot the testing covers
when the certifier creates a certificate
based off that testing. Accordingly, for
the Final Rule, CPSC maintains the
requirement in § 1110.11(a)(5) for the
‘‘initial date of manufacture’’ when
describing production lots.
Comment 21: The AAFA (111) and
RILA (114) recommend eliminating, in
§ 1110.11(b), the optional data field of a
URL or other electronic means to access
supporting records, such as test records,
because the Product Registry will have
all the necessary information to confirm
the certificate and many test reports
contain out-of-scope and confidential
business information. Commenters state
that CPSC should instead communicate
directly with the importer.
Response 21: Part 1110 applies to
certificates for all consumer products,
including those that are domestically
manufactured. However, only
certificates for imported consumer
products must be eFiled. Moreover, the
information specified in § 1110.11(b) is
optional for all certificates. CPSC staff
advises that regardless of whether the
certificate is hard copy, electronic, or
eFiled, having immediate access to test
data is more efficient for the agency
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than having to contact the importer,
manufacturer, or broker with additional
questions or to request test
documentation. Because this
information is optional on a certificate,
CPSC maintains the test report URL
field in the Final Rule.
Comment 22: JPMA (99) supports
maintaining the requirement in
§ 1109.11(a)(6) to provide the date when
the finished product was tested for
compliance.
Response 22: CPSC agrees and
maintains this requirement in the Final
Rule.
Comment 23: The AAFA (111) and
JPMA (99) agree that generic contact
information proposed in the SNPR
should be acceptable.
Response 23: CPSC agrees and
maintains this concept as proposed in
§ 1110.11(a)(4) of the Final Rule.
Comment 24: The AAFA (111) asks
CPSC to provide clarity as to how
eFiling would work in the case of
multiple production lots, produced in
different months, where the product is
being imported at different times with
no material change.
Response 24: One certificate can cover
multiple production lots subject to the
same test results, as long as there is no
material change, as defined in guidance
found on CPSC’s website. Therefore,
one certificate can cover many identical
products manufactured over an
extended period. For that reason, CPSC
clarified in the SNPR that the certificate
must contain the month and year of the
start date of the series of manufacturing.
Comment 25: PPAI (119) asks for
clarity regarding the duplicative testing
statement in proposed § 1110.11(d).
PPAI asks how this requirement applies
to separate rules, standards, bans, or
regulations and generating certificates
for different orders involving identical
products.
Response 25: The Final Rule
maintains the proposal in § 1110.11(d)
regarding duplicative testing, but
clarifies that the rule for ‘‘duplicative
testing’’ means that the same third party
test does not need to be conducted more
than once on each sample, when the
same test is required by another
applicable rule. CPSC included
§ 1110.11(d) in the NPR and the SNPR
because some test laboratories were
charging manufacturers to conduct the
same test twice, when the test was
required by two separate rules
applicable to a children’s product. To
reduce burden, CPSC clarifies in
§ 1110.11(d) that this type of duplicative
testing is unnecessary; one test to the
same requirement in overlapping
regulations is sufficient. Thus, certifiers
are not required to conduct duplicative
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testing for any rule that refers to, or
incorporates fully, another applicable
consumer product safety rule or similar
rule, ban, standard, or regulation under
any other law enforced by the
Commission.
The potential for duplicate testing
applies primarily to children’s products,
where CPSC has long-standing
requirements, such as lead, phthalate,
and small part requirements, but has
also established rules for specific
products that also may require a
chemical or small parts test, such as the
rule applicable to toys in 16 CFR part
1250. For example, if a toy is already
tested to section 4.6 of the ASTM
International (ASTM) F963 Toy
Standard for small objects, codified in
16 CFR part 1250, duplicative testing for
small parts does not need to be
conducted again to meet 16 CFR part
1501. A certificate should list both
citations for part 1250 and part 1501,
although only one test must be
conducted.
The duplicate test clarification in
§ 1110.11(d) has no bearing on
certificates for different orders for the
same product. Each product certificate
must list all applicable rules, but the
same certificate may be used for
repeated shipments of the same product,
so long as there is no material change to
the product. A material change is a
change that could affect compliance,
such as a different manufacturing
facility or source of raw materials. Most
certifiers test continually manufactured
products at least once a year. CPSC
purposely developed the Product
Registry to allow a single certificate to
be used more than once, every time the
same product is imported. Thus, when
a product has been tested and certified,
and has not undergone a material
change, importers eFiling the certificate
data can reference the same certificate
in the PGA Reference Message Set for
the same product, regardless of the
shipment’s recipient or purchaser.
Comment 26: The TA (97) and JPMA
(99) disagree with the requirement for
certifiers to specify each applicable
section of ASTM F963, which they
allege is beyond what is required by the
CPSA and 16 CFR part 1110 and further
complicates the data set for
manufacturers. The TA (97) also states
that the ‘‘sectional applicability’’ is
specifically directed to toys subject to
ASTM F963, but not to any other rule.
IKEA (123) supports identifying
individual sections of ASTM F963,
because this requirement improves
controls on U.S.-bound shipments.
However, IKEA (123) requests that the
year of adoption be included in the
citation code that incorporates an ASTM
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standard by reference (e.g. ASTM F963–
17 or ASTM F963–23), because if
revisions occur to the standard, then it
would be impossible to determine if the
linked test report is issued for the right
standard.
Response 26: Through the Product
Registry and CPSC’s CATAIR and
guidance documents, the Final Rule
maintains the requirement for finished
product certifiers to list on a certificate
the citation for each individual section
of ASTM F963 to which a toy is tested
and certified. This is not a change to the
existing procedure; CPSC has long
required that certificates identify which
sections of ASTM F963 apply to each
toy on a certificate, because staff need
to know what has been tested to
determine product compliance.
Certifiers are, and have always been,
responsible for knowing which tests for
compliance apply to their products and
for listing them on their test reports and
on their certificates. ASTM F963, as
incorporated into part 1250, is broader
than other voluntary standards
incorporated into CPSC rules, in that the
standard and mandatory rule apply to
many different types of toys with
different associated hazards. Other
CPSC regulations generally apply to one
product type with characteristic
hazards, such as the rules for full-size
cribs or strollers. CPSC has addressed
the fact that ASTM F963 contains
requirements for many types of toys
since 2008 when the CPSIA mandated
F963 as the mandatory toy standard.
Citing only ASTM F963 on a certificate
does not provide sufficient information
to CPSC about the product or its
compliance with the rule, because toys
are tested to individual subsections of
ASTM F963 and not to the entire
standard.
Moreover, toys are required to be
third party tested by an International
Organization for Standardization (ISO)accredited laboratory whose
accreditation has been accepted by
CPSC. These testing laboratories do not
conduct every test in ASTM F963 on
every toy; manufacturers and testing
laboratories must know which tests in
ASTM F963 apply to each toy, and such
tests are listed on the test reports. Thus,
the Final Rule is consistent with current
CPSC practice and will allow CPSC to
more easily enforce the existing
requirement to list all applicable ASTM
provisions.
Importantly, the benefits of eFiling for
CPSC would be diminished without
knowing which tests within ASTM F963
apply to each toy. CPSC will be able to
target and assess risk based on the
regulatory citations. Also, test
laboratories are CPSC-accepted based on
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the particular provision of ASTM F963
to which they are ISO-accredited, and
not generally for all tests within ASTM
F963. Therefore, the certificate must
identify the relevant ASTM subsection
in order for the RAM to audit that
citation against CPSC’s testing
laboratory credentialing information.
Regarding periodic updates to the
ASTM standard, CPSC requires
compliance with a revised ASTM
standard upon the effective date of a
rule incorporating the standard, for all
products manufactured after the
effective date (or as otherwise stated in
a rule), unless the revision’s effective
date occurs by statute. See, e.g. 15
U.S.C. 2056b(g). Other regulations will
also change over time and incorporate
new versions of a voluntary standard as
such standards are revised. Any product
manufactured after the effective date of
a revised rule incorporating a voluntary
standard must comply with the updated
rule. Therefore, CPSC would expect that
a certificate with a product manufacture
date on or after the effective date of a
rule to comply with the revised
mandatory standard, which can be
confirmed by reviewing the test date
and/or the associated test report. For
administrative efficiency and burden
reduction, however, CPSC is not
mandating addition of the year to the
ASTM citations at this time, and will
rely on the data points on a certificate
for targeting.
Comment 27: Two commenters (TA
(97) and JPMA (99)) claim that
exemptions and exclusions do not need
to be cited on a certificate of
compliance, because they are assumed if
a citation is not listed on the certificate.
Thus, CPSC should not require the
citations of exemptions or exclusions.
IKEA (124) claims that this requirement
of citing exemptions and exclusions
increases reporting burdens.
Response 27: The Final Rule retains
the proposal that certificates include
citations for testing exemptions or
exclusions. Section 14(a)(1)(B) of the
CPSA states that the certificate ‘‘shall
specify each rule, ban, standard, or
regulation applicable to the product.’’
Accordingly, certificates must list each
rule to which the product is subject. For
each rule listed on the certificate, the
certifier should list the firm or testing
laboratory that conducted such test.
However, some rules contain testing
exceptions for certain products or
product characteristics, and no testing is
required. Thus, for completeness and to
avoid unnecessary investigations of
shipments that are in fact compliant due
to an exemption or exclusion, the
certificate should either provide the
name of the testing laboratory that
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conducted testing, or state why the
product was not tested. All possible
testing exemptions and exclusions are
codified in a statute or within the
applicable regulation. This provision
aids CPSC in targeting and enforcing
test requirements. CPSC’s eFiling
Document Library contains a detailed
list of CPSC’s rules and all associated
codes for testing exclusions within each
rule that CPSC expects to appear, as
applicable, on a certificate.
Comment 28: RILA (114) recommends
that CPSC create a list of products
subject to exemptions, which importers
could reference when determining if
they need to create a certificate. IKEA
(123, 130) and RILA (126) additionally
request that CPSC address the certificate
requirements, which they term
‘‘reporting logic,’’ 28 on all products in
its jurisdiction and publish a clear and
publicly available list of flagged HTS
codes. IKEA (123) additionally provided
several products for which they request
clarification of the certificate
requirements, and also recommend that
CPSC establish a working group with
industry to establish clear guidance for
eFiling reporting logic. IKEA (130) also
recommends that CPSC provide
immediate notice of all HTS Codes that
CPSC will flag in CBP’s Automated
Broker Interface (ABI) as part of the
eFiling initiative to provide time for
industry to design their eFiling systems.
IKEA (130) recommends that CPSC
finalize the CATAIR guidance on or
before finalizing a rule and provide a 6month implementation period for any
subsequent changes to this guidance. ITI
(125) states that CPSC has not addressed
how eFiling will work with respect to
the business relationships involved for
products containing button cell or coin
batteries.
Response 28: Before the SNPR
published, CPSC created and posted on
its website a list of HTS codes, citations,
testing exclusions, and CPSC’s CATAIR
guidance.29 CPSC will continue to
update citations and testing exclusions
when promulgating new regulations or
adding or changing HTS codes based on
updates from the United States
International Trade Commission (ITC).
Certifiers who believe the lists are
missing any HTS code, citation, or
testing exclusions should inform CPSC.
CPSC will flag HTS codes once the
eFiling requirement becomes effective.
CPSC’s CATAIR contains a ‘‘Change
28 IKEA (130) defines ‘‘reporting logic’’ as ‘‘the
methodology for resolving reporting uncertainties,
often related to products for which CPSC exercises
enforcement, but permits exemptions or exclusions
from regulation.’’
29 Available at: https://cpsc.gov/eFilingDocument-Library.
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Log’’ to identify updates and will
include an ‘‘effective date’’ in the
Change Log. Stakeholders can submit
questions or comments on specific
products or testing and certification to
CPSC’s eFiling support email inbox:
eFilingSupport@cpsc.gov.
Comment 29: Several commenters (BV
(92), TA (97), AAFA (111), RILA (114,
126), and EAA (131)) state that the
requirement to utilize CBP’s Disclaimer
Message Set for non-regulated products
within CPSC’s jurisdiction and for
products that are regulated, but do not
require certification results in ‘‘proving
a negative.’’ Commenters claim that this
adds workload to industry, because
industry does not track when a product
does not need a certificate. AAFA (111)
claims that this requirement reverses
CPSC’s 2016 enforcement discretion for
adult wearing apparel. NCBFAA (122)
disagrees with the requirement of
Intended Use Codes for Disclaimer
Message Sets, because this differs from
other PGAs and brokers would need to
track down these codes for shipments
not subject to CPSC, which would be
time-consuming and costly. EAA (131)
states that the disclaim process would
negative impact operators that clear de
minimis shipments off the manifest and
add unnecessary costs in the supply
chain.
Response 29: As explained in section
V.F of this preamble, as a matter of
policy and to reduce burden, CPSC will
not require a Disclaimer Message Set for
products that do not require a
certificate. This includes cases where (1)
the product is not within CPSC’s
jurisdiction; (2) the product or
substance is within CPSC’s jurisdiction,
but no rule, ban, standard, or regulation
requiring a certificate applies; (3) the
product is a component of a consumer
product or substance that is not
intended for sale to consumers, but
rather for further assembly or
manufacturing in the United States; and
(4) the product is subject to enforcement
discretion and no certificate is required.
While importers do not need to submit
a Disclaimer Message Set in these
situations, they are encouraged to do so
because the additional information
provided to CPSC will inform the staff
as to why a certificate does not
accompany the product. Likewise,
Intended Use Codes are also optional,
but encouraged. Additional guidance on
Disclaimer Message Sets and Intended
Use Codes is available at https://
cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
Comment 30: The CTA (103) and the
ITI (98) urge CPSC to exclude products
covered by 16 CFR part 1263 (Reese’s
Law) from the proposed eFiling
requirements. They state that the
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requirement to file a Disclaimer Message
Set, coupled with CPSC’s new
regulations for button cell and coin
batteries, would place an unnecessary
burden on manufacturers, importers,
and CBP. The CTA (103) and ITI (98)
express concern that the number of
electronic products that do not contain
button cell or coin batteries, such as
desktop and laptop computers, printers,
watches, wireless headphones,
calculators, games, and lights, would be
captured by broad HTS codes and then
require a Disclaimer Message Set. The
CTA (103) states that this will result in
unnecessary shipment holds and delays,
increasing costs for consumers, which
would work against the country’s efforts
to fight inflation. The ITI (98) states that
any HTS code changes requested by
CPSC should have a 12-months’
advance notice.
Comverex (117), however, does not
support an exclusion and argues that
while the number of associated
Disclaimer Message Sets for products
with button cell and coin batteries could
be large, the Citation Code and Intended
Use Code data set is small. Comverex
states that, in particular, Reese’s Law
would include some filers that have no
product requiring certificates to
disclaim. Comverex asserts that
regardless of the software platform,
importers can readily identify all
products that contain these batteries,
which they must now do by law, and as
a result identify all products that do not.
Comverex believes that for retailers, the
ability to know may be a challenge;
however, they can utilize their lab
testing partners to identify products that
contain button cell batteries, and by
default which products do not, and
update their internal product data
accordingly. Comverex states that for
large retailers, APIs could be readily
developed to eliminate corresponding
data entry.
Response 30: As stated in response to
comment 29, as a matter of policy and
to reduce burden, the Final Rule does
not require filing Disclaimer Message
Sets not only for products outside of
CPSC’s jurisdiction, but also for
products within CPSC’s jurisdiction but
not regulated, alleviating CTA (103) and
ITI (98) concerns. Regarding products
containing button cell or coin batteries
subject to 16 CFR part 1263, at CPSC’s
request, the ITC created additional HTS
codes to address these products. Though
not required, CPSC encourages
importers to file a Disclaimer Message
Set when appropriate, to better inform
CPSC as to why the product is not
accompanied by certificate data.
Comment 31: BV (92) recommends
adding a ‘‘disclaimer code’’ to the
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Product Registry, which will allow for
the same information flow for all
products, while reporting the needed
details.
Response 31: The Final Rule does not
require a Disclaimer Message Set.
Accordingly, CPSC does not intend to
build a ‘‘disclaimer code’’ feature in the
Product Registry. At this time, the
Product Registry is intended to store
certificate data for regulated products,
and not to store data associated with
products that do not require a
certificate.
Comment 32: Many commenters
(RILA (114), AFSL (94), AAFA (111),
TSC (86), NFA (95), APA (101), FOA
(102), APE (105), and WFI (107)) state
that the additional manual certification
in the Product Registry is a redundant
requirement and an unnecessary burden
when using API or a CSV template to
upload data in bulk. Commenters
contend that manual certification
requires an individual to go back into
the Product Registry and manually
certify each certificate with no
additional consumer protection.
RILA (114) recommends three
alternatives to manual certification in
the Product Registry: (1) requiring users
to attest that the certificate data is true
and correct upon initial access of the
Product Registry; (2) requiring users to
attest to the certificate data upon each
instance of accessing the Product
Registry; or (3) requiring importers to
periodically (annually or biannually)
attest to the certificate data upon login.
The ASFL (94) similarly recommends
requiring users to review and accept
terms each time the company logs into
the Product Registry.
Comverex (88) recommends that the
attestation requirement be satisfied
when a user’s software enters certificate
data into the Product Registry via an
API, because their platform already
confirms attestation by their clients
regarding the data accuracy
requirements of proposed
§ 1110.11(a)(10).
Finally, several commenters (AFSL
(94), TA (97), JPMA (99)) state that
additional manual certification is legally
unnecessary, because § 1110.15 clearly
states the legal responsibility of the
certifier and § 1110.11 already requires
identification of the certifier and
attestation to the truth and accuracy of
the information provided. Commenters
argue that the Commission is amply
protected and has more than adequate
ability to enforce against a company
with the authorities of 15 U.S.C.
2068(a)(13), 19 U.S.C. 1592, and 18
U.S.C. 1001. Lastly, the AFSL (94)
writes that the Commission has not
supported the need for additional
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manual certification by identifying an
entity that purposely misstated
information on a certificate and CPSC
acknowledged multiple existing
possible enforcement actions.
Response 32: We agree with the
commenters. As explained in section
V.F of this preamble, CPSC will
automate attestations for bulk certificate
upload into the Product Registry via API
or the CSV template and will not require
individual attestation of certificates.
Such attestation options will reduce the
burden for industry, while also
confirming for CPSC that importers are
knowledgeable about the certificate
information filed. Bulk attestation
options will only apply to users with
certification permissions. If certificate
data is entered into the Product Registry
by a user without certification
permissions, such as by a third-party
user, then a Business Account
Administrator will have to manually
certify the certificates, although groups
of certificates can be certified at one
time. Additionally, consistent with the
SNPR, § 1110.15 of the Final Rule
clarifies the legal responsibility for
finished product certifiers, stating that
finished product certifiers can rely on
the testing or certification of other
parties pursuant to part 1109, but
remain legally responsible for the
information on a finished product
certificate, including its validity,
accuracy, completeness, and
availability.
Comment 33: The PPAI (119) asks
which entity is to attest to each
certificate.
Response 33: The attestation required
in § 1110.11(a)(7) must be made by the
entity responsible for product
certification identified in § 1110.7, the
defined ‘‘finished product certifier.’’ In
the Product Registry, the finished
product certifier is owner of the
Business Account, meaning the
importer, that must certify/attest that
the information in the certificate is true
and accurate. Trade partners entering
data on behalf of an importer must also
attest to the veracity of the information.
Even when an importer allows another
party to enter data, or to certify products
in the Product Registry, the importer
remains accountable for the information
on a certificate.
H. Section 1110.13 Certificate
Availability
Comment 34: Several commenters
(Alta (93), JPMA (99), Boppy (109),
Newell (110), and NAM (113)) oppose
changes to § 1110.13 regarding the
availability of certificates, arguing that
the current ‘‘upon request’’ system is
sufficient and that CPSC did not show
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that it is insufficient to justify the
eFiling system. JPMA (99) argues that
the current system reflects the
legislative intent of Congress in enacting
the CPSA. NAM (113) further argues
that the ‘‘upon request’’ requirement in
the CPSA is distinct from a ‘‘eFiling’’
requirement for certificates.
Response 34: As explained in detail in
the 2013 NPR, the SNPR, and in section
V.G of this preamble, sections 14(g)(3)
and 14(g)(4) of the CPSA provide CPSC
the authority to require eFiling of
certificates for imported consumer
products. Certificates that are collected
on an ad hoc basis, either as a hard-copy
or a PDF copy via email or uploaded via
the ACE Document Image System (DIS),
are not in a data-usable format that can
be processed into CPSC’s RAM and risk
scored. To implement section 14(g)(4) of
the CPSA, § 1110.13 of the Final Rule
requires the eFiling of all certificates for
regulated, imported finished products,
including CPCs and GCCs, at the time of
filing entry or entry summary, if both
entry and entry summary are filed
together. CPSC intends to use certificate
data to risk score shipments and enforce
its statutes and regulations. An eFiled
certificate would meet the ‘‘accompany’’
requirement in section 14(g)(3) of the
CPSA and the requirement in
§ 1110.13(a).
Comment 35: The AAFA (111)
disagrees with the SNPR’s proposal that
each certificate must describe a single
product, because in the apparel and
footwear industry, one unique identifier
is used for a single style that may have
many variations that do not affect the
overall certification. AAFA argues that
no regulatory goal is served by requiring
that each certificate describe a single
product.
Response 35: CPSC proposed in the
SNPR that each certificate describe a
single product to improve CPSC’s
enforcement efforts. If a potential
violation were found, then CPSC could
take action against that one product. If
multiple products appear on one
certificate, this may disrupt importation
of compliant products that appear on
the same certificate as a potentially noncompliant product.
However, regarding apparel and
footwear, CPSC clarified in response to
comment 53 in the SNPR that multiple
models of apparel and footwear that
were composite tested together are
considered one product for certificate
purposes. Therefore, apparel model
variations that do not affect certification
can appear on one certificate as long as
there is no material change, which is
defined in 16 CFR 1107.2 as ‘‘any
change in the product’s design,
manufacturing process, or sourcing of
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component parts that a manufacturer
exercising due care knows, or should
know, could affect the product’s ability
to comply with the applicable rules,
bans, standards, or regulations.’’
Comment 36: Two commenters (TA
(97) and PPAI (119)) argue that CPSC is
doubling the certificate burden by
supposedly requiring certificate data to
be entered in the Product Registry in
one format while requiring certificates
be provided to CPSC and furnished to
distributors and retailers in another
format such as PDF. This would require
importers to maintain two parallel sets
of effectively identical certificate data.
And if manufacturers certify, instead of
importers (as proposed by the TA (97)),
then manufacturers would have to
maintain a third set of certificate data
containing the reference identifier to be
submitted via ACE.
Response 36: Importers using the
Product Registry can download
certificates in a PDF format, which can
then be furnished to retailers and
distributors. Users can also download
certificate data in a CSV file, where each
row of the spreadsheet is a certificate,
which can be furnished to retailers and
distributors. This functionality of the
Product Registry will eliminate any
alleged need for importers to maintain
parallel sets of data. Moreover, while
manufacturers can enter certificate data
into the Product Registry and certify on
behalf of an importer, the importer is
legally responsible for the certificate
data for products they import and must
follow the requirements in part 1109,
meaning they should exercise due care
in reliance on a manufacturer’s testing
and certification, as required in part
1109.
Comment 37: The PPAI (119) states
the SNPR will create a troublesome
administrative burden for firms, by
increasing the number of certificates,
housing the certificates in internal
systems, and integrating the certificates
with companies’ existing shipping
software. Requirements of the SNPR
will be especially challenging when
‘‘kitting’’ or ‘‘bundling’’ multiple
products into one product, such as a gift
basket, because each product in the
‘‘kitted’’ box would require a unique
certificate. Comverex (89) states
concerns about the potential for dozens
of applicable test reports from various
CPSC-accredited labs for ‘‘kitted’’
children’s products and requests
confirmation from CPSC that the
Product Registry, and the corresponding
API, will support this type of data
volume.
Response 37: Like the SNPR, the Final
Rule does not add any new certification
requirements to products that
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previously did not require a certificate.
Therefore, the number of certificates an
importer must issue and associated
records remain the same. And, as it is
today, importers may provide one
certificate for ‘‘kitted’’ or ‘‘bundled’’
products, covering all individual
products, or provide multiple
certificates for the product, where each
certificate covers an individual product
in the ‘‘kit’’ or ‘‘bundle.’’ Furthermore,
CPSC is not dictating that importers
integrate certificates with existing
shipping software. CPSC is providing
the Product Registry to make
management of certificates and
certificate data more efficient for any
importer. Certificate data entered into
the Product Registry can contain
multiple citations and testing
laboratories. Therefore, CPSC designed
the Product Registry to accommodate
the volume of data for ‘‘kitted’’ and
‘‘bundled’’ products.
Comment 38: RILA (114) asks for
clarity regarding ‘‘up to 24 hours before
arrival’’ and recommends that CPSC
clarify that certificate information can
be transmitted in a timeframe prior to
arrival consistent with CBP’s regulations
and as late as 24 hours prior to arrival.
Response 38: CPSC interprets ‘‘up to
24 hours before arrival’’ to mean as late
as 24 hours prior to arrival, in
agreement with the commenter. This
means that the PGA Message Set must
be filed with the entry or entry
summary, if both are filed together, as
late as 24 hours prior to arrival.
Comment 39: RILA (114) and AAFA
(111) recommend a 48-hour response
time to provide additional
documentation to align with existing
programs using PGA Message Sets.
Furthermore, RILA (114) and AAFA
(111) question what additional
information a paper or electronic
certificate could provide, because all the
information should be provided via
eFiling.
Response 39: CPSC retains a 24-hour
response time for additional
documentation. The Commission
interprets the word ‘‘immediately’’
consistent with other CPSC rules, to
mean ‘‘within 24 hours.’’ 78 FR 28080;
28089; 88 FR 85760, 85782. Therefore,
CPSC disagrees with extending the
response time to 48 hours. Because
eFiled certificates replace paper
certificates for imported products, CPSC
would typically only request supporting
documents, such as test reports, from an
importer to verify the data on an eFiled
certificate. However, CPSC could ask for
either a paper certificate or test reports
to validate the information on the
certificate, or when the required
certificate is not eFiled. CPSC and CBP
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retain the right to request a certificate,
but agree that if a certificate is eFiled,
the need for an additional certificate is
unlikely.
I. Section 1110.15 Legal Responsibility
for Certificate Information
Comment 40: JPMA (99) supports the
proposed § 1110.15 that another entity
may maintain an electronic certificate
platform on behalf of the certifier.
Response 40: The Final Rule retains
this provision.
J. Section 1110.17 Recordkeeping
Requirements
Comment 41: The JPMA (99) writes
that the proposed § 1110.17 maintains
the recordkeeping requirement from the
2013 NPR. CPCs already have a five-year
record retention period.
Response 41: Pursuant to 16 CFR part
1107, CPCs and supporting records
already have a five-year record retention
period. The Final Rule retains the
proposal that GCC’s and supporting
records also be maintained for five
years. We note that for imported
products, a five-year record retention
period is consistent with CBP’s
recordkeeping requirement.
K. Special Use Case: De Minimis and
International Mail Shipments
Comment 42: Two commenters (TA
(97) and NAM (113)) request that CPSC
revise the scope of the proposed rule to
explicitly exclude any noncommercial
consumer import of products into the
United States, whether or not for
personal use or enjoyment, and
expressly state a lowered de minimis
level. By not doing so, they assert that
any gift sent as a mail shipment from
outside the United States would require
a certificate, imposing a burden on a
consumer sending the product.
Furthermore, the commenters claim that
CPSC would have no way of
determining non-conformance to the
eFiling requirement for international
mail shipments that may arrive before
CPSC could review them, resulting in an
increased burden to the United States
Postal Service (USPS) and penalizing
those entities who do comply.
Furthermore, the NCBFAA (122) states
that importers of de minimis shipments
are unlikely to be able to manage the
Product Registry process and will rely
on the Full Message Set, which they
assert will be a costly and unrealistic
undertaking for low-valued shipments.
NCBFAA encourages CPSC to work with
the trade industry to overcome these
challenges.
Response 42: The CPSA does not
provide a de minimis exemption for
certificates. eFiling requirements apply
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to regulated finished products,
regardless of value. Importers of
regulated finished products requiring a
certificate that are eligible for the de
minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) must use ET 86 to
file CPSC’s Message Set at entry.
However, the Final Rule does not
require eFiling of a certificate for
noncommercial products sent from one
consumer overseas to another consumer
in the United States, such as a gift.
CPSC agrees that the consumer sending
the shipment will not have the ability to
obtain the certificate. Brokers or carriers
facilitating these shipments may, but are
not required to, file a Disclaimer
Message Set, based on the guidance
provided by CPSC, to inform CPSC that
the shipment does not require a
certificate. For non-gift shipments sent
via international mail, the sender will
need to file a certificate into the Product
Registry before the shipment arrives in
the United States. Lastly, CPSC is
committed to working with the trade
industry, including those who primarily
import de minimis shipments. CPSC
continues to develop improvements to
the Product Registry to make entering
data for mail shipments more efficient.
Comment 43: PeopleForBikes (112)
supports the expanded definition of
‘‘importer’’ that clarifies that, in the case
of a direct-to-consumer shipment, the
importer is responsible for certification
and not the end consumer. The
commenter states that too many lowquality and inadequately tested
products, such as lithium-ion batteries,
are currently being imported into the
United States under the de minimis
exemption, creating unreasonable and
unacceptable safety risks for consumers.
Response 43: CPSC agrees with the
commenter but notes that lithium-ion
batteries used in micromobility
products are not subject to a CPSC
mandatory safety rule at this time.
However, the definition of ‘‘importer’’
in the Final Rule will impose the eFiling
requirement for CPSC regulated finished
products on the importer, as defined in
the rule, even for de minimis shipments.
For de minimis shipments, the importer
for purposes of CPSC’s certificate
requirements is a party eligible to make
entry for the finished products pursuant
to CBP statutes and regulations, who
may be an owner, purchaser, consignee,
or authorized customs broker. Also,
because a consumer could fall within
the definition of purchaser or consignee,
the definition of ‘‘importer’’ continues
to state that for the purposes of this rule,
CPSC will not typically consider an end
consumer purchasing or receiving
products for personal use or enjoyment
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to be the importer responsible for
certification.
L. Special Use Case: Foreign Trade
Zones (FTZs)
Comment 44: Three commenters
(RILA (114), NAFTZ (96, 121, 127), and
IKEA (123, 130)) state importers who
import products via an FTZ will need
additional time to build out
infrastructure and troubleshoot issues
prior to implementation. RILA (114)
states that the FTZs’ ‘‘first in first out’’
(FIFO) method can only attach the latest
certificate that is associated with an
article/supplier combination and not the
specific certificate at an actual inventory
layer level. The NAFTZ (96, 121, 127)
and IKEA (123) state that the FIFO
method (including the FTZ Inventory
and Recordkeeping System) uses a
Unique Identifier (UIN) for virtual
inventory and has no relationship to the
compliance data being reported. RILA
(114) claims that CPSC conflates the use
of FIFO as accounting methodology and
virtual inventory practice. The
commenters claim that FTZ importers
will require significant changes to their
current software to comply with the
SNPR.
IKEA (123) further states that the
requirement to file certificates at entry
summary is not compatible with FTZ
procedures, because those goods would
have already been shipped to stores and
possibly sold, negating CPSC’s ability to
place the goods on hold. IKEA (123)
adds that the eFiling requirement
undermines Congress’s intent of FTZs
and many global companies may be
forced to stop using FTZs for CPSC
regulated products, resulting in millions
of dollars of costs and increased prices
for consumers. IKEA states that CPSC is
preventing companies from storing noncompliant goods inside an FTZ in order
to bring them into compliance. IKEA
(123) encourages CPSC to work with the
CBP Border Interagency Executive
Council (BIEC) to build a single window
concept inclusive of FTZs and provide
a transition period of 24 months to
implement eFiling for FTZ products.
The NAFTZ (96 & 121) proposes three
alternatives for goods imported via an
FTZ: (1) CPSC accepts the data elements
associated with the latest certificate of
the UIN associated with the weekly
entry summary Customs Form 7501; (2)
specifically for manufacturing/
production in FTZs, allow the importer
to register the certificate with a location
for exam at the time of manufacture and
use a Disclaimer Message Set on entry
type 06; (3) delay eFiling requirement
for FTZs until CBP has the capability to
accept the certificate on the FTZ
admission (CBP Form E214), which is
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the only opportunity to match a
certificate with the physical items.
Response 44: The Final Rule retains
the proposal in the SNPR that FTZ
importers must provide the actual
certificate for the shipment but provides
a 24-month effective date for entries for
consumption or warehousing from an
FTZ. Section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA states
that ‘‘every certificate required under
this section shall accompany the
applicable product or shipment of
products covered by the same
certificate.’’ Therefore, FTZ importers
should already be tracking the actual
certificate of the product and providing
those certificates upon request to CPSC.
For eFiling to fulfill its purpose, CPSC
requires the actual certificate data so
that the agency can effectively use such
data for targeting in CPSC’s RAM.
IKEA (123) is incorrect that the
certificate must be filed with entry
summary. The Final Rule requires
eFiling certificates for imported
consumer products with CBP at the time
of filing the CBP entry, or the time of
filing the entry and entry summary, if
both are filed together. Moreover,
nothing in the Final Rule prevents a
company from admitting non-compliant
goods into an FTZ for the purpose of
bringing those goods into compliance.
Finished product certificates are only
required when entering goods for
consumption or warehousing into
United States customs territory from an
FTZ. Moreover, regarding IKEA’s
observation that products entered from
an FTZ might already be sold, all
entered merchandise that is released
from CBP custody is released
conditionally, meaning that CBP has 30
days in which to demand redelivery if
an applicable requirement, including a
PGA Message Set requirement, has not
been satisfied.
Of the three options for FTZ imports
suggested by the NAFTZ (96 & 121), the
third option appears to present the best
solution. The first option is not
compliant with section 14(g)(3) of the
CPSA, which requires the actual
certificate to accompany the shipment.
The second option does not allow for
effective risk assessment and targeting.
CPSC’s RAM needs the data input from
the certificate for risk assessment of the
entry. A Disclaimer Message Set for
entry type 06 would inform CPSC that
a certificate was entered in the Product
Registry, but CPSC would not be able to
match a certificate to the entry and
could not use the data for automated
risk assessment.
The third option suggested by the
NAFTZ, to delay eFiling for FTZ
imports until CBP has the capability to
accept certificates for FTZ admissions,
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may present a solution, because eFiling
of certificates on the CBP Form 214 at
the time of admission, which is before
entry, meets the requirement of section
14(g)(4), ‘‘the electronic filing of
certificates [. . .] up to 24 hours before
arrival of an imported product.’’
Accordingly, the Final Rule provides a
24-month effective date for consumer
products imported into an FTZ and
subsequently entered for consumption
or warehousing. CPSC understands that
the primary delay for eFiling associated
with entries from an FTZ is related to
software solutions. Based on CPSC’s
experience with eFiling for all other
entry types, technical solutions
involving software are feasible.
Accordingly, this longer effective date
provides a significant amount of time
for CPSC, CBP, and industry to identify
technical solutions and develop the
necessary software to bring entries from
an FTZ into compliance with the Final
Rule, as further explained in section VI
of this preamble.
M. Technical, Information Security,
Enforcement
Comment 45: JPMA (99) claims that
CPSC is creating its own unique ‘‘ACEindependent’’ system different from an
integrated system with CBP and asserts
that an ‘‘eFiled certificate’’ should align
with an electronic certificate that is
submitted via ACE. JPMA (99) argues
that the Commission should not
substitute its requirements for those of
the Commissioner of Customs and
nullify the requirement that certificates
be available ‘‘upon request’’ by CPSC
and CBP.
Response 45: CPSC is not creating a
unique ‘‘ACE-independent’’ system.
CBP developed the PGA Message Set
specifically to implement the ‘‘single
window’’ for collecting all trade-related
data required by partner government
agencies. At least 13 other PGAs have
already worked with CBP to implement
their own Message Sets and CPSC
continues to work with CBP to
implement eFiling.30 CPSC has been
developing its Message Set alongside
CBP, during the Alpha Pilot, Beta Pilot,
the expanded Beta Pilot, and in
preparation for this Final Rule.
CPSC also is not substituting its PGA
requirements for those of the
Commissioner of Customs. CPSC
consulted CBP at every stage of
rulemaking, as required by section 14,
and conducted pilots in collaboration
with CBP. The Product Registry is an
optional database for managing
30 See, e.g., CBP’s website listing 13 other agency
CATAIRs and discussing CPSC’s Beta Pilot,
available at: https://www.cbp.gov/trade/ace/catair.
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certificate data that supplements the
PGA Message Set. Stakeholders asked
for a Product Registry in 2013 after
publication of the NPR. CPSC has spent
the last 11 years working with CBP and
industry to develop an eFiling solution
consistent with CBP systems and
procedures and less burdensome for the
trade.
Comment 46: Galaxy (90) asks
whether their company will be required
to acquire new software to send the GCC
information to their broker.
Response 46: The Final Rule does not
require businesses to change software.
Some businesses will choose to use the
Product Registry to enter certificate
data, and then provide a certificate
reference number to their broker upon
importation of regulated consumer
products, while larger companies with
more complicated import procedures
will likely choose to update their
software to automate data transfer.
Accordingly, each importer should
decide with their broker whether to use
the Full Message Set or the Reference
Message Set when filing certificate data
with an entry, and whether providing
this information would be more efficient
with new software to send certificate
information to their broker.
Comment 47: Hansen (115) states that
most testing of bicycles takes place in
Asia and asks whether foreign testing
laboratories will be given access to the
Product Registry or ACE to upload data.
Response 47: The Product Registry is
based on Business Accounts created by
the importer, who may invite any third
party (including foreign testing
laboratories) to enter certificate data into
the Product Registry on their behalf.
Therefore, testing laboratories can have
access to upload data into the Product
Registry if invited by an importer.
Testing laboratories will not enter data
into ACE on behalf of importers.
Comment 48: ITI (125) remarks that
the import-centric registration
methodology in the Product Registry
will create a ‘‘logistics nightmare’’ for
U.S. companies that use information
and communications technology (ICT)
equipment and finds the functioning of
the tool unclear. ITI (125) asks whether
a broker that is importing another
manufacturer’s laptop for business use
or independent sale would be able to
freely search the Product Registry or
would have to be granted viewing
rights.
Response 48: The Product Registry
functions on Business Accounts created
by the importer, who could invite other
users from trade parties, such as
brokers, to collaborate. The Product
Registry is not publicly searchable; an
importer would need to grant
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permission to other users to view a data
collection. The importer is responsible
for providing certificate identifiers to a
broker for Reference Message Sets
associated with every imported
shipment. CPSC’s website contains a
Product Registry Guide, along with
other important background materials
on eFiling, at https://www.cpsc.gov/
eFiling-Document-Library.
Comment 49: The TA (97) asserts that
CPSC should ensure that the Product
Registry and all data systems used in
support of the rule maintain an
appropriate level of data security. The
TA states that only a few entities have
accessed the Product Registry and these
programs do not reflect the complex
scenarios that will occur when the
program is fully rolled out. The TA (97)
also states that CPSC did not adequately
respond in the SNPR regarding the
security of the Product Registry, when
CPSC wrote that it does not prohibit
‘‘password protection for certificates
furnished to retailers and distributors.’’
Response 49: The Product Registry
uses a range of data security techniques
and best practices to protect user and
business information. Some notable
security features include:
• All eFiled certificate data is
encrypted at rest (encrypted storage)
and in flight (Secure Sockets Layer and
other secure protocols).
• Authentication to the Product
Registry is handled by a web access
management platform that requires
verified ownership of a valid email
address, which includes standard
intruder detection and account recovery
protocols.
• The Product Registry utilizes a
token-based authorization scheme and
access controls for accounts and roles.
These determine level-of-access
permissions for application components
and for individual data requests.
• Data is segregated by Business
Account and by Product Collections.
Only users authorized by the Business
Account Administrators can access the
collection-specific data.
Comment 50: The TA (97) notes that
CPSC does not address in the SNPR how
the risk score is compiled, maintained,
and notified, and requests more
information on the framework to allow
for review, understanding, and
comment. The AFSL (94) writes that
confidentiality about the factors that the
CPSC uses to target shipments for
examination is counterproductive. The
ASFL argues that if CPSC publicizes and
demonstrates that consistent
compliance with certification and other
requirements yields fewer examinations
and detentions, this will better meet the
Commission’s mission of a more
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compliant marketplace. Similarly, RILA
(114) and NCBFAA (122) recommend
CPSC develop a trusted trader program,
such as the CBP/CPSC Importer SelfAssessment Product Safety Pilot (ISA–
PS) program, so trusted partners are not
unduly targeted and could be exempted
from eFiling, and so that CPSC
resources can be directed to higher risk
shipments.
Response 50: The RAM risk scores
shipments using a logarithmic model
based on data received from sources
including the entry document and, once
fully implemented, from the PGA
Message Set. CPSC does not share how
the risk score is calculated or the risk
score itself. This information is for
official use only, because it is directly
related to CPSC’s targeting and
enforcement. CPSC disagrees that
confidential treatment of this
information is counterproductive,
because its publication could allow
nefarious actors to avoid compliance
with CPSC regulations.
Importers should consistently file
accurate certificate data to avoid
unnecessary examination holds for
compliant products. With use of the
certificate data, CPSC can improve its
targeting models to more effectively
target shipments with potentially
significant violations. CPSC will be able
to review the certificate data prior to
shipment arrival, instead of needing to
place a shipment on hold to examine it
for an administrative violation.
Certificate data will be one aspect of risk
scoring. Staff anticipate that importers
who consistently provide compliant
certificate data will see a reduction in
their risk scores, which may result in
fewer holds for exams, fewer warehouse
charges, and a greater facilitation of
trade. At the moment, CPSC is not
developing a trusted-trader program,
because compliant importers may
experience benefits, such as lower risk
scores, from filing compliant certificate
data.
Comment 51: The AFSL (94) states
that the conclusion of the Certificate
Study aligns with AFSL’s own research,
conclusions, development of voluntary
standards, and testing. The AFSL (94)
strongly supports the eFiling program
and the CPSC’s RAM program and
strongly encourages CPSC to focus its
enforcement activities more specifically
and aggressively on those companies
with a history of non-compliance or on
those companies without an established
history of providing a certificate within
24 hours of a CPSC request. ASFL
argues that established and proven
testing and certification programs
should be considered as a ‘‘mitigating
factor’’ in a company’s RAM risk profile.
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Response 51: CPSC will use results
from the Certificate Study and Beta Pilot
to improve its risk scoring in the RAM
and to more effectively target noncompliant importers. Certificate data
will be one aspect of risk scoring. Staff
anticipate that companies and
organizations with established and
proven testing and certification
programs will benefit from lowered risk
scores by consistently providing
compliant certificate data.
Comment 52: The AAFA (114) and
RILA (126) request that CPSC clarify
whether eFiled certificate data will be a
condition of admissibility or whether
errors will cause shipment delays. The
commenters state that if eFiling errors
will cause delay, this could dramatically
disrupt the free movement of trade and
increase burden on importers.
Response 52: The lack of a required
eFiled certificate, or the presence of a
false or misleading certificate, will affect
a shipment’s risk score, resulting in a
higher likelihood of the shipment being
held for an exam. CPSC has the
authority to refuse admission of
products that are not accompanied by a
certificate or are accompanied by a false
or misleading certificate. 15 U.S.C.
2066(a)(2). As a matter of enforcement
discretion, at least in the initial stages
of eFiling, CPSC in general does not
intend to request that CBP deny entry of
products into the United States solely
based on a failure to provide eFiled
certificate data; however, CPSC fully
intends to enforce eFiling requirements
by taking enforcement action, such as
requesting that CBP initiate seizure of
noncompliant products.
N. Costs, Burdens, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) and Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA)
Comment 53: Commenters TA (97),
JPMA (99), Boppy (109), and NAM (113)
express concerns about the cost of
technology needed to implement the
Final Rule, including costs to update
technology, programing to the PGA
Message Sets, and setting up API
connections.
Response 53: Commenters are
concerned about costs, but they do not
offer estimates of what the technological
costs would be. CPSC built the Product
Registry to reduce costs for importers,
who are not required to update software
to eFile certificates. The SNPR
estimated that a portion of mainly larger
firms may opt to use API integration
with the Product Registry for their data
systems and the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Act Analysis (IRFA)
provided an estimate of building such a
system as $9,750 plus $2,880 in annual
maintenance. CPSC also queried
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software developers, who plan to
develop an API integration with the
Product Registry, which would be
covered through broker fees. Larger
importers may still choose to build and
maintain an API integration to interface
with the Product Registry. This is,
however, not a requirement, as the
Product Registry enables users to upload
a single certificate at a time and
multiple certificates via a bulk upload.
Additionally, the Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) in section
VII of this preamble presents an analysis
of startup costs—the initial labor and
technology investments small firms
need to make to prepare for eFiling—
that estimates an average cost per firm
of $1,086 or an equivalent burden of 20
hours, which CPSC deems as nonsignificant for the typical small firm.
The Commission solicited comments on
the number of firms that may choose to
invest in new technology due to the
SNPR and estimates of the size of those
investments, but responses offered no
specific data. As such, CPSC retains its
estimates of technology investments per
firm.
Comment 54: Commenters Alta (93),
AFSL (94), Boppy (109), and PPAI (119)
allege increased costs associated with
additional staff. Boppy (109) states an
additional $150,000 in costs for
technology, staff training, fees, and
manually filing certificates, but offers no
itemization of these costs.
Response 54: Without a breakdown of
the costs, CPSC cannot offer a more
specific response. However, CPSC
estimates that importers will bear the
burden for the staff hours comprising
certificate creation, disclosure, and
recordkeeping, which are already
required by statute and regulation.
Importers would also bear the burden of
staff time for entering and transmitting
certificate data to their brokers. CPSC
estimates that the average eFilingrelated activity, including entering
every type of message set and the bulk
upload of certificates to the Product
Registry, will take 0.37 minutes (22
seconds) per filing, on average. CPSC
estimates that importers will conduct
57.5 million total filings annually.31
We concur that the overall burden to
importers can be considered significant
if presented in the aggregate, for two
main reasons: first, the large number of
filings; and second, the potentially
elevated one-time start up investments
in technology, organizational changes,
and staff training. However, individual
31 This number of filings is broken down as
follows: 2.3 million Product Registry filings, 1.7
million Full Message Sets, 46.5 million Reference
Message Sets, and 7.0 million Disclaimer Message
Sets.
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importers will only bear the burden for
the certificates they file. On average, an
importer will conduct 217 certificate
filings per year, which will take about
1.34 hours to enter and transfer (217 ×
22 seconds/3,600 seconds = 1.34
hours).32 At an hourly rate of $33.12 for
office and admin wages, this represents
a cost of $44.29 per year per importer
in staff hourly burden. Additional
startup investments are not an annual
cost, but an investment that will last for
many years. After annualizing this onetime investment, CPSC expects the
average firm to incur out of pocket cost
that represents a non-significant share of
the annual revenue of a typical firm.
Comment 55: Commenters Alta (93),
JPMA (99), Boppy (109), and PPAI (119)
state that the burden of additional staff,
technology, and broker charges would
impact small importers. JPMA (99)
states that the number of responses in
the IRFA would be many times greater,
while Alta (93) states that increased cost
from using customs brokers would
cause undue financial hardship for
small firms.
Response 55: Since 2008, testing and
certification of products regulated by
CPSC has been required under section
14 of the CPSA. The CPSA does not
exclude small businesses from
certification requirements. New
requirements in the Final Rule include
extended recordkeeping for GCCs and
eFiling certificates for imported,
regulated products, which CPSC
estimated in the 2023 SNPR, and has
updated in section VII of this Final Rule
preamble. The Commission’s SNPR
analysis provided an estimate of the
number of responses that result from a
detailed list of data-driven assumptions.
Without additional information from the
commenters showing the inaccuracy of
the assumptions used, CPSC cannot
produce a different estimate of the
number of responses.
The FRFA in section VII of this
preamble shows that the impact on
small firms may not be as large as
indicated by the commenter; instead,
the cost impact is not significant
because it is well below one percent of
the revenue of a typical small firm and
represents a fraction of one percent of
the average value of shipments imported
that require eFiled certificates.
Comment 56: The Commission
requested in the SNPR that firms
comment on filing fees that importers
may bear from eFiling certificates with
CBP using the Full or Reference PGA
Message Set. JPMA (99), Boppy (109),
32 The values presented are rounded, so the
results on each side of the equation may not exactly
match.
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and NAM (113) express concern that
eFiling certificates would require
additional filing fees. Only JPMA (99)
provides estimates of filing fees,
asserting that a small manufacturer
would have to pay $75,000 in filing fees,
but did not indicate the number of
message sets that the small business
would file annually. JPMA (99) also
wrote that CPSC did not adequately
model the cost of using third-party
service providers or customs brokers to
comply with the rule.
Response 56: CPSC does not expect to
charge filing fees for use of the Product
Registry. Brokers typically charge a fee
per entry or per entry line that is filed,
and each entry line may contain one or
more product certificates. Staff
contacted less than 10 brokers involved
in the Beta Pilot and inquired about fees
that brokers would charge for eFiling.
Most brokers charge a maximum fee per
entry which reduces the filing fees per
certificate for firms that file multiple
certificates per entry. We assume that
most firms would choose to file as many
product certificates as possible per
entry, and this action will significantly
lower the cost per individual product
certificate filed. CSPC estimates that the
average fee per filing under these
conditions will be $0.77.
CPSC does not know how many
message sets the small manufacturer
mentioned by JPMA (99) would file to
reach the estimated filing fees, but on
average, the filing volume of most small
importers would comprise a relatively
small number of Full and Reference
Message Sets in total. CPSC’s analysis
assumes that small importers would file
10 percent of the responses (i.e. message
set filings) the average importer files.
Additionally, CPSC expects that the
impact of filing fees as a percentage of
the overall value of the shipment will be
very small. Thus, CPSC expects that
filing fees will not create a significant
burden on the average small importer.
Comment 57: Commenters TA (97)
and Boppy (109) state that CPSC
underestimates the burden of startup
staff training required to implement the
rule. For example, TA (97) urges that
CPSC reassess the estimated cost burden
for implementation of the eFiling
Product Registry, to include an accurate
representative set of values that
properly reflects the cost to implement
eFiling to manufacturers, retailers,
distributors and other entities who fall
within the scope of part 1110.
Response 57: CPSC conducted a Beta
Pilot between October 2023 and June
2024. Staff observed startup hours for
participation in the eFiling Beta Pilot
and the initial organization required to
eFile. Staff observed a median startup
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time of about 60 staff hours per
importer. While observing variability in
startup times across participants, CPSC
expects that as more importers and
third-party service providers become
adept in the eFiling process, the startup
hours for remaining importers will
decrease over time. CPSC expects a
similar experience for firms that did not
participate in the pilot but are required
to eFile. CPSC notes the startup burden
is a one-time investment that would
allow importers to conduct eFiling
operations for many years. To produce
a more accurate accounting of costs,
CPSC annualizes the startup burden
over the useful life of the investments.
Additionally, the Final Rule has an
effective date of 18 months for most
imported products (and 24 months for
products entered for consumption or
warehousing from an FTZ), a period
over which the burden will be
effectively spread. CPSC also expects
that improvements derived from process
learning will reduce the cost per firm
over this period.
Comment 58: Two commenters, Alta
(93) and NAM (113), suggest that CPSC
underestimates the eFiling burden for
each importation. NAM (113) states that
a 20-second burden per Reference
Message Set and a 1-minute burden per
Full Message Set is not realistic given
the large number of certifications for
every product.
Response 58: Staff revised eFiling
burden estimates, in part based on
information from Beta Pilot participants.
The revised estimate is 15.3 seconds per
Reference Message Set and 4.75 minutes
per Full Reference Message Set.
Reference Message Sets are simplified
messages (primarily composed of a
Unique ID) that link products being
imported to certificate data already
uploaded into CPSC’s Product Registry.
The eFiling estimate is based on the
time it takes to enter and transmit a
Reference Message Set, applying a
learning curve to data provided by Beta
Pilot participants. This learning curve
enables staff to assess the impact of
learning efficiencies in processing
times. Sections . and VIII of this
preamble contain additional detail on
the revised eFiling burden analysis for
the Final Rule. Staff’s analysis applies a
similar learning curve to Full Message
Sets, which results in a higher
processing time of 4.75 minutes per
message (increased from one minute in
the SNPR), which is consistent with
NAM’s (113) assessment.
Comment 59: Hansen (115) states that
CPSC underestimated the burden of
putting certificate data into the Product
Registry using a CSV spreadsheet, citing
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an example of bike distributors that
carry tens of thousands of bicycle parts.
Response 59: As stated in response to
comment 6, the bicycle standard is a
finished product standard that does not
regulate individual parts of bikes sold
separately. However, other CPSC
regulations, such as limits on lead
content, lead in paint, and small parts,
could apply to children’s bikes and
parts of children’s bikes sold separately.
Certificates can be entered in bulk into
the Product Registry via a CSV
spreadsheet. During the Beta Pilot,
importers demonstrated that they could
enter numerous certificates into the
Product Registry using the CSV
spreadsheet, resulting in uploads of a
fraction of a second per certificate. Staff
conservatively estimate that it takes 8.7
seconds per certificate to upload multicertificate data into the Product
Registry.
Comment 60: JPMA (99) states that no
statistically validated record exists to
justify the burden assumptions for filing
Message Sets. The commenter states that
the assumptions are not realistic. JPMA
(99) also writes that one small-business
member advised that they would accrue
an extra $30,000 for document
preparation and $40,000 for document
prep full headcount at factory.
Response 60: The Commission’s
economic analysis is based on available
information and states the basis for each
assumption. Most recordkeeping in this
information collection is mandated by
sections 14(a) and 16(b) of the CPSA
and within CPSC’s regulations in part
1107, 1109, and the existing part 1110
rule. Typically, non-children’s product
regulations contain a three-year
recordkeeping requirement; children’s
products require a 5-year record
retention period pursuant to part 1107.
The Final Rule increases record
retention to five years for general use
products, as proposed. Both the SNPR
and the Final Rule address the
additional two years of recordkeeping,
as well as record keeping for additional
data items. Note that for eFiled
certificates, CBP already has a 5-year
record retention requirement for import
documentation.
Comment 61: Alta (93) states that the
manual nature of submitting data entry
into ACE could lead to human errors
and delays. The commenter alleges that
repeated filings of certificates via ACE
would be complex, expensive, and
labor-intensive for a business such as
theirs with a small staff. The commenter
also states that expensive automation
and time-consuming processes would
cause undue hardship to small
businesses such as theirs.
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Response 61: The Final Rule does not
require repeated filing of the same
certificate data into ACE. CPSC built the
Product Registry at the request of
importers to reduce repetitive data
entry. Thus, importers have the option
of loading certificate data into CPSC’s
Product Registry once before filing an
entry, either manually or through batch
uploads, and then filing a short PGA
Reference Message Set that links to the
certificate data in the Product Registry
each time the product is imported
thereafter. Using a Reference Message
Set allows importers to reference the
same certificate data multiple times,
each time the product is imported.
CPSC estimates that over 96 percent of
importers will use the Product Registry
and Reference Message Sets.
Accordingly, using the Product Registry
will simplify import filings, reduce
costs, and reduce filing errors. In
practice, most importers file entries and
PGA Message Sets through a customs
broker, who would only need to be
supplied with the Unique ID for the
Reference Message Set that links the
imported product with certificate data
in the Product Registry. Use of the
Product Registry is free of charge.
Importers may also use a Full Message
Set that does require entering all
certificate data for each regulated,
imported consumer product. Importers
that want to gain eFiling experience
before the effective date of the Final
Rule can participate in the expanded
Beta Pilot, as discussed in section II of
this preamble.
Comment 621: JPMA (99) states that
that no ‘‘one size fits all’’ solution
should be proposed and that CPSC
should create a less burdensome
integrated system with CBP.
Response 62: CPSC did not propose,
nor is it testing, a one-size-fits-all
approach. Importers have two options
for eFiling certificates, a Full Message
Set or a Reference PGA Message Set and
use of the Product Registry. As
described in the SNPR and in this Final
Rule, CPSC has worked on eFiling
solutions with CBP and with industry
for over ten years. CPSC undertook
creation of the Product Registry at the
request of importers who specifically
asked for an IT solution that would
reduce burden, the need for duplicate
data entry, and errors. The IT solutions
for CPSC are now ready to be
implemented. CPSC’s solutions are
integrated with CBP systems, and CBP
has participated in the Alpha and Beta
Pilots, and has been specifically
consulted regarding the NPR, SNPR, and
the Final Rule.
Comment 63: RILA (126) asserts that
the burden estimate in the June 4, 2024,
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regarding the expanded Beta Pilot test
(89 FR 47922) does not account for the
full time to support gathering and
submitting data elements and only
reflects the burden of gathering and
submitting data for a limited quantity of
products and their corresponding
fillings. RILA states that their members’
approximations of the burden hours per
importer are nearly double or more of
the Commission’s estimates, depending
on the overall size of the retailer and
volume and variety of imported goods.
RILA references two members that
participated in the Beta Pilot; one
estimated an annual burden of
approximately 500 hours and another
estimated an annual burden of 15,700
hours.
Response 63: One purpose of the
eFiling Beta Pilot was to gain experience
with the burden that importers may
incur. CPSC gained useful information
from the limited quantity of products
and filings made during the Beta Pilot.
Staff advise that the burden of gathering
and submitting data elements during the
Beta Pilot only reflects the burden for a
limited quantity of products and
corresponding filings; most participants
did not choose to eFile certificates for
all of their imported, regulated
products. Additionally, staff observed
significant variation in the burden
expressed by Beta Pilot participants and
in the number of certificates that
participants filed.
For the Final Rule, CPSC provides
revised burden estimates in sections VII
and VIII of this preamble, in part using
information learned from the Beta Pilot.
This revised analysis demonstrates that
the burden of the Final Rule is not large
on a per importer basis. However, even
if the burden of the Final Rule was
much greater than the inputs used in the
revised analysis, burden estimates per
firm would still be non-significant.
O. Legal Comments
Comment 64: Boppy (109) alleges that
the SNPR is unconstitutional, asserting
that the manner in which the rule is
being promulgated violates the U.S
Constitution’s Separation of Powers and
Appointments Clause because the CPSC
Commissioners’ for-cause removal
protections are unconstitutional. Boppy
states that the Supreme Court has
recognized only two limited exceptions
to the President’s otherwise
‘‘unrestricted’’ removal power: (1) an
exception for inferior officers with
limited duties and no policymaking or
administrative authority, Seila Law v.
CFPB, 140 S. Ct. 2183, 2199–2200
(2020), and (2) an exception for
principal officers who do not exercise
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executive power, id. 2198–99
(discussing Humphrey’s Executor v.
United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935)).
Boppy argues that neither the inferiorofficer exception nor the ‘‘Humphrey’s
Executor exception’’ applies because
CPSC’s Commissioners are principal
(not inferior) officers who exercise
substantial, ‘‘quintessentially executive
power [that was] not considered in
Humphrey’s Executor.’’ Seila Law, 140
S. Ct. at 2200.
Response 64: Federal Courts of
Appeals have recently rejected the same
Constitutional arguments made by
Boppy. See Consumers’ Rsch. v. CPSC,
91 F.4th 342 (5th Cir. 2024), petition for
cert. filed, (Consumers’ Rsch. v.
Consumer Prod. Safety Comm’n, No.
23–1323 (petition for cert. denied Oct.
21, 2024)), and Leachco, Inc. v. CPSC,
103 F.4th 748 (10th Cir. 2024), petition
for cert. filed, (Leachco, Inc. v. CPSC,
No. 22–7060 (petition for cert. filed on
Aug. 9, 2024)). Consistent with those
decisions and the Supreme Court’s
holding in Humphrey’s Executor v.
United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935), we
reject Boppy’s constitutional arguments.
Comment 65: The Toy Association
(97) states that requiring each importer
of a product, instead of the
manufacturer, to submit a separate
certificate, would be redundant and
potentially a Technical Barrier to Trade
(TBT) as defined by the World Trade
Organization (WTO). The JPMA (99)
argues that the eFiling requirement in
the SNPR is arbitrary and needlessly
burdensome, which may also be a TBT.
Response 65: The Final Rule does not
constitute a technical barrier to trade.
The purpose of section 14 of the CPSA,
and part 1110, is to protect the health
and safety of U.S. consumers from
noncompliant consumer products.
Article 2.2 of the TBT Agreement states
that technical regulations ‘‘shall be no
more trade-restrictive than necessary for
the achievement of a legitimate
objective, including . . . the protection
of human health and safety.’’
Additionally, the preamble to the TBT
Agreement recognizes that ‘‘no country
should be prevented from taking
measures necessary . . . for the
protection of human, animal or plant
life or health.’’
CPSC’s requirements are within the
scope of the health and safety
provisions of the TBT Agreement. The
Toy Association and JPMA appear to
ignore CPSC’s long-standing and
statutorily required testing and
certification regime. Since 2008, testing
and certification requirements apply to
all products subject to a CPSC rule, ban,
standard, or regulation, regardless of the
place of manufacture, if those products
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are imported for consumption or
warehousing or distributed in U.S.
commerce. The purpose of section 14 of
the CPSA, and part 1110, is to protect
the health and safety of U.S. consumers
from noncompliant consumer products.
Commenters also ignore the lengths to
which CPSC has gone since 2008 to
streamline requirements for testing and
certification. For example,
manufacturers and importers may rely
on any other party’s testing or
certification pursuant to 16 CFR part
1109. That rule has been in place for
more than 10 years and allows
importers that want to rely on a
manufacturer’s testing and/or
certification, the ability to do so.
Moreover, as described in section II of
this preamble, CPSC has spent the last
10 years working with the industry on
two pilots, a study, building an eFiling
program, and developing the Product
Registry, to address importers’ concerns
about burden and cost. Sections VII and
VIII of this preamble and the experience
of Beta Pilot participants demonstrate
that the Product Registry is easy to use
and reduces burden. In fact, CPSC
developed the Product Registry in
response to industry’s 2013 request to
reduce burden, data entry errors, and
potential duplication of effort, for all
importers of regulated products.
It bears repeating that the eFiling
requirement does not create new testing
or certification requirements for
importers. Since 2207, importers have
been required to provide certificates and
the test reports on which they are based
to CPSC and CBP upon request. CPSC is
now requesting this information at the
time of entry, as specifically provided in
section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA. This
requirement modernizes the certificate
requirement in a manner that does not
create undue burden to importers or
create a barrier to trade, and instead
assists compliant importers. CPSC’s
economic analysis demonstrates that for
compliant importers, the PGA Message
Set requirement will not have a
significant impact on small (or large)
importers, and thus the requirement
should not create an obstacle to trade.
Finally, as a matter of enforcement
discretion, at least in the initial stages
of eFiling, CPSC in general does not
intend to request that CBP deny entry of
products into the United States solely
based on a failure to provide eFiled
certificate data. However, CPSC will
continue to enforce certificate
requirements, for example by refusing
admission under section 17(a)(2) of the
CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2066(a)(2), or
requesting CBP to initiate seizure of
noncompliant products. Further, CPSC
intends to increase or decrease risk
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scores based on eFiled data, which
should reduce holds and examinations
of compliant products and better focus
resources on non-compliant products.
Comment 66: JPMA (99) asserts that
Congress did not plainly set forth a
requirement that certificates be available
by eFiling and that the language in
section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA is a distinct
requirement. Therefore, providing a
certificate ‘‘upon request’’ even in an
electronic format should be maintained
as an option.
Response 66: We disagree. Section
14(g)(4) of the CPSA provides CPSC
specific authority to require eFiling for
imported consumer products.
Interdicting noncompliant products
before they are distributed in U.S.
commerce is an important safety
mission of the Commission.
Accordingly, as set forth in response to
comment 34, to allow the Commission
to focus limited resources on imported
products that are not in compliance
with CPSC regulations, the Final Rule
retains the SNPR’s eFiling requirement
for all regulated, imported consumer
products. The Final Rule retains the
‘‘upon request’’ certificate option for
products manufactured in the United
States, and for imported products, to the
extent certificate data is not filed at
entry, as required, or is potentially false
or misleading.
P. Out of Scope Comments
Comment 67: Hansen (115) opines
that the SNPR did not adequately
address the 2013 comments filed by the
Bicycle Product Suppliers Association
(BPSA; now PeopleforBikes). Hansen
discussed the bicycle regulation in 16
CFR part 1512 and particularly electric
bicycles.
Response 67: The Final Rule is not
about the substantive safety
requirements for bicycles. Note,
however, that CPSC issued an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking in 2024
related to eBikes, 89 FR 18861 (Mar. 15,
2024), and staff anticipate sending the
Commission a proposed rule related to
lithium-ion batteries used in
micromobility products, including
eBikes, in the coming months.
The remaining comments primarily
discuss technical features of the eFiling
Product Registry. The procedural
aspects of data entry and the user
interface of the Product Registry are not
addressed in the regulation text of this
Final Rule. Accordingly, if not already
addressed above, CPSC will endeavor to
address technical questions in the
guidance materials on our website.
Additionally, any firm using the
Product Registry can report software
issues, ask questions, or send
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suggestions to: eFilingSupport@
cpsc.gov.
V. Description and Explanation of the
Final Rule
Below we describe and explain the
basis for the Final Rule’s requirements.
Because of the number of changes to
part 1110, the Commission proposes to
strike and replace the existing 1110 rule
in its entirety, as described below.
A. Purpose and Scope (§ 1110.1)
The Commission finalizes the purpose
and scope in the Final Rule as proposed
in the SNPR, which states that the rule
specifies certificate content, form, and
availability, and requires eFiling
certificates for imported finished
products that are required to be
certified. The Commission did not
receive any adverse comment on the
SNPR’s proposal.
B. Definitions (§ 1110.3)
The 2013 NPR added to part 1110 13
new definitions to introduce concepts
and terms used in the 1107 and 1109
rules and to clarify the requirements of
part 1110. 78 FR 28080, 28081–82. The
SNPR maintained the additional terms
proposed in the 2013 NPR, added
several more terms, and revised several
definitions. Newly defined terms
included: ‘‘eFiled certificate,’’ to
differentiate an electronic certificate,
primarily used for domestically
manufactured products, from a
certificate for an imported product that
is entered via ACE in a PGA Message
Set, and ‘‘Product Registry,’’ to describe
the CPSC-maintained repository for
certificate data for imported products.
The SNPR revised several definitions to
better describe the types of merchandise
under CPSC’s jurisdiction, which
includes not only consumer products,
but also hazardous substances.
The SNPR also proposed to broaden
the definition of ‘‘importer’’ as that term
is used in part 1110, beyond the IOR, to
allow a party familiar with the products
with a beneficial ownership in the
goods to be the importer responsible for
testing and certification. Thus, the
SNPR proposed that the definition of
‘‘importer’’ include any entity that
could make entry for consumer
products, and qualify as the importer
under the Tariff Act (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B)). Proposed § 1110.3 also
defined additional terms to develop the
revised definition of ‘‘importer’’ in the
SNPR, such as ‘‘importer of record,’’
‘‘consignee,’’ and ‘‘owner or purchaser.’’
Based on the comments, the Final
Rule adds two statutory definitions for
‘‘manufacturer’’ and ‘‘private labeler’’
and clarifies several other definitions
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proposed in the SNPR. For example, the
Final Rule modifies the definition of
ACE in a manner consistent with the
SNPR, but better aligns with CBP’s
characterization of their authorized
electronic data interchange system and
any successor systems.
Commenters also continued to
demonstrate confusion about the
difference between a component part
and a finished product, and when a part
of consumer product is a finished
product that must be accompanied by a
finished product certificate. By
definition, a ‘‘component part’’ is not a
‘‘finished product.’’ Component part
certificates are allowed by 16 CFR part
1109 but are voluntary. Component part
testing or certification can be relied
upon to issue a finished product
certificate, but only finished product
certificates must accompany finished
products and be eFiled pursuant to
§ 1110.13(a)(1). Component part
certificates are not required and should
not be eFiled. Accordingly, to add
clarity to the definition of ‘‘component
part certificate,’’ the Final Rule adds to
the definition that a component part
certificate is voluntary, and, to further
reduce confusion, the Final Rule moves
all requirements for component part
certificates into § 1110.19 at the end of
the rule.
Relatedly, based on commenters’
concerns, the Final Rule also clarifies
the definition of a ‘‘finished product’’ by
removing the phrase ‘‘replacement
parts,’’ as the phrase appears to have a
different and broader meaning to
industry than CPSC intended for this
rule. The Final Rule now explains the
three criteria required for a product to
be considered a ‘‘finished product’’ that
must be accompanied by a finished
product certificate—namely, that the
product must be: (1) subject to a CPSCenforced rule, ban, standard, or
regulation; (2) imported for
consumption or warehousing, or
distributed in commerce; and (3)
packaged, sold, or held for sale to, or for
use by, consumers. To address
comments regarding the role of a
‘‘finished product certifier,’’ the Final
Rule adds to the definition the three
parties in section 14 of the CPSA that
can be a finished product certifier.
These are the manufacturer and private
labeler, as defined in the CPSA, and the
importer, as defined in this rule. See 15
U.S.C. 2052(a)(11) and (a)(12).
The Final Rule also modifies the
definition of ‘‘importer’’ in response to
comments 7 through 10 in section IV of
this preamble and simplifies related
definitions of ‘‘owner or purchaser’’ and
‘‘consignee.’’ The definitions for
‘‘importer,’’ ‘‘owner or purchaser,’’ and
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‘‘consignee’’ in the Final Rule are
intended to harmonize with the Tariff
Act and CBP’s implementing regulations
that govern importation procedures but
are solely for purposes of this Final
Rule. These definitions do not change
CBP requirements for parties eligible to
make entry and are specifically limited
to implementation of CPSC’s eFiling
requirement and the party CPSC will
hold legally responsible for issuing a
finished product certificate for
imported, CPSC regulated finished
products. Moreover, these definitions
may not reflect the full scope of the
relevant terms under the CPSA or other
statutes implemented by CPSC.
The Final Rule clarifies that, as
proposed in the 2013 NPR and
consistent with the SNPR comments, for
purposes of this rule, the ‘‘importer’’
means the IOR eligible to make entry for
imported finished products under the
Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19
U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an
owner, purchaser, or authorized
customs broker. The Final Rule
addresses the concerns of commenters
stating that an IOR authorized to make
entry for a shipment, such as a broker,
may not have sufficient knowledge of
the consumer products to be held
responsible for testing and certification.
Accordingly, the definition also
provides that an authorized broker may
identify the owner, purchaser, or
consignee of the finished products who
authorized the customs broker to make
entry, as the party responsible for
compliance with CPSC certificate
requirements. A broker would identify
such party by eFiling certificate data
using CPSC’s PGA Message Set, which
identifies the finished product certifier
responsible for product certification, as
required in § 1110.11(a)(3).
If identified as the finished product
certifier in the PGA Message Set data,
the owner, purchaser, or consignee that
authorized the broker to file entry is the
party that CPSC would expect to have
sufficient knowledge of the finished
products being imported and to
understand that such products must
now comply with U.S. laws and
regulations, including compliance with
CPSC’s testing and certification
requirements.33 A broker identifying an
owner, purchaser, or consignee as the
party responsible for certification
should receive from that party, either
the Unique ID for the Reference PGA
Message Set, linking certificate data in
33 We note that the party that CPSC holds legally
responsible for certificate data does not mean that
this party is responsible for submitting such data
into ACE, because this party may not be the IOR
for the shipment or be another party eligible to
make entry under CBP statutes and regulations.
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the Product Registry with the shipment,
or all certificate data elements for
submitting the Full PGA Message Set at
entry. If an authorized customs broker
fails to submit a PGA Message Set
containing CPSC’s certificate data
elements to identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee responsible for
product certification, CPSC can hold
such a broker legally responsible for
certificate data as set forth in § 1110.15.
The Final Rule also clarifies, for
purposes of this rule, the importer who
is legally responsible for CPSC’s
certificate data for finished products
that must be accompanied by a
certificate that are imported by mail, or
for which a de minimis duty exemption
under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is
claimed. These shipments do not have
an IOR. The ‘‘importer’’ definition in the
Final Rule specifies the importer for
purposes of CPSC’s certificate
requirement for these shipments is a
party eligible to make entry for the
merchandise pursuant to CBP statutes
and regulations, who may be an owner,
purchaser, consignee, or authorized
customs broker. An authorized broker
may also identify the owner, purchaser,
or consignee that authorized entry as the
finished product certifier in a PGA
Message Set for a de minimis shipment
filed using ET 86.
The Final Rule defines ‘‘owner or
purchaser’’ and ‘‘consignee’’ in a way
consistent with the SNPR, but
simplified. The Final Rule definitions
now clarify that these definitions are
only for the purposes of this rule and
explain who CPSC may hold
responsible for certificate data,
particularly for de minimis and mail
shipments that lack the required
certificate data. For this rule, a
‘‘consignee’’ means a party who takes
custody or delivery of CPSC regulated
finished products for which CPSC
certificate data is required. For this rule,
an ‘‘owner or purchaser’’ means a party
who has a financial interest in the
finished products for which CPSC
certificate data is required, to include
the actual owner of the merchandise.
Because a consumer could fall within
the definitions of purchaser or
consignee, the definition of ‘‘importer’’
continues to state, as proposed, that for
the purposes of this rule, CPSC will not
typically consider an end consumer
purchasing or receiving products for
personal use or enjoyment to be the
importer responsible for certification..
The Final Rule changes a defined
term from ‘‘eFiled certificate’’ to ‘‘eFile’’
because the term ‘‘eFiled certificate’’ is
not used in the rule, but the term
‘‘eFile’’ or ‘‘eFiled’’ is used nine times
throughout the regulation. The
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definition of ‘‘eFile’’ is consistent with
the SNPR definition of ‘‘eFiled
certificate,’’ and means to electronically
file the required data elements on a
finished product certificate, as
described in § 1110.11, into ACE, in the
format required in § 1110.13(a)(1).
Minor edits were also made to the
definition of ‘‘electronic certificate.’’ An
‘‘electronic certificate’’ is not an eFiled
certificate. An electronic certificate
contains the same certificate
information as an eFiled certificate, but
is primarily used to provide an
electronic certificate to CPSC for
domestically manufactured products, in
the format described in § 1110.9(c).
Finally, the Final Rule clarifies the
definition of ‘‘Product Registry’’ by
stating that the finished product certifier
that is required to issue the finished
product certificate, as specified in
§ 1110.7(a), and who is also required to
eFile the certificate data as set forth in
§ 1110.13(a)(1), enters finished product
certificate data into the Product
Registry. Note that pursuant to
§ 1110.15, a finished product certifier
can rely on other parties to maintain
records, test, or certify products, or
enter data into the Product Registry, but
remains legally responsible for the
validity, accuracy, completeness, and
availability of finished product
certificates.
C. Finished Products Required To Be
Certified (§ 1110.5)
The Commission finalizes § 1110.5 as
proposed, except for two minor
clarifications. First, § 1110.5 clarifies
that finished products also include
‘‘substances,’’ which are regulated
under the Federal Hazardous
Substances Act (FHSA). Second, the
title of this section revises ‘‘Products’’ to
‘‘Finished products,’’ and changes the
phrase ‘‘GCC or CPC, as applicable’’ to
‘‘finished product certificate’’ (which
encompasses GCCs and CPCs), to more
clearly convey that only finished
products are required to be certified.
Accordingly, § 1110.5 explains that a
certificate is required only when: (1) the
product is a finished product or
substance; (2) the product or substance
is subject to a consumer product safety
rule under the CPSA, or similar rule,
ban, standard, or regulation under any
other law enforced by the Commission;
and (3) the product or substance is
imported for consumption or
warehousing, or is distributed into
commerce.
D. Who Must Certify Finished Products
(§ 1110.7)
The SNPR required that, unless a
specific rule states otherwise, only
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importers, as defined in the rule, must
issue a certificate for imported products.
However, a private labeler could assume
responsibility for certifying an imported
product under the SNPR, if the private
labeler falls within the definition of an
importer in § 1110.3.
For domestically manufactured
finished products, the SNPR maintained
the 2013 NPR proposal that, unless
otherwise required in a specific rule, the
manufacturer must issue the certificate,
except for consumer products or
substances that are privately labeled.
When a product is privately labeled, a
manufacturer name does not appear on
the product. Accordingly, for such
products, placing responsibility on the
private labeler is both pragmatic and
appropriate. However, the SNPR
proposed to allow private labelers to
continue to rely on a manufacturer’s
testing or certification if they choose to
do so. Importantly, if a manufacturer’s
name appears on a product, the product
is not privately labeled under the
definition in section 3 of the CPSA, 15
U.S.C. 2052(a)(12), and the
manufacturer would be required to test
and certify the product.
The SNPR moved the requirement
regarding the availability of certificates
for imports and domestic products,
found in § 1110.7(c) of the existing rule,
to § 1110.13.
The Commission finalizes § 1110.7 as
proposed in the SNPR with a
clarification specifying that the required
certifier is the ‘‘finished product
certifier.’’ The terms ‘‘finished product
certifier’’ and ‘‘finished product
certificate’’ are used throughout the
regulation to explain certificate
responsibilities and content
requirements. The Final Rule is
consistent with section 14(g)(1) of
CPSA, which requires that the
manufacturer (defined as any person
who manufactures or imports a
consumer product) or private labeler
must test and certify products. For
domestically manufactured products
that are privately labeled, the private
labeler must certify or ensure that a
manufacturer certifies the product. Also,
pursuant to the 1109 rule, a private
labeler can rely on a manufacturer’s
testing or certification to issue their own
finished product certificate. Section
3(a)(12)(B) of the CPSA defines a
privately labeled product as a product
with no manufacturer information on
the product or packaging. Therefore,
CPSC is unable to identify any other
party to hold responsible for a
noncompliant product. For clarity, the
Final Rule adds the statutory definitions
of ‘‘manufacturer’’ and ‘‘private labeler’’
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in 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)–(12) to the list
of defined terms in § 1110.3.
E. Certificate Language and Format
(§ 1110.9)
The Final Rule maintains § 1110.9 as
proposed in the SNPR, with the
addition of ‘‘finished product
certificate’’ in place of ‘‘certificate,’’ to
clarify that the requirements apply to
finished products. Section IV.E of this
preamble contains comments and
CPSC’s responses regarding § 1110.9.
We describe each section of § 1110.9.
The SNPR § 1110.9(a) proposed that
an eFiled certificate must be in English,
which is consistent with the statutory
requirement and is necessary for CBP
and CPSC IT systems. Proposed
§ 1110.9(a) provided that a hard copy or
electronic certificate must be in English,
but may also contain the same content
in any other language. The Commission
finalizes § 1109.9(a) without substantive
change.
Proposed § 1110.9(b) clarified the
formats for eFiled and for hard copy and
electronic certificates. The SNPR
proposed that an eFiled certificate must
meet the requirements in proposed
§ 1110.13(a), and that certificates
furnished to retailers, distributors, or to
CPSC pursuant to § 1110.13(b) and (c)
may be provided in hard copy or
electronically. The Commission
finalizes § 1109.9(b) without substantive
change.
Proposed § 1110.9(c) described the
format for the electronic certificates
described in § 1110.13(b) and (c), which
are used to furnish a certificate to
retailers or distributors, or to CBP or
CPSC upon request. The SNPR proposed
to allow password protection of
certificate information, so long as the
password is provided to CPSC or CBP at
the same time as a certificate. This
provision applies to domestic
manufacturers and to other certifiers
when providing a password protected
electronic certificate to CPSC or CBP;
the password must be provided to the
relevant agency at the same time. The
Commission finalizes § 1109.9(c)
without substantive change.
F. Certificate Content (§ 1110.11)
The 2023 SNPR proposed to require
the seven statutory certificate data
elements in the existing rule, and to
include only one of the three additional
requirements proposed in the 2013
NPR—attestation. However, the SNPR
provided additional detail on the
required data elements. Below we
describe each data element proposed in
§ 1110.11(a) of the SNPR. Except for a
clarifying change to the attestation
requirement, and addition of the terms
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‘‘finished product certificate’’ and
‘‘finished product certifier’’ in place of
‘‘certificate’’ and ‘‘certifier,’’ the Final
Rule retains the requirements as
proposed in the SNPR.
Product Identification
(§ 1110.11(a)(1)): The Final Rule retains
the SNPR proposal to identify the
finished product covered by the
certificate, including at least one unique
ID from a list of seven options, and a
sufficient product description so that
CPSC can match the finished product to
the certificate. Finished product
certificates may contain optional
additional IDs to assist with product
identification. The SNPR clarified that
‘‘identification’’ means a unique ID is
necessary for eFiling, so that certificates
can be better tracked in the Product
Registry and RAM. The SNPR explained
that CPSC expects it would be easier for
importers to provide a unique ID that
already exists for the product, instead of
having certifiers manage an additional
identifier assigned by CPSC.
The Final Rule also retains the SNPR
proposal to expand the term
‘‘description’’ as it relates to products to
mean a ‘‘sufficient description to match
the finished product to the certificate.’’
Currently, the product description in a
certificate is sometimes insufficient to
enable CPSC staff to determine whether
the certificate describes the product
being examined.
List of Applicable Rules
(§ 1110.11(a)(2)): Although CPSC
received adverse comments regarding
listing applicable subsections of the
ASTM Toy Standard, codified in 16 CFR
part 1250, CPSC is maintaining this
requirement as proposed, as further
explained in response to comment 26, to
align with sections 14(a)(1) and 14(g) of
the CPSA. The underlying requirement
to list applicable rules is statutory;
certificates must provide a list of all
applicable rules to which the product is
being certified. The eFiling system
makes this requirement easier for
certifiers because CPSC provides a
standardized list of all rules, each
assigned a code. When eFiling
certificate data, the certifier will only
need to select from these codes, either
in the Full Message Set or in the
Product Registry. Additionally, certifiers
of domestically manufactured products,
and those certifying using a Full
Message Set, have access to the list of
all rule citations and testing exclusions,
which is updated and stored on CPSC’s
website, available at: https://
www.cpsc.gov/eFiling-DocumentLibrary.
Identification of Certifier
(§ 1110.11(a)(3)): The Final Rule retains
the SNPR proposal to identify the party
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certifying compliance of the finished
product(s), including the party’s name,
street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region,
electronic mail (email) address, and
telephone number. Adding a more
specific street address interprets the
statutory requirement for a ‘‘full mailing
address,’’ and will assist staff in
distinguishing facilities or locating
certifiers for site visits. If a certifying
party’s physical location does not have
a street address, then a location
identification typical of the country of
origin, or a Global Positioning System
(GPS) coordinate, is also permissible.
The Final Rule also retains the SNPR
proposal to include an email address,
which will improve communication
between CPSC and the certifying party,
particularly across time zones. Note that
for imported finished products, the
finished product certifier should be the
Business Account Administrator if
using the Product Registry to eFile
certificate data.
Contact for Records (1110.11(a)(4)):
The Final Rule retains the SNPR’s
proposal to provide the identity and
contact information for the individual
maintaining records of test results. As
with the certifier’s contact information,
the Final Rule includes more detail
regarding the concept of a ‘‘full mailing
address,’’ which includes ‘‘street
address, city, state or province, country
or administrative region, electronic mail
(email) address, and telephone
number.’’ For clarity, and because this
data element requires a name and
contact information, the Final Rule
moves the bulleted list of recordkeeping
requirements in sections of the CFR that
apply to GCCs and CPCs to the
recordkeeping requirement in § 1110.17
of the Final Rule.
The Final Rule maintains the SNPR
clarification that the individual
maintaining records may be a position
title, provided that this position is
always staffed and responsive to CPSC’s
requests. Allowing a position title
instead of an individual is in response
to public comments concerned that the
individual maintaining the records of
test results may leave the company or
otherwise be unavailable, and that a
position title would provide continuity.
Manufacture Date and Place
(1110.11(a)(5)): The Final Rule retains
the SNPR proposal to provide the date
when the finished product(s) were
manufactured, produced, or assembled,
as further explained in response to
comment 19. The first date of a batch
run is the date of manufacturing. The
Final Rule also retains the statutory
requirement to provide the place where
the finished product(s) were
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manufactured. Section 14(g)(1) of the
CPSA requires that each certificate
contains ‘‘each party’s name, full
mailing address, [and] telephone
number.’’ Therefore, the Final Rule
aligns with the statute and with the
other data elements requiring contact
information, which includes a name,
street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region, email
address, and telephone number. For this
data element, the contact information
must state where the finished product(s)
were manufactured, produced, or
assembled. The Final Rule requires this
manufacturer detail, for eFiling in
particular, because staff have
experienced situations where it is
difficult to distinguish between multiple
firms with similar addresses and contact
the correct manufacturer. If a location
does not have a street address, a
location identification typical of the
country of origin or a GPS coordinate is
permissible.
Test Date and Place (1110.11(a)(6)):
The Final Rule retains the SNPR
proposal, which is also in the existing
rule, to provide the date when the
finished product(s) were tested for
compliance. The SNPR amended this
requirement to clarify that the required
date is the most recent date of testing.
The Final Rule retains this change,
which aids CPSC in assessing the
validity and integrity of a certificate,
and promotes consistency across
certificates for CPSC and certifiers,
particularly where laboratory testing is
done over several days.
The Final Rule also maintains the
SNPR proposal, which is in the existing
rule, to provide the place where the
finished product(s) were tested for
compliance. As proposed, the Final
Rule standardizes the contact
information required, including the
name of each third-party conformity
assessment body or other party on
whose testing the certificate depends,
and the street address (or locally
comparable location identification),
city, state or province, country or
administrative region, email address,
and telephone number. The Final Rule
also requires an email address, as
proposed, so staff have another means of
contacting the testing laboratory.
Attestation (§ 1110.11(a)(7)): The
SNPR proposed to include an attestation
by the certifier that the certificate
information is true and accurate and
that the certified product complies with
all rules, bans, standards, or regulations
applicable to the product under the
CPSA or any other Act enforced by the
Commission. The Final Rule retains the
attestation requirement for certificates
provided to CPSC or CBP in hard copy
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or in electronic format, as provided in
§ 1110.9(c), and clarifies that the
finished product certifier is responsible
for the attestation. For imported
products that require an eFiled
certificate, the Final Rule requires an
attestation, but clarifies that the eFiling
requirements for both the Full Message
Set and the Reference Message Set
already include an attestation. The Full
Message Set contains a check box data
element for the attestation. Importers
using the Product Registry must
periodically attest to the veracity of the
data, depending on the user’s
permissions. For eFiled certificates,
even if the importer allows another
entity to enter certificate data into the
Product Registry on their behalf, or to
certify products on their behalf, the
importer/finished product certifier
remains responsible for the information
provided to CPSC, as stated in § 1110.15
of the Final Rule. Thus, the Product
Registry includes built-in, simplified
attestation requirements.
Electronic access to records
(§ 1110.11(b)): The Final Rule retains
the SNPR proposal in § 1110.11(b) for a
certificate to optionally include a URL
or other electronic means, along with
the identification of the custodian of
records, to allow for electronic access of
supporting records, such as test records.
If certifiers provide this information,
staff can more easily confirm the
veracity of the certificate.
Statutory or regulatory testing
exclusions (§ 1110.11(c)): Although
CPSC received adverse comments
regarding the inclusion of testing
exclusions on certificates, claiming that
exclusions are self-effective, as
explained in response to comments 27
and 28 the Final Rule requires
identification of testing exclusions that
are codified in a statute or regulation.
CPSC’s algorithm will expect either a
certificate citing a CPSC-accepted
testing laboratory for each rule, or
reliance on a testing exclusion.
Accordingly, as proposed, § 1110.11(c)
of the Final Rule requires finished
product certifiers to list all claimed
testing exclusions, instead of providing
the date and place where the finished
product was tested for compliance.
The requirement to list testing
exclusions on a finished product
certificate does not apply to
Commission enforcement discretion for
adult wearing apparel or for refrigerator
doors. This requirement only applies to
consumer products that are subject to
testing and certification, where a statute
or regulation allows for a testing
exclusion for certain products subject to
a rule. The Product Registry lists all
available exclusions for each rule,
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streamlining and standardizing how to
record these exclusions on a certificate.
These exclusions are also updated and
maintained on CPSC’s website for use in
a Full PGA Message Set and for
domestically manufactured products
and CPSC will continue to maintain the
list of CPSC rules (citations) and any
associated testing exclusions. CPSC is
currently updating and finalizing this
list for use in the expanded Beta Pilot
and this Final Rule. Some finished
product certifiers already list testing
exclusions on a certificate and CPSC’s
website provides guidance on how to do
so; the Final Rule standardizes this
requirement for all finished product
certifiers. Note that no certificate is
required if a product is not subject to a
safety rule or similar rule, ban, standard,
or regulation, or if the product is subject
to enforcement discretion (such as adult
wearing apparel relying on 16 CFR
1610.1(d) and household refrigerators
subject to 16 CFR part 1750).
For the Final Rule, CPSC also clarifies
that, as a matter of policy and to reduce
burden, importers are not required to
file a Disclaimer Message Set for: (1)
products that are not within CPSC’s
jurisdiction, (2) non-regulated products
within CPSC’s jurisdiction; or (3)
products that are regulated but do not
require certification. Although the
Commission has authority to require a
Disclaimer Message Set for all consumer
products within CPSC’s jurisdiction,
based on the comments, and to reduce
burden for products that do not have a
certificate requirement at the time of
import, CPSC will not require a
Disclaimer Message Set. CPSC updated
the CATAIR guideline to reflect this
change. However, CPSC encourages
importers to file Disclaimer Message
Sets, where appropriate, meaning when
a certificate may be expected, because
this additional information will inform
CPSC staff as to why a certificate does
not accompany the shipment, reducing
the possibility of a hold at the port for
further inspection.
Duplicative testing not required
(§ 1110.11(d)): To reduce burden for
certifiers, the Final Rule retains the
SNPR proposal in § 1110.11(d) regarding
duplicative testing, but provides more
clarity regarding when this provision
applies, based on a comment. The Final
Rule clarifies that finished product
certifiers are not required to conduct the
same third party test more than once on
each sample when a rule references, or
incorporates fully, another applicable
consumer product safety rule or similar
rule, ban, standard, or regulation under
any other law enforced by the
Commission, that contains the same
requirement. This provision is
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applicable primarily to children’s
products that are more likely to have
overlapping requirements, such as those
for lead content or small parts that
apply specifically to children’s products
but also may be required within a
product level safety rule, such as the toy
rule or rules for bassinets, strollers, or
other durable infant or toddler products.
G. Certificate Availability (§ 1110.13)
Although CPSC received adverse
comments regarding the availability of
certificates, arguing that the current
‘‘upon request’’ system is sufficient,
section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA specifically
provides the Commission with the
authority to, by rule, require eFiling of
certificates for imported consumer
products. Moreover, the Commission
has been explaining and demonstrating
the benefits of eFiling since at least
2012, in the Alpha Pilot, Beta Pilot, in
establishing the eFiling program in
2020, and in the SNPR and this Final
Rule.
Section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA
establishes several requirements
regarding the availability of certificates,
which must: ‘‘accompany the applicable
product or shipment of products
covered by the same certificate;’’ ‘‘be
furnished to each distributor or retailer
of the product;’’ and be furnished to the
Commission upon request. By codifying
the eFiling requirement, an eFiled
certificate meets the ‘‘accompany’’ and
‘‘upon request’’ requirements of section
14(g)(3).
As explained in response to
comments 34, 45, and 65, the Final Rule
retains § 1110.13(a) as proposed in the
SNPR. Now that IT solutions are
developed, available, and being tested,
the Final Rule points to a CPSC-specific
CATAIR and Product Registry that
contain the IT solutions for eFiling. For
example, the Final Rule does not retain
a separate ‘‘accompany’’ requirement for
imported finished products that are
delivered directly to a consumer in the
United States, but rather provides for
collecting these certificates through
eFiling. However, finished product
certifiers must still provide a finished
product certificate when asked by CPSC
or CBP, especially in cases where a
required certificate has not been eFiled
or contains false or misleading
information.
The final § 1110.13(a) explains that a
finished product certificate must
accompany each finished product or
finished product shipment required to
be certified pursuant to § 1110.5.
Additionally, § 1110.13(a) requires that
each certificate describe a single
product. One product per certificate
allows the RAM to conduct risk analysis
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on unique products in a shipment,
which allows better targeting of
potentially violative products and
avoids delaying delivery of shipments
that do not warrant examination.34
Final § 1110.13(a)(1) states the
requirements for finished products
manufactured outside the United States
that are offered for importation into the
United States for consumption or
warehousing, including products
offered for consumption or warehousing
from a Foreign Trade Zone, or products
eligible for the de minimis duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C.
1321(a)(2)(C). As proposed, finished
product certificate data elements
required in § 1110.11 must be eFiled at
the time of filing the CBP entry, or entry
summary, if both are filed together, into
ACE as provided in CPSC’s CATAIR and
any revisions of the CATAIR. CPSC’s
most recent CATAIR is provided in Tab
B of the Staff Final Rule Briefing Memo.
Section 1110.13(a)(1) of the Final Rule
contains minor clarifications related to
international mail shipments, stating
that for products imported by mail, the
finished product certifier must enter the
required finished product certificate
data elements into CPSC’s Product
Registry before the shipment arrives in
the United States.
Section 1110(a)(2), stating
requirements for domestically
manufactured products that are required
to be certified pursuant to § 1110.5, is
finalized as proposed. The finished
product certifier for these products must
issue the required certificate on or
before the finished product is
distributed in commerce, and they must
make the finished product certificate
available for inspection immediately,
meaning with 24 hours of CPSC’s
request.
Final § 1110.13(b) maintains the
statutory requirement to ‘‘furnish’’ a
required finished product certificate to
each distributor or retailer, and final
§ 1110.13(c) maintains the statutory
requirement to make certificates
available for inspection immediately
upon request by CPSC or CBP. To be
clear regarding the expectation, the term
‘‘immediately’’ means within 24 hours,
as explained in the NPR and the SNPR.
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H. Legal Responsibility of Finished
Product Certifiers (§ 1110.15)
CPSC did not receive adverse
comments on this section of the SNPR;
however, the Final Rule provides
further explanation, consistent with the
34 See, for example, § 1107.23, which explains a
‘‘material change’’ to a children’s product. Products
that are not the same in all material respects cannot
be on the same certificate.
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SNPR and with the 1109 rule, regarding
how a finished product certifier may
rely on other parties to maintain data,
test or certify component parts or
finished products, or enter data into the
Product Registry. The Final Rule
continues to state, as proposed, that a
finished product certifier remains
legally responsible for the information
in a finished product certificate,
including its validity, accuracy,
completeness, and availability. The
Final Rule is intended to accommodate
diverse relationships between finished
product certifiers and their trade
partners to better facilitate trade.
However, the Final Rule places
accountability for certifications and
submitted data on the finished product
certifiers, who are ultimately
responsible for ensuring that imported
products comply with applicable U.S.
law, including CPSC’s required testing
and certification. Finished product
certifiers, meaning importers for
imported products, will have the ability
in the Product Registry to manage
permissions for trade partners to enter
data and/or to certify products,
including managing the roles of specific
individuals who enter data or certify
products on the finished product
certifier’s behalf. Finished product
certifiers should exercise due diligence
if they allow another entity to submit
data into the Product Registry or to
certify on their behalf.
I. Recordkeeping Requirements
(§ 1110.17)
CPSC did not receive adverse
comments on proposed § 1110.17 in the
SNPR. However, the Final Rule modifies
§ 1110.17 by moving into this section
the bulleted list of potential certificaterelated records previously in
§ 1110.11(a)(4). The listed records are
the same as those stated in the SNPR,
but they are formatted differently and
with additional explanation. The Final
Rule states that finished product
certificates, which include CPCs and
GCCs, and related records, must be
maintained for five years, as proposed.
J. Component Part Certificates
(§ 1110.19)
The Final Rule is consistent with the
SNPR proposal; however, based on
continued confusion regarding
component part certificates, the Final
Rule adds the purpose of the 1109 rule,
explaining that component part
certificates are voluntary, but may be
relied upon by a finished product
certifier to issue a finished product
certificate. The Final Rule further
explains that component part
certificates must not be eFiled into ACE.
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1827
The Final Rule continues to set forth the
content, form, and availability
requirements for component part
certificates.
VI. Effective Dates
The Administrative Procedures Act
(APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30
days after publication of the Final Rule.
5 U.S.C. 553(d). In the SNPR, the
Commission proposed that a Final Rule
revising 16 CFR part 1110 become
effective 120 days after publication in
the Federal Register, to provide
importers time to onboard with CPSC’s
Product Registry and upgrade software
to send PGA Message Sets to their
broker for eFiling. Based on the public
comments and Beta Pilot participant
feedback, CPSC will finalize a longer
effective date of 18 months after a Final
Rule publishes in the Federal Register,
except for consumer products and
substances that are imported into an
FTZ and subsequently entered for
consumption or warehousing. For
products and substances entered for
consumption or warehousing from an
FTZ, the Final Rule is effective 24
months after publication of the Final
Rule in the Federal Register.
A. 18-Month Effective Date—Domestic
and eFiled Certificates
The Final Rule provides an 18-month
effective date for regulated, domestic
products and substances that are
required to be certified. Domestic
certificates should not be eFiled.
However, the Final Rule includes three
primary changes for domestic
certificates:
• § 1110.7—Unless otherwise stated
in a specific rule, the manufacturer is
the finished product certifier that must
issue a certificate. However, for
privately labeled products, the private
labeler is the finished product certifier
that must issue a certificate, unless the
manufacturer issues the certificate.
• § 1110.11(a)(7)—Include an
attestation of compliance.
• § 1110.11(c)—Unless otherwise
provided by the Commission, if a
finished product certifier is claiming a
statutory or regulatory testing exclusion
for an applicable rule, then in addition
to listing all applicable rules, and in lieu
of providing the date and place of
testing, the certificate must list the
applicable testing exclusion.
If a product is privately labeled, the
Final Rule shifts the responsibility of
certification onto the private labeler,
who becomes the finished product
certifier that must certify the product or
ensure that the manufacturer certifies
the product. A privately labeled product
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
is one that is branded and does not
contain the name of a manufacturer.
Currently, CPSC’s website advises that
firms list testing exclusions on
certificates; the Final Rule will require
certificates to list such exclusions. Thus,
when a rule applies, but a certifier does
not test to the rule because a testing
exclusion within a rule or statute
applies, the Final Rule requires that
such testing exclusion be listed on the
certificate instead of the name of the
testing laboratory. CPSC’s website
contains a list of all testing exclusions
to include on a certificate, where
applicable.35 This additional
information will require certifiers to
review the requirement, assess their
products, and align their certificates
accordingly. Because domestic
manufacturers and private labelers must
reassess their business relationships and
responsibilities, and certificates will
now be required to identify testing
exclusions, the Final Rule’s effective
date for domestically manufactured
products is 18 months after publication
in the Federal Register.
With regard to eFiled products, CPSC
surveyed Beta Pilot participants to
gauge their preparation time for
eFiling.36 On average, Beta Pilot
participants took five weeks to prepare
for the Beta Pilot and create their
Business Account in the Product
Registry. This preparation included
attending meetings, reviewing and
understanding CPSC’s guidance
documents, communicating internally
and externally with trade partners, and
organizing certificate data in an
electronic format. Furthermore, Beta
Pilot participants stated that their
customs brokers needed to concurrently
update their software to enable
transmission of the PGA Message Set
into ACE via the Automated Broker
Interface. Several brokers who assisted
importers in the Beta Pilot estimated
that this update (either in-house or from
a software developer) takes three to 12
months, with an average of nine
months. Based on this feedback, as well
as public comments, the Final Rule is
effective for all imported, products
regulated by CPSC 18 months after
publication of the Final Rule in the
Federal Register for all entry types,
except for products entered for
consumption or warehousing from an
FTZ.
35 Currently available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/
s3fs-public/BetaPilotCitationandTestingExclusion
Codesv3.xlsx.
36 Tab C of Staff’s Final Rule Memo contains the
Beta Pilot participant survey responses.
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B. 24-Month Effective Date—Products
Entered for Consumption or
Warehousing From an FTZ
For regulated products imported into
an FTZ and subsequently entered for
consumption or warehousing, the Final
Rule is effective 24 months after
publication of a Final Rule in the
Federal Register. Based on discussions
with the National Association of Foreign
Trade Zones (NAFTZ) and other
importers, updating processes and
software to meet this Final Rule will be
particularly challenging for importers
using FTZs. Importers can use FTZs in
various ways before entering consumer
products into customs territory for
consumption or warehousing. For
example, importers can use an FTZ to:
hold products prior to making entry into
the United States; assemble components
of products from various manufacturing
sites into finished products; bring
products into compliance with CPSC
rules; manufacture components or
finished products; or test and certify
finished products. Although products
and materials admitted into an FTZ are
accounted for on CBP Form 214, when
products are imported into the United
States, CBP allows for entry to occur on
a weekly basis, including estimation of
the number of products removed from
an FTZ for entry for consumption. If this
estimate is exceeded, entry must be
made for the excess quantity prior to its
removal from an FTZ into customs
territory.
CBP’s current FTZ import procedure
does not allow accurate CPSC PGA
Message Sets to be attached to CBP
entries. Commenters (Comment 44),
including the NAFTZ, state that FTZ
importers require additional time before
eFiling implementation to build the
necessary infrastructure to
accommodate accurate CPSC PGA
Message Sets and to troubleshoot issues.
Commenters explain that the First-InFirst-Out inventory accounting method
applicable to fungible merchandise
within an FTZ uses a Unique Identifier
(UIN) for inventory control and
recordkeeping which has no
relationship to the compliance data
CPSC requests. Commenters explain
that currently, FTZ imports can only
attach the latest certificate associated
with an article/supplier combination
and cannot attach a specific certificate
at the inventory level that CPSC’s
Message Set requires. Commenters state
that FTZ importers will require
significant changes to their current
software to comply with an eFiling
requirement. Moreover, commenters
allege that FTZ procedures are
incompatible with a requirement to file
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certificates at entry summary, because
goods imported from an FTZ may have
already been shipped to stores and
possibly sold, negating CPSC’s ability to
place such goods on hold for
examination.
Commenters encourage CPSC to work
with the CBP Border Interagency
Executive Council (BIEC) to build a
single window concept inclusive of
FTZs and provide a transition period of
at least 24 months. CPSC staff further
informs that CBP processes for FTZ
imports would also need to be updated
to accommodate an eFiling requirement,
but 24 months is likely necessary for
full implementation of eFiling for FTZimported products and substances.
CPSC intends to work with the trade
and with CBP in the coming months, to
initiate conversations on software
solution(s) that would best allow
compliance with CPSC’s Message Set.
Once a software solution is identified,
meeting the eFiling requirement will
involve software development, testing,
implementation, and troubleshooting.
Based on CPSC’s experience with
developing and testing IT solutions for
the Beta Pilot, for products entered for
consumption or warehousing from an
FTZ, the effective date is 24 months
after publication of the Final Rule in the
Federal Register.
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
5 U.S.C. 601–612, requires agencies to
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis
unless the head of the agency certifies
that the proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. In
the SNPR, the Commission certified that
the proposed rule would not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small businesses. 88 FR
85760, 85783. The Commission received
additional information during the SNPR
comment period and the eFiling Beta
Pilot regarding: (1) initial startup burden
for eFiling; (2) filing fees; (3) Disclaimer
Message Sets (disclaims); and (4) de
minimis entry filings. Based on these
comments, the Commission has
prepared a final regulatory flexibility
analysis (FRFA) that includes an
analysis of this additional information.
The conclusion of this FRFA is that the
cost of the Final Rule is likely less than
one percent of the revenue for a small
firm, and therefore does not impose
significant costs to a substantial number
of firms.
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
A. Need for Agency Action and
Objectives of the Rule
Sections I and II of the preamble
describe the need for agency action and
objectives of the Final Rule.
B. Issues Raised by Comments and
Resulting Changes
Several SNPR commenters provided
additional information regarding costs
to importers and eFilers, including
technology and staff-related costs from
initial startup activities for eFiling,
filing fees, disclaims, and de minimis
entries. See Comments 53–63 in section
IV.N of this preamble.
C. Small Entities to Which the Rule Will
Apply
The Final Rule applies to all
importers and domestic
manufacturers 37 required to issue
certificates for products or substances
1829
subject to a CPSC rule, ban, standard, or
regulation, that are imported for
consumption or warehousing into the
United States or are distributed in
commerce.38 The Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) estimated
the number of small businesses
impacted by the rule. 88 FR 85760,
85783. This FRFA uses these same
estimates, which are displayed in Table
2.
TABLE 2—ESTIMATED NUMBER OF SMALL BUSINESSES IMPACTED BY THE RULE
Non-children
products
Small business
Manufacturers ..............................................................................................................................
Importers ......................................................................................................................................
Number of Small Business ..........................................................................................................
Table 3 presents an estimate of the
number of certificates produced
annually by small firms impacted by the
Final Rule. These estimates assume
small firms produce 10 percent of the
7,771
35,290
43,061
Children
products
18,852
211,148
230,000
Total
26,623
246,438
273,061
number of certificates the average firm
in their industry produces:
TABLE 3—ESTIMATED NUMBER OF CERTIFICATES PRODUCED ANNUALLY BY SMALL FIRMS IMPACTED BY THE RULE
Certificates created by small business
CPCs
Total
Manufacturers ..............................................................................................................................
Importers ......................................................................................................................................
34,438
85,002
11,590
129,804
46,028
214,806
Total ......................................................................................................................................
119,440
141,393
260,834
D. Compliance, Reporting, and
Recordkeeping Requirements of the Rule
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GCCs
1. Potential Impact on Small Firms
This FRFA assesses the economic
costs that will be incurred by small U.S.
firms impacted by the Final Rule.
Typically, CPSC considers costs that
exceed one percent of gross revenue to
be an economically significant cost
impact. This FRFA estimates the cost
impact of the Final Rule on small firms
arising from both extended
recordkeeping of GCCs (i.e., the burden
associated with the increasing the
recordkeeping period for GCCs from
three to five years) and eFiling (which
includes (i) the hourly burden and (ii)
the out-of-pocket costs from
electronically filing certificate data for
regulated, imported consumer
products).
Small firms face an hourly burden
related to uploading or submitting
information via;
• The CPSC Product Registry,
• Full Message Sets to CBP through a
broker,
37 The rule also applies to private labelers who
may be contingent or substitute recordkeepers or
filers. However, in order to avoid double counting
of impacts, staff developed the analysis for
domestic manufacturers and importers only.
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• Reference Message Sets (of
certificates uploaded into the Product
Registry) with simplified filings with
CBP, and
• Disclaimer Message Sets (for
products or substances that do not
require a certificate).
In addition to the hourly burden,
small importers will face out of pocket
expenses that include: Startup costs,
and Filing fees to eFile certificates.
(a) Extended Recordkeeping of GCCs
The Final Rule requires firms to
maintain records of all certificates for
five years. CPC’s records are already
required to be kept for a period of five
years pursuant to part 1107. Currently,
however, for non-children’s products,
firms are either required within specific
rules to maintain records for three years
or follow the guidance in the existing
part 1110 to maintain records for three
years. Thus, firms supplying nonchildren products will have to hold
certificates and supporting
documentation, such as test reports, for
38 Part 1107 governs the creation and
recordkeeping requirements for CPCs. Among other
requirements, part 1107 requires that importers and
domestic manufacturers of children’s products
issue a CPC affirming that the firm has met third
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two additional years after the Final Rule
becomes effective.
To estimate this additional burden,
the FRFA takes the difference of the
total burden under the current
requirements (i.e., baseline) and total
burden with the Final Rule
requirements. To estimate the number of
non-children’s product certificates that
additionally require recordkeeping with
the Final Rule, the FRFA conservatively
uses the number of active certificates
and multiplies by five (years). The
FRFA estimates the number of
certificates requiring recordkeeping in
the baseline by multiplying the total
number of certificates issued annually
by the current recordkeeping period of
three (years). The hourly burden of
additional recordkeeping is the
difference between active certificates
and baseline certificates (i.e., the
increase in the number of active
certificates) multiplied by the estimated
3 seconds it takes to ensure that records
of active certificates are kept in a safe
virtual storage location and the
provision of routine maintenance of
party testing requirements: https://www.ecfr.gov/
current/title-16/chapter-II/subchapter-B/part-1107.
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
records. The estimated total cost is
equal to the number of burden hours
multiplied by the hourly compensation
of office and administrative support
occupations 39 of $35.56.40
Table 4 presents staff’s estimate of the
additional routine annual recordkeeping
burden of the Final Rule to domestic
manufacturers and importers. The total
cost of maintaining GCC records for two
additional years is $7,079; of this total
$2,041 is a burden to manufacturers and
$5,038 a burden to importers.
TABLE 4—ESTIMATED COST OF ROUTINE ANNUAL RECORDKEEPING OF GCCS BY SMALL FIRMS
Prior to the
rule
Cost of routine GCC recordkeeping for small firms
Active Certificates:
Manufacturers .......................................................................................................................
Importers ...............................................................................................................................
Burden Hours:
Manufacturers .......................................................................................................................
Importers ...............................................................................................................................
Cost of the Burden:
Manufacturers .......................................................................................................................
Importers ...............................................................................................................................
Total Change in Cost for Routine GCC Recordkeeping ...............................................
(b) eFiling of Certificates
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Small firms required to eFile finished
product certificates, either a GCC or
CPC, are likely to face an hourly burden
due to eFiling activities. Importers will
have two methods of filing certificate
data with CBP: a Full Message Set, or a
Reference Message Set. While the Final
Rule does not require the use of the
Product Registry, CPSC expects that
most small importers will use the
Product Registry to enter and maintain
certificate data. The use of Reference
Message Sets along with the Product
Registry will likely reduce the time for
storing, transmitting, and eFiling
certificates. Full Message Sets are more
burdensome than Reference Message
Sets because they require repeated data
entry, maintained by the importer or
broker, rather than relying on CPSC’s IT
solution, the Product Registry, and a
shortened Reference Message Set.
To achieve compliance with the Final
Rule’s eFiling requirements, small
39 Bureau of Labor Statistics, ‘‘Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation’’, Table 4. Employer Costs
for Employee Compensation for private industry
workers by occupational and industry group, June
2024, ‘‘Total Compensation’’ for ‘‘Office and
administrative support occupations’’ under ‘‘Goodsproducing industries’’, https://www.bls.gov/
news.release/ecec.t04.htm.
40 The cost per firm is $0.16. Three seconds per
active certificate represent $0.02963 (3/3600 ×
$35.56), where $35.56 is the hourly compensation
(includes benefits plus wage) of office and
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importers of products requiring either a
GCC or CPC may also incur out-ofpocket costs from several activities
including startup costs (consisting of the
one-time cost of updating technology
and training staff for eFiling) and filing
fees. The following sections present
estimates for the hourly burden and outof-pocket cost for eFiling.
(i) eFiling Hourly Burden
The burden of eFiling is only a
burden on importers. Domestic
manufacturers are unaffected by
eFiling.41 Within the category of eFiling,
this FRFA considered the hourly costs
of entering records in the:
• CPSC Product Registry,
• Full Message Sets,
• Reference Message Sets, and
• Disclaimer Message Sets.
Most importers will upload product
certificate records for products regulated
by CPSC into the Product Registry; 96.4
percent of eFilings by importers will
likely use Reference Message Sets to
administrative support occupation in good
producing industries as of June 2024. The estimated
number of active GCCs is 597,202 and the net
increase in the number of responses due to the
move from 3 to 5 years is 238,881. There are a total
of 43,061 small firms producing GCCs, so the net
increase in the average number of active certificate
records is 5.5. The annual cost per firm is then
roughly $0.16.
41 Except for providing domestic manufacturers
with the ability to upload certificate data into the
Product Registry, eFiling should not affect
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With the rule
Net change
103,314
255,007
172,191
425,011
68,876
170,004
86.1
212.5
143.5
354.2
57.4
141.7
$3,062
$7,557
$5,103
$12,594
$2,041
$5,038
$10,618
$17,697
$7,079
submit certificate data already stored in
the Product Registry based on data from
the eFiling Beta Pilot. The FRFA uses
this share for small importers. The
FRFA assumes the remaining 3.6
percent of eFiled certificates to use a
Full Message Set, which requires users
to enter all data fields on a certificate
every time a product is imported.
Aside from Reference and Full
Message Sets, some importers will file
Disclaimer Message Sets for products or
substances that do not require a
certificate. Disclaimer Message Sets are
not required but can be filed for finished
products or substances under CPSC’s
jurisdiction that would otherwise
require a certificate, but do not require
one under the circumstances. Based on
data from the Beta Pilot, the FRFA
estimates that Disclaimer Message Sets
will account for 14.4 percent of the total
number of Reference and Full Message
Sets.
manufacturers. If each domestic manufacturer
uploaded all the certificates it generated during the
year, the total hourly burden would reach 111
hours. At a total compensation of $35.56 per hour
for Office and Administrative Support Occupations
in Good-producing industries as of June 2024, the
cost of the annual burden to all domestic
manufacturers would be $3,955; roughly $0.15 per
manufacturer.
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The Beta Pilot participants provided
estimates for this FRFA regarding the
time it would take importers to submit
each type of Message Set. This FRFA
assumes that eFilers would become
more efficient over time as eFiling
becomes widespread and learning takes
place. Accordingly, this FRFA uses a
learning curve 42 that helps assess the
impact of learning efficiencies in the
processing time of Message Sets. Using
this approach, the FRFA estimates that
it would take participants an average of
15.3 seconds 43 to file a Reference
Message Set; half that amount of time,
or 7.6 seconds,44 to file a Disclaimer
Message Set; and 4.75 minutes 45 to file
a Full Message Set. Additionally, each
certificate filed in the Product Registry
as part of a multi-certificate data upload
would take an average of 8.7 seconds.
This FRFA assumes, conservatively,
that all importer certificates will be filed
once in the Product Registry. Based on
import surveillance data, this FRFA
estimates that 20 Reference Message
Sets will be filed annually per
certificate.46 Then, using the number of
Reference Message Sets per certificate,
this FRFA estimates that 0.7 47 Full
Message Sets and 3 48 Disclaimer
Message Sets will be filed annually per
certificate.
The annual creation of certificates is
industry dependent. Firms in some
industries produce a low number of new
1831
annual certificates per year, usually due
to lower levels of innovation or product
turnover, while other industries
produce a larger number of annual
certificates. Therefore, the cost per firm
in some industries may be larger than in
others. For instance, high certificate
turnover industries of small importers
include Vinyl Plastic Film (43 annual
certificates), Furniture (25 annual
certificates), Special Packaging or PPA
(23 annual certificates), and Clothing
and Apparel (13 annual certificates)
Table 5 presents staff’s estimate of the
number of annual GCC and CPC filings
by importers, under the assumptions
discussed earlier.
TABLE 5—ESTIMATED ANNUAL eFILINGS BY SMALL IMPORTERS IMPACTED BY THE RULE
Filings by importers
GCCs
CPCs
Total
Initial Filing in Product Registry ...................................................................................................
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker ..............................................................................
Transmission of Reference Message Set ...................................................................................
Transmission of Disclaims ...........................................................................................................
85,002
62,630
1,700,044
254,471
129,804
95,640
2,596,076
388,593
214,806
158,271
4,296,120
643,063
All Filings ..............................................................................................................................
2,102,147
3,210,113
5,312,260
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
Aggregating the processing times per
type of certificate filing with the number
of annual filings per certificate, the
annual burden of the Final Rule per
certificate would be 9.1 minutes.49
Table 6 shows the hourly burden on
small importers.
TABLE 6—ESTIMATED HOURLY BURDEN ON SMALL IMPORTERS IMPACTED BY THE eFILING PROVISION OF THE RULE
eFiling hourly burden on small importers
GCCs
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
Initial Filing in Product Registry ...................................................................................................
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker ..............................................................................
Transmission of Reference Message Set ...................................................................................
42 Staff used the responses of Beta Pilot survey
participants regarding the number of minutes it
took them to enter or upload certificate data, along
with the number of certificates each participant
uploaded to estimate the average time per certificate
at different volumes of certificate intake.
Specifically, staff found that participants who
entered or uploaded less than 100 certificates (an
average of 39.7 certificates per participant), spend
an average of 3.52 minutes filling out and
submitting each Reference Message Set; while
participants who entered/uploaded more than 100
certificates (an average of 409 certificates per
participant), spend an average of 0.2 minutes per
Reference Message Set. Staff used these
observations to fit a learning curve with a slope of
¥0.6147 that implies a 34.7 percent time
improvement for every doubling in the number of
certificates processed. To be conservative, staff used
a learning curve slope that is half the size of the
slope estimated from the data (¥1.229).
43 Staff obtained 15 seconds as the weighted
average of 18.6 seconds for importers of children’s
products (who have less opportunities for learning
as they file a lower number of certificates per year
but generate a higher number of filings as a group—
59.2 percent); and 12.2 seconds for importers of
nonchildren products (who have more learning
opportunities by filing a higher number of
certificates per year but generate a lower number of
total filings as a group—40.8 percent). The
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hypothetical time it would have taken to file the
first certificate through a Reference Message Set was
estimated as the highest average time observed from
the Beta Pilot survey, or 4.64 minutes per
certificate.
44 Staff considered half the time of a Reference Set
is reasonable given that a Disclaimer Message Set
does not require inputting any certificate data or
unique ID.
45 Staff assumes that the learning curve slope
(¥0.6147) obtained for Reference Message Sets
would also apply to Full Message Sets. Therefore,
staff applied a similar learning curve to the
estimated time for the first certificate filed through
a Full Message Set using the average number of Full
Message Set generated by each importer. Staff
estimated the time it would have taken to file the
first certificate as the average time to enter and
transfer a single product certificate data to the
broker for the submission of a Full Message Set, as
provided by Beta Pilot survey respondents. This
average from the survey was 12 minutes.
46 For importers of children’s products, CPCs are
filed with CBP on average 20 times per year. Note
that large suppliers subject to part 1107 may have
to certify and thus eFile many more products
annually. Additionally, importers must eFile GCCs
with CBP with each import; on average 20 times per
year per GCC. Like with children’s products, staff
expects larger importers to file more frequently,
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205
4,963
7,220
CPCs
314
7,579
11,026
Total
519
12,543
18,247
while smaller importers may only file a few times
a year.
47 Beta Pilot data suggests that the number of
Reference Message Sets would represent 96.4
percent of the total number of filings, excluding
disclaims. Therefore, each certificate would be filed
as a Full Message Set the remaining 3.6 percent of
times, or 0.7 times per year ([20/96.4] × 3.6%).
48 Based on data from the Beta Pilot, the number
of Disclaimer Message Sets is roughly 14.4 percent
of the total number of Full and Reference Message
Sets. Because a total of 20.7 filings of Full and
Reference Message Sets would be submitted per
certificate, then an average of 3 disclaims would be
created annually per existing certificate, where 3 =
20.7 × 14.4%.
49 An annual average of 20 Reference Message Set
filings per certificate with each filing taking 15.3
seconds results in 305.8 seconds per certificate.
Additionally, one filing per year of certificate data
in the Product Registry takes 8.7 seconds. Then, an
annual average of 0.7 (or 0.7368 to be more
accurate) Full Message Sets per certificate with each
taking 4.8 minutes (or 4.7549) results in an
additional 210.21 seconds per year. Finally, an
annual total of 3 disclaims per certificate at 7.6
seconds each total 22.89 seconds. Therefore, the
Rule creates an annual time burden per certificate
of 547.6 seconds, or 9.1 minutes.
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TABLE 6—ESTIMATED HOURLY BURDEN ON SMALL IMPORTERS IMPACTED BY THE eFILING PROVISION OF THE RULE—
Continued
eFiling hourly burden on small importers
GCCs
CPCs
Total
Transmission of Disclaims ...........................................................................................................
540
825
1,366
All Filings ..............................................................................................................................
12,930
19,744
32,674
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
Given the hourly burden and the
$35.56 hourly compensation rate for
each hour of burden, the average annual
cost of eFiling per small importer at
high turnover industries will be
between $70 and $232, while in low
turnover industries the hourly burden
will be as low as $1.50 Given these small
amounts, it is unlikely for the cost of the
hourly burden of eFiling to exceed 1%
of revenue for the typical small firm.51
Tables 7 shows the estimated annual
cost of such burden on small importers.
TABLE 7—ESTIMATED ANNUAL COST OF THE BURDEN OF EFILING ON SMALL IMPORTERS
Cost of eFiling hourly burden on importers
CPCs
Total
Initial Filing in Product Registry ...................................................................................................
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker ..............................................................................
Transmission of Reference Message Set ...................................................................................
Transmission of Disclaims ...........................................................................................................
$7,305
176,495
256,761
19,217
$11,155
269,520
392,090
29,345
$18,460
446,015
648,851
48,562
All Filings ..............................................................................................................................
459,778
702,110
1,161,888
Startup Costs: eFiling may require
some firms to invest in a combination of
new technologies,52 as well as training
and/or hiring staff to conduct eFiling
activities. Large firms may be able to
build these new technologies
themselves. Third-party service
providers may develop tools that large
or small firms may use.53 Firms are also
likely to train staff on the use of these
new technologies and the updated
processes that support eFiling of
certificates, including participating in
meetings with their brokers, reading
guidance documents, and
communicating and distributing
information.
A survey conducted among Beta Pilot
participants indicated that firms
invested roughly the equivalent of 60
staff hours in preparation for their
participation in the Beta Pilot, including
getting trained, understanding and
communicating the guidance, gathering
product information, and coordinating
with their brokers. However, most firms
that participated in the Beta pilot are of
significant size, which likely implies the
startup times for the average firm may
not be as large. Also, the potential
introduction of third-party tools or
third-party support to perform these
duties will likely reduce the number of
hours required for setting up the
logistics of the average firm to conduct
eFiling activities. Accordingly, the
FRFA assumes that the average firm will
invest the equivalent of only one-third
of the value of startup activities, or the
monetized equivalent of 20 hours,54 in
all startup activities. Many firms could
likely hire third parties that benefit from
economies of scale, instead of devoting
as many staff hours to startup tasks; or
will use a combination of third-party
vendors and staff to set up eFiling.
This FRFA converts the 20 hours of
startup time into an average cost per
firm of $1,086 using an average
compensation rate for managerial and
administrative occupations.55 This
startup cost per firm does not exceed
one percent of revenue of the typical
small firm in each of the industries
impacted by this Final Rule, as
discussed later in this section.
Filing Fees: Many importers use
import brokers to facilitate customs
filings and reporting with the U.S.
government. Brokers typically charge a
fee per entry or per entry line that is
filed, and each entry line may contain
one or more product certificates. During
the eFiling Beta Pilot in 2024, brokers
had made or were making technological
investments needed for eFiling, and the
fees that brokers would charge for
eFiling would cover these investments.
This FRFA includes these broker fees as
a cost for importers. While it is
uncertain what changes, and the
magnitude of changes, firms would
choose to make to their technology,
brokers will likely seek to recover their
investments through fees. Use of the
Product Registry will reduce the
50 Staff expects small importers in industries such
as Architectural Glazing Materials, Bicycle Helmets,
and Bunk Beds to produce less than one certificate
per year, on average.
51 This FRFA assumes that most small firms file
only 10 percent the average number of certificates
filed by the average firm within their NAICS code.
52 For instance, larger importers and
manufacturers may choose to invest in technology
to enable batch uploads of data into the Product
Registry or to submit certificate data to their
brokers. Most small importers are unlikely to have
the incentives to develop in-house tools, but they
may purchase third-party software or services. The
Final Rule, however, does not require any specific
investments from large or small importers.
53 CPSC does not expect small businesses to
invest in technology due to the creation of CPSC’s
Product Registry. A small business only needs a
laptop with a hard drive for storing records and an
internet connection to enter certificates into the
Product Registry.
54 This corresponds to a learning factor of 3, one
sixth the size of the learning factor used to estimate
processing times for Reference Message Sets.
55 As of June 2024, the hourly rate for
management, professional, and related occupations
at good producing industries was $73.02, while the
hourly rate for office and administrative support
occupations was $35.56. Staff assumes that the
hours invested in startup activities are one half
managerial and one-half support staff, which
produces an average hourly rate of $54.29.
Staff expect small importers to incur
a total cost of $1.16 million, which
approximates $4.71 per small importer.
The estimated average hourly burden of
eFiling for small importers of children’s
and non-children’s products would be
$3.33 and $13.03. These amounts are
unlikely to exceed one percentage of the
annual revenue of a typical small
importer.
(ii) eFiling Out-of-Pocket Costs
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GCCs
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complexity of Message Sets by allowing
importers to supply only a Unique ID
for each product certificate, which may
result in less complex entries and
reduced brokers fees.
The fees that brokers charge vary with
the complexity of the Message Set and
with the number of Message Sets filed.
Most brokers charge a maximum fee per
entry, which reduces the filing fees per
certificate for firms that file multiple
certificates per entry. This FRFA
assumes that the majority of importers
will choose to file as many product
certificates as possible per entry, and
this action will significantly lower the
cost per individual product certificate
filed. The estimated average fee per
filing under these conditions is $0.77.56
As discussed, the eFiling burden
depends on the number of filings, the
number of annual certificates generated
by each small importer, and the
frequency of product imports. This
FRFA assumes that each certificate will
generate a total of 23.7 annual filings,57
out of which 20.7 require broker fees 58
for a total of $15.97 per certificate.
Accounting for the number of
certificates filed annually per NAICS
code, the range of fees for an average
small importer would fluctuate between
$2 and $686 depending on the industry.
This range is unlikely to exceed one
percent of revenue for most small
importers.
2. Overall Cost to Small Importers
CPSC estimates the cost to small
importers 59 of CPSC regulated products
by summing the costs and sub costs
from:
• recordkeeping,
• eFiling of certificates,
1833
Æ filing hourly burden,
Æ eFiling out-of-pocket cost,
D startup costs, and
D filing fees.
Table 8 shows the cost from the
additional recordkeeping and eFiling
requirements on small importers. Small
importers, a total of 35,290 small firms,
will have to maintain records of GCCs
and their supporting information for
two additional years, which generates
an additional annual cost of $5,038.60
Additionally, these 35,290 small
importers 61 will eFile GCCs at a burden
of 12,930 hours, which is a cost of
$459,778, and another 211,148 small
importers will eFile CPCs with CBP at
a total additional burden 62 of 19,744
hours, which is a cost of $702,110. In
total, this is 32,674 hours per year and
a total estimated cost of $1.16 million
for eFiling’s hourly burden.
TABLE 8—TOTAL ESTIMATED INITIAL COST OF THE RULE TO SMALL IMPORTERS
[First-year costs]
Annual cost of the final rule to importers
GCCs
CPCs
All
Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden ...................................................................................
eFiling Hourly Burden ..................................................................................................................
Total Startup Costs ...............................................................................................................
Annual Filing Fees ................................................................................................................
eFiling Out of Pocket Cost ..........................................................................................................
Impact of eFiling on Importers .....................................................................................................
$5,038
459,778
38,317,945
1,357,259
39,675,204
40,134,982
$0
702,110
229,264,000
2,072,622
231,336,622
232,038,732
$5,038
1,161,888
267,581,945
3,429,881
271,011,826
272,173,714
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers ......................................................................................
40,140,020
232,038,732
272,178,752
In addition to the hourly burden,
small importers of CPSC regulated
products will also bear monetary costs
that include total startup costs of
$267.58 million and eFiling fees of
$3.43 million for a total out-of-pocket
cost burden of $271.01 million. The
total overall cost of the Final Rule on
small importers reaches $272.18 million
in the first year of the Final Rule of
which $232.04 are linked to children’s
product certificates and $40.14 are
linked to non-children product
certificates.
Table 9 presents the corresponding
annualized costs of the Final Rule to
small importers. As opposed to Table 8
that shows the total startup cost, Table
9 presents the annualized startup cost to
small importers over a time span of 30
years at a 2 percent discount rate.63 The
total annualized cost to small importers
is $16.54 million; $3.53 million for
small importers of general use products
and $13.01 million for small importers
of children’s products.
TABLE 9—ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED COST OF THE RULE TO SMALL IMPORTERS
Annual cost of the final rule to importers
GCCs
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Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden ...................................................................................
eFiling Hourly Burden ..................................................................................................................
Annualized Startup Costs .....................................................................................................
Annual Filing Fees ................................................................................................................
56 Average fees per certificate are estimated
assuming a maximum fee per entry of $25, which
is based on information provided by Beta Pilot
participants. Staff then assumes that the average
importer receives an average number of shipments
per year, and estimated the number of certificates
per entry dividing the average number of GCCs and
CPCs per year by the average number of shipments.
Finally, the average fees per GCCs and CPCs are
estimated dividing $25 per entry by the average
number of certificates included with each entry;
these averages then are weighted by the total
number of GCCs and CPCs to obtain an overall
weighted average per certificate of $0.77.
57 This number of filings includes 20 Reference
Message Sets, 0.7 Full Message Sets, and 3
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Disclaimer Message Sets per average certificate.
Most brokers are not expected to charge a fee for
Disclaimer Message Sets.
58 Brokers will charge fees for 20.7 filings per
certificate. This number results from adding up the
expected number of Reference Message Sets per
certificate (20) with the number of Full Message
Sets (0.7).
59 The cost to small domestic manufacturers is
non-significant, only a few cents per firm, and
indicated earlier, so it is not included in this
section.
60 If domestic manufacturers were included here,
this figure would increase by $2,041 to $7,079.
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$5,038
459,778
1,710,893
1,357,259
CPCs
$0
702,110
10,236,620
2,072,622
All
$5,038
1,161,888
11,947,513
3,429,881
61 Staff estimates the number of small businesses
during the PRA Analysis by multiplying the
estimated proportion of small businesses for a given
NAICS industry by the number of estimated firms
for that industry. For an explanation of how staff
estimated the number of firms see section VIII of
this preamble.
62 Additional Burden is defined as the difference
between existing burden from statute and other
applicable rules and that of the Final Rule.
63 This is rate of discount or default social rate of
time preference set by Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Guidance for all effects from the
present through 30 years into the future in Circular
A–4 (Regulatory Analysis) of November 2023.
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TABLE 9—ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED COST OF THE RULE TO SMALL IMPORTERS—Continued
Annual cost of the final rule to importers
GCCs
CPCs
All
eFiling Out of Pocket Cost ..........................................................................................................
Impact of eFiling on Importers .....................................................................................................
3,068,152
3,527,930
12,309,242
13,011,352
15,377,394
16,539,282
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers ......................................................................................
3,532,968
13,011,352
16,544,320
Table 10 presents the average costs of
the Final Rule per small importer. Small
importers will incur an average cost of
$1,104 per firm ($272.18 million/
246,438 small importers) in first-year
costs in connection with the Final
Rule’s new requirements. The cost per
small importer of non-children’s
products will be on average $1,137,
while the cost per small importer of
children’s products will be $1,099. The
difference between these two estimates
is mainly driven by a larger number of
certificates created by small importers of
non-children’s products.
TABLE 10—ESTIMATED AVERAGE COST OF THE RULE PER SMALL IMPORTER
Average cost per small importer
GCCs
CPCs
Total
Average Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden .....................................................................
Average eFiling Hourly Burden ...................................................................................................
Average Annualized Startup Costs ......................................................................................
Average Annual Filing Fees .................................................................................................
Average eFiling Out of Pocket Cost ............................................................................................
Average Impact of eFiling per Importer .......................................................................................
$0.14
13.03
1,085.80
38.46
1,124.26
1,137.29
$0.00
3.33
1,085.80
9.82
1,095.62
1,098.94
$0.02
4.71
1,085.80
13.92
1,099.72
1,104.43
Average Cost of the Rule per Small Importer .............................................................................
1,137.43
1,098.94
1,104.45
3. eFiling Impact as a Percent of Filed
Certificate Value
The Final Rule requires importers to
eFile certificates with CBP at entry, at
which point the import value of the
shipment is tabulated. This FRFA
compares the burden of the eFiling
requirements to the average sales value
per certificate filed 64 for imported
products subject to the Final Rule’s
eFiling requirement. This approach
provides a pragmatic assessment of the
Final Rule’s impact on small firms.
Table 11 shows the burden cost per
certificate filed and its relative cost
impact as a percentage of expected
revenue per certificate.
TABLE 11—ESTIMATED ANNUAL IMPACT OF THE RULE ON SMALL IMPORTERS AS A PERCENTAGE OF REVENUE
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Cost as share of estimated revenue per certificate
GCCs
CPCs
All
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers .............................................................................................
Total Number of eFilings ......................................................................................................
Average Cost Per eFiling .....................................................................................................
Estimated Revenue per Certificate Filed .....................................................................................
$40,140,020
2,102,147
19.09
12,050
$232,038,732
3,210,113
72.28
12,050
$272,178,752
5,312,260
51.24
12,050
Cost as a % of Estimated Revenue per Certificate .............................................................
0.1585%
0.5999%
0.4252%
Table 11 shows that small importers
of general use products will bear an
estimated burden of $19.09 per eFiling
and a total initial cost of $40.14 million
during the first year of implementation
of the Final Rule. Small importers of
children’s products will bear an
estimated $72.28 burden per eFiling for
a total initial cost of $232.04 million.65
During the first year of implementation
of the Final Rule, the average burden of
the Final Rule across importers of all
products regulated by CPSC is $51.24,
which represents 0.43 percent of the
average revenue per certificate filed. If
these initial cost estimates are
annualized over a 30-year lifespan at a
2 percent discount rate, small importers
will bear an annualized cost of $3.11 per
certificate filing ($1.68 per GCC filing
and $4.05 per CPC filing). These equate
to $16.54 million in annualized cost to
small importers: $3.53 million to small
importers of general use products and
$13.01 million to small importers of
children products. The estimated
impact per eFiling for both importers of
general use products and importers of
children’s products is well under one
percent of the estimated revenue from
selling the imported products associated
with each eFiling.
4. Net Impact on Small Businesses
64 Staff obtained the shipment value per
certificate filed from CPSC’s division of import
surveillance (EXIS). Staff added a 60% markup to
estimate the sales value of the imported products.
65 Note that small importers of children’s
products as a group include a larger number of
firms and eFilings than importers of non-children’s
products.
66 ECN Core Statistics Economic Census (2017):
Establishment and Firm Size Statistics for the U.S.
https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/
economic-census/data/2017/sector00/.
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CPSC uses the threshold of one
percent of revenue to estimate whether
a given rule will have a significant
impact on the small businesses the rule
covers.
Table 12 shows the average revenue
for firms smaller than the largest 50
firms in a given NAICS code.66 This
segment is characteristic of smaller
firms. The Final Rule impact does not
exceed the threshold of one percent of
the average revenue of this subset of
small firms because the overall cost
impact of the Final Rule is minimal.
Several NAICS industries have an
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average revenue of slightly under $1
million for firms smaller than the top
50. However, the one percent threshold
(in this case, roughly $10,000) is greater
than both the cost of the Final Rule of
$1,137 per small importers of
nonchildren’s products, and $1,099 per
small importers of children’s products.
In the SNPR the Commission
requested comments on the average
1835
annual revenues of small businesses
within the impacted industries and
alternative industry classifications for
SBA purposes, but did not receive any
comments.
TABLE 12—AVERAGE REVENUE FOR FIRMS SMALLER THAN THE TOP 50 BY NAICS INDUSTRY
2017
Average revenue for firms smaller than top 50
($ thousands)
Product
% Small
Matchbooks ...............................
Bicycle Helmets .........................
CB Band Base Station Antennas .........................................
Walk Behind Power Mowers .....
Swimming Pool Slides ..............
Cellulose Insulation ...................
Cigarette and Multipurpose
Lighters ..................................
Garage Door Openers ..............
Furniture (paint & entrapment),
Furniture (bunk beds) ............
Furniture (bunk beds) ................
Paints and Coatings ..................
ATVs ..........................................
Pools and Spas (VGB Act) .......
Fireworks Devices .....................
Bicycles .....................................
Carpets and Rugs .....................
Mattresses .................................
Refrigerators ..............................
Candles w/Metal Core Wicks ....
Refuse Bins ...............................
NAICS 1
NAICS 3
NAICS 1
NAICS 2
NAICS 3
Min NAICS
revenue
1% of
revenue
97
83
339999
339113
325998
339920
....................
....................
$920
4,305
$8,491
1,979
....................
....................
$920
1,979
$9
20
75
95
85
37
334220
333112
....................
322219
....................
....................
....................
322299
....................
....................
....................
....................
5,351
1,288
....................
3,445
....................
....................
....................
4,127
....................
....................
....................
....................
5,351
1,288
....................
3,445
54
13
....................
34
97
97
339999
332321
325998
332710
....................
335999
920
5,069
8,491
1,806
....................
4,220
920
1,806
9
18
85
85
90
95
85
90
95
95
95
95
66
62
337110
337124
325211
336999
....................
325998
336991
314110
337910
333415
325612
326199
337121
....................
325510
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
335220
....................
....................
337122
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
1,115
979
18,334
1,410
....................
8,491
958
1,800
3,400
9,159
3,266
12,445
2,481
....................
5,321
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
771
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
771
979
5,321
1,410
....................
8,491
958
1,800
3,400
9,159
3,266
12,445
8
10
53
14
....................
85
10
18
34
92
33
124
Merchandise imported by one person
on one day that is accorded a duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C.
1321(a)(2)(C), for which the aggregate
fair retail value in the country of
shipment does not exceed $800, is
commonly known as a de minimis
shipment. Such merchandise may be
entered under the ‘‘release from
manifest’’ process or via the ACE Entry
Type 86 Test (89 FR 2630 (Jan 16.
2024)). Merchandise subject to PGA
requirements, such as CPSC’s PGA
Message Set or certification requirement
for regulated consumer products, is
ineligible for entry under the ‘‘release
from manifest’’ process. Accordingly,
the Final Rule requires that importers
file a type 86 entry for de minimis
shipments to submit CPSC’s PGA
Message Set. Staff estimate that a
significant number of small importers
would need to file type 86 entry for de
minimis shipments containing a product
subject to a CPSC rule, ban, standard, or
regulation. These small businesses ship
thousands of units of products through
de minimis entries. Staff considered
current entry type 86 shipments in HTS
codes that could fall within CPSC’s
jurisdiction, although CPSC has no way
to determine whether these shipments
contain consumer products or whether
such products are regulated by CPSC.
As shown in Figure 1, the median value
of a de minimis shipment is about $30;
after applying a direct-to-consumer
markup, staff estimates the sales value
is $48.67
67 The sales value i.e. revenue, of the shipment is
the value of the shipment that CPSC estimates
based on trade data plus a direct-to-consumer
markup of 60%. See https://www.shopify.com/
retail/product-pricing-for-wholesale-and-retail.
CPSC’s estimate relies on de minimis shipments
that filed an ET 86 entry, which does not include
shipments that did not file an entry or international
mail shipments. However, CPSC’s estimate covers
all de minimis shipments by extrapolating from the
data based on the ratios of products under CPSC
jurisdiction for de minimis shipments entered
under Entry Type 86.
5. Impact on Importers of De Minimis
Shipments
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
De minimis value distribution
■
4,500
1()1)5
4,000
909'
S,500
aa
i
3,000
I!!
:c
2,500
8
Frequency
1°"
..
~
'8 2,000
5 1,500
4°"
1,000
205
500
lffi'
8
30%
°"
Averqeimportvalue
Under current shipping conditions,
importers of parties eligible to file a type
86 entry would likely eFile a single
certificate per entry; this would increase
the filing fees per certificate to the point
that it might represent a significant
portion (greater than one percent) of the
value of each shipment.
CBP reports that they process
approximately 4 million de minimis
shipments a day.68 In 2022, CBP
reported 685.1 million total de minimis
shipments, which are also called section
321 shipments.69 Until this Final Rule is
in effect, importers of regulated
consumer products claiming a de
minimis exemption are not required to
submit CPSC’s PGA Message Set using
entry type 86. Accordingly, CPSC
currently does not know how many de
minimis shipments per day contain
finished products within CPSC’s
jurisdiction, nor how many of those
finished products are subject to a rule,
ban, standard, or regulation enforced by
CPSC.
The RFA requires consideration of the
impact of the Final Rule on U.S. small
businesses. Importers can be either
foreign 70 or domestic firms and firms of
varying sizes. CBP does not classify
importers by size. Accordingly, without
68 https://www.cbp.gov/frontline/buyer-bewarebad-actors-exploit-de-minimis-shipments.
69 https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/trade.
70 For example, if a consumer received a direct
shipment from a foreign company, no U.S. small
business may be involved in the transaction.
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additional data on de minimis and mail
shipments, and who uses this mode of
importation, CPSC does not have
sufficient information to estimate the
number of small U.S. firms that would
be impacted by the Final Rule
requirements. To the extent that de
minimis entries are primarily caused by
foreign companies, for example, such
costs would not be included in the
FRFA impact assessment.
Moreover, as a result of the Final
Rule, some firms may choose to cease
using entry type 86 if this importation
route becomes more costly, and may
choose to bundle shipments using
another entry type, such as an 01 entry
for consumption or warehousing.
However, CPSC does not have enough
information to determine what
percentage of the impacted firms would
be able to structure their import
transactions in a manner to avoid a
substantial increase in fees.
Additionally, CPSC does not know
whether some of these firms may have
other sources of revenue offsetting the
type 86 entry filing requirement or
whether some of these firms are actually
subsidiaries of larger firms.
Accordingly, CPSC is currently unable
to estimate the impact of the Final Rule
on small U.S. importers of de minimis
shipments.
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E. Alternatives for Reducing the Adverse
Impact on Small Businesses
CPSC considered three alternatives to
the Final Rule:
(1) Make eFiling of certificates
voluntary, instead of mandatory;
(2) Require PDF submissions of
certificates rather than eFiling
certificates; and
(3) Extend the effective date of the
Final Rule to 36 months for all products,
regardless of their origin.
Alternative 1 to the Final Rule would
allow, rather than require, certificate
data for imported products to be eFiled
at entry. If the Commission adopted this
alternative, the certificate would still
have to be available for examination
upon request, as it is now. Allowing,
instead of requiring, certificates to be
eFiled at entry could reduce the burden
on small businesses, but it would not
meaningfully enhance the Commission’s
ability to target shipments for
examination by using the additional
certificate data elements collected via
eFiling, nor to enforce and verify the
accuracy of certificates. This alternative
would largely maintain the status quo,
because it is likely that only a few firms
would choose to eFile certificates;
therefore, unlike mandatory eFiling, this
alternative would not reduce costly
delays at the ports.
Alternative 2 to the Rule would
require PDF submissions of certificates.
For imported products, the importer
could upload a PDF to CBP’s Document
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Figure 1
Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
The Final Rule contains information
collection requirements that are subject
to public comment and review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the PRA. 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521. The PRA requires an agency to
publish the following information:
D a title for the collection of
information;
D a summary of the collection of
information;
D a brief description of the need for
the information and the proposed use of
the information;
D a description of the likely
respondents and proposed frequency of
response to the collection of
information;
D an estimate of the burden that will
result from the collection of
information; and
D notice that comments may be
submitted to OMB.
44 U.S.C. 3507(a)(1)(D).
The Final Rule creates a new
collection of information for certificates
for non-children’s products and
expands the existing collection for
Third Party Testing of Children’s
Products, OMB Control No. 3041–0159.
The Children’s Product OMB control
number would expand to include
eFiling certificates for imported
children’s products that are subject to a
CPSC rule requiring certification. We
update and summarize that information
here.
In accordance with OMB’s
requirement, the Commission provides
the following information:
Title: (1) Certification of NonChildren’s Products; (2) Amendment to
Third Party Testing of Children’s
Products, approved previously under
OMB Control Number 3041–0159.
Summary, Need, and Use of
Information: Sections I and II of this
preamble contain this information.
Respondents and Frequency: For
products manufactured outside of the
United States, respondents include
importers of consumer products subject
to a CPSC-enforced regulation. For
products manufactured within the
United States, respondents include
manufacturers and private labelers of
consumer products subject to a CPSCenforced regulation.
Estimated Burden: CPSC has
estimated the respondent burden in
hours and the estimated labor costs to
respondents.
Estimate of Respondent Burden:
Below we categorize and estimate the
burden created by both the statute and
the Final Rule for children’s and nonchildren’s regulated products as follows:
Certificates: The burden associated
with the creation of certificates (GCCs
and CPCs). This can be considered a
general recordkeeping burden.
Disclosure: The burden derived from
disclosing certificate information and
from furnishing the certificates to these
third parties (distributors and retailers).
Recordkeeping: The burden
associated with the initial storage and
routine maintenance of records,
including records of the certificates and
any supporting and testing
documentation, for a period of five
years.
eFiling: The initial burden from
electronically filing the certificates,
using either the CPSC-maintained
Product Registry or the systems
provided by the brokers that support
importers’ activities, as well as the
71 Totals shown may not exactly match the
product of component parts due to rounding.
72 The estimates from the equation may not match
the total number of hours due to rounding.
73 This includes the entire eFiling burden of
144,487 hours and 2,223 hours of additional hours
of recordkeeping due to the increase in the
recordkeeping period of GCCs from 3 to 5 years.
Image System. Similar to Alternative 1,
this alternative would not enhance the
Commission’s ability to target
shipments for examination by using the
additional certificate data elements
collected via eFiling. Not only are PDF
files not useful for targeting, but CBP is
also unlikely to allow the collection and
maintenance of a large volume of PDFs
in ACE, because PDF files require a
relatively large amount of storage space.
Alternative 3 would delay
implementation of the Final Rule by
changing the effective date from 18
months for all consumer products
subject to a CPSC rule, ban, standard, or
regulation not entered from an FTZ and
24 months for products and substances
entered for consumption or
warehousing from an FTZ, to 36 months
for all CPSC regulated products
regardless of their origin. This would
allow small firms importing from nonFTZ areas 24 additional months to
implement any new technology and
organizational changes needed for
eFiling, train staff, communicate with
partners, and perform quality controls,
among other activities. Alternative 3 did
not receive any substantive comments
from small firms importing from nonFTZs indicating a need for such an
extension. The Commission has already
extended the 120-day effective date to
18 months, providing small firms with
an ample amount of time for preparation
and implementation activities.
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VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
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1837
routine burden on importers submitting
associated Full or Reference PGA
Message Sets.
A. Hourly Burden for GCCs
CPSC estimates that there may be
49,364 non-children’s products firms
subject to the Final Rule. On average,
these firms are expected to create 27
certificates per year, for a total of
1,333,982 certificates.71 CPSC assumes
each certificate will require 5 minutes of
labor per certificate, which equates to
111,165 hours spent on their creation.
These same firms must keep the
records supporting the certificates for a
period of five years. CPSC assumes
recordkeeping will take, on average, 1
minute for record creation and initial
storage and an additional 15 seconds for
the routine annual maintenance of the
certificate record. This annual burden
comes to 27,791 hours (1.25 minutes/60
× 1,333,982 certificates).
The firms must also disclose each
certificate to retailers and distributors of
the product upon request; thus, staff
estimates an additional 0.25 hours (15
minutes) burden for third-party
disclosure. This sums to 333,495 hours
(15 minutes/60 × 1,333,982 certificates).
CPSC estimates the number of
responses for eFiling as 23,491,168. The
average filing takes roughly 22 seconds
across filing modes. This adds to an
estimated eFiling burden of 144,487
hours (22 seconds/3,600 ×
23,491,168).72
The aggregate burden of the Final
Rule for suppliers of non-children’s
products is 616,939 hours and has a
total cost of $26,102,580. This estimate
includes the burden imposed by statute,
which non-children’s products
suppliers would bear in absence of the
Final Rule. The net burden from the
Final Rule—excluding the statutory
burden—is 146,710 hours 73 and the net
cost is $5,217,007. Table 13 shows that
importers of general use products
requiring a GCC bear most of both the
statutory burden and the additional
burden from the eFiling requirement.
CPSC expects that 82 percent of the
firms supplying non-children’s products
subject to the Final Rule will be
importers with the remaining 18 percent
as manufacturers. As shown in Table 13,
staff estimate the statutory burden borne
by importers is 480,905 hours (78%)
and the expected burden to
manufacturers as 136,034 hours (22%).
The net annual burden of the Final Rule
of 146,710 hours can be broken into a
E:\FR\FM\08JAR3.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
burden of 146,070 hours borne by
importers (99.6%) and 640 hours borne
by manufacturers (0.4%).
TABLE 13—TOTAL BURDEN ON NON-CHILDREN PRODUCTS COVERED BY PART 1110
Total burden
Frequency
of
response
Respondents
Response
time
Responses
Cost per
burden
hour 74
Burden
hours
Total cost of
burden
Total
Certificates ..............................................................................
Disclosure ................................................................................
Recordkeeping ........................................................................
eFiling ......................................................................................
Total .................................................................................
49,364
49,364
49,364
40,665
I
49,364
27.0
27.0
27.0
577.7
I
557.0
1,333,982
1,333,982
1,333,982
23,491,168
I
27,493,113
0.0833
0.2500
0.0208
0.0062
I
0.0224
111,165
333,495
27,791
144,487
I
616,939
$73.02
35.56
35.56
35.56
I
42.31
$8,117,279
11,859,097
988,258
5,137,946
I
26,102,580
Additional Burden from the Rule
Total .................................................................................
49,364
475.9
23,491,168
0.006245
146,710
35.56
5,217,007
384,095
384,095
384,095
0
0.0833
0.2500
0.0208
0.0000
32,008
96,024
8,002
0
73.02
35.56
35.56
0.00
2,337,219
3,414,607
284,551
0
Manufacturers
Certificates ..............................................................................
Disclosure ................................................................................
Recordkeeping ........................................................................
eFiling ......................................................................................
Total .................................................................................
8,699
8,699
8,699
0
I
8,699
44.2
44.2
44.2
0.0
I
132.5
I
1,152,286
I
0.1181
I
136,034
I
44.37
I
6,036,377
Additional Burden to Manufacturers
Total .................................................................................
8,699
0.0
0
0.0000
640
35.56
22,764
Importers
Certificates ..............................................................................
Disclosure ................................................................................
Recordkeeping ........................................................................
eFiling ......................................................................................
40,665
40,665
40,665
40,665
23.4
23.4
23.4
577.7
949,886
949,886
949,886
23,491,168
0.0833
0.2500
0.0208
0.0062
79,157
237,472
19,789
144,487
73.02
35.56
35.56
35.56
5,780,059
8,444,491
703,708
5,137,946
Total .................................................................................
40,665
647.8
26,340,828
0.0183
480,905
41.73
20,066,203
0.0062
146,070
35.56
5,194,243
Additional Burden to Importers
Total .................................................................................
40,665
577.7
23,491,168
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
Section 14 of the CPSA requires thirdparty testing of children’s products that
are subject to an applicable children’s
product safety rule to ensure
compliance with such rules. Based on
this testing, manufacturers, including
importers, are required to certify
compliance of their products to the
applicable standards. The burden
associated with certificate production,
recordkeeping, and disclosure is already
subject to an OMB control number,
3041–0159, for children’s product
testing, as set forth in 16 CFR parts 1107
and 1109. The Final Rule adds a
certificate eFiling requirement for
importers of finished children’s
products and estimates the reporting
burden for this requirement.
Table 14 presents CPSC’s estimate
that there are 224,000 small importers
supplying children’s products.
Commission staff estimates an average
of 152 certificate filings per firm based
on assumptions supported on data from
the Division of Import Surveillance and
the Beta Pilot, which means that
34,055,116 shipments related to
imported children’s products would be
annually required to eFile certificates,
with an estimated eFiling burden of
209,462 hours.75 This number only
includes burden imposed by the Final
Rule, so the net burden from the Final
Rule is also 209,462 hours, and the cost
of this additional burden from the Final
Rule is $7,448,474.
74 To estimate the cost of the hourly burden,
CPSC staff used the hourly compensation (benefits
plus wage) of management, professional, and
related occupations in goods-producing industries
for the production of certificates ($73.02), and the
hourly compensation of office and administrative
support occupations in good-producing industries
for the disclosure, recordkeeping, and eFiling of
certificates ($35.56). These hourly compensation
estimates were obtained from the report on
‘‘Employer Cost for Employee Compensation’’
prepared by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as
of June 2024. https://www.bls.gov/news.release/
ecec.t04.htm.
75 The average filing takes roughly 22 seconds
across filing modes. This adds to an estimated
eFiling burden of 209,462 hours (22 seconds/3,600
× 34,055,116). The result from this equation may
not exactly match the total due to rounding.
76 To estimate the cost of the hourly burden of
eFiling, staff used the hourly compensation
(benefits plus wage) of office and administrative
support occupations in good producing industries
($35.56). This hourly compensation estimate was
obtained from the report on ‘‘Employer Cost for
Employee Compensation’’ prepared by the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics as of June 2024. https://
www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t04.htm.
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B. Hourly Burden for eFiling CPCs
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 14—EFILING CHILDREN’S PRODUCT CERTIFICATES (CPC)
Total burden
eFiling ......................................................................................
Respondents
Frequency
of response
224,000
152.0
Responses
34,055,116
Response
time
Burden
hours
Cost per
burden
hour 76
Total cost of
burden
0.0062
209,462
$35.56
$7,448,474
0.0062
209,462
35.56
7,448,474
Additional Burden from the Rule
Total .................................................................................
C. Burden Estimate Breakdowns by
Imported and Domestically
Manufactured Products
224,000
152.0
34,055,116
Table 16 provides a summary of this
analysis for domestically manufactured
products.
Table 15 provides a summary of the
analysis for imported products, and
TABLE 15—IMPORT DATA ANALYSIS BY PRODUCT
Total
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Product
Total
respondents
Architectural Glazing Materials .........................................................................
Artificial Emberizing Materials ...........................................................................
ATVs ..................................................................................................................
Baby Changing Products ..................................................................................
Bassinets and Cradles ......................................................................................
Bedside Sleepers ..............................................................................................
Bicycle Helmets .................................................................................................
Bicycles .............................................................................................................
Bunk Beds—Furniture .......................................................................................
Button Batteries .................................................................................................
Candles with metal-cored wicks .......................................................................
Carpets and Rugs .............................................................................................
Carriages and Strollers .....................................................................................
CB Antennas .....................................................................................................
Cellulose Insulation ...........................................................................................
Children’s folding chairs and stools ..................................................................
Children’s Sleepwear ........................................................................................
Cigarette & Multipurpose Lighters ....................................................................
Clacker Balls .....................................................................................................
Clothing Storage Units ......................................................................................
Consumer Patching Compounds ......................................................................
Crib mattresses .................................................................................................
Cribs ..................................................................................................................
Dive Sticks and Other Similar Articles ..............................................................
Drywall ...............................................................................................................
Electrically Operated Toys or Articles ...............................................................
Fireworks ...........................................................................................................
Frame Child Carriers .........................................................................................
Furniture ............................................................................................................
Garage Door Openers ......................................................................................
Gates and enclosures .......................................................................................
Hand-Held Infant Carriers .................................................................................
High chairs ........................................................................................................
Imitation Firearms .............................................................................................
Infant Bath Seats ..............................................................................................
Infant Bath Tubs ................................................................................................
Infant Bouncer Seats ........................................................................................
Infant Sleep Products ........................................................................................
Infant Swings .....................................................................................................
Infant Walkers ...................................................................................................
Lawn Darts ........................................................................................................
Liquid Nicotine Packaging .................................................................................
Magnets .............................................................................................................
Matchbooks .......................................................................................................
Mattresses .........................................................................................................
Pacifiers .............................................................................................................
Paints ................................................................................................................
Play Yards .........................................................................................................
Pool and Spa drain covers ...............................................................................
Portable Bedrails ...............................................................................................
Portable fuel containers ....................................................................................
Portable gas containers ....................................................................................
Portable hook-on chairs ....................................................................................
Power Mowers ..................................................................................................
Rattles ...............................................................................................................
Refrigerator doors .............................................................................................
Refuse Bins .......................................................................................................
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792
16
41
4,027
76
230
624
194
2,076
57
2,616
186
243
538
5,764
1,273
112
69
4,863
2,992
864
154
81
2,003
68
1,012
132
0
1,092
3,451
87
0
172
992
73
1,594
82
739
95
33
2,353
536
908
71
329
146
812
71
2,636
7,605
386
386
564
111
592
140
2,407
Sfmt 4700
CPC
Total
responses
11,717
5
37,795
523,490
2,299
75,979
16,300
125,796
89,801
523
27,843
261,374
9,030
12,594
46,511
67,489
66,855
3,908
10,243
316,923
13,101
8,294
14,206
4,853
35,134
15,794
47,076
0
5,402,165
10,533
7,018
0
14,990
3,853
507
5,929
5,224
80,644
1,388
3,183
4,704
2,242
34,846
241
167,504
4,166
154,543
3,400
33,397
29,814
5,974
5,974
5,328
18,865
7,939
74,190
2,717
Percent of
Resp as
CPC
CPC
responses
0
0
25
100
100
100
50
50
75
0
0
25
100
0
0
100
100
0
100
0
0
100
100
100
0
100
0
100
0
0
100
100
100
0
100
100
100
100
100
100
0
0
0
0
50
100
0
100
0
100
0
0
0
0
100
0
0
E:\FR\FM\08JAR3.SGM
GCC
08JAR3
0
0
9,449
523,490
2,299
75,979
8,150
62,898
67,351
0
0
65,344
9,030
0
0
67,489
66,855
0
10,243
0
0
8,294
14,206
4,853
0
15,794
0
0
0
0
7,018
0
14,990
0
507
5,929
5,224
80,644
1,388
3,183
0
0
0
0
83,752
4,166
0
3,400
0
29,814
0
0
0
0
7,939
0
0
Percent of
Resp as
GCC
100
100
75
0
0
0
50
50
25
100
100
75
0
100
100
0
0
100
0
100
100
0
0
0
100
0
100
0
100
100
0
0
0
100
0
0
0
0
0
0
100
100
100
100
50
0
100
0
100
0
100
100
100
100
0
100
100
GCC
responses
11,717
5
28,346
0
0
0
8,150
62,898
22,450
523
27,843
196,031
0
12,594
46,511
0
0
3,908
0
316,923
13,101
0
0
0
35,134
0
47,076
0
5,402,165
10,533
0
0
0
3,853
0
0
0
0
0
0
4,704
2,242
34,846
241
83,752
0
154,543
0
33,397
0
5,974
5,974
5,328
18,865
0
74,190
2,717
1840
Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 15—IMPORT DATA ANALYSIS BY PRODUCT—Continued
Total
Product
Total
respondents
Sling Carriers ....................................................................................................
Soft Infant and Toddler Carriers .......................................................................
Special Packaging (PPPA) ...............................................................................
Stationary activity centers .................................................................................
Swimming Pool Slides ......................................................................................
Toddler Beds .....................................................................................................
Toys ...................................................................................................................
Vinyl Plastic Film ...............................................................................................
Wearing Apparel ...............................................................................................
0
0
310
37
886
76
1,926
729
220
CPC
Total
responses
0
0
1,410,691
3,093
4,184
1,839
1,349,066
33,719
16,290,891
Percent of
Resp as
CPC
GCC
CPC
responses
100
100
0
100
0
100
100
50
50
0
0
0
3,093
0
1,839
1,349,066
16,859
8,145,446
Percent of
Resp as
GCC
0
0
100
0
100
0
0
50
50
GCC
responses
0
0
1,410,691
0
4,184
0
0
16,859
8,145,446
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
TABLE 16—DOMESTIC MANUFACTURER DATA BY PRODUCT CATEGORY
CFR
Product categories
NAICS
NAICS_description
16 CFR part 1201 ..........................
16 CFR part 1201 ..........................
16 CFR part 1201 ..........................
Architectural Glazing Materials .....
Architectural Glazing Materials .....
Architectural Glazing Materials .....
327211
321911
326199
16 CFR part 1201 ..........................
16 CFR part 1201 ..........................
16 CFR part 1305 ..........................
Architectural Glazing Materials .....
Architectural Glazing Materials .....
Artificial Emberizing Materials .......
327215
332321
327999
16 CFR part 1420 ..........................
ATVs ..............................................
336999
16 CFR part 1203 ..........................
16 CFR part 1512 ..........................
Bicycle Helmets .............................
Bicycles .........................................
339920
336991
16
16
16
16
part 1500.17(a)(13) ..........
parts 1630 and 1631 ........
parts 1630 and 1631 ........
part 1204 ..........................
Candles w/Metal Core Wicks ........
Carpets and Rugs .........................
Carpets and Rugs .........................
CB Band Base Station Antennas ..
339999
314110
314999
334220
16 CFR part 1209 ..........................
16 CFR part 1210 and 1212 ..........
Cellulose Insulation .......................
Cigarette Lighters ..........................
321219
339999
16 CFR part 1261 ..........................
16 CFR part 1261 ..........................
16 CFR part 1507; 16 CFR
1500.17(3) and 1500.17(8).
16 CFR parts 1213 ........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1303 ..........................
16 CFR part 1211 ..........................
Clothing Storage Units ..................
Clothing Storage Units ..................
Fireworks Devices .........................
337122
337127
325998
Furniture (bunk beds) ....................
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Furniture (paint & entrapment) ......
Garage Door Openers ..................
337122
337122
337127
337121
337211
337212
337214
335999
16 CFR part 1306 ..........................
15 U.S.C. 1472a ............................
Lawn Darts ....................................
Liquid Nicotine Packaging .............
339920
325411
16 CFR part 1262 ..........................
Magnets .........................................
327110
16 CFR part 1262 ..........................
Magnets .........................................
332999
16 CFR part 1202 ..........................
Matchbooks ...................................
325998
16
16
16
16
parts 1632 and 1633 ........
parts 1632 and 1633 ........
part 1303 ..........................
part 1304 ..........................
Mattresses, Pads, and Sets ..........
Mattresses, Pads, and Sets ..........
Paints and Coatings ......................
Patching Compounds ....................
337910
337121
325510
327999
16 CFR part 1460 ..........................
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
Portable gas containers ................
PPPA .............................................
PPPA .............................................
326199
324110
325180
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
PPPA .............................................
325194
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
PPPA .............................................
325199
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
PPPA .............................................
325411
Flat Glass Manufacturing ......................................................................
Wood Window and Door Manufacturing ...............................................
All Other Plastics Product Manufacturing: Doors and door frames,
plastics, manufacturing.
Glass Product Manufacturing Made of Purchased Glass ....................
Metal Window and Door Manufacturing ...............................................
All Other Miscellaneous Nonmetallic Mineral Product Manufacturing:
Asbestos products (except brake shoes and clutches) manufacturing.
All other transportation equipment manufacturing: All-terrain vehicles
(ATVs), wheeled or tracked, manufacturing.
Sporting and athletic goods manufacturing ..........................................
Motorcycle, bicycle, and parts manufacturing: Bicycles and parts
manufacturing.
All other miscellaneous manufacturing: candle manufacturing ............
Carpet and rug mills .............................................................................
All other miscellaneous textile product mills .........................................
Radio and television broadcasting and wireless communications
equipment manufacturing.
Reconstituted Wood Product Manufacturing ........................................
All other miscellaneous manufacturing: Cigarette lighters (except precious metal) manufacturing.
Nonupholstered Wood Household Furniture Manufacturing ................
Institutional Furniture Manufacturing ....................................................
All other miscellaneous chemical product and preparation manufacturing: Fireworks manufacturing.
Nonupholstered Wood Household Furniture Manufacturing ................
Nonupholstered Wood Household Furniture Manufacturing ................
Institutional Furniture Manufacturing ....................................................
Upholstered Household Furniture Manufacturing .................................
Wood Office Furniture Manufacturing ...................................................
Custom Architectural Woodwork and Millwork Manufacturing .............
Office Furniture (except Wood) Manufacturing ....................................
All Other Miscellaneous Electrical Equipment and Component Manufacturing: Garage door openers manufacturing.
Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing .........................................
Medicinal and Botanical Manufacturing: Nicotine and derivatives (i.e.,
basic chemicals) manufacturing.
Pottery, Ceramics, and Plumbing Fixture Manufacturing—Magnets,
permanent, ceramic or ferrite, manufacturing.
All Other Miscellaneous Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing—
Magnets, permanent, metallic, manufacturing.
All other miscellaneous chemical product and preparation manufacturing: Matches and matchbook manufacturing.
Mattress manufacturing ........................................................................
Upholstered Household Furniture Manufacturing .................................
Paint and coating manufacturing ..........................................................
All Other Miscellaneous Nonmetallic Mineral Product Manufacturing:
Asbestos products (except brake shoes and clutches) manufacturing.
All Other Plastics Product Manufacturing .............................................
Petroleum Refineries: Solvents made in petroleum refineries .............
Other Basic Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing—Fuel propellants,
solid inorganic, not specified elsewhere by process, manufacturing;
Caustic soda (i.e., sodium hydroxide) manufacturing, Potassium
hydroxide (i.e., caustic potash) manufacturing.
Cyclic Crude, Intermediate, and Gum and Wood Chemical Manufacturing: Turpentine.
All Other Basic Organic Chemical Manufacturing: Fuel propellants,
solid organic, not specified elsewhere by process, manufacturing.
Medicinal and Botanical Manufacturing: Dietary supplements,
uncompounded, manufacturing.
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
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08JAR3
Respondents
19
48
139
50
45
7
5
38
125
1,000
185
219
10
65
29
2,012
581
50
201
29
73
15
52
5
9
10
278
7
18
6
314
686
100
10
10
16
94
13
156
115
1841
Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 16—DOMESTIC MANUFACTURER DATA BY PRODUCT CATEGORY—Continued
Respondents
CFR
Product categories
NAICS
NAICS_description
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
16 CFR part 1700 ..........................
PPPA .............................................
PPPA .............................................
PPPA .............................................
325412
325612
325620
16 CFR part 1301 ..........................
Refuse Bins ...................................
332439
16 CFR part 1207 ..........................
16 CFR part 1205 ..........................
Swimming Pool Slides ..................
Walk Behind Power Mowers .........
339920
333112
16 CFR part 1611 ..........................
Vinyl Plastic Film ...........................
326113
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Clothing And Apparel
Multipurpose Lighters
315110
315190
315210
315220
315240
315280
315990
339999
Pharmaceutical Preparation Manufacturing .........................................
Polish and Other Sanitation Good Manufacturing ................................
Toilet Preparation Manufacturing: Mouthwashes (except medicinal)
manufacturing; Permanent wave neutralizers.
Other Metal Container Manufacturing: Light gauge metal garbage
cans manufacturing.
Sporting and athletic goods manufacturing ..........................................
Lawn and garden tractor and home lawn and garden equipment
manufacturing.
Unlaminated Plastics Film and Sheet (except Packaging) Manufacturing—Vinyl and vinyl copolymer film and unlaminated sheet (except packaging) manufacturing.
Hosiery and sock mills ..........................................................................
Other apparel knitting mills ...................................................................
Cut and sew apparel contractors .........................................................
Men’s and boys’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing ..........................
Women’s, girls’, and infants’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing .......
Other cut and sew apparel manufacturing ...........................................
Apparel accessories and other apparel manufacturing ........................
All other miscellaneous manufacturing: Cigarette lighters (except precious metal) manufacturing.
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
part
part
part
part
part
part
part
part
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1210
..........................
..........................
..........................
..........................
..........................
..........................
..........................
and 1212 ..........
D. Additional Recordkeeping Costs
Public comments stated there were
additional eFiling costs not considered
in the SNPR. In response to these
comments, agency staff analyzed survey
responses and data from the eFiling Beta
Pilot participants and queried import
brokers to assess additional potential
out-of-pocket expenses imposed by the
Final Rule. As a result of this
assessment, staff conducted an analysis
of three additional annual cost burden
categories: (1) startup costs to account
for the burden of organizational
meetings, staff training, and setting up
accounts and a data storage system to
house the certificate data; (2) fees
charged by brokers to file message sets
with CBP; and (3) de minimis filings.
However, for the reasons stated in
section VII.D.5 of this preamble, CPSC
has insufficient information for a
substantive burden analysis involving
de minimis filings impacted by the Final
Rule. Therefore, the following subsections discuss startup costs and filing
fees.
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
....................
1. Startup Burden Cost
eFiling of certificates may require
some importers to invest in a
combination of new technologies and
training or hiring staff to conduct
eFiling activities. These new
technologies may be built in-house by
larger firms. Also, third-party service
providers may develop tools and
services that large or small importers
could use.77 Firms are also likely to
train their staff on the use of these new
technologies and the updated processes
that support the eFiling of certificates,
including participating in meetings with
their brokers, reading guidance
documents, and communicating and
distributing information.
Firms that participated in the Beta
Pilot indicated an average of 60 hours of
startup time 78 for training,
understanding and communicating
eFiling guidance, gathering product
information, and coordinating with
brokers. However, most firms that
participated in the Beta Pilot are of
significant size, which implies the
262
107
236
20
24
29
50
1
2
72
13
34
11
17
29
startup times for the average importer
likely are not as large. Also, the
potential introduction of third-party
tools or third-party support to perform
these duties will likely reduce the
number of hours required for setting up
the logistics of the average importer to
conduct eFiling activities.
Consequently, CPSC assumes that the
average firm would invest the
equivalent of only one-third the time, or
20 hours,79 in all startup activities. More
than 264 thousand importers will be
involved in eFiling, so ample room
exists for learning and cost
improvements.
The 20 hours of startup time converts
to an average cost per firm of $1,086
using the average wage rate of
management and administrative
occupations.80 Annualizing the average
startup cost per firm at a 2% discount
rate over 30 years, the estimated
annualized cost equivalent per firm is
$48.48. Table 17 presents a summary of
estimated startup costs.
TABLE 17—EFILING STARTUP COSTS
Additional costs of response
Importers
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GCC Startup Burden ................................................................................
77 Technology investments may decrease the
overall costs associated with managing certificate
data, records, or entering products into the Product
Registry or into a broker’s database. Importers are
not required to invest in this technology but larger
firms with more resources at their disposal may do
so, provided a positive return exists on such an
investment. To minimize costs, most firms would
likely take advantage of existing broker technologies
and not make unnecessary changes to their system
unless there was a business case to do so.
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Frequency
of response
40,665
Furthermore, testing facilities offer suppliers tools
to manage and eFile certificate data. Online tools,
such as Interlink by Intertek, can be used by firms
of any size to capture, track, and file GCCs and
CPSC.
78 We use startup timeframes to estimate startup
costs. In reality, many firms will likely hire third
parties to benefit from the economies of scale,
instead of devoting as many staff hours to startup
tasks. This will reduce burden.
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1
Responses
40,665
Cost per
response
$48.48
Total
additional
costs
$1,971,475
79 This corresponds to a learning factor of 3, one
sixth the size of the learning factor used to estimate
processing times for Reference Message Sets.
80 As of June 2024, the hourly rate for
management, professional, and related occupations
at good producing industries was $73.02, while the
hourly rate for office and administrative support
occupations was $35.56. CPSC assumes that the
hours invested in startup activities are one-half
managerial and one-half support staff at an average
hourly rate of $54.29.
E:\FR\FM\08JAR3.SGM
08JAR3
1842
Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 17—EFILING STARTUP COSTS—Continued
Additional costs of response
Importers
Frequency
of response
Responses
Total
additional
costs
Cost per
response
CPC Startup Burden ................................................................................
224,000
1
224,000
48.48
10,859,718
Total ..................................................................................................
264,665
1
264,665
48.48
12,831,194
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
2. Filing Fees
Many importers use import brokers to
facilitate customs filings and reporting
with the government. Brokers typically
charge a fee per entry or per entry line
that is filed, and each entry line may
contain one or more product certificates.
The fees that brokers charge vary with
the complexity of the Message Set and
with the number of Message Sets filed.
Most brokers charge a maximum fee per
entry which reduces the filing fees per
certificate for firms that file multiple
certificates per entry. CPSC assumes
that a majority of firms would choose to
file as many product certificates as
possible per entry, and this action will
significantly lower the cost per
individual product certificate filed.
CPSC estimates the average fee per filing
under these conditions to be $0.77.81
Importers are only expected to pay a
filing fee for Reference Message Sets and
Full Message Sets.
Table 18 presents an estimate of filing
fees. CPSC estimates importers of non-
children’s products will file 19,697,612
annual message sets (Full and Reference
Message Sets) for a fee. At the average
filing fee per certificate of $0.77, the
expected fees for all GCCs are
$15,167,162 in total. CPSC also estimate
that importers of children’s products
will file 28,555,603, annual message sets
for a fee, and expect filing fees for CPCs
to total $21,987,815 annually. The
estimated annual total filing fees paid
by all filers is $37,154,976. These totals
exclude de minimis filings.
TABLE 18—ESTIMATED ANNUAL FILING FEES
Additional cost
Importers
Responses
Cost per
response
Total filling
fees
GCC Filing Fees ......................................................................................
CPC Filings Fees .....................................................................................
40,665
224,000
484
127
19,697,612
28,555,603
$0.77
0.77
$15,167,162
21,987,815
All Importer Filings ............................................................................
264,665
182
48,253,216
0.77
37,154,976
E. Cost to the Federal Government
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
Filings with
a fee
The estimated annual cost of the
information collection requirements to
the federal government in Fiscal Year
2026 (October 1, 2025, through
September 30, 2026) is approximately
$1.2 million in 2024 dollars, which
includes 2,080 staff hours to manage the
eFiling program and $1 million in
contracting costs. This estimate for
Fiscal Year 2026 is based in part on the
annual salary for a mid-level salaried
GS–13–5 employee in the Washington,
DC metropolitan area (effective as of
January 2024) which is $64.28 per
hour.82 This represents 67.7 percent of
total compensation (U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics, ‘‘Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation,’’ March 2024,
Table 2, percentage of wages and
salaries for all civilian management,
professional, and related employees.83
Adding an additional 32.3 percent for
benefits brings the average annual
compensation for a mid-level salaried
GS–13–5 employee to $94.94 per hour
($64.28 ÷ 0.677). Assuming that
81 This figure assumes an average fee per entry of
$25, Average fees per GCCs and CPCs are estimated
dividing $25 per entry by the average number of
certificates included with each entry; these averages
then are weighted by the total number of GCCs and
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Jkt 265001
approximately 2,080 hours will be
required annually, this results in an
annual labor cost of $197,477.10 ($94.98
per hour × 2,080 hours = $197,477) plus
an annual contracting cost of $1,000,000
in IT development for an annual cost to
the government of $1.2 million in Fiscal
Year 2026. Contracting costs are
expected to decrease substantially
thereafter. Because eFiling will be fully
functional and firms will be
experienced with it, contractor support
should only be required for ongoing
operations and maintenance.
Under these regulations, certain
categories of CPSC actions normally
have ‘‘little or no potential for affecting
the human environment,’’ and therefore,
do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact
statement. 16 CFR 1021.5(c). Rules
regarding product certification fall
within this categorical exclusion. 16
CFR 1021.5(c)(2).
X. Preemption
CPSC has submitted the information
collection requirements of this Final
Rule to OMB for review in accordance
with PRA requirements. 44 U.S.C.
3507(d).
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C.
2075(a), addresses the preemptive effect
of CPSC’s consumer product safety
standards. Part 1110, however, is a
procedural rule, not a consumer product
safety standard. Therefore, the
preemption provision of section 26(a) of
the CPSA does not apply to this Final
Rule.
IX. Environmental Considerations
XI. Congressional Review Act
The Commission’s regulations address
whether the agency is required to
prepare an environmental assessment or
an environmental impact statement.
The Congressional Review Act (CRA;
5 U.S.C. 801–808) states that before a
rule may take effect, the agency issuing
the rule must submit the rule, and
CPCs to obtain an overall weighted average per
certificate of $0.77.
82 $64.28 comes from rounding $64.275 = 133,692
a year/2,080 hours per year. See https://
www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/
salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2024/DCB.pdf.
83 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t02.htm
F. OMB Submission
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Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 / Rules and Regulations
certain related information, to each
House of Congress and the Comptroller
General. 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1). The CRA
submission must indicate whether the
rule is a ‘‘major rule.’’ The CRA states
that the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) determines
whether a rule qualifies as a ‘‘major
rule.’’
Pursuant to the CRA, OIRA has
determined that this Final Rule qualifies
as a ‘‘major rule,’’ as defined in 5 U.S.C.
804(2). To comply with the CRA, CPSC
will submit the required information to
each House of Congress and the
Comptroller General.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1110
Administrative practice and
procedure, Business and industry,
Certificate, Certification, Children,
Component part certificate, Consumer
protection, Electronic filing, Imports,
Labeling, Product testing and
certification, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Record
retention, Regulated products.
■ For the reasons stated in the preamble,
the Commission revises 16 CFR part
1110 to read as follows:
PART 1110—CERTIFICATES OF
COMPLIANCE
Sec.
1110.1 Purpose and scope.
1110.3 Definitions.
1110.5 Finished products required to be
certified.
1110.7 Who must certify finished products.
1110.9 Certificate language and format.
1110.11 Certificate content.
1110.13 Certificate availability.
1110.15 Legal responsibility of finished
product certifiers.
1110.17 Recordkeeping requirements.
1110.19 Component part certificates.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063, Secs. 3 and 102
of Pub. L. 110–314, 122 Stat. 3016, 3017
(2008), Pub. L. 112–28 (2011).
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
§ 1110.1
Purpose and scope.
This part specifies the entities that
must issue certificates for finished
products in accordance with section
14(a) of the Consumer Product Safety
Act (CPSA), as amended, 15 U.S.C.
2063(a); specifies certificate content,
form, and availability requirements that
must be met to satisfy the requirements
of section 14 of the CPSA; requires
importers to file certificates
electronically (eFile) with U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (CBP) for
imported finished products that are
required to be certified; and clarifies
which provisions of this part apply to
component part certificates. This part
does not address the type or frequency
of testing necessary to support a
certificate.
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§ 1110.3
Definitions.
(a) The definitions of section 3 of the
CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2052, and additional
definitions in the Consumer Product
Safety Improvement Act of 2008
(CPSIA), Pub. L. 110–314, apply to this
part.
(b) Additionally, the following
definitions apply for purposes of this
part:
Automated Commercial Environment
(ACE) means an electronic data
interchange system authorized by CBP
for the transmission of data and
documents used to track, control, and
process commercial imports, including
entry and entry summary data, and
includes any successor CBP authorized
electronic data interchange system.
CBP or Customs means U.S. Customs
and Border Protection.
Certificate or certificate of compliance
means a certification that the finished
products or component parts within the
scope of the certificate comply with the
consumer product safety rules under the
CPSA, or similar rules, bans, standards,
or regulations under any other law
enforced by the Commission, as set forth
on the certificate. ‘‘Certificate’’ and
‘‘certificate of compliance’’ generally
refer to all four types of certificates, as
defined in this section: General
Certificates of Conformity (GCC),
Children’s Product Certificates (CPC),
finished product certificates, and
component part certificates.
Certifier means the party who issues
a certificate of compliance.
Children’s Product Certificate (CPC)
means a certificate of compliance for a
finished product issued pursuant to
section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C.
2063, and part 1107 of this chapter.
Commission or CPSC means the
United States Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Component part means a component
part of a consumer product or other
product or substance regulated by the
Commission, as defined in § 1109.4(b) of
this chapter, that is intended to be used
in the manufacture or assembly of a
finished product, and is not intended
for sale to, or use by, consumers as a
finished product.
Component part certificate means a
voluntary certificate of compliance for a
component part, as defined in this
section.
Consignee, for purposes of this part,
means a party who takes custody or
delivery of imported finished products
for which CPSC certificate data are
required, and may be held legally
responsible by CPSC for the required
finished product certificate data as set
forth in § 1110.15.
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eFile means to electronically file the
required data elements on a finished
product certificate, as described in
§ 1110.11, into ACE, in the format
required in § 1110.13(a)(1).
Electronic certificate means the set of
required data elements on a finished
product certificate, described in
§ 1110.11, that are available in, and
accessible by, electronic means, in the
format described in § 1110.9(c).
Finished product means a consumer
product or other product or substance,
or a part of a consumer product or
substance, that is subject to a consumer
product safety rule under the CPSA, or
similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation
under any other law enforced by the
Commission, that is imported for
consumption or warehousing, or is
distributed in commerce, and that is
packaged, sold, or held for sale to, or for
use by, consumers.
Finished product certificate means a
certificate of compliance for a finished
product, as defined in this section, that
is required by § 1110.5. There are two
types of finished product certificates:
Children’s Product Certificates (CPCs)
and General Certificates of Conformity
(GCCs).
Finished product certifier means a
party who is required to issue a finished
product certificate pursuant to § 1110.7.
Pursuant to sections 14(a)(1) and (2) of
the CPSA (15 U.S.C. 2052, 2063(a)(1),
and 2063(a)(2)), a finished product
certifier must be an importer, as defined
in this section, or a manufacturer or
private labeler as defined in sections
3(a)(11) and (12) of the CPSA (15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11) and (12)).
General Certificate of Conformity
(GCC) means a certificate of compliance
for a finished product issued pursuant
to section 14(a)(1) of the CPSA, 15
U.S.C. 2063(a)(1).
Importer, for the purposes of this part,
means the Importer of Record (IOR)
eligible to make entry for imported
finished products under the Tariff Act
of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an owner,
purchaser, or authorized customs
broker; provided that, if the IOR is an
authorized customs broker, the customs
broker may identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee of the finished
products who authorized the customs
broker to make entry, as the party
responsible for compliance with CPSC
certificate requirements as part of the
finished product certificate data filed in
CPSC’s PGA Message Set. For finished
products imported by mail, or for which
a de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed, the
importer for purposes of CPSC’s
certificate requirements is a party
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eligible to make entry for the finished
products pursuant to CBP statutes and
regulations, who may be an owner,
purchaser, consignee, or authorized
customs broker. For purposes of this
rule, CPSC will not typically consider a
consumer purchasing or receiving
products for personal use or enjoyment
to be the importer responsible for
certification.
Manufacturer as defined in section
3(a)(11) of the CPSA, means any person
who manufactures or imports a
consumer product. 15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11).
Owner or purchaser, for purposes of
this part, means a party who has a
financial interest in imported finished
products for which CPSC certificate data
are required, including the actual owner
of the finished products, who may be
held legally responsible by CPSC for the
required finished product certificate
data as set forth in § 1110.15.
Private labeler as defined in section
3(a)(12) of the CPSA, means an owner
of a brand or trademark on the label of
a consumer product which bears a
private label. 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(12). A
consumer product bears a private label
if: (i) the product (or its container) is
labeled with the brand or trademark of
a person other than a manufacturer of
the product; (ii) the person with whose
brand or trademark the product (or
container) is labeled has authorized or
caused the product to be so labeled; and
(iii) the brand or trademark of a
manufacturer of such product does not
appear on such label.
Product Registry means a database
created and maintained by CPSC that
facilitates the electronic submission of
required data elements on a finished
product certificate, as provided in
§ 1110.11, by a finished product certifier
as stated in § 1110.7(a), who is required
to eFile the finished product certificate
pursuant to § 1110.13(a)(1). This
definition includes any CPSC successor
system.
Third party conformity assessment
body means a testing laboratory whose
accreditation has been accepted by the
CPSC to conduct certification testing on
children’s products, as required in
§ 1107.2 of this chapter.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
§ 1110.5 Finished products required to be
certified.
Finished products subject to a
consumer product safety rule under the
CPSA, or similar rule, ban, standard, or
regulation under any other law enforced
by the Commission, which are imported
for consumption or warehousing, or are
distributed in commerce, must be
accompanied by a finished product
certificate.
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19:55 Jan 07, 2025
Jkt 265001
§ 1110.7 Who must certify finished
products.
(a) Imports. Except as otherwise
provided in a specific rule, ban,
standard, or regulation enforced by
CPSC, for a finished product
manufactured outside of the United
States that must be accompanied by a
certificate as set forth in § 1110.5, the
importer, as defined in this part, is the
finished product certifier that must
issue a finished product certificate that
meets the requirements of this part.
(b) Domestic products. Except as
otherwise provided in a specific rule,
ban, standard, or regulation enforced by
the Commission, for a finished product
manufactured in the United States that
must be accompanied by a certificate, as
set forth in § 1110.5, the manufacturer is
the finished product certifier that must
issue a finished product certificate that
meets the requirements of this part.
However, if a finished product
manufactured in the United States is
privately labeled, the private labeler is
the finished product certifier that must
issue a finished product certificate that
meets the requirements of this part,
unless the manufacturer issues the
finished product certificate.
§ 1110.9
Certificate language and format.
(a) Language. An eFiled finished
product certificate must be in the
English language. All other certificates,
including hard copy and electronic
certificates, must be in the English
language and may also contain the same
content in any other language.
(b) Format. Finished product
certificates for finished products
manufactured outside the United States
and offered for importation into the
United States for consumption or
warehousing are required to be eFiled
using the format required in
§ 1110.13(a)(1). All other finished
product certificates must be made
available as provided in § 1110.13(b)
and (c), and may be provided in hard
copy or electronically, as set forth in
subsection (c) of this section.
(c) Electronic certificates. An
electronic finished product certificate
meets the requirements of § 1110.13(b)
and (c) if it is identified prominently on
the finished product, shipping carton, or
invoice by a unique identifier and can
be accessed via a World Wide Web
uniform resource locator (URL) or other
electronic means, provided that the
finished product certificate, the URL or
other electronic means, and the unique
identifier are accessible, along with
access to the electronic finished product
certificate itself, to the Commission,
CBP, distributors, and retailers, on or
before the date the finished product is
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Sfmt 4700
distributed in commerce. If the
electronic finished product certificate is
password protected, the password must
be provided at the same time as the
certificate when requested by CPSC or
CBP.
§ 1110.11
Certificate content.
(a) Content requirements. Each
finished product certificate must:
(1) Identify the finished product(s)
covered by the certificate. Finished
product certificates must contain at least
one of the following unique identifiers:
global trade item number (GTIN), model
number, registered number, serial
number, stock keeping number (SKU),
universal product code (UPC), or
alternate identifier, along with a
sufficient description to match the
finished product to the certificate.
Finished product certificates may also
include other identifiers, such as lot
number, model style, and model color,
that may assist with product
identification.
(2) State each consumer product
safety rule under the CPSA, or similar
rule, ban, standard, or regulation under
any law enforced by the Commission, to
which the finished product(s) are being
certified. Finished product certificates
must identify separately all applicable
rules, bans, standards, or regulations.
(3) Identify the finished product
certifier that is certifying compliance of
the finished product(s), as set forth in
§ 1110.7, including the party’s name,
street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region,
electronic mail (email) address, and
telephone number.
(4) Identify and provide contact
information (consisting, at a minimum,
of the individual’s name, street address,
city, state or province, country or
administrative region, email address,
and telephone number) for the
individual maintaining records listed in
§ 1110.17 on behalf of the finished
product certifier. The individual can be
a position title, provided that the
position is always staffed and
responsive to CPSC’s requests.
(5) Provide the date (month and year,
at a minimum) and place (including a
manufacturer name, street address, city,
state or province, country or
administrative region, email address,
and telephone number) where the
finished product(s) were manufactured,
produced, or assembled. For
manufacturing runs over a series of
days, provide the initial date of
manufacture (month and year, at a
minimum).
(6) Provide the most recent date and
place(s) (including for each third party
conformity assessment body or other
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party on whose testing the finished
product certificate depends, the name,
street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region, email
address, and telephone number) where
the finished product(s) were tested for
compliance with the rule(s), ban(s),
standard(s), or regulation(s) cited in
§ 1110.11(a)(4).
(7) Provide the finished product
certifier’s attestation. For eFiled
certificates required in § 1110.13(a)(1),
attestations are included in the Product
Registry and in CPSC’s Partner
Government Agency (PGA) Message Set
CBP and Trade Automated Interface
Requirements (CATAIR)
Implementation Guide (including
revisions thereto). Paper and electronic
finished product certificates described
in § 1110.9(b) and (c), and required in
§§ 1110.13(a)(2), (b), and (c), must
include the following attestation by the
finished product certifier:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES3
I hereby certify that the finished product(s)
covered by this certificate comply with the
rules, bans, standards, and regulations stated
herein, and that the information in this
certificate is true and accurate to the best of
my knowledge, information, and belief. I
understand and acknowledge that it is a
United States federal crime to knowingly and
willfully make any materially false, fictitious,
or fraudulent statement, representation, or
omission on this certificate.
(b) Electronic access to records. In
addition to identification of the
individual maintaining records, as
described in § 1110.11(a)(4), a finished
product certificate may include a URL,
or other electronic means, which
provides electronic access to the
required underlying records to support
the certificate as specified in §§ 1107.26
and 1109.5(g) of this chapter, or any
other applicable consumer product
safety rule, ban, standard, or regulation
enforced by the Commission.
(c) Statutory or regulatory testing
exclusions: Unless otherwise provided
by the Commission, if a finished
product certifier is claiming a statutory
or regulatory testing exclusion to an
applicable consumer product safety rule
or similar rule, ban, standard, or
regulation, then in addition to listing all
applicable rules, bans, standards, and
regulations as required under
§ 1110.11(a)(2), and in lieu of providing
the date and place where testing was
conducted for that regulation under
§ 1110.11(a)(6), a finished product
certificate shall identify the applicable
testing exclusion.
(d) Duplicative testing not required.
Although finished product certificates
must list each applicable rule, ban,
standard, or regulation separately,
finished product certifiers are not
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19:55 Jan 07, 2025
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required to conduct the same third party
test on each sample more than once
when a rule references, or incorporates
fully, another applicable consumer
product safety rule or similar rule, ban,
standard, or regulation under any other
law enforced by the Commission with
the same requirement.
§ 1110.13
Certificate availability.
(a) Accompanying certificates. A
finished product certificate must
accompany each finished product or
finished product shipment required to
be certified pursuant to § 1110.5. Each
finished product certificate must
describe only one product.
(1) In the case of finished products
that are manufactured outside the
United States and are offered for
importation into the United States for
consumption or warehousing, including
finished products offered for
consumption or warehousing from a
Foreign Trade Zone, or finished
products eligible for the de minimis
duty exemption under 19 U.S.C.
1321(a)(2)(C), the finished product
certifier must eFile the finished product
certificate data elements required in
§ 1110.11 at the time of filing the entry,
or the time of filing the entry and entry
summary, if both are filed together, in
ACE as provided in CPSC’s PGA
Message Set CATAIR Implementation
Guide (including revisions thereto). In
the case of finished products that are
manufactured outside of the United
States and imported by mail, the
finished product certifier must enter the
finished product certificate data
elements required in § 1110.11 into
CPSC’s Product Registry before arrival
of the product or substance in the
United States.
(2) In the case of finished products
manufactured in the United States, the
finished product certifier must issue the
required certificate on or before the date
the finished product is distributed in
commerce and make the finished
product certificate available for
inspection immediately, meaning
within 24 hours, upon request by CPSC.
(b) Furnishing certificates. A finished
product certifier must furnish the
required finished product certificate to
each distributor or retailer of the
finished product.
(c) Availability. Finished product
certifiers must make finished product
certificates available for inspection
immediately, meaning within 24 hours,
upon request by CPSC or CBP.
§ 1110.15 Legal responsibility of finished
product certifiers.
Finished product certifiers may,
directly or through another entity,
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1845
maintain an electronic certificate
platform. Pursuant to part 1109 of this
chapter, a finished product certifier may
rely on another party to test or certify
component parts or finished products.
Also, for purposes of § 1110.13(a)(1), a
finished product certifier may rely on
another party to enter data into the
Product Registry or to certify finished
products on their behalf. The finished
product certifier, identified in § 1110.7,
remains legally responsible for the
information in a finished product
certificate, including its validity,
accuracy, completeness, and
availability.
§ 1110.17
Recordkeeping requirements.
Finished product certifiers are
required to maintain finished product
certificates and the following records
supporting such certificates for at least
five years from the certificate creation
date:
(a) Records of test results on which a
GCC is based, and records described in
§§ 1109.5(g) and (j) of this chapter
(where applicable).
(b) Records of test results and other
records on which a CPC is based, as
required by § 1107.26, and § 1109.5(g)
and (j) of this chapter (where
applicable).
(c) Records of test results and other
records on which a component part
certificate is based, as required by
§ 1109.5(g) and (j) of this chapter.
§ 1110.19
Component part certificates.
Pursuant to part 1109 of this chapter,
component part certificates are
voluntary, but may be relied upon by a
finished product certifier to issue a
finished product certificate. Component
part certificates must not be eFiled in
ACE upon importation of a component
part. Certifiers of component parts, and
finished product certifiers that rely on
component part certificates to issue a
finished product certificate, must meet
the requirements in part 1109 of this
chapter. Component part certificates
must meet the same form, content,
recordkeeping, and availability
requirements as finished product
certificates, described in §§ 1110.9,
1110.11, 1110.13(c), 1110.15, and
1110.17.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024–30826 Filed 1–7–25; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 5 (Wednesday, January 8, 2025)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1800-1845]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-30826]
[[Page 1799]]
Vol. 90
Wednesday,
No. 5
January 8, 2025
Part V
Consumer Product Safety Commission
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16 CFR Part 1110
Certificates of Compliance; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 90 , No. 5 / Wednesday, January 8, 2025 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 1800]]
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CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1110
[CPSC Docket No. 2013-0017]
Certificates of Compliance
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In consultation with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP),
the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (Commission or CPSC) issues
this final rule (the Final Rule) to revise the agency's regulation for
Certificates of Compliance (certificates). The Final Rule aligns CPSC's
current certificates rule with other CPSC rules on testing and
certification, and implements, for importation of products and
substances regulated by CPSC, electronic filing of certificates
(eFiling) with CBP.
DATES: For all CPSC regulated consumer products and substances subject
to the Final Rule and required to be certified, except for products and
substances imported into a foreign trade zone (FTZ) and subsequently
entered for consumption or warehousing, the Final Rule is effective on
July 8, 2026. For CPSC regulated products and substances entered from
an FTZ for consumption or warehousing, the Final Rule is effective on
January 8, 2027.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kat Rickerson, eFiling Program
Specialist, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East-West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone 240-429-4257; email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Commission is issuing a final rule to
revise the requirements for certificates of compliance (certificates)
(the Final Rule) in 16 CFR part 1110 (part 1110 or the 1110 rule). The
Final Rule applies to importers, domestic manufacturers, and private
labelers who are required to issue certificates for consumer products
and substances \1\ regulated by CPSC that are imported for consumption
or warehousing into the United States or are distributed in commerce in
the United States. The Commission promulgated the existing part 1110
for certificates in 2008. The existing rule tracks the statutory
requirements for certificates in section 14 of the Consumer Product
Safety Act (CPSA), designates importers as the certifier for imported
products and manufacturers as the certifier for domestically
manufactured products, and allows for ``electronic'' certificates to
satisfy the requirement that a certificate ``accompany'' the product or
shipment of products, meaning a URL to access the certificate or a PDF
file. 73 FR 68328 (Nov. 18, 2008); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a), (g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 14(a) of the CPSA requires that manufacturers,
including importers, and private labelers issue certificates for all
consumer products subject to a consumer product safety rule under
the CPSA, or a similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any
other law enforced by the Commission, that are imported for
consumption or warehousing or distributed in commerce. 15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11)-(12); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). In this Final Rule, all
consumer products and substances subject to a CPSC rule, ban,
standard, or regulation required to be certified under section 14(a)
of the CPSA are referred to as ``consumer products'' or
``products.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2013, the Commission issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPR) to revise part 1110 to align with rules for testing children's
products under 16 CFR part 1107 (part 1107 or the 1107 rule) and
component part testing under 16 CFR part 1109 (part 1109 or the 1109
rule). 78 FR 28080 (May 13, 2013) (2013 NPR). Consistent with section
222 of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA),
which requires the Commission develop a Risk Assessment Methodology
(RAM) to identify imported products likely to include consumer products
in violation of section 17(a) of the Consumer Product Safety Act (15
U.S.C. 2066(a)) or other import provisions enforced by the Commission,
for imported consumer products, the 2013 NPR also proposed to require
eFiling of certificates with CBP at the time of filing the CBP entry,
or the time of filing the entry and entry summary, if both are filed
together.\2\ 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ CBP regulations define ``entry'' as the documentation or
data required to secure the release of imported merchandise from CBP
custody, or the act of filing that documentation. See 19 CFR
141.0a(a). CBP regulations define an ``entry summary'' as any other
documentation or data necessary for CBP to assess duties, collect
statistics on imported merchandise, and determine whether other
requirements of law or regulation have been met. See 19 CFR
141.0a(b). An entry can be made as either a 2-Step or 1-Step
process. As a 2-Step process, an entry is filed initially and an
entry summary is filed within 10 days of entry filing. As a 1-Step
process, an entry summary is filed which serves as both the entry
and entry summary filing. See e.g., 19 CFR 141.68(b). Consequently,
using the term ``entry'' encompasses both processes, irrespective of
whether the entry/CBP Form 3461 is filed for a 2-Step or a 1-Step
entry process where the entry summary/CBP Form 7501 serves as the
entry.
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Currently, CPSC collects certificates only after staff identifies a
shipment for examination; certificate data are not generally collected
and therefore cannot be used effectively to target shipments for
examination. The purpose of eFiling is to allow CPSC to use data from a
certificate to assess the health and safety risk of consumer products
when they are being imported into the United States, and to better
focus CPSC's resources for examinations and holds at the ports on
products that are more likely to be non-complaint, while reducing
inspection delays for compliant products. The RAM processes data,
including entry data and soon certificate data as well, using
algorithms to increase or decrease RAM risk scores for each product
shipment. Risk scores assist port staff in their assessment of incoming
shipments and in interdicting non-compliant consumer products. Using
certificate data for more precise targeting will maximize examination
efficiency for stakeholders and staff; help CPSC to keep hazardous,
violative products out of consumer's hands; and reduce burden on
industry by reducing inspection delays for compliant products.
Since 2013, the Commission has undertaken a series of projects to
advance implementation of an eFiling requirement, including conducting
an eFiling Alpha Pilot, a Certificate Study, and an eFiling Beta Pilot.
In December 2020, the Commission approved a multi-year plan to
implement an eFiling program at CPSC.\3\ Moreover, since 2013, CBP has
completed development and implementation of the Automated Commercial
Environment (ACE), which is the system through which the U.S.
government has implemented the ``single window,'' the primary system
for processing trade-related import and export data required by
government agencies. The transition away from paper-based procedures
results in faster, more streamlined processes for both government and
industry. Specifically, CBP developed the Partner Government Agency
(PGA) Message Set as a way for U.S. government agencies to
electronically collect additional import-related data. The eFiling
Alpha and Beta Pilots were conducted in conjunction with CBP and tested
use of CPSC's PGA Message Sets.
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\3\ The 2020 staff briefing package to implement an eFiling
program at CPSC is available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/CPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-Imported-Consumer-Products.pdf. The record of commission action is available at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-CPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-Imported-Consumer-Products.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 8, 2023, the Commission published a supplemental notice
of proposed rulemaking (SNPR) proposing to revise part 1110 to, among
other things: revise terminology to incorporate concepts that had been
introduced in the 1107 and 1109 rules but not yet included in part
1110; broaden the definition of ``importer'' in part 1110 to address
commenters'
[[Page 1801]]
concerns about the product certifier having control over and knowledge
of the goods; allow private labelers to test and certify products; and
implement eFiling for imported consumer products regulated by CPSC. 88
FR 85760 (SNPR).
The Commission received 47 comments on the SNPR, addressed in
section IV of this preamble, and is now finalizing the rule to revise
part 1110, with clarifications and modifications in response to
commenters' concerns.4 5 The Final Rule specifies the
entities that must issue certificates for finished products, including
domestically manufactured and imported products, in accordance with
section 14(a) of the CPSA, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 2063(a); specifies
certificate content, form, and availability requirements in section 14
of the CPSA; requires importers to eFile certificate data with CBP for
imported finished products that must be certified; and clarifies which
provisions of part 1110 apply to voluntary component part certificates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ On December 18, 2024, the Commission voted (3-0-2) to
publish the Final Rule, with all five Commissioners voting to
approve the rule; and a majority voting to approve the rule with an
amendment extending the general implementation date from 12 months
to 18 months. All Commissioners issued a statement in connection
with their vote. The Record of Commission Action and Commissioner
statements are available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-Final-Rule-to-Implement-eFiling-for-Certificates-of-Compliance.pdf?VersionId=JN7iuAdHGzooHBnXpuU7xZB4aX4Dkada.
\5\ The information in this Final Rule is also based on Staff's
November 15, 2024 Memorandum: Draft Final Rule to Revise 16 CFR part
1110 for Certificates of Compliance and to Implement eFiling of
Certificates for Regulated, Imported Consumer Products (Staff's
Final Rule Memo).
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I. Statutory Authority
Section 102 of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA)
amended section 14(a) of the CPSA to expand requirements for
certificates of compliance. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a). As amended, section
14(a) of the CPSA requires that manufacturers and private labelers
issue certificates for all consumer products subject to a consumer
product safety rule under the CPSA, or a similar rule, ban, standard,
or regulation under any other law enforced by the Commission, that are
imported for consumption or warehousing or distributed in commerce. 15
U.S.C. 2052(a)(11)-(12); 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). The CPSA defines the
term ``manufacturer'' as ``any person who manufactures or imports a
consumer product.'' 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11). Thus, certificates must be
issued by a manufacturer, importer, or private labeler. When a product
has more than one manufacturer, including an importer, or private
labeler, the Commission may by rule designate one or more of such
entities as the certifier and exempt the others. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(4).
Certificates for children's products (Children's Product
Certificates or CPCs) must be based on testing performed by a third
party conformity assessment body whose accreditation to perform such
testing has been accepted by the Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(2); 16
CFR part 1107. Certificates for non-children's products (General
Certificates of Conformity or GCCs) must be based on a test of each
product or a reasonable testing program. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1)(A).
Section 14(a)(1)(B) of the CPSA requires that certificates specify each
rule, ban, standard, or regulation applicable to the product. 15 U.S.C.
2063(a)(1)(B).
Section 14(g) of the CPSA contains additional requirements for the
form, content, and availability of certificates. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g).
Section 14(g)(1) requires that each certificate must identify the
manufacturer (including importer) or private labeler issuing the
certificate, as well as any third party conformity assessment body on
whose testing the certificate depends. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(1). At a
minimum, certificates must include the date and place of manufacture;
the date and place where the product was tested; each party's name,
full mailing address, and telephone number; and contact information for
the individual responsible for maintaining records of test results. Id.
Section 14(g)(2) requires that every certificate be legible and that
all contents be in English; contents can additionally be in another
language. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(2).
Certificates must accompany the applicable product or shipment of
products covered by the certificate, and a copy of the certificate must
be furnished to each distributor or retailer of the product. Upon
request, the manufacturer (including importer) or private labeler
issuing the certificate must provide a copy of the certificate to the
Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(3). Finally, section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA
states that in consultation with the Commissioner of Customs, CPSC may,
by rule, provide for the electronic filing of certificates up to 24
hours before arrival of an imported product. Upon request, the
manufacturer (including importer) or private labeler issuing the
certificate must provide a copy of such certificate to the Commission
and to CBP. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
In addition to the statutory authority to require certificates for
regulated products, as outlined in sections 14(a) and (g) of the CPSA,
the Commission has general authority to implement testing and
certification requirements pursuant to section 3 of the CPSIA, which
provides that ``the Commission may issue regulations, as necessary, to
implement this Act and the amendments made by this Act.'' Notes to 15
U.S.C. 2051 (citing Pub. L. 110-314, 3, Aug. 14, 2008, 122 Stat. 3017).
II. Background on Certificates and eFiling
Section II of the SNPR provided a detailed background on the
existing 1110 rule, the 2013 NPR to revise the 1110 rule, CPSC's risk
assessment and targeting efforts for imported consumer products, and
CPSC's eFiling-related projects since the 2013 NPR. 88 FR 85760, 85761-
63. In this section of the preamble, we summarize the same information
and additionally describe the 2023 SNPR.
A. The 1110 Rule
As stated in section I of this preamble, the CPSIA expanded section
14 of the CPSA to require testing and certification of consumer
products subject to a consumer product safety rule, or to a similar
rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any other act enforced by the
Commission. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1). The existing 1110 rule tracks the
statutory requirements in section 14, allows for certificates in paper,
electronic (URL), and PDF formats, and states that this initial rule is
``streamlined, at least in its initial phase.'' 73 FR 68328 (Nov. 18,
2008). The existing rule was not expected to be permanent. As the
Commission explained when adopting the rule, ``with time CPSIA's
expanded certification requirements will become more routine, and
[CPSC] then would consider whether this rule needs to be revised based
on actual experience.'' 73 FR 68328. The existing 1110 rule does not
implement the authority in section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA to require
eFiling of certificates for imported products. 15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(4).
B. The 2013 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In 2011, as required by section 222 of the CPSIA, CPSC launched a
pilot targeting system to test the effectiveness of CPSC's RAM. The
purpose of the RAM is to support identification and interception of
shipments containing potentially hazardous products. The pilot RAM
system used a rules-based approach and aggregate-scoring models to
highlight potential risks, patterns, and targets. 15 U.S.C. 2066 Note.
By 2012, staff had worked to refine the RAM and had begun to grapple
with the rise of internet-based companies selling
[[Page 1802]]
consumer products (eCommerce) and direct-to-consumer shipments, which
made CPSC's interdiction of non-compliant products more challenging. To
address those concerns, and to be able to use certificate data for
targeting and enforcement of CPSC's rules at the ports, CPSC proposed
in the 2013 NPR to implement eFiling of certificates with CBP for
regulated, imported products, pursuant to section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA.
The 2013 NPR also sought to revise part 1110 to integrate the rule into
the testing and certification regime contemplated in then-new parts
1107 and 1109.\6\ CPSC received over 500 comments from more than 70
commenters on the 2013 NPR.
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\6\ The 1107 rule sets forth requirements for children's product
testing and certification, including when and how products must be
tested and certified, and recordkeeping requirements. The 1109 rule
sets forth conditions and requirements for component part testing
and certification for both children's and non-children's products.
Both rules introduced new concepts and terminology related to
certificates that are not present in the existing part 1110 rule
published in 2008.
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C. CPSC's Risk Assessment and Targeting Efforts for Imported Consumer
Products
In 2017, CPSC transitioned to the RAM 2.0 system, which assesses
more data within CPSC's jurisdiction than the pilot RAM and uses
analytic and performance reports to aid staff in modifying and fine-
tuning risk assessment and targeting rules to select shipments for
examination. CPSC's RAM currently receives an electronic feed of import
entry data collected by CBP.\7\ The RAM is optimized to ingest CBP's
data and uses algorithms to identify potentially noncompliant consumer
product shipments for CPSC's inspection. However, the data ingested by
the RAM are collected by CBP for its enforcement and tariff purposes,
which do not always align with CPSC's risk assessment purposes.
Moreover, CPSC's current import enforcement methodology is labor-
intensive and lacks an efficient means of using product-specific data
to identify potentially non-compliant products.
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\7\ Currently, CPSC's RAM system is limited to data collected
and provided by CBP and does not contain CPSC-specific information
that would help enhance risk assessment. eFiling certificate data
for imported consumer products will allow the RAM to use this data
to further improve CPSC's ability to target noncompliant consumer
products for examination at the ports.
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Currently, CPSC collects certificates only after staff identifies a
shipment for examination; certificate data are not generally collected
and therefore cannot be used to target shipments for examination. CPSC
port staff identifies shipments for examination, requesting that CBP
place a shipment on hold and transport the goods to an examination
station for CPSC inspection. An examination hold creates a delay that
costs CPSC and businesses time and money; thus, importers and CPSC have
a common interest in reducing examinations of compliant products and
focusing instead on examinations of products that are likely to be
violative. Using certificate data for more precise targeting will
maximize examination efficiency for stakeholders and staff; keep
hazardous, violative products out of consumer's hands; and reduce
burden by not delaying compliant products and not holding up shipments
at the port while waiting to receive a certificate.
Using certificate data can also improve CPSC's ability to target
low-value shipments accorded a duty exemption under 19 U.S.C.
1321(a)(2)(C), which are commonly referred to as de minimis shipments.
CPSC's port staff are currently unable to pinpoint with a high degree
of certainty potentially non-compliant and hazardous products in such
low-value shipments. De minimis shipments may currently be entered
under either the ``release from manifest'' process,\8\ or the ACE Entry
Type 86 Test (ET86). Of these, only the latter is capable of
transmitting the PGA Message Set \9\ data required to effect release of
CPSC regulated merchandise.\10\ The Final Rule requires de minimis
shipments containing finished products regulated by CPSC to file CPSC's
PGA Message Set via an entry type capable of transmitting this message
set, which is currently limited to ET86. Accordingly, importers may now
use ET86 for de minimis shipments to append the required CPSC PGA
Message Set. Once the Final Rule is effective, CPSC's RAM can receive
CBP's entry data and CPSC's PGA Message Set containing certificate data
elements for risk scoring. Using product-specific certificate
information will provide CPSC with greater insights into all imported
products, including de minimis shipments. Millions of de minimis
shipments enter the United States daily; although not all of these
shipments contain CPSC regulated finished products, the ability to use
algorithms to assess certificate data and identify higher-risk
shipments, even those of low value that occur frequently, would enhance
CPSC's ability to focus limited resources to identify and interdict
higher risk shipments.
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\8\ Merchandise for which a duty exemption is claimed under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) may be entered by presenting the bill of lading
or a manifest listing each bill of lading. This type of informal
entry is termed the ``release from manifest'' process. Generally,
such shipments are released from CBP custody based on the
information provided on the manifest or bill of lading. 89 FR 2630,
2631-2632 (Jan. 16, 2024).
\9\ CBP created the PGA Message Set to collect from importers
additional agency-related import data for partner government
agencies and to allow importers to transmit the data elements to ACE
at time of entry or entry summary. CPSC created two PGA Message
Sets: the Full Message Set and Reference Message Set. When using a
Full Message Set, importers will provide all certificate data in the
form of data elements. When using a Reference Message Set, importers
will provide a reference ID to certificate data entered into CPSC's
Product Registry. The Product Registry is a certificate database
created and maintained by CPSC. Importers can enter or upload
certificate data for regulated consumer products that can be
referenced in a short PGA Message Set each time the product is
imported without having to re-enter the same certificate data
elements.
\10\ Shipments that have PGA data reporting requirements, or
require the payment of any duties, fees, or taxes may not use the
``release from manifest'' process. 89 FR 2630, 2632.
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Additionally, CBP does not collect entry data for products imported
into the United States via international mail; thus, these shipments
cannot relay the PGA Message Set required for products regulated by
CPSC. However, CPSC staff inspect mail shipments; lack of product-
related data can lead to CPSC inspections of compliant products that
delay their release. Although CBP is unable to process any certificate
data collected for international mail shipments via ACE,\11\ the Final
Rule requires a modified eFiling requirement for international mail.
Importers using international mail to import consumer products
regulated by CPSC must enter certificate data into the Product Registry
before arrival of the shipment in the United States, so that staff can
analyze this data and work with CBP to target mail shipments for
examination.
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\11\ ACE is CBP's system through which the U.S. government has
implemented the ``single window,'' the primary system for processing
all trade-related import and export data required by government
agencies. The ``single window'' transitions away from paper-based
procedures to provide government and industry faster, more
streamlined processes.
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D. CPSC eFiling Related Projects Since the 2013 NPR
Since publication of the 2013 NPR, CPSC has implemented RAM 2.0 and
CBP has implemented ACE and developed the PGA Message Set. In 2016 and
2017, CPSC conducted an eFiling Alpha Pilot, in coordination with CBP,
involving eight volunteer participants who successfully eFiled a
limited set of targeting/enforcement data for regulated products. Also
in 2017, CPSC conducted a Certificate Study to assess CPSC's ability to
use certificates and the information on them for risk assessment and
targeting of regulated, imported consumer products. In December 2020,
the Commission
[[Page 1803]]
approved a multi-year plan to implement an eFiling program at CPSC.\12\
Following this eFiling plan, CPSC began an eFiling Beta Pilot in the
fall of 2023 with 37 participants.\13\ Section II of the SNPR contains
a detailed description of each of these initiatives. 88 FR 85760,
85762-63. Most recently, on June 4, 2024, CPSC announced an expansion
of the Beta Pilot to include up to an additional 2,000 participants, to
further test the eFiling IT infrastructure and to allow more importers
to prepare for full implementation of an eFiling requirement.\14\
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\12\ The 2020 staff briefing package to implement an eFiling
program at CPSC is available at: https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/CPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-Imported-Consumer-Products.pdf?BYXOLX2gJmF4NaAN1LCMmqiXRISuaRkr=. The record of
commission action is available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-CPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-Imported-Consumer-Products.pdf.
\13\ 87 FR 35513 (June 10, 2022).
\14\ 89 FR 47922 (June 4, 2024).
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To minimize burden on industry, CPSC developed an eFiling System
through the Alpha and Beta Pilots that allows importers to enter
certificate data through two means: Full PGA Message Set or Reference
PGA Message Set using the Product Registry.\15\ When using the Full PGA
Message Set, the importer submits all certificate data elements via
ACE. When using the Reference PGA Message Set, the importer enters all
certificate data elements into CPSC's Product Registry prior to filing
entry with CBP, and then submits a unique reference identifier (ID) via
ACE as part of their entry filing.\16\ The CBP and Trade Automated
Interface Requirement (CATAIR), which details the technical
requirements to file each of CPSC's PGA Message Sets in ACE, is
available in the eFiling document library maintained on CPSC's website
at https://www.cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
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\15\ The eFiling system collectively refers to the PGA Message
Set and Product Registry and process of filing certificate data.
Finished product certifiers (meaning importers, manufacturers, or
private labelers) are responsible for the certificate data
submitted, but brokers or other designated parties can upload data
and certify products on behalf of a finished product certifier. See
16 CFR part 1109 and Sec. 1110.15 of this Final Rule.
\16\ Other trade parties, such as brokers and laboratories, may
enter certificate data into the Product Registry on behalf of a
finished product certifier, if given permission to do so in the
Product Registry.
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The Product Registry allows importers, or their designees, to enter
the certificate data elements via a user interface, batch upload, and/
or Application Programing Interface (API) upload. The user interface is
a step-by-step process in which the importer submits one certificate at
a time. The batch upload feature allows importers to submit multiple
certificates using a Comma-Separated Value (CSV) template. The API
upload feature allows importers to build an API connection via the
Product Registry and their data systems to directly enter certificates.
Additionally, the Product Registry provides multiple features to
optimize the importer's interaction. Each importer has a Business
Account in the Product Registry through which individual users
representing the importer can view all certificates submitted into the
Product Registry associated with the importer. An importer can also
provide other third parties, such as a broker or testing laboratory,
with different levels of permission to submit certificate data into the
Product Registry on their behalf. The most recent user guide for the
Product Registry is attached as Tab A to Staff's Final Rule Memo and is
also available in the eFiling document library maintained on CPSC's
website at https://www.cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library. Updates to
the Product Registry user guide and other eFiling-related guidance
documents will continue to be placed in this document library.
E. Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
On December 8, 2023, CPSC published an SNPR that modified the 2013
NPR based on comments on the 2013 NPR, lessons learned, and participant
feedback from the Alpha Pilot and the Certificate Study, as well as
feedback during preparation of the Beta Pilot. 88 FR 85760. The SNPR
proposed to revise the 1110 rule to clarify certificate requirements
for all regulated products. Among other changes, the SNPR added 13 new
definitions to incorporate concepts used in the 1107 and 1109 rules and
to clarify the requirements of part 1110; broadened the definition of
``importer'' in part 1110 to include any entity CBP allows to be an
importer under the Tariff Act; addressed which party is responsible for
certifying imported and domestically manufactured products; clarified
the certificate format; provided additional detail to the required data
elements; required that each certificate describe a single product;
specified that the 1110 rule applies to de minimis shipments,
international mail shipments, and to products entered for consumption
or warehousing from an FTZ; clarified the legal responsibility for
certificate information; and expanded the record retention period for
GCCs to five years.
III. Overview of the Final Rule
The Commission is finalizing the rule largely as proposed in the
SNPR. For clarity, the Final Rule contains minor grammar and syntax
revisions that do not change the substance of the rule. Based on the
comments, one of the biggest changes to the Final Rule is the effective
date, extended from the proposed 120 days after publication in the
Federal Register, to 18 months for all imported and domestically
manufactured products (other than those imported into an FTZ and
subsequently entered for consumption or warehousing, for which the
effective date will be 24 months after publication). Additionally,
throughout the Final Rule, we use the term ``finished product
certificate'' or ``finished product certifier'' to clarify that the
requirement to certify regulated products attaches to finished products
and not to component parts, and the obligation to certify regulated
finished products rests with a finished product certifier, as set forth
in the rule. Using these terms consistently throughout the regulation
text addresses several comments received on the SNPR demonstrating
confusion regarding which party has the obligation to certify and which
products must be accompanied by a certificate. The Final Rule also
modifies the definition of ``importer'' to address commenters'
concerns, and to ensure that a party eligible to make entry for
imported, regulated consumer products is legally responsible for CPSC's
certificate requirements. Finally, the Final Rule clarifies the party
that is legally responsible for information on a finished product
certificate and the requirements for component part certificates.
In this section of the preamble, we briefly describe the primary
modifications and clarifications made in the Final Rule based on
comments received on the SNPR and experience and feedback on the
eFiling Beta Pilot. Section V of this preamble contains a more detailed
explanation of the requirements in the Final Rule.
A. Effective Date
As explained in section VI of this preamble, the effective date is
extended from the proposed 120 days. For all consumer products
regulated by CPSC subject to the Final Rule and required to be
certified, except for products imported into an FTZ and subsequently
entered for consumption or
[[Page 1804]]
warehousing,\17\ the Final Rule is effective 18 months after
publication of the Final Rule in the Federal Register. The 18-month
effective date applies to regulated consumer products subject to the
Final Rule that are imported, as well as to those that are domestically
manufactured. For CPSC regulated products imported into an FTZ and
subsequently entered for consumption or warehousing, the Final Rule is
effective 24 months after publication of the Final Rule in the Federal
Register.
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\17\ Entry type 06 is used to enter for consumption consumer
products withdrawn from an FTZ for entry for consumption.
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B. Definitions (Sec. 1110.3)
Definitions in the Final Rule contain the following changes from
the SNPR:
Component part certificate--Clarifies that component part
certificates are voluntary.
Consignee--Clarifies that this definition is only for the purposes
of this rule and simplifies the definition to mean a party who takes
custody or delivery of imported finished products for which CPSC
certificate data are required. The definition informs that a consignee
may be held legally responsible by CPSC for the required certificate
data as set forth in Sec. 1110.15. Although a consignee will not
necessarily be eligible to enter certificate data into ACE, CPSC may
hold the consignee legally responsible for CPSC's certificate data as
the importer.
eFile--Modifies the defined term from ``eFiled certificate'' to
``eFile'' because the term ``eFiled certificate'' is not used in the
rule, but the term ``eFile'' or ``eFiled'' is used nine times
throughout the regulation. The definition of ``eFile'' is consistent
with the SNPR definition of ``eFiled certificate.''
Finished product--Removes the phrase ``replacement parts'' and
clarifies the three requirements that define a ``finished product'':
(1) the product is imported for consumption or warehousing, or
distributed in commerce; (2) the product is subject to a consumer
product safety rule under the CPSA, or similar rule, ban, standard, or
regulation under any other law enforced by the Commission; and (3) the
product is packaged, sold, or held for sale to, or use by, consumers.
Finished product certifier--For clarity, adds the statutory
requirement that a finished product certifier must be a manufacturer,
importer, or private labeler.
Importer--Clarifies that for purposes of this rule, the importer is
the Importer of Record (IOR) eligible to make entry for imported
finished products under the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an owner, purchaser, or authorized customs
broker. This modification is consistent with the 2013 NPR and comments
stating that the SNPR proposal to broaden the importer definition was
too broad and created confusion about which party is required to
certify imported products. Pursuant to CBP's statute, entry
documentation must be transmitted by the owner or purchaser of the
merchandise or, when appropriately designated by the owner, purchaser,
or consignee of the merchandise, a person holding a valid license under
19 U.S.C. 1641. The IOR must be a party eligible to file such entry
documentation. 19 U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B). A valid license under 19 U.S.C.
1641 means a customs broker licensed to conduct customs business. 19
U.S.C. 1641(a). Accordingly, the Final Rule places responsibility to
issue a finished product certificate for imported products on the IOR,
and the definition tracks the parties eligible to be an IOR in the
Tariff Act, as amended.
However, to address additional comments stating that an IOR
authorized to make entry for a shipment, such as a broker, may not have
sufficient knowledge of the consumer products to be held responsible
for testing and certification, the definition of ``importer'' in the
Final Rule provides that an authorized broker may identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee of the finished products who authorized the
customs broker to make entry, as the party responsible for compliance
with CPSC certificate requirements, as part of the certificate data
filed in CPSC's PGA Message Set. Accordingly, a broker may identify the
party responsible for certification by filing CPSC's required PGA
Message Set in ACE, and the Message Set should identify the finished
product certifier as part of the certificate data required in Sec.
1110.11(a)(3) of this Final Rule. This owner, purchaser, or consignee
that authorized a broker to file entry is the party that CPSC would
expect to have sufficient knowledge of the products being imported and
understand that such finished products must now comply with U.S. laws
and regulations, including compliance with CPSC's testing and
certification requirements.\18\
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\18\ We note that the party that CPSC holds legally responsible
for certificate data does not signify that this party is responsible
for submitting such data into ACE, given that this party is not
necessarily an IOR or other party eligible to make entry under CBP
statutes and regulations.
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Additionally, the Final Rule clarifies that for finished products
imported by mail, or for which a de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed, the importer for purposes of CPSC's
certificate requirements is a party eligible to make entry for the
finished products pursuant to CBP statutes and regulations, who may be
an owner, purchaser, consignee, or authorized customs broker.\19\
Because a consumer could fall within the definition of a purchaser or
consignee, the definition of ``importer'' continues to state, as
proposed, that for purposes of this rule, CPSC will not typically
consider a consumer purchasing or receiving products for personal use
or enjoyment to be the importer responsible for certification.
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\19\ Id.
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Manufacturer--For clarity, restates the statutory definition of
``manufacturer'' in the regulatory text.
Owner or purchaser--Clarifies that this definition is only for the
purposes of this rule and simplifies the definition to mean a party who
has a financial interest in imported finished products for which CPSC
certificate data are required, including the actual owner of the
merchandise. The definition informs that an owner or purchaser of the
imported finished products may be held legally responsible by CPSC for
the required certificate data as set forth in Sec. 1110.15. This
definition does not signify which party is eligible to enter
certificate data into ACE but informs the owner or purchaser that CPSC
may hold them legally responsible for CPSC's certificate data as the
importer.
Private labeler--For clarity, restates the statutory definition of
``private labeler'' in the regulatory text.
Product Registry--Places the responsibility to submit data into the
Product Registry on the finished product certifier, meaning the
importer that is required to issue the finished product certificate, as
specified in Sec. 1110.7(a), and who is also required to eFile the
certificate data as set forth in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1).\20\
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\20\ Pursuant to Sec. 1110.15, a finished product certifier can
rely on other parties to maintain records, test, certify products,
or enter data into the Product Registry, but remains legally
responsible for the validity, accuracy, completeness, and
availability of finished product certificates.
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C. Certificate Content (Sec. 1110.11)
Requirements for certificate content in the Final Rule contain the
following changes from the SNPR proposal:
Individual maintaining records Sec. 1110.11(a)(4)--Moves the
bulleted list summarizing required testing and certification records to
the recordkeeping requirement in Sec. 1110.17, because the data
element in
[[Page 1805]]
Sec. 1110.11(a)(4) requires a name and contact information for the
recordkeeper; thus, the list of potential records is more appropriately
defined in the Final Rule's recordkeeping requirement.
Attestations Sec. 1110.11(a)(7)--Clarifies that although all
certificates require an attestation, the written attestation only
applies to certificates provided in hard copy or electronic formats,
because eFiled certificates already address the attestation requirement
through the Product Registry (Reference Message Set) and a data element
in the Full Message Set.
Duplicative testing not required Sec. 1110.11(d)--Clarifies that
the rule's provision on duplicative testing is intended to prevent test
laboratories from conducting the same third party test multiple times
on the same sample when the same test is required by overlapping rules.
D. Legal Responsibility of Finished Product Certifiers (Sec. 1110.15)
This provision modifies the heading proposed in the SNPR, changing
the description from ``Legal responsibility for certificate
information'' to ``Legal responsibility of finished product
certifiers.'' This modification better reflects the content of Sec.
1110.15, which is broader than just the information on a certificate
and includes requirements for finished product certifiers when they
rely on other parties to maintain records, or to submit data into the
Product Registry, test, or certify.
E. Recordkeeping Requirements (Sec. 1110.17)
The Final Rule simplifies the presentation of the recordkeeping
requirements for all finished product certificates by stating that
required records must be maintained for five years from the date of
creation, as proposed, and moves the bulleted recordkeeping
requirements previously contained in Sec. 1110.11(a)(4) to this
section of the rule.
F. Disclaimer Message Sets
The SNPR proposed to require Disclaimer Message Sets in Sec.
1110.13(a)(1) by referencing CPSC's PGA Message Set requirements in
CPSC's CATAIR. As explained in section IV.F of this preamble, as a
matter of policy and to reduce burden, CPSC will not require importers
to file a Disclaimer Message Set with CBP for products that do not
require a certificate. Accordingly, a Disclaimer Message Set is not
required when: (1) the imported product is not within CPSC's
jurisdiction; (2) the imported product is within CPSC's jurisdiction,
but no rule, ban, standard, or regulation requiring a certificate
applies; (3) the imported product is a component of a consumer product
that is not packaged, sold, or held for sale to, or for use by,
consumers, but rather the part will be used in further assembly or
manufacturing in the United States; or (4) the imported product is
subject to an enforcement discretion and no certificate is required.
Commission staff have updated the CPSC's CATAIR accordingly.
IV. Response to Comments
This section of the preamble summarizes and responds to the 47
comments received on the SNPR by topic. Table 1 contains a key to the
acronyms used to describe each commenter.
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\21\ The commenter key is based on the document ID that was
assigned to the comment upon submission to the Federal Register
docket of the SNPR. Several commenters submitted comments in
separate submissions and were assigned multiple IDs. Acronyms and
abbreviations for easier reference of each commenter are in
parentheses. Comments on the SNPR begin with comment number 84.
Table 1--Commenter Key \21\
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
84.................................... Comverex, LLC (Comverex) 108..................... National Foreign Trade Council and U.S.
Chamber of Commerce (NFTC & USCC)
85.................................... Tractor Supply Company (TSC) 109..................... The Boppy Company, LLC (Boppy)
86.................................... Tractor Supply Company (TSC) 110..................... Newell Brands Inc. (Newell)
87.................................... Tractor Supply Company (TSC) 111..................... American Apparel & Footwear Association
(AAFA)
88.................................... Comverex, LLC (Comverex) 112..................... PeopleForBikes Coalition (PeopleForBikes)
89.................................... Comverex, LLC (Comverex) 113..................... The National Association of Manufacturers
(NAM)
90.................................... Galaxy Fireworks, Inc. (Galaxy) 114..................... Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA)
91.................................... Comverex, LLC (Comverex) 115..................... Law Offices of Steven W Hansen (Hansen)
92.................................... Bureau Veritas (BV) 116..................... Lighter Association (LA)
93.................................... Alta Cycling Group, LLC (Alta) 117..................... Comverex, LLC (Comverex)
94.................................... American Fireworks Standards Laboratory 118..................... Writing Instrument Manufacturer's
(AFSL) Association (WIMA)
95.................................... National Fireworks Association (NFA) 119..................... Promotional Products Association
International (PPAI)
96.................................... National Association of Foreign-Trade 121..................... National Association of Foreign-Trade
Zones (NAFTZ) Zones (NAFTZ)
97.................................... Toy Association (TA) 122..................... National Customs Brokers and Forwarders
Association of America, Inc. (NCBFAA)
98.................................... Informational Technology Industry Council 123..................... IKEA
(ITI)
99.................................... Juvenile Products Manufacturers 124..................... IKEA
Association (JPMA)
100................................... Outdoor Power Equipment Institute, Inc. 125..................... Informational Technology Industry Council
(OPEI) (ITI)
101................................... American Pyrotechnics Association (APA) 126..................... Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA)
102,.................................. Ingram Enterprises, Inc. DBA Fireworks 127..................... National Association of Foreign-Trade
120................................... Over America and Affiliated Zones (NAFTZ)
Companies (FOA) (Comment 120 identical)
103................................... Consumer Technology Association (CTA) 128..................... National Association of Foreign-Trade
Zones (NAFTZ)
104................................... UL Solutions (ULS) 129..................... National Fireworks Association (NFA)
105................................... American Promotional Events, Inc. d/b/a 130..................... IKEA
TNT Fireworks (APE)
106................................... Window Covering Manufacturers Association 131..................... Express Association of America (EAA)
(WCMA)
107................................... Winco Fireworks International LLC (WFI)
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A. Procedural Comments
Comment 1: Several commenters (Galaxy (90), JPMA (99), NAM (113),
RILA (114), and NCBFAA (122)) argue that the SNPR was proposed
prematurely, because CPSC assertedly did not benefit from outcomes and
feedback from Beta Pilot participants;
[[Page 1806]]
these commenters noted general concern about the impact of eFiling.
Response 1: When drafting the SNPR, CPSC benefited from the
outcomes and feedback from comments to the 2013 NPR, the Alpha Pilot
conducted in 2016, the Certificate Study conducted in 2017, preparation
and development for the Beta Pilot in 2023, and the initial months of
the Beta Pilot. Furthermore, CPSC is drawing upon outcomes and feedback
from the Beta Pilot participants in the Final Rule, specifically with
respect to consideration of the effective date of the Final Rule and
finalizing the eFiling burden analysis in sections VII and VIII of this
preamble. Finally, while the Beta Pilot tests the mechanics of eFiling
and practical considerations, it does not impact the Final Rule's basic
requirement to eFile certificates.
Comment 2: Hansen (115) states that the bicycle industry has not
received sufficient information about the eFiling proposal, and that
the SNPR was sudden, considering the 10-year lapse between the NPR and
the SNPR. Hansen complains that no company from the bicycle industry is
participating in the Beta Pilot and that it will take many months to
set up testing laboratories around the world and hire people to manage
the new data requirements.
Response 2: Because more than 10 years have passed since the NPR
was published in 2013, the Commission issued the SNPR to provide
additional opportunity for notice and comment and to describe proposed
requirements for the revisions to part 1110 based on the Commission's
efforts since 2013 to advance eFiling. The SNPR recounts such efforts,
including the Alpha Pilot in 2016 and a Certificate Study in 2017. 88
FR 85760, 85762-62. The Commission voted in December 2020 to approve
staff's recommended four-phased approach to create an eFiling program
at CPSC \22\ and began recruiting for the Beta Pilot on June 10, 2022
(87 FR 35513). CPSC conducted the Beta Pilot with 37 participants from
October 2023 to June 2024. Most recently, CPSC announced expansion of
the Beta Pilot test on June 4, 2024 (89 FR 47922). CPSC has also
conducted extensive outreach via public events, such as a workshop held
on October 13, 2022 (87 FR 48162 (Aug. 8, 2022)), and communication
with a variety of trade organizations.\23\ CPSC provided industry with
a wealth of information about the Beta Pilot and eFiling and provided
numerous notices and opportunities for bicycle importers to
participate; bicycle importers can still participate in the expanded
Beta Pilot. Lastly, the Final Rule requires eFiling of certificates
that bicycle importers are already responsible for creating and
maintaining; the Final Rule does not add new testing-related data
requirements for certificates and does not require the bicycle industry
to set up additional testing laboratories or change their testing
processes.
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\22\ Record of Commission Action available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/RCA-CPSC-Plan-to-Create-an-eFiling-Program-for-Imported-Consumer-Products.pdf.
\23\ Section XI of the October 30, 2024: Staff Briefing
Memorandum: Draft Final Rule to Revise 16 CFR part 1110 for
Certificates of Compliance and to Implement eFiling (Final Rule
SBP), contains a list of staff outreach and engagement efforts since
2013 regarding CPSC's eFiling initiative. This list demonstrates at
least 121 staff engagements on eFiling in the last 3 years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Effective Date
Comment 3: Many commenters (TSC (87), BV (92), Alta (93), TA (97),
ITI (98), JPMA (99), OPEI (100), WCMA (106), NFTC & USCC (108), Newell
(110), AAFA (111), NAM (113), RILA (114, 126), Hansen (115), LA (116),
Comverex (117), NAFTZ (127), EAA (131), and IKEA (123, 130)) argue that
an effective date of 120 days after publication of the Final Rule, as
proposed, is inadequate and recommend a longer implementation period,
ranging from six to 24 months. The NCBFAA (122) expresses concern about
slow participation by importers and potential system bugs in
development.\24\ The TA (97) specifically recommends a staggered phase-
in period once the effective date has elapsed. Commenters argue that an
extended implementation period would allow industry to implement the
new changes, including organizing resources, hiring data personnel,
integrating internal technological systems, onboarding to the eFiling
system, reviewing existing compliance programs, developing internal
procedures, and completing additional legal agreements between parties
to assign certification responsibilities.
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\24\ During the Beta Pilot, between October 16, 2023 and June
30, 2024, the eFiling support team provided real-time support using
the Beta Pilot Support Mailbox. The support team responded to 287
Tier 1 (basic troubleshooting, policy, and process) incidents and
153 Tier 2 (advanced technical issues) incidents with an average
resolution time of 21 hours. CPSC expects to have a fully staffed
service desk to assist with the expanded Beta Pilot. Additionally,
during the Beta Pilot CPSC reviewed and assessed participant
feedback, analyzed their needs to adjust the eFiling program, and
implemented changes where needed. CPSC will continue to incorporate
participant feedback throughout the eFiling voluntary stage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The AAFA (111) states that an interim manual entry process, which
CPSC did not propose, is not feasible for most importers, because it
would require significant staff time. Commenters recommend that CPSC
host additional workshops and training. IKEA (123, 130) claims that to
secure a stable and resilient supply chain, message sets need to be
ready at least three months prior to import, suppliers require four
months to update their systems, each new product requires at least 6
months to mitigate any deviations from eFiling requirements, and one
month to correct errors in the data flow. IKEA (130) asserts that
eFiling requires many months of preparation with suppliers, vendors,
and brokers, recommending a 24-month effective date and a phased
approach to implementation. NAFTZ (127) and EAA (131) recommend an
effective date of at least one year or longer.
Response 3: Based on CPSC's experience with Beta Pilot, the
Commission agrees with the commenters that additional time is warranted
for importers and their trade partners to prepare for full
implementation of eFiling. Accordingly, the Final Rule provides an
effective date of 18 months after publication of the Final Rule, as
described in section VI of the preamble, to implement eFiling for all
entry types except products entered for consumption or warehousing from
an FTZ, which will have a 24-month effective date. This timeline is
based on comments received on the SNPR and feedback from Beta Pilot
participants and their trade partners. CPSC will also consider hosting
additional workshops and trainings before and during implementation of
the eFiling requirement and will update guidance materials as needed on
CPSC's eFiling document library, available at https://cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library. Finally, to allow importers and the Commission time
to test and plan for full implementation of eFiling, the Commission is
expanding the Beta Pilot test to include up to 2,000 additional
participants, as described in a June 4, 2024, Federal Register notice.
89 FR 47922. Importers can apply to participate in the expanded Beta
Pilot as stated in this notice. Id.
Comment 4: WCMA (106) alleges that the 120-day implementation
period in the SNPR conflicts with the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI)/WCMA 2022 custom window covering safety standard
(effective June 1, 2024) and the approaching conclusion of the Reese's
Law discretionary enforcement period (on March 19, 2024). WCMA (106)
states that the window covering industry will have to adapt to new
compliance requirements, while being unfamiliar with the eFiling
system.
[[Page 1807]]
Response 4: The Commission published 16 CFR part 1263 on September
21, 2023 (88 FR 65274; 88 FR 65296) to implement Reese's Law, 15 U.S.C.
2056e, which required the Commission to issue a rule providing
performance and labeling requirements for consumer products that
contain button cell or coin batteries, to eliminate or adequately
reduce the risk of injury associated with children 6 years old and
younger ingesting these batteries. 15 U.S.C. 2056e(a)(1). Some
motorized window coverings contain button cell or coin batteries.
The effective date of this Final Rule, as revised, will occur about
one and a half years after the effective date of Reese's Law
requirements for consumer products containing button or coin cell
batteries. As of September 2024, testing and certification of consumer
products containing button cell or coin batteries has been in effect
for six months. Accordingly, the 18-month effective date of the Final
Rule will provide window covering manufacturers and importers with
sufficient time to comply with testing, certification, and eFiling
requirements.
Comment 5: Comverex (84) expresses concern about the proposed 120-
day effective date, believing that test data that is typically valid
for 365 days would need to be reconducted in 245 days (365 days-120
days = 245 days) to allow test laboratories to automate test data
submission into the Product Registry. Comverex states that a 120-day
effective date would require testing to be obtained up to 245 days in
advance of publication of the Final Rule, potentially requiring
importers to reconduct testing or to coordinate obtaining the necessary
data from previously issued test reports.
Response 5: Certificate data entered into the Product Registry are
the responsibility of the importer, who can allow a testing laboratory
to submit test data into the Product Registry on their behalf. The
decision to rely on a testing laboratory for data entry is at the
discretion of the importer. The premise of Comverex's concern, that
test data must be entered at the time of testing, is incorrect; in
fact, importers or their trade partners can enter test data into the
Product Registry at any time before importation of the product,
including testing conducted before the effective date of the Final
Rule. Based on comments and the experience of Beta Pilot participants,
the Final Rule now has a 18-month effective date, which also obviates
Comverex's concern. Note that if an importer participates in the
expanded Beta Pilot, the importer can begin submitting certificate data
into the Product Registry before the effective date of the Final Rule.
C. Section 1110.3 Definitions
Comment 6: Several commenters (Alta (93), TA (97), Newell (110),
PeopleForBikes (112), and Hansen (115)) oppose expanding the definition
of a ``finished product'' in Sec. 1110.3 to include replacement parts.
These commenters argue that replacement parts are effectively covered
by certification for the full finished product and are not tracked
independently, so it would be burdensome to create and track
certificates for replacement parts. Furthermore, a change to any
replacement part would be considered a ``material change'' and trigger
retesting under an existing regulation. Lastly, commenters state that
component parts are imported in bulk and the importer has no way of
knowing whether the parts are intended for domestic assembly, repair
shops, or retail customers. Commenters state that this differs from
parts sold with the intent that they may be assembled to create some
larger item or ensemble, like doll accessories for toys.
Additionally, PeopleForBikes (112) and Hansen (115) write that
CPSC's example that a handlebar sold as a replacement part requires a
certificate is incorrect, because 16 CFR part 1512 (part 1512) is a
complete product standard and the handlebar must meet the requirements
in part 1512 after assembly into complete bicycles. PeopleForBikes
(112) notes that in response to comment 63 on the 2013 NPR, CPSC
indicated that parts of a bicycle could be tested and certified. The
commenter states that CPSC provided as an example replacement
handbrakes, which the commenter asserts cannot be tested individually,
but are covered under 16 CFR 1512.5. Hansen (115) states that importers
will not know whether a part, such as handlebars, will be used on a
child's bike or not, and requests documentation that CPSC has
previously stated that replacement bicycle parts must be tested to part
1512.
JPMA (99) and NAM (113) claim the proposed rule does not clearly
define ``component parts'' and ``component part certificates.'' These
commenters state that CPSC should clarify that certification is only
required for component or replacement parts if they are sold as fully
independent, finished, packaged consumer products subject to a specific
applicable regulation. The OPEI (100) seeks clarity as to whether
replacement shields for power mowers (as defined in 16 CFR part 1205.3)
require separate testing and certificates if sold to consumers as
replacement parts.
Response 6: In the Final Rule, CPSC amends the definition of
``finished product'' and adds guidance in sections V.B and V.C of this
preamble to clarify when a part of a consumer product is considered a
finished product. As defined in 16 CFR part 1109 and this revised part
1110, a ``component part'' is not, by definition, a finished product
that requires certification. A component of a consumer product only
requires testing and certification if the part itself is: (1) packaged,
sold, or held for sale to, or use by, consumers (in which case it is a
finished product); (2) regulated by the Commission, meaning the part is
specifically regulated and not regulated as a subsection of a final
product standard; and (3) imported for consumption or warehousing or
distributed into commerce. To be a finished product, components must be
sold independently, packaged for a consumer, or intended for use by a
consumer.
CPSC incorrectly stated in the SNPR that bicycle handbrakes sold
separately would require a certificate. The commenter is correct that
16 CFR part 1512, as applied to non-children's products, is a finished
product standard and the individual components are tested as part of
the finished product. Imported replacement parts for bicycles, power
mowers, or any non-children's product covered by a finished product
regulation are not subject to the eFiling requirement unless a
regulation applies to the part, as sold. However, a part of a
children's product that is sold separately to consumers may be subject
to third party testing for CPSC rules such as lead content, lead in
paint, or small parts. Lastly, per 16 CFR part 1109, a certifier can
use component part testing and certification to certify a finished
product, where applicable.
Comment 7: Several commenters (JPMA (99), NFTC & USCC (108), AAFA
(111), NAM (113), and RILA (114)) disagree with the proposed expanded
definition of ``importer'' and urge using ``importer of record (IOR),''
as proposed in the 2013 NPR. Commenters claim that the industry is
already familiar with the definition of IOR and the expanded definition
will add complexity and ambiguity to who is responsible for eFiling
certificate data. Commenters argue that multiple entities may be held
responsible, or that retailers may be improperly authorized to certify
products. JPMA (99) and NAM (113) assert that the definition of
``importer'' cannot be changed, because it is already legislatively
defined, and the SNPR is contrary to the plain language of the
[[Page 1808]]
CPSA that specifies manufacturers as the required certifier.
Response 7: The 2013 NPR proposed to define ``importer'' as the
``importer of record as defined under the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B))'' 78 FR 28080, 28107. The 2023 SNPR proposed to broaden
the definition to include the importer of record, consignee, or owner,
purchaser, or party that has a financial interest in the product or
substance being offered for import and effectively caused the product
or substance to be imported into the United States. 88 FR 85760, 85789.
For the Final Rule, the Commission agrees with the commenters that
identifying a specific party responsible for certifying imported,
finished products helps to clarify the party responsible for complying
with CPSC's certificate requirements and ensures that certificate data
is eFiled at entry. Accordingly, the Final Rule clarifies that, as
proposed in the 2013 NPR and consistent with the SNPR and the comments
received, for purposes of this rule, the ``importer'' means the
importer of record (IOR) eligible to make entry for imported finished
products under the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an owner, purchaser, or authorized customs
broker.
The Final Rule also addresses the concerns of commenters stating
that an IOR authorized to make entry for a shipment, such as a broker,
may not have sufficient knowledge of the consumer products to be held
responsible for testing and certification. Accordingly, the definition
of ``importer'' in the Final Rule provides that an authorized broker
may identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee of the finished
products who authorized the customs broker to make entry, as the party
responsible for compliance with CPSC certificate requirements. A broker
would identify such party by eFiling certificate data using CPSC's PGA
Message Set, which will identify the finished product certifier
responsible for product certification, as required in Sec.
1110.11(a)(3).
If identified as the finished product certifier in the PGA Message
Set data, the owner, purchaser, or consignee that authorized the broker
to file entry is the party that CPSC would expect to have sufficient
knowledge of the finished products being imported and understand that
such products must now comply with U.S. laws and regulations, including
compliance with CPSC's testing and certification requirements. We note
that the party that CPSC holds legally responsible for certificate data
does not mean that this party is responsible for submitting such data
into ACE, because this party may not be the IOR for the shipment or be
another party eligible to make entry under CBP statutes and
regulations.
Thus, the Final Rule definition of ``importer'' is consistent with
the parties identified in the NPR and the SNPR and addresses commenters
concerns by requiring the IOR to comply with CPSC's certificate
requirements, but allowing an IOR who is an authorized broker to
identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee of the finished products
who authorized the customs broker to make entry, as the party
responsible for compliance with CPSC certificate requirements. However,
for finished products regulated by CPSC that are required to be
accompanied by a certificate, if an authorized customs broker fails to
submit a PGA Message Set containing CPSC's certificate data elements to
identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee responsible for product
certification,\25\ CPSC can hold such a broker legally responsible for
certificate data as set forth in Sec. 1110.15.\26\ Practically
speaking, a broker will receive from the owner, purchaser, or consignee
authorizing entry, either the Unique ID for the Reference PGA Message
Set, linking certificate data in the Product Registry with the
shipment, or all certificate data elements for submitting the Full PGA
Message Set at entry.
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\25\ Section 1110.11(a)(3) of the Final Rule requires that the
certificate identify the finished product certifier that is
certifying compliance of the finished product(s), as set forth in
Sec. 1110.7, including the party's name, street address, city,
state or province, country or administrative region, electronic mail
(email) address, and telephone number.
\26\ A licensed customs broker is required to exercise
responsible supervision and control over the customs business that
it conducts. 19 U.S.C. 1641(b)(4).
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The Final Rule also clarifies, for purposes of this rule, the
importer who is legally responsible for CPSC's certificate data for
finished products that must be accompanied by a certificate that are
imported by mail, or for which a de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed. These shipments do not have an IOR.
The ``importer'' definition in the Final Rule specifies that for
finished products imported by mail, or for which a de minimis duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed, the importer for
purposes of CPSC's certificate requirement is a party eligible to make
entry for the merchandise pursuant to CBP statutes and regulations, who
may be an owner, purchaser, consignee, or authorized customs broker.
The Final Rule defines ``owner or purchaser'' and ``consignee''
consistent with the SNPR but simplified. An authorized broker may
identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee that authorized entry as
the finished product certifier in a PGA Message Set for a de minimis
shipment as well. Because a consumer could fall within the definition
of a purchaser or consignee, the definition of ``importer'' continues
to state, as proposed, that for purposes of this rule, CPSC will not
typically consider a consumer purchasing or receiving products for
personal use or enjoyment to be the importer responsible for
certification.
The assertion by JPMA (99) and NAM (113) that the plain language of
the CPSA specifies a manufacturer as the required certifier is
incorrect and comes 16 years after the CPSC first required importers to
certify imported consumer products in the existing 1110 rule, effective
November 18, 2008. 73 FR 68328. Section 3(a)(11) of CPSA defines a
manufacturer as ``any person who manufactures or imports a consumer
product.'' The CPSA does not define ``importer,'' and, pursuant to the
implementing authority in section 3 of the CPSIA, CPSC has the
authority to define ``importer'' for the purposes of this rule, and to
effectuate the statutory authority to require electronic filing of
certificates in section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA. Moreover, CPSC has the
authority to designate the certifier pursuant to section 14(a)(4) of
the CPSA, which states that when a product has more than one
manufacturer or private labeler, the Commission may by rule designate
one or more of such entities as the certifier and exempt the others. 15
U.S.C. 2063(a)(4).
Accordingly, the Commission's 1107 and 1109 rules both rely on the
requirement for importers to certify imported consumer products, and
these rules have been effective since 2013 and 2011, respectively. 76
FR 69482 (November 8, 2011) (finalizing part 1107); 76 FR 69546
(November 8, 2011) (finalizing part 1109). To address importer
concerns, for more than 13 years part 1109 has allowed importers, or
any finished product certifier, to rely on another party's testing or
certification, such as a manufacturer's, to issue their own finished
product certificate, provided the finished product certifier meets the
requirements in part 1109.
Comment 8: The NFTC and USCC (108) are concerned that the proposed
definition of ``importer'' would result in a ``diffusion of
responsibility'' across all parties in the transaction of the shipment,
resulting in confusion. These commenters propose that the IOR must
eFile the certificate, but another
[[Page 1809]]
specified entity could prepare the certificate, which could either be
(1) an entity that by mutual agreement is responsible for preparing the
certificate, or (2) in the absence of agreement, a hierarchy of
entities within the proposed definition of ``importer.'' Commenters
state that in this case, if the IOR does not have the requisite
knowledge to prepare the certificate, another specified entity with
direct knowledge of the facts underlying the certificate could be
responsible for its preparation.
The NCBFAA (122) questions why the definition of ``importer''
specifically highlights customs brokers, because they are already
subsumed in the definition of IOR. They argue that this adds confusion,
because the customs broker will rarely assume legal responsibility for
certification. The NCBFAA (122) urges CPSC to make it clear that a
customs broker or other non-beneficial owner will never be the
responsible importer by default merely due to their role in the import
process, and to distinguish those roles.
Response 8: As described in response to comment 7 and in section
V.B of this preamble, the Final Rule revises the definition of
``importer'' proposed in the SNPR, agreeing in part with the
commenters. The NFTC and USCC (108) request that CPSC identify the IOR
as the importer but allow for another specified party to be responsible
in case the IOR does not have the requisite knowledge to prepare the
certificate. As stated in response to comment 7, the Final Rule
specifies that the IOR is the importer responsible for certification of
a finished product. However, if the IOR is an authorized customs
broker, the broker may identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee that
authorized entry, as the party responsible for CPSC's certificate
requirements, as part of the eFiled certificate data. If the required
certificate data is not eFiled, CPSC can hold the broker legally
responsible as set forth in Sec. 1110.15.
The revised definition limits confusion by specifying the IOR as
the importer, while also addressing broker concerns about not having
sufficient detailed knowledge about the consumer products being
imported to issue a certificate, by allowing the broker to specify the
owner, purchaser, or consignee that authorized the broker to make
entry. Use of the Product Registry will aid brokers in obtaining the
requisite certificate information for eFiling. Practically speaking, a
broker can identify the finished product certifier responsible for
certification either by ensuring complete certificate data is filed in
a Full Message Set, including the required ``certifying entity'' in
Sec. 1110.11(a)(3), or when stating the ``certifier ID'' for the
Reference Message Set.
Comment 9: The TA (97) claims that the proposed importer definition
does not adequately fulfill CPSC's stated intention to include products
that are ``imported as a mail shipment.''
Response 9: As proposed in the SNPR, Sec. 1110.13(a)(1) of the
Final Rule requires that mail shipments containing finished products
that are required to be accompanied by a certificate submit the
finished product certificate data elements required in Sec. 1110.11
into CPSC's Product Registry before arrival of the shipment in the
United States. Mail shipments do not have an IOR. Accordingly, in
response to the TA (97), CPSC adds a clarifying sentence to the
definition of ``importer'' stating that for the purposes of this rule,
the importer for purposes of CPSC's certificate requirements is a party
eligible to make entry for the finished products pursuant to CBP
statutes and regulations, who may be an owner, purchaser, consignee, or
authorized customs broker.
Comment 10: The PPAI (119) disagrees with the proposed ``importer''
definition and claims that the proposed new definition will render
distributors primarily responsible for certification, instead of the
suppliers as it is today. The PPAI (119) states that the proposed rule
would require distributors to retest the same product for individual
orders, causing problems for companies with multiple ``operating as''
or ``dba'' designations, and uncertainty when a customs broker is
involved.
Response 10: The Final Rule does not disrupt CPSC's current testing
and certification requirements. As is currently the case, importers are
the finished product certifiers that must certify imported finished
products. However, since 2011, importers have been able to rely on a
supplier's testing or certification to issue their own finished product
certificates, as allowed by 16 CFR part 1109. The Product Registry aids
in this process by allowing an importer to give a supplier permission
to upload certificate data into the Product Registry, and to certify
such data, on their behalf. However, as set forth in Sec. 1110.15, the
importer, who is the defined finished product certifier in Sec.
1110.7, remains legally responsible for the information in a finished
product certificate, including its validity, accuracy, completeness,
and availability.
D. Section 1110.5 Products Required To Be Certified
Comment 11: ULS (104) supports CPSC's focus on products required to
be certified and the content of the certificates to be eFiled.
Specifically, ULS (104) agrees with the proposed language for Sec.
1110.5 and CPSC's efforts to make this process as efficient as possible
for users by listing the applicable rules in the eFiling system.
Response 11: CPSC retains the proposed Sec. 1110.5 in the Final
Rule.
Comment 12: JPMA (99) agrees with the proposed Sec. 1110.5
clarification that certificates are only required for finished
products. However, JPMA (99) also writes that proposed Sec. 1110.5
requires greater definition to reflect that the manufacturing of
finished products may involve multiple productions of identical
products or variations unique to different customers that rely upon
baseline certificates.
Response 12: Finished product certifiers may rely on applicable
component part test reports, certification of component parts of
consumer products, or finished product testing or certification
procured or issued by another party, per 16 CFR part 1109. However, the
finished product certifier must still issue its own certificate, either
based on their own testing, or by relying on the underlying test
reports and certificates from other parties, such as a manufacturer. As
described in response to comment 11, the Product Registry aids in this
process by allowing an importer to give their trade partners the
ability to upload and certify data on their behalf.
E. Section 1110.7 Who Must Certify Products
Comment 13: Two commenters (AAFA (111) and RILA (114)) prefer the
language in Sec. 1110.7 of the existing 1110 rule, which requires
importers and domestic manufacturers to issue certificates for imported
and domestically manufactured products, respectively. The commenters
argue that these entities are better suited for compliance than a
private labeler, because importers and domestic manufacturers are most
knowledgeable of the product design and manufacturing process,
including sourcing of materials, rather than the private labeler, even
if the private labeler has influence on the product. Commenters further
claim that CPSC provided no indication that the existing certification
process is not effectively protecting consumers and that the proposed
change would improve safety. RILA (114) raises concerns regarding the
[[Page 1810]]
statement in the SNPR that ``CPSC can enforce the certificate
requirement against an importer or a private labeler, even if neither
firm is the entity submitting the required certificate data'' (88 FR
85790), because the current allocation of responsibility amongst
domestic manufacturers and importers appropriately ensures the products
are certified prior to entering commerce.
Three commenters (TA (97), JPMA (99), and NAM (113)) do not support
the requirement that each importer is responsible for submitting
certificate information for imported products. Instead, these
commenters assert that responsibility should fall on the product
manufacturer or private labeler, unless unavailable, in which case the
importer of record would be reasonably expected to certify. The TA (97)
asserts that CPSC is not recognizing the real-world supply chain, where
multiple importers may source from the same independent manufacturer,
who would ultimately be responsible for product compliance. JPMA (99)
cites the CPSA that ``every manufacturer [. . .] shall issue a
certificate.'' JPMA (99) and NAM (113) further request that the rule
clearly state that downstream customers of manufacturers and private
labelers may rely on such certificates without having to independently
file duplicative certificates. JPMA (99) believes that certification
should be permitted from a corporate representative.
Response 13: Pursuant to section 3(a)(11) of the CPSA, the term
``manufacturer'' means ``any person who manufactures or imports a
consumer product.'' To address commenter confusion, the Final Rule
restates this statutory definition in Sec. 1110.3. Based on this
definition, importers have been responsible for certifying imported
products since promulgation of the original part 1110 rule in 2008. 73
FR 68328, 68331 (Nov. 18, 2008). CPSC understands that manufacturers
supply products to different importers. Accordingly, since 2011, under
16 CFR part 1109, importers have been able to rely upon testing and
certification conducted by another party, including a manufacturer or
private labeler, to issue their own product certificates. 76 FR 69546,
69580 (Nov. 8, 2011). Therefore, as explained in section V.D of this
preamble, CPSC maintains the existing requirements, and as re-proposed
in the SNPR, that the importer be responsible for certifying imported
products. Importers are in the best position to certify imported
consumer products because importers know when a consumer product is
imported into the United States and must comply with U.S. laws and
regulations, and importers are responsible for ensuring that imported
products comply with all applicable requirements. We note that CPSC
generally holds responsible for certification the party responsible for
importation, and not an individual representing a certifying party.
For imported privately labeled products, a private labeler can
certify a product if the private labeler falls within the definition of
``importer,'' as defined in Sec. 1110.3. For privately labeled
domestically manufactured products, the private labeler either must
certify the products, or ensure that the manufacturer has certified the
products. Based on commenters' apparent confusion regarding when a
product is privately labeled, Sec. 1110.3 of the Final Rule restates
the statutory definition of ``private labeler,'' to reiterate that a
privately labeled product has no manufacturer information on the
product or packaging. In that case, neither consumers nor CPSC know
whether any other party, besides the private labeler, is responsible
for manufacturing or distributing the product. CPSC appropriately
places testing and certifying requirements on the private labeler in
this scenario. However, when a manufacturer's name is on the product or
packaging, the product is not privately labeled, and the manufacturer
is responsible for certifying.
Lastly, we reiterate that pursuant to 16 CFR part 1109, any party
responsible for testing and certification can rely on component part
test reports, finished product test reports, certification of component
parts of consumer products, or finished product certifications that are
procured or issued by another party, such as a manufacturer or private
labeler. However, the finished product certifier, such as an importer,
must still issue their own certificate. As described in response to
comment 11, for importers, the Product Registry aids in this process by
allowing an importer to give their trade partners the ability to upload
and certify data on their behalf. However, the importer remains legally
responsible for the certificate as stated in Sec. 1110.15.
F. Section 1110.9 Certificate Language and Format
Comment 14: JPMA (99) agrees with Sec. 1110.9 of the existing
rule, which provides that certificates may be in hard copy or
electronic form and must be provided in English, but may also be
provided in any other language. JPMA (99) disagrees with proposed
format requirements for electronic certificates in Sec. 1110.9(c),
stating that a unique identifier that can be accessed online via an URL
or other electronic means be identified prominently because the product
packaging is already often cluttered.
Response 14: Section 1110.9(c) regarding electronic certificates
only applies to domestically manufactured products, not to imported
products where eFiling is required. The SNPR did not propose to require
that the unique identifier be provided only on consumer packaging.
Rather, the SNPR proposed that a unique identifier be identified
prominently on the finished product, shipping carton, or invoice. The
requirement for a unique identifier that is available via a URL or
other electronic means is not a new concept; this option has been in
the existing part 1110 since 2008. The Commission maintains Sec.
1110.9(c) of the SNPR in the Final Rule, because the proposal provides
three options for certifiers, stating that ``an electronic certificate
meets the [availability] requirements of Sec. 1110.13(b) and (c) if it
is identified prominently on the finished product, shipping carton, or
invoice by a unique identifier. . . .'' Hard copy certificates, such as
PDF and paper certificates, remain an option for domestically
manufactured products pursuant to Sec. 1110.9(b).
Comment 15: JPMA (99) requests that CPSC affirmatively allow for
password protection in Sec. 1110.9 to maintain the confidentiality of
proprietary competitively sensitive information.
Response 15: The SNPR proposed to allow for password protection of
certificates in Sec. 1110.9(c), which primarily applies to electronic
certificates for domestically manufactured products. CPSC maintains
this allowance in the Final Rule, stating ``[i]f the electronic
certificate is password protected, the password must be provided at the
same time as the certificate when requested by CPSC or CBP.''
G. Section 1110.11 Certificate Content
Comment 16: JPMA (99) argues that the unique ID and description
required in the SNPR should be permissible and not mandatory, because
eFiling should be optional.
Response 16: The Final Rule requires eFiling for imported products
that are regulated by CPSC. This is necessary to achieve the objectives
of eFiling, including enabling more effective targeting of violative
imported products. The Final Rule also maintains the proposal in Sec.
1110.11(a)(1) for the unique ID and product description for all
certificates, for domestic and imported products, so that CPSC can
better track certificates and match them
[[Page 1811]]
to consumer products, including certificates received in person,
through email, through the Product Registry, and through the RAM (Full
PGA Message Set).
Comment 17: The AAFA (111) states that the product descriptions on
customs documents, which are for clarity of Harmonized Tariff Schedule
(HTS) codes, may not match the descriptions on certificates.
Response 17: CPSC recognizes that the product descriptions on
customs documents and certificates may not match. HTS codes can be very
broad and capture many different products under one code. For this
reason, the SNPR proposed that certificates contain ``a sufficient
description to match the finished product to the certificate.'' This
requirement, as finalized in this rule, allows staff to determine
whether the attached certificate describes the product being examined.
Comment 18: The WCMA (106) writes that custom cordless window
coverings historically have not been subject to CPSC rules that require
testing and certification, and therefore have not been assigned unique
identification codes. To comply with this SNPR and the Reese's Law
Direct Final Rule (88 FR 65274 (Sept. 21, 2023)), WCMA states, the
window covering industry will need to invest significant resources in
upgrading software systems and manufacturing processes to permanently
affix or imprint a new unique product identifier.
Response 18: Window covering requirements in 16 CFR part 1120 do
not require testing and certification, however, window coverings that
contain a button cell or coin battery are required to meet 16 CFR part
1263, which requires testing and certification of the battery
compartment. Nothing in the SNPR or this Final Rule requires a product
identifier that distinguishes between products that contain a button
battery and those that do not, or that products permanently affix or
imprint such a product identifier on the product. Existing model
numbers that are placed on the certificate and found somewhere on the
product, shipping carton, or invoice, that assist CPSC to match
certificates with a product, are sufficient. Note that eFiled
certificates for imported window coverings will already be matched to
the shipment using CPSC's PGA Message Set. Only electronic certificates
for domestically manufactured products need to meet Sec. 1110.9(c).
Comment 19: Several commenters (Boppy (109), Newell (110), LA
(116), WIMA (118)) disagree with the requirement of providing the
manufacturer's name, street address, and contact information, because
this information is highly confidential and public disclosure could
severely impact business operations. Boppy (109) is further concerned
whether eFiled certificates will be placed in a publicly searchable
database or available through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request. A commenter states that in the event CPSC requires the name of
the foreign manufacturer, then the Commission could always request that
the information be provided with a CPSA section 6(a) submission.
Several commenters (AFSL (94), NFA (95), APA (101), FOA (102), APE
(105)) argue that the manufacturer email address and phone number
should not be provided, because in the fireworks industry, this
information is protected by a ``middleman'' to prevent customers from
purchasing directly from the source. By requiring this information,
importers risk losing their current relationship.
The AAFA (111) states that the expansion to the full mailing
address is unnecessary and duplicative, because the customs
documentation already contains the country of origin and foreign
manufacturer information on entry documents and the certificate has
contact information.
Two commenters (TSC (85 and RILA (114)) argue against including the
manufacturer email address and phone number, because those contacts
could be unreliable, including potential language barriers, and the
contact may change frequently. RILA (114) recommends CPSC first contact
the IOR or the Product Registry Business Account Administrator before
contacting the manufacturer.
Response 19: As explained in section V.F of this preamble, CPSC
maintains the requirement for certifiers to provide the manufacturer's
name, street address, email address, and phone number, because this is
consistent with section 14(g)(1) of the CPSA, which requires that each
certificate contain ``each party's name, full mailing address, [and]
telephone number.'' We also note that section 16(c)(1) of the CPSA (15
U.S.C. 2065(c)(1)), requires that when requested by a ``duly
designated'' CPSC employee, every importer, retailer, or distributor of
a consumer product must identify the manufacturer of that product by
name, address, or such other identifying information as the officer or
employee may request, to the extent that such information is known or
can be readily determined by the importer, retailer, or distributor. In
this case, the Commission is requesting the manufacturer's name,
address, and contact information by rule.
Accordingly, the Final Rule requires certifiers to provide the
manufacturer name, full mailing address, phone number, and email to
CPSC on the certificate. CPSC should not have to request the
information via a section 6(a) submission,\27\ because these data
elements are statutorily required and necessary for CPSC's risk
assessment and targeting. CPSC cannot conduct effective risk
assessments at the ports without all relevant data points. The country
of origin and foreign manufacturer information on entry documents is
not sufficient, because CPSC has a different definition for
``manufacturer'' than CBP. CBP's required ``Manufacturer Identification
Code'' or ``MID'' is a code, not a name, and is not necessarily linked
to the name of the foreign manufacturer. For example, a MID can
identify a foreign supplier. Compare 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11) (CPSC's
definition of ``manufacturer'') with 19 CFR part 102 (explaining how to
construct a MID code for entry documents).
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\27\ See 15 U.S.C. 2055(a) (describing procedures for potential
disclosure of confidential information).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The certificate data provided is secured by CPSC and neither the
Product Registry nor RAM are publicly searchable databases. The Product
Registry has industry-standard security features like encryption and
token authorization, as further explained in the response to comment
49. When a FOIA request is filed, importers, domestic manufacturers,
and private labelers who are required to issue certificates are first
given the opportunity to assert confidentiality before such information
is released. Manufacturer information on a certificate would not be
released pursuant to a FOIA request as long as the certifier makes out
that the information is confidential under section 6(a) of the CPSA.
Certificates must be furnished to retailers and distributors in
accordance with section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA (15 U.S.C. 2063(g)(3)).
Section 1110.13(b) of the SNPR, which is maintained in the Final Rule,
simply restates this statutory requirement. However, the Final Rule
does not dictate how a finished product certifier must furnish a
certificate to retailers and distributors. Certifiers, retailers, and
distributors may decide, based on business relationships and needs, how
to proceed. For example, CPSC is aware that some certifiers redact
manufacturer information from certificates before providing them to
retailers and distributors. As long as
[[Page 1812]]
certificates provided to CPSC are complete and contain all required
information, CPSC takes no position at this time on whether
manufacturer information must be provided to third parties, unless
safety or the testing and certification regime is compromised in some
way.
Contact information for test data in Sec. 1110.11(a)(4) may be a
generic email address and telephone number, as long as it is actively
monitored by a knowledgeable person and the certifying firm is
responsive within 24 hours of CPSC's initial contact. Furthermore,
staff will primarily contact the finished product certifier (who should
be the Business Account Administrator in the Product Registry) first,
but may need to contact the manufacturer if the certifier is non-
responsive or if staff uncover a greater product issue with the
manufacturer. Manufacturers often supply consumer products to more than
one importer, retailer, or distributor.
Comment 20: The ASFL (94) states that the ``initial date of
manufacture'' in Sec. 1110.11(a)(5) is unattainable and recommends
that the manufacturing date listed on the receipt or similar document
should be the date provided.
Response 20: The ``initial date of manufacture'' means the month
and year, at a minimum, for products manufactured over a series of
days. Testing is typically conducted for a batch or production lot of
products; therefore, the certifier should know which production lot the
testing covers when the certifier creates a certificate based off that
testing. Accordingly, for the Final Rule, CPSC maintains the
requirement in Sec. 1110.11(a)(5) for the ``initial date of
manufacture'' when describing production lots.
Comment 21: The AAFA (111) and RILA (114) recommend eliminating, in
Sec. 1110.11(b), the optional data field of a URL or other electronic
means to access supporting records, such as test records, because the
Product Registry will have all the necessary information to confirm the
certificate and many test reports contain out-of-scope and confidential
business information. Commenters state that CPSC should instead
communicate directly with the importer.
Response 21: Part 1110 applies to certificates for all consumer
products, including those that are domestically manufactured. However,
only certificates for imported consumer products must be eFiled.
Moreover, the information specified in Sec. 1110.11(b) is optional for
all certificates. CPSC staff advises that regardless of whether the
certificate is hard copy, electronic, or eFiled, having immediate
access to test data is more efficient for the agency than having to
contact the importer, manufacturer, or broker with additional questions
or to request test documentation. Because this information is optional
on a certificate, CPSC maintains the test report URL field in the Final
Rule.
Comment 22: JPMA (99) supports maintaining the requirement in Sec.
1109.11(a)(6) to provide the date when the finished product was tested
for compliance.
Response 22: CPSC agrees and maintains this requirement in the
Final Rule.
Comment 23: The AAFA (111) and JPMA (99) agree that generic contact
information proposed in the SNPR should be acceptable.
Response 23: CPSC agrees and maintains this concept as proposed in
Sec. 1110.11(a)(4) of the Final Rule.
Comment 24: The AAFA (111) asks CPSC to provide clarity as to how
eFiling would work in the case of multiple production lots, produced in
different months, where the product is being imported at different
times with no material change.
Response 24: One certificate can cover multiple production lots
subject to the same test results, as long as there is no material
change, as defined in guidance found on CPSC's website. Therefore, one
certificate can cover many identical products manufactured over an
extended period. For that reason, CPSC clarified in the SNPR that the
certificate must contain the month and year of the start date of the
series of manufacturing.
Comment 25: PPAI (119) asks for clarity regarding the duplicative
testing statement in proposed Sec. 1110.11(d). PPAI asks how this
requirement applies to separate rules, standards, bans, or regulations
and generating certificates for different orders involving identical
products.
Response 25: The Final Rule maintains the proposal in Sec.
1110.11(d) regarding duplicative testing, but clarifies that the rule
for ``duplicative testing'' means that the same third party test does
not need to be conducted more than once on each sample, when the same
test is required by another applicable rule. CPSC included Sec.
1110.11(d) in the NPR and the SNPR because some test laboratories were
charging manufacturers to conduct the same test twice, when the test
was required by two separate rules applicable to a children's product.
To reduce burden, CPSC clarifies in Sec. 1110.11(d) that this type of
duplicative testing is unnecessary; one test to the same requirement in
overlapping regulations is sufficient. Thus, certifiers are not
required to conduct duplicative testing for any rule that refers to, or
incorporates fully, another applicable consumer product safety rule or
similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any other law enforced
by the Commission.
The potential for duplicate testing applies primarily to children's
products, where CPSC has long-standing requirements, such as lead,
phthalate, and small part requirements, but has also established rules
for specific products that also may require a chemical or small parts
test, such as the rule applicable to toys in 16 CFR part 1250. For
example, if a toy is already tested to section 4.6 of the ASTM
International (ASTM) F963 Toy Standard for small objects, codified in
16 CFR part 1250, duplicative testing for small parts does not need to
be conducted again to meet 16 CFR part 1501. A certificate should list
both citations for part 1250 and part 1501, although only one test must
be conducted.
The duplicate test clarification in Sec. 1110.11(d) has no bearing
on certificates for different orders for the same product. Each product
certificate must list all applicable rules, but the same certificate
may be used for repeated shipments of the same product, so long as
there is no material change to the product. A material change is a
change that could affect compliance, such as a different manufacturing
facility or source of raw materials. Most certifiers test continually
manufactured products at least once a year. CPSC purposely developed
the Product Registry to allow a single certificate to be used more than
once, every time the same product is imported. Thus, when a product has
been tested and certified, and has not undergone a material change,
importers eFiling the certificate data can reference the same
certificate in the PGA Reference Message Set for the same product,
regardless of the shipment's recipient or purchaser.
Comment 26: The TA (97) and JPMA (99) disagree with the requirement
for certifiers to specify each applicable section of ASTM F963, which
they allege is beyond what is required by the CPSA and 16 CFR part 1110
and further complicates the data set for manufacturers. The TA (97)
also states that the ``sectional applicability'' is specifically
directed to toys subject to ASTM F963, but not to any other rule.
IKEA (123) supports identifying individual sections of ASTM F963,
because this requirement improves controls on U.S.-bound shipments.
However, IKEA (123) requests that the year of adoption be included in
the citation code that incorporates an ASTM
[[Page 1813]]
standard by reference (e.g. ASTM F963-17 or ASTM F963-23), because if
revisions occur to the standard, then it would be impossible to
determine if the linked test report is issued for the right standard.
Response 26: Through the Product Registry and CPSC's CATAIR and
guidance documents, the Final Rule maintains the requirement for
finished product certifiers to list on a certificate the citation for
each individual section of ASTM F963 to which a toy is tested and
certified. This is not a change to the existing procedure; CPSC has
long required that certificates identify which sections of ASTM F963
apply to each toy on a certificate, because staff need to know what has
been tested to determine product compliance. Certifiers are, and have
always been, responsible for knowing which tests for compliance apply
to their products and for listing them on their test reports and on
their certificates. ASTM F963, as incorporated into part 1250, is
broader than other voluntary standards incorporated into CPSC rules, in
that the standard and mandatory rule apply to many different types of
toys with different associated hazards. Other CPSC regulations
generally apply to one product type with characteristic hazards, such
as the rules for full-size cribs or strollers. CPSC has addressed the
fact that ASTM F963 contains requirements for many types of toys since
2008 when the CPSIA mandated F963 as the mandatory toy standard. Citing
only ASTM F963 on a certificate does not provide sufficient information
to CPSC about the product or its compliance with the rule, because toys
are tested to individual subsections of ASTM F963 and not to the entire
standard.
Moreover, toys are required to be third party tested by an
International Organization for Standardization (ISO)-accredited
laboratory whose accreditation has been accepted by CPSC. These testing
laboratories do not conduct every test in ASTM F963 on every toy;
manufacturers and testing laboratories must know which tests in ASTM
F963 apply to each toy, and such tests are listed on the test reports.
Thus, the Final Rule is consistent with current CPSC practice and will
allow CPSC to more easily enforce the existing requirement to list all
applicable ASTM provisions.
Importantly, the benefits of eFiling for CPSC would be diminished
without knowing which tests within ASTM F963 apply to each toy. CPSC
will be able to target and assess risk based on the regulatory
citations. Also, test laboratories are CPSC-accepted based on the
particular provision of ASTM F963 to which they are ISO-accredited, and
not generally for all tests within ASTM F963. Therefore, the
certificate must identify the relevant ASTM subsection in order for the
RAM to audit that citation against CPSC's testing laboratory
credentialing information.
Regarding periodic updates to the ASTM standard, CPSC requires
compliance with a revised ASTM standard upon the effective date of a
rule incorporating the standard, for all products manufactured after
the effective date (or as otherwise stated in a rule), unless the
revision's effective date occurs by statute. See, e.g. 15 U.S.C.
2056b(g). Other regulations will also change over time and incorporate
new versions of a voluntary standard as such standards are revised. Any
product manufactured after the effective date of a revised rule
incorporating a voluntary standard must comply with the updated rule.
Therefore, CPSC would expect that a certificate with a product
manufacture date on or after the effective date of a rule to comply
with the revised mandatory standard, which can be confirmed by
reviewing the test date and/or the associated test report. For
administrative efficiency and burden reduction, however, CPSC is not
mandating addition of the year to the ASTM citations at this time, and
will rely on the data points on a certificate for targeting.
Comment 27: Two commenters (TA (97) and JPMA (99)) claim that
exemptions and exclusions do not need to be cited on a certificate of
compliance, because they are assumed if a citation is not listed on the
certificate. Thus, CPSC should not require the citations of exemptions
or exclusions. IKEA (124) claims that this requirement of citing
exemptions and exclusions increases reporting burdens.
Response 27: The Final Rule retains the proposal that certificates
include citations for testing exemptions or exclusions. Section
14(a)(1)(B) of the CPSA states that the certificate ``shall specify
each rule, ban, standard, or regulation applicable to the product.''
Accordingly, certificates must list each rule to which the product is
subject. For each rule listed on the certificate, the certifier should
list the firm or testing laboratory that conducted such test. However,
some rules contain testing exceptions for certain products or product
characteristics, and no testing is required. Thus, for completeness and
to avoid unnecessary investigations of shipments that are in fact
compliant due to an exemption or exclusion, the certificate should
either provide the name of the testing laboratory that conducted
testing, or state why the product was not tested. All possible testing
exemptions and exclusions are codified in a statute or within the
applicable regulation. This provision aids CPSC in targeting and
enforcing test requirements. CPSC's eFiling Document Library contains a
detailed list of CPSC's rules and all associated codes for testing
exclusions within each rule that CPSC expects to appear, as applicable,
on a certificate.
Comment 28: RILA (114) recommends that CPSC create a list of
products subject to exemptions, which importers could reference when
determining if they need to create a certificate. IKEA (123, 130) and
RILA (126) additionally request that CPSC address the certificate
requirements, which they term ``reporting logic,'' \28\ on all products
in its jurisdiction and publish a clear and publicly available list of
flagged HTS codes. IKEA (123) additionally provided several products
for which they request clarification of the certificate requirements,
and also recommend that CPSC establish a working group with industry to
establish clear guidance for eFiling reporting logic. IKEA (130) also
recommends that CPSC provide immediate notice of all HTS Codes that
CPSC will flag in CBP's Automated Broker Interface (ABI) as part of the
eFiling initiative to provide time for industry to design their eFiling
systems. IKEA (130) recommends that CPSC finalize the CATAIR guidance
on or before finalizing a rule and provide a 6-month implementation
period for any subsequent changes to this guidance. ITI (125) states
that CPSC has not addressed how eFiling will work with respect to the
business relationships involved for products containing button cell or
coin batteries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ IKEA (130) defines ``reporting logic'' as ``the methodology
for resolving reporting uncertainties, often related to products for
which CPSC exercises enforcement, but permits exemptions or
exclusions from regulation.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response 28: Before the SNPR published, CPSC created and posted on
its website a list of HTS codes, citations, testing exclusions, and
CPSC's CATAIR guidance.\29\ CPSC will continue to update citations and
testing exclusions when promulgating new regulations or adding or
changing HTS codes based on updates from the United States
International Trade Commission (ITC). Certifiers who believe the lists
are missing any HTS code, citation, or testing exclusions should inform
CPSC. CPSC will flag HTS codes once the eFiling requirement becomes
effective. CPSC's CATAIR contains a ``Change
[[Page 1814]]
Log'' to identify updates and will include an ``effective date'' in the
Change Log. Stakeholders can submit questions or comments on specific
products or testing and certification to CPSC's eFiling support email
inbox: [email protected].
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\29\ Available at: https://cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 29: Several commenters (BV (92), TA (97), AAFA (111), RILA
(114, 126), and EAA (131)) state that the requirement to utilize CBP's
Disclaimer Message Set for non-regulated products within CPSC's
jurisdiction and for products that are regulated, but do not require
certification results in ``proving a negative.'' Commenters claim that
this adds workload to industry, because industry does not track when a
product does not need a certificate. AAFA (111) claims that this
requirement reverses CPSC's 2016 enforcement discretion for adult
wearing apparel. NCBFAA (122) disagrees with the requirement of
Intended Use Codes for Disclaimer Message Sets, because this differs
from other PGAs and brokers would need to track down these codes for
shipments not subject to CPSC, which would be time-consuming and
costly. EAA (131) states that the disclaim process would negative
impact operators that clear de minimis shipments off the manifest and
add unnecessary costs in the supply chain.
Response 29: As explained in section V.F of this preamble, as a
matter of policy and to reduce burden, CPSC will not require a
Disclaimer Message Set for products that do not require a certificate.
This includes cases where (1) the product is not within CPSC's
jurisdiction; (2) the product or substance is within CPSC's
jurisdiction, but no rule, ban, standard, or regulation requiring a
certificate applies; (3) the product is a component of a consumer
product or substance that is not intended for sale to consumers, but
rather for further assembly or manufacturing in the United States; and
(4) the product is subject to enforcement discretion and no certificate
is required. While importers do not need to submit a Disclaimer Message
Set in these situations, they are encouraged to do so because the
additional information provided to CPSC will inform the staff as to why
a certificate does not accompany the product. Likewise, Intended Use
Codes are also optional, but encouraged. Additional guidance on
Disclaimer Message Sets and Intended Use Codes is available at https://cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
Comment 30: The CTA (103) and the ITI (98) urge CPSC to exclude
products covered by 16 CFR part 1263 (Reese's Law) from the proposed
eFiling requirements. They state that the requirement to file a
Disclaimer Message Set, coupled with CPSC's new regulations for button
cell and coin batteries, would place an unnecessary burden on
manufacturers, importers, and CBP. The CTA (103) and ITI (98) express
concern that the number of electronic products that do not contain
button cell or coin batteries, such as desktop and laptop computers,
printers, watches, wireless headphones, calculators, games, and lights,
would be captured by broad HTS codes and then require a Disclaimer
Message Set. The CTA (103) states that this will result in unnecessary
shipment holds and delays, increasing costs for consumers, which would
work against the country's efforts to fight inflation. The ITI (98)
states that any HTS code changes requested by CPSC should have a 12-
months' advance notice.
Comverex (117), however, does not support an exclusion and argues
that while the number of associated Disclaimer Message Sets for
products with button cell and coin batteries could be large, the
Citation Code and Intended Use Code data set is small. Comverex states
that, in particular, Reese's Law would include some filers that have no
product requiring certificates to disclaim. Comverex asserts that
regardless of the software platform, importers can readily identify all
products that contain these batteries, which they must now do by law,
and as a result identify all products that do not. Comverex believes
that for retailers, the ability to know may be a challenge; however,
they can utilize their lab testing partners to identify products that
contain button cell batteries, and by default which products do not,
and update their internal product data accordingly. Comverex states
that for large retailers, APIs could be readily developed to eliminate
corresponding data entry.
Response 30: As stated in response to comment 29, as a matter of
policy and to reduce burden, the Final Rule does not require filing
Disclaimer Message Sets not only for products outside of CPSC's
jurisdiction, but also for products within CPSC's jurisdiction but not
regulated, alleviating CTA (103) and ITI (98) concerns. Regarding
products containing button cell or coin batteries subject to 16 CFR
part 1263, at CPSC's request, the ITC created additional HTS codes to
address these products. Though not required, CPSC encourages importers
to file a Disclaimer Message Set when appropriate, to better inform
CPSC as to why the product is not accompanied by certificate data.
Comment 31: BV (92) recommends adding a ``disclaimer code'' to the
Product Registry, which will allow for the same information flow for
all products, while reporting the needed details.
Response 31: The Final Rule does not require a Disclaimer Message
Set. Accordingly, CPSC does not intend to build a ``disclaimer code''
feature in the Product Registry. At this time, the Product Registry is
intended to store certificate data for regulated products, and not to
store data associated with products that do not require a certificate.
Comment 32: Many commenters (RILA (114), AFSL (94), AAFA (111), TSC
(86), NFA (95), APA (101), FOA (102), APE (105), and WFI (107)) state
that the additional manual certification in the Product Registry is a
redundant requirement and an unnecessary burden when using API or a CSV
template to upload data in bulk. Commenters contend that manual
certification requires an individual to go back into the Product
Registry and manually certify each certificate with no additional
consumer protection.
RILA (114) recommends three alternatives to manual certification in
the Product Registry: (1) requiring users to attest that the
certificate data is true and correct upon initial access of the Product
Registry; (2) requiring users to attest to the certificate data upon
each instance of accessing the Product Registry; or (3) requiring
importers to periodically (annually or biannually) attest to the
certificate data upon login. The ASFL (94) similarly recommends
requiring users to review and accept terms each time the company logs
into the Product Registry.
Comverex (88) recommends that the attestation requirement be
satisfied when a user's software enters certificate data into the
Product Registry via an API, because their platform already confirms
attestation by their clients regarding the data accuracy requirements
of proposed Sec. 1110.11(a)(10).
Finally, several commenters (AFSL (94), TA (97), JPMA (99)) state
that additional manual certification is legally unnecessary, because
Sec. 1110.15 clearly states the legal responsibility of the certifier
and Sec. 1110.11 already requires identification of the certifier and
attestation to the truth and accuracy of the information provided.
Commenters argue that the Commission is amply protected and has more
than adequate ability to enforce against a company with the authorities
of 15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(13), 19 U.S.C. 1592, and 18 U.S.C. 1001. Lastly,
the AFSL (94) writes that the Commission has not supported the need for
additional
[[Page 1815]]
manual certification by identifying an entity that purposely misstated
information on a certificate and CPSC acknowledged multiple existing
possible enforcement actions.
Response 32: We agree with the commenters. As explained in section
V.F of this preamble, CPSC will automate attestations for bulk
certificate upload into the Product Registry via API or the CSV
template and will not require individual attestation of certificates.
Such attestation options will reduce the burden for industry, while
also confirming for CPSC that importers are knowledgeable about the
certificate information filed. Bulk attestation options will only apply
to users with certification permissions. If certificate data is entered
into the Product Registry by a user without certification permissions,
such as by a third-party user, then a Business Account Administrator
will have to manually certify the certificates, although groups of
certificates can be certified at one time. Additionally, consistent
with the SNPR, Sec. 1110.15 of the Final Rule clarifies the legal
responsibility for finished product certifiers, stating that finished
product certifiers can rely on the testing or certification of other
parties pursuant to part 1109, but remain legally responsible for the
information on a finished product certificate, including its validity,
accuracy, completeness, and availability.
Comment 33: The PPAI (119) asks which entity is to attest to each
certificate.
Response 33: The attestation required in Sec. 1110.11(a)(7) must
be made by the entity responsible for product certification identified
in Sec. 1110.7, the defined ``finished product certifier.'' In the
Product Registry, the finished product certifier is owner of the
Business Account, meaning the importer, that must certify/attest that
the information in the certificate is true and accurate. Trade partners
entering data on behalf of an importer must also attest to the veracity
of the information. Even when an importer allows another party to enter
data, or to certify products in the Product Registry, the importer
remains accountable for the information on a certificate.
H. Section 1110.13 Certificate Availability
Comment 34: Several commenters (Alta (93), JPMA (99), Boppy (109),
Newell (110), and NAM (113)) oppose changes to Sec. 1110.13 regarding
the availability of certificates, arguing that the current ``upon
request'' system is sufficient and that CPSC did not show that it is
insufficient to justify the eFiling system. JPMA (99) argues that the
current system reflects the legislative intent of Congress in enacting
the CPSA. NAM (113) further argues that the ``upon request''
requirement in the CPSA is distinct from a ``eFiling'' requirement for
certificates.
Response 34: As explained in detail in the 2013 NPR, the SNPR, and
in section V.G of this preamble, sections 14(g)(3) and 14(g)(4) of the
CPSA provide CPSC the authority to require eFiling of certificates for
imported consumer products. Certificates that are collected on an ad
hoc basis, either as a hard-copy or a PDF copy via email or uploaded
via the ACE Document Image System (DIS), are not in a data-usable
format that can be processed into CPSC's RAM and risk scored. To
implement section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA, Sec. 1110.13 of the Final Rule
requires the eFiling of all certificates for regulated, imported
finished products, including CPCs and GCCs, at the time of filing entry
or entry summary, if both entry and entry summary are filed together.
CPSC intends to use certificate data to risk score shipments and
enforce its statutes and regulations. An eFiled certificate would meet
the ``accompany'' requirement in section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA and the
requirement in Sec. 1110.13(a).
Comment 35: The AAFA (111) disagrees with the SNPR's proposal that
each certificate must describe a single product, because in the apparel
and footwear industry, one unique identifier is used for a single style
that may have many variations that do not affect the overall
certification. AAFA argues that no regulatory goal is served by
requiring that each certificate describe a single product.
Response 35: CPSC proposed in the SNPR that each certificate
describe a single product to improve CPSC's enforcement efforts. If a
potential violation were found, then CPSC could take action against
that one product. If multiple products appear on one certificate, this
may disrupt importation of compliant products that appear on the same
certificate as a potentially non-compliant product.
However, regarding apparel and footwear, CPSC clarified in response
to comment 53 in the SNPR that multiple models of apparel and footwear
that were composite tested together are considered one product for
certificate purposes. Therefore, apparel model variations that do not
affect certification can appear on one certificate as long as there is
no material change, which is defined in 16 CFR 1107.2 as ``any change
in the product's design, manufacturing process, or sourcing of
component parts that a manufacturer exercising due care knows, or
should know, could affect the product's ability to comply with the
applicable rules, bans, standards, or regulations.''
Comment 36: Two commenters (TA (97) and PPAI (119)) argue that CPSC
is doubling the certificate burden by supposedly requiring certificate
data to be entered in the Product Registry in one format while
requiring certificates be provided to CPSC and furnished to
distributors and retailers in another format such as PDF. This would
require importers to maintain two parallel sets of effectively
identical certificate data. And if manufacturers certify, instead of
importers (as proposed by the TA (97)), then manufacturers would have
to maintain a third set of certificate data containing the reference
identifier to be submitted via ACE.
Response 36: Importers using the Product Registry can download
certificates in a PDF format, which can then be furnished to retailers
and distributors. Users can also download certificate data in a CSV
file, where each row of the spreadsheet is a certificate, which can be
furnished to retailers and distributors. This functionality of the
Product Registry will eliminate any alleged need for importers to
maintain parallel sets of data. Moreover, while manufacturers can enter
certificate data into the Product Registry and certify on behalf of an
importer, the importer is legally responsible for the certificate data
for products they import and must follow the requirements in part 1109,
meaning they should exercise due care in reliance on a manufacturer's
testing and certification, as required in part 1109.
Comment 37: The PPAI (119) states the SNPR will create a
troublesome administrative burden for firms, by increasing the number
of certificates, housing the certificates in internal systems, and
integrating the certificates with companies' existing shipping
software. Requirements of the SNPR will be especially challenging when
``kitting'' or ``bundling'' multiple products into one product, such as
a gift basket, because each product in the ``kitted'' box would require
a unique certificate. Comverex (89) states concerns about the potential
for dozens of applicable test reports from various CPSC-accredited labs
for ``kitted'' children's products and requests confirmation from CPSC
that the Product Registry, and the corresponding API, will support this
type of data volume.
Response 37: Like the SNPR, the Final Rule does not add any new
certification requirements to products that
[[Page 1816]]
previously did not require a certificate. Therefore, the number of
certificates an importer must issue and associated records remain the
same. And, as it is today, importers may provide one certificate for
``kitted'' or ``bundled'' products, covering all individual products,
or provide multiple certificates for the product, where each
certificate covers an individual product in the ``kit'' or ``bundle.''
Furthermore, CPSC is not dictating that importers integrate
certificates with existing shipping software. CPSC is providing the
Product Registry to make management of certificates and certificate
data more efficient for any importer. Certificate data entered into the
Product Registry can contain multiple citations and testing
laboratories. Therefore, CPSC designed the Product Registry to
accommodate the volume of data for ``kitted'' and ``bundled'' products.
Comment 38: RILA (114) asks for clarity regarding ``up to 24 hours
before arrival'' and recommends that CPSC clarify that certificate
information can be transmitted in a timeframe prior to arrival
consistent with CBP's regulations and as late as 24 hours prior to
arrival.
Response 38: CPSC interprets ``up to 24 hours before arrival'' to
mean as late as 24 hours prior to arrival, in agreement with the
commenter. This means that the PGA Message Set must be filed with the
entry or entry summary, if both are filed together, as late as 24 hours
prior to arrival.
Comment 39: RILA (114) and AAFA (111) recommend a 48-hour response
time to provide additional documentation to align with existing
programs using PGA Message Sets. Furthermore, RILA (114) and AAFA (111)
question what additional information a paper or electronic certificate
could provide, because all the information should be provided via
eFiling.
Response 39: CPSC retains a 24-hour response time for additional
documentation. The Commission interprets the word ``immediately''
consistent with other CPSC rules, to mean ``within 24 hours.'' 78 FR
28080; 28089; 88 FR 85760, 85782. Therefore, CPSC disagrees with
extending the response time to 48 hours. Because eFiled certificates
replace paper certificates for imported products, CPSC would typically
only request supporting documents, such as test reports, from an
importer to verify the data on an eFiled certificate. However, CPSC
could ask for either a paper certificate or test reports to validate
the information on the certificate, or when the required certificate is
not eFiled. CPSC and CBP retain the right to request a certificate, but
agree that if a certificate is eFiled, the need for an additional
certificate is unlikely.
I. Section 1110.15 Legal Responsibility for Certificate Information
Comment 40: JPMA (99) supports the proposed Sec. 1110.15 that
another entity may maintain an electronic certificate platform on
behalf of the certifier.
Response 40: The Final Rule retains this provision.
J. Section 1110.17 Recordkeeping Requirements
Comment 41: The JPMA (99) writes that the proposed Sec. 1110.17
maintains the recordkeeping requirement from the 2013 NPR. CPCs already
have a five-year record retention period.
Response 41: Pursuant to 16 CFR part 1107, CPCs and supporting
records already have a five-year record retention period. The Final
Rule retains the proposal that GCC's and supporting records also be
maintained for five years. We note that for imported products, a five-
year record retention period is consistent with CBP's recordkeeping
requirement.
K. Special Use Case: De Minimis and International Mail Shipments
Comment 42: Two commenters (TA (97) and NAM (113)) request that
CPSC revise the scope of the proposed rule to explicitly exclude any
noncommercial consumer import of products into the United States,
whether or not for personal use or enjoyment, and expressly state a
lowered de minimis level. By not doing so, they assert that any gift
sent as a mail shipment from outside the United States would require a
certificate, imposing a burden on a consumer sending the product.
Furthermore, the commenters claim that CPSC would have no way of
determining non-conformance to the eFiling requirement for
international mail shipments that may arrive before CPSC could review
them, resulting in an increased burden to the United States Postal
Service (USPS) and penalizing those entities who do comply.
Furthermore, the NCBFAA (122) states that importers of de minimis
shipments are unlikely to be able to manage the Product Registry
process and will rely on the Full Message Set, which they assert will
be a costly and unrealistic undertaking for low-valued shipments.
NCBFAA encourages CPSC to work with the trade industry to overcome
these challenges.
Response 42: The CPSA does not provide a de minimis exemption for
certificates. eFiling requirements apply to regulated finished
products, regardless of value. Importers of regulated finished products
requiring a certificate that are eligible for the de minimis duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) must use ET 86 to file CPSC's
Message Set at entry. However, the Final Rule does not require eFiling
of a certificate for noncommercial products sent from one consumer
overseas to another consumer in the United States, such as a gift. CPSC
agrees that the consumer sending the shipment will not have the ability
to obtain the certificate. Brokers or carriers facilitating these
shipments may, but are not required to, file a Disclaimer Message Set,
based on the guidance provided by CPSC, to inform CPSC that the
shipment does not require a certificate. For non-gift shipments sent
via international mail, the sender will need to file a certificate into
the Product Registry before the shipment arrives in the United States.
Lastly, CPSC is committed to working with the trade industry, including
those who primarily import de minimis shipments. CPSC continues to
develop improvements to the Product Registry to make entering data for
mail shipments more efficient.
Comment 43: PeopleForBikes (112) supports the expanded definition
of ``importer'' that clarifies that, in the case of a direct-to-
consumer shipment, the importer is responsible for certification and
not the end consumer. The commenter states that too many low-quality
and inadequately tested products, such as lithium-ion batteries, are
currently being imported into the United States under the de minimis
exemption, creating unreasonable and unacceptable safety risks for
consumers.
Response 43: CPSC agrees with the commenter but notes that lithium-
ion batteries used in micromobility products are not subject to a CPSC
mandatory safety rule at this time. However, the definition of
``importer'' in the Final Rule will impose the eFiling requirement for
CPSC regulated finished products on the importer, as defined in the
rule, even for de minimis shipments. For de minimis shipments, the
importer for purposes of CPSC's certificate requirements is a party
eligible to make entry for the finished products pursuant to CBP
statutes and regulations, who may be an owner, purchaser, consignee, or
authorized customs broker. Also, because a consumer could fall within
the definition of purchaser or consignee, the definition of
``importer'' continues to state that for the purposes of this rule,
CPSC will not typically consider an end consumer purchasing or
receiving products for personal use or enjoyment
[[Page 1817]]
to be the importer responsible for certification.
L. Special Use Case: Foreign Trade Zones (FTZs)
Comment 44: Three commenters (RILA (114), NAFTZ (96, 121, 127), and
IKEA (123, 130)) state importers who import products via an FTZ will
need additional time to build out infrastructure and troubleshoot
issues prior to implementation. RILA (114) states that the FTZs'
``first in first out'' (FIFO) method can only attach the latest
certificate that is associated with an article/supplier combination and
not the specific certificate at an actual inventory layer level. The
NAFTZ (96, 121, 127) and IKEA (123) state that the FIFO method
(including the FTZ Inventory and Recordkeeping System) uses a Unique
Identifier (UIN) for virtual inventory and has no relationship to the
compliance data being reported. RILA (114) claims that CPSC conflates
the use of FIFO as accounting methodology and virtual inventory
practice. The commenters claim that FTZ importers will require
significant changes to their current software to comply with the SNPR.
IKEA (123) further states that the requirement to file certificates
at entry summary is not compatible with FTZ procedures, because those
goods would have already been shipped to stores and possibly sold,
negating CPSC's ability to place the goods on hold. IKEA (123) adds
that the eFiling requirement undermines Congress's intent of FTZs and
many global companies may be forced to stop using FTZs for CPSC
regulated products, resulting in millions of dollars of costs and
increased prices for consumers. IKEA states that CPSC is preventing
companies from storing non-compliant goods inside an FTZ in order to
bring them into compliance. IKEA (123) encourages CPSC to work with the
CBP Border Interagency Executive Council (BIEC) to build a single
window concept inclusive of FTZs and provide a transition period of 24
months to implement eFiling for FTZ products.
The NAFTZ (96 & 121) proposes three alternatives for goods imported
via an FTZ: (1) CPSC accepts the data elements associated with the
latest certificate of the UIN associated with the weekly entry summary
Customs Form 7501; (2) specifically for manufacturing/production in
FTZs, allow the importer to register the certificate with a location
for exam at the time of manufacture and use a Disclaimer Message Set on
entry type 06; (3) delay eFiling requirement for FTZs until CBP has the
capability to accept the certificate on the FTZ admission (CBP Form
E214), which is the only opportunity to match a certificate with the
physical items.
Response 44: The Final Rule retains the proposal in the SNPR that
FTZ importers must provide the actual certificate for the shipment but
provides a 24-month effective date for entries for consumption or
warehousing from an FTZ. Section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA states that
``every certificate required under this section shall accompany the
applicable product or shipment of products covered by the same
certificate.'' Therefore, FTZ importers should already be tracking the
actual certificate of the product and providing those certificates upon
request to CPSC. For eFiling to fulfill its purpose, CPSC requires the
actual certificate data so that the agency can effectively use such
data for targeting in CPSC's RAM.
IKEA (123) is incorrect that the certificate must be filed with
entry summary. The Final Rule requires eFiling certificates for
imported consumer products with CBP at the time of filing the CBP
entry, or the time of filing the entry and entry summary, if both are
filed together. Moreover, nothing in the Final Rule prevents a company
from admitting non-compliant goods into an FTZ for the purpose of
bringing those goods into compliance. Finished product certificates are
only required when entering goods for consumption or warehousing into
United States customs territory from an FTZ. Moreover, regarding IKEA's
observation that products entered from an FTZ might already be sold,
all entered merchandise that is released from CBP custody is released
conditionally, meaning that CBP has 30 days in which to demand
redelivery if an applicable requirement, including a PGA Message Set
requirement, has not been satisfied.
Of the three options for FTZ imports suggested by the NAFTZ (96 &
121), the third option appears to present the best solution. The first
option is not compliant with section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA, which
requires the actual certificate to accompany the shipment. The second
option does not allow for effective risk assessment and targeting.
CPSC's RAM needs the data input from the certificate for risk
assessment of the entry. A Disclaimer Message Set for entry type 06
would inform CPSC that a certificate was entered in the Product
Registry, but CPSC would not be able to match a certificate to the
entry and could not use the data for automated risk assessment.
The third option suggested by the NAFTZ, to delay eFiling for FTZ
imports until CBP has the capability to accept certificates for FTZ
admissions, may present a solution, because eFiling of certificates on
the CBP Form 214 at the time of admission, which is before entry, meets
the requirement of section 14(g)(4), ``the electronic filing of
certificates [. . .] up to 24 hours before arrival of an imported
product.'' Accordingly, the Final Rule provides a 24-month effective
date for consumer products imported into an FTZ and subsequently
entered for consumption or warehousing. CPSC understands that the
primary delay for eFiling associated with entries from an FTZ is
related to software solutions. Based on CPSC's experience with eFiling
for all other entry types, technical solutions involving software are
feasible. Accordingly, this longer effective date provides a
significant amount of time for CPSC, CBP, and industry to identify
technical solutions and develop the necessary software to bring entries
from an FTZ into compliance with the Final Rule, as further explained
in section VI of this preamble.
M. Technical, Information Security, Enforcement
Comment 45: JPMA (99) claims that CPSC is creating its own unique
``ACE-independent'' system different from an integrated system with CBP
and asserts that an ``eFiled certificate'' should align with an
electronic certificate that is submitted via ACE. JPMA (99) argues that
the Commission should not substitute its requirements for those of the
Commissioner of Customs and nullify the requirement that certificates
be available ``upon request'' by CPSC and CBP.
Response 45: CPSC is not creating a unique ``ACE-independent''
system. CBP developed the PGA Message Set specifically to implement the
``single window'' for collecting all trade-related data required by
partner government agencies. At least 13 other PGAs have already worked
with CBP to implement their own Message Sets and CPSC continues to work
with CBP to implement eFiling.\30\ CPSC has been developing its Message
Set alongside CBP, during the Alpha Pilot, Beta Pilot, the expanded
Beta Pilot, and in preparation for this Final Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ See, e.g., CBP's website listing 13 other agency CATAIRs
and discussing CPSC's Beta Pilot, available at: https://www.cbp.gov/trade/ace/catair.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPSC also is not substituting its PGA requirements for those of the
Commissioner of Customs. CPSC consulted CBP at every stage of
rulemaking, as required by section 14, and conducted pilots in
collaboration with CBP. The Product Registry is an optional database
for managing
[[Page 1818]]
certificate data that supplements the PGA Message Set. Stakeholders
asked for a Product Registry in 2013 after publication of the NPR. CPSC
has spent the last 11 years working with CBP and industry to develop an
eFiling solution consistent with CBP systems and procedures and less
burdensome for the trade.
Comment 46: Galaxy (90) asks whether their company will be required
to acquire new software to send the GCC information to their broker.
Response 46: The Final Rule does not require businesses to change
software. Some businesses will choose to use the Product Registry to
enter certificate data, and then provide a certificate reference number
to their broker upon importation of regulated consumer products, while
larger companies with more complicated import procedures will likely
choose to update their software to automate data transfer. Accordingly,
each importer should decide with their broker whether to use the Full
Message Set or the Reference Message Set when filing certificate data
with an entry, and whether providing this information would be more
efficient with new software to send certificate information to their
broker.
Comment 47: Hansen (115) states that most testing of bicycles takes
place in Asia and asks whether foreign testing laboratories will be
given access to the Product Registry or ACE to upload data.
Response 47: The Product Registry is based on Business Accounts
created by the importer, who may invite any third party (including
foreign testing laboratories) to enter certificate data into the
Product Registry on their behalf. Therefore, testing laboratories can
have access to upload data into the Product Registry if invited by an
importer. Testing laboratories will not enter data into ACE on behalf
of importers.
Comment 48: ITI (125) remarks that the import-centric registration
methodology in the Product Registry will create a ``logistics
nightmare'' for U.S. companies that use information and communications
technology (ICT) equipment and finds the functioning of the tool
unclear. ITI (125) asks whether a broker that is importing another
manufacturer's laptop for business use or independent sale would be
able to freely search the Product Registry or would have to be granted
viewing rights.
Response 48: The Product Registry functions on Business Accounts
created by the importer, who could invite other users from trade
parties, such as brokers, to collaborate. The Product Registry is not
publicly searchable; an importer would need to grant permission to
other users to view a data collection. The importer is responsible for
providing certificate identifiers to a broker for Reference Message
Sets associated with every imported shipment. CPSC's website contains a
Product Registry Guide, along with other important background materials
on eFiling, at https://www.cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
Comment 49: The TA (97) asserts that CPSC should ensure that the
Product Registry and all data systems used in support of the rule
maintain an appropriate level of data security. The TA states that only
a few entities have accessed the Product Registry and these programs do
not reflect the complex scenarios that will occur when the program is
fully rolled out. The TA (97) also states that CPSC did not adequately
respond in the SNPR regarding the security of the Product Registry,
when CPSC wrote that it does not prohibit ``password protection for
certificates furnished to retailers and distributors.''
Response 49: The Product Registry uses a range of data security
techniques and best practices to protect user and business information.
Some notable security features include:
All eFiled certificate data is encrypted at rest
(encrypted storage) and in flight (Secure Sockets Layer and other
secure protocols).
Authentication to the Product Registry is handled by a web
access management platform that requires verified ownership of a valid
email address, which includes standard intruder detection and account
recovery protocols.
The Product Registry utilizes a token-based authorization
scheme and access controls for accounts and roles. These determine
level-of-access permissions for application components and for
individual data requests.
Data is segregated by Business Account and by Product
Collections. Only users authorized by the Business Account
Administrators can access the collection-specific data.
Comment 50: The TA (97) notes that CPSC does not address in the
SNPR how the risk score is compiled, maintained, and notified, and
requests more information on the framework to allow for review,
understanding, and comment. The AFSL (94) writes that confidentiality
about the factors that the CPSC uses to target shipments for
examination is counterproductive. The ASFL argues that if CPSC
publicizes and demonstrates that consistent compliance with
certification and other requirements yields fewer examinations and
detentions, this will better meet the Commission's mission of a more
compliant marketplace. Similarly, RILA (114) and NCBFAA (122) recommend
CPSC develop a trusted trader program, such as the CBP/CPSC Importer
Self-Assessment Product Safety Pilot (ISA-PS) program, so trusted
partners are not unduly targeted and could be exempted from eFiling,
and so that CPSC resources can be directed to higher risk shipments.
Response 50: The RAM risk scores shipments using a logarithmic
model based on data received from sources including the entry document
and, once fully implemented, from the PGA Message Set. CPSC does not
share how the risk score is calculated or the risk score itself. This
information is for official use only, because it is directly related to
CPSC's targeting and enforcement. CPSC disagrees that confidential
treatment of this information is counterproductive, because its
publication could allow nefarious actors to avoid compliance with CPSC
regulations.
Importers should consistently file accurate certificate data to
avoid unnecessary examination holds for compliant products. With use of
the certificate data, CPSC can improve its targeting models to more
effectively target shipments with potentially significant violations.
CPSC will be able to review the certificate data prior to shipment
arrival, instead of needing to place a shipment on hold to examine it
for an administrative violation. Certificate data will be one aspect of
risk scoring. Staff anticipate that importers who consistently provide
compliant certificate data will see a reduction in their risk scores,
which may result in fewer holds for exams, fewer warehouse charges, and
a greater facilitation of trade. At the moment, CPSC is not developing
a trusted-trader program, because compliant importers may experience
benefits, such as lower risk scores, from filing compliant certificate
data.
Comment 51: The AFSL (94) states that the conclusion of the
Certificate Study aligns with AFSL's own research, conclusions,
development of voluntary standards, and testing. The AFSL (94) strongly
supports the eFiling program and the CPSC's RAM program and strongly
encourages CPSC to focus its enforcement activities more specifically
and aggressively on those companies with a history of non-compliance or
on those companies without an established history of providing a
certificate within 24 hours of a CPSC request. ASFL argues that
established and proven testing and certification programs should be
considered as a ``mitigating factor'' in a company's RAM risk profile.
[[Page 1819]]
Response 51: CPSC will use results from the Certificate Study and
Beta Pilot to improve its risk scoring in the RAM and to more
effectively target non-compliant importers. Certificate data will be
one aspect of risk scoring. Staff anticipate that companies and
organizations with established and proven testing and certification
programs will benefit from lowered risk scores by consistently
providing compliant certificate data.
Comment 52: The AAFA (114) and RILA (126) request that CPSC clarify
whether eFiled certificate data will be a condition of admissibility or
whether errors will cause shipment delays. The commenters state that if
eFiling errors will cause delay, this could dramatically disrupt the
free movement of trade and increase burden on importers.
Response 52: The lack of a required eFiled certificate, or the
presence of a false or misleading certificate, will affect a shipment's
risk score, resulting in a higher likelihood of the shipment being held
for an exam. CPSC has the authority to refuse admission of products
that are not accompanied by a certificate or are accompanied by a false
or misleading certificate. 15 U.S.C. 2066(a)(2). As a matter of
enforcement discretion, at least in the initial stages of eFiling, CPSC
in general does not intend to request that CBP deny entry of products
into the United States solely based on a failure to provide eFiled
certificate data; however, CPSC fully intends to enforce eFiling
requirements by taking enforcement action, such as requesting that CBP
initiate seizure of noncompliant products.
N. Costs, Burdens, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) and Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA)
Comment 53: Commenters TA (97), JPMA (99), Boppy (109), and NAM
(113) express concerns about the cost of technology needed to implement
the Final Rule, including costs to update technology, programing to the
PGA Message Sets, and setting up API connections.
Response 53: Commenters are concerned about costs, but they do not
offer estimates of what the technological costs would be. CPSC built
the Product Registry to reduce costs for importers, who are not
required to update software to eFile certificates. The SNPR estimated
that a portion of mainly larger firms may opt to use API integration
with the Product Registry for their data systems and the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis (IRFA) provided an estimate of
building such a system as $9,750 plus $2,880 in annual maintenance.
CPSC also queried software developers, who plan to develop an API
integration with the Product Registry, which would be covered through
broker fees. Larger importers may still choose to build and maintain an
API integration to interface with the Product Registry. This is,
however, not a requirement, as the Product Registry enables users to
upload a single certificate at a time and multiple certificates via a
bulk upload. Additionally, the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA) in section VII of this preamble presents an analysis of startup
costs--the initial labor and technology investments small firms need to
make to prepare for eFiling--that estimates an average cost per firm of
$1,086 or an equivalent burden of 20 hours, which CPSC deems as non-
significant for the typical small firm. The Commission solicited
comments on the number of firms that may choose to invest in new
technology due to the SNPR and estimates of the size of those
investments, but responses offered no specific data. As such, CPSC
retains its estimates of technology investments per firm.
Comment 54: Commenters Alta (93), AFSL (94), Boppy (109), and PPAI
(119) allege increased costs associated with additional staff. Boppy
(109) states an additional $150,000 in costs for technology, staff
training, fees, and manually filing certificates, but offers no
itemization of these costs.
Response 54: Without a breakdown of the costs, CPSC cannot offer a
more specific response. However, CPSC estimates that importers will
bear the burden for the staff hours comprising certificate creation,
disclosure, and recordkeeping, which are already required by statute
and regulation. Importers would also bear the burden of staff time for
entering and transmitting certificate data to their brokers. CPSC
estimates that the average eFiling-related activity, including entering
every type of message set and the bulk upload of certificates to the
Product Registry, will take 0.37 minutes (22 seconds) per filing, on
average. CPSC estimates that importers will conduct 57.5 million total
filings annually.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ This number of filings is broken down as follows: 2.3
million Product Registry filings, 1.7 million Full Message Sets,
46.5 million Reference Message Sets, and 7.0 million Disclaimer
Message Sets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We concur that the overall burden to importers can be considered
significant if presented in the aggregate, for two main reasons: first,
the large number of filings; and second, the potentially elevated one-
time start up investments in technology, organizational changes, and
staff training. However, individual importers will only bear the burden
for the certificates they file. On average, an importer will conduct
217 certificate filings per year, which will take about 1.34 hours to
enter and transfer (217 x 22 seconds/3,600 seconds = 1.34 hours).\32\
At an hourly rate of $33.12 for office and admin wages, this represents
a cost of $44.29 per year per importer in staff hourly burden.
Additional startup investments are not an annual cost, but an
investment that will last for many years. After annualizing this one-
time investment, CPSC expects the average firm to incur out of pocket
cost that represents a non-significant share of the annual revenue of a
typical firm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ The values presented are rounded, so the results on each
side of the equation may not exactly match.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 55: Commenters Alta (93), JPMA (99), Boppy (109), and PPAI
(119) state that the burden of additional staff, technology, and broker
charges would impact small importers. JPMA (99) states that the number
of responses in the IRFA would be many times greater, while Alta (93)
states that increased cost from using customs brokers would cause undue
financial hardship for small firms.
Response 55: Since 2008, testing and certification of products
regulated by CPSC has been required under section 14 of the CPSA. The
CPSA does not exclude small businesses from certification requirements.
New requirements in the Final Rule include extended recordkeeping for
GCCs and eFiling certificates for imported, regulated products, which
CPSC estimated in the 2023 SNPR, and has updated in section VII of this
Final Rule preamble. The Commission's SNPR analysis provided an
estimate of the number of responses that result from a detailed list of
data-driven assumptions. Without additional information from the
commenters showing the inaccuracy of the assumptions used, CPSC cannot
produce a different estimate of the number of responses.
The FRFA in section VII of this preamble shows that the impact on
small firms may not be as large as indicated by the commenter; instead,
the cost impact is not significant because it is well below one percent
of the revenue of a typical small firm and represents a fraction of one
percent of the average value of shipments imported that require eFiled
certificates.
Comment 56: The Commission requested in the SNPR that firms comment
on filing fees that importers may bear from eFiling certificates with
CBP using the Full or Reference PGA Message Set. JPMA (99), Boppy
(109),
[[Page 1820]]
and NAM (113) express concern that eFiling certificates would require
additional filing fees. Only JPMA (99) provides estimates of filing
fees, asserting that a small manufacturer would have to pay $75,000 in
filing fees, but did not indicate the number of message sets that the
small business would file annually. JPMA (99) also wrote that CPSC did
not adequately model the cost of using third-party service providers or
customs brokers to comply with the rule.
Response 56: CPSC does not expect to charge filing fees for use of
the Product Registry. Brokers typically charge a fee per entry or per
entry line that is filed, and each entry line may contain one or more
product certificates. Staff contacted less than 10 brokers involved in
the Beta Pilot and inquired about fees that brokers would charge for
eFiling. Most brokers charge a maximum fee per entry which reduces the
filing fees per certificate for firms that file multiple certificates
per entry. We assume that most firms would choose to file as many
product certificates as possible per entry, and this action will
significantly lower the cost per individual product certificate filed.
CSPC estimates that the average fee per filing under these conditions
will be $0.77.
CPSC does not know how many message sets the small manufacturer
mentioned by JPMA (99) would file to reach the estimated filing fees,
but on average, the filing volume of most small importers would
comprise a relatively small number of Full and Reference Message Sets
in total. CPSC's analysis assumes that small importers would file 10
percent of the responses (i.e. message set filings) the average
importer files. Additionally, CPSC expects that the impact of filing
fees as a percentage of the overall value of the shipment will be very
small. Thus, CPSC expects that filing fees will not create a
significant burden on the average small importer.
Comment 57: Commenters TA (97) and Boppy (109) state that CPSC
underestimates the burden of startup staff training required to
implement the rule. For example, TA (97) urges that CPSC reassess the
estimated cost burden for implementation of the eFiling Product
Registry, to include an accurate representative set of values that
properly reflects the cost to implement eFiling to manufacturers,
retailers, distributors and other entities who fall within the scope of
part 1110.
Response 57: CPSC conducted a Beta Pilot between October 2023 and
June 2024. Staff observed startup hours for participation in the
eFiling Beta Pilot and the initial organization required to eFile.
Staff observed a median startup time of about 60 staff hours per
importer. While observing variability in startup times across
participants, CPSC expects that as more importers and third-party
service providers become adept in the eFiling process, the startup
hours for remaining importers will decrease over time. CPSC expects a
similar experience for firms that did not participate in the pilot but
are required to eFile. CPSC notes the startup burden is a one-time
investment that would allow importers to conduct eFiling operations for
many years. To produce a more accurate accounting of costs, CPSC
annualizes the startup burden over the useful life of the investments.
Additionally, the Final Rule has an effective date of 18 months for
most imported products (and 24 months for products entered for
consumption or warehousing from an FTZ), a period over which the burden
will be effectively spread. CPSC also expects that improvements derived
from process learning will reduce the cost per firm over this period.
Comment 58: Two commenters, Alta (93) and NAM (113), suggest that
CPSC underestimates the eFiling burden for each importation. NAM (113)
states that a 20-second burden per Reference Message Set and a 1-minute
burden per Full Message Set is not realistic given the large number of
certifications for every product.
Response 58: Staff revised eFiling burden estimates, in part based
on information from Beta Pilot participants. The revised estimate is
15.3 seconds per Reference Message Set and 4.75 minutes per Full
Reference Message Set. Reference Message Sets are simplified messages
(primarily composed of a Unique ID) that link products being imported
to certificate data already uploaded into CPSC's Product Registry. The
eFiling estimate is based on the time it takes to enter and transmit a
Reference Message Set, applying a learning curve to data provided by
Beta Pilot participants. This learning curve enables staff to assess
the impact of learning efficiencies in processing times. Sections . and
VIII of this preamble contain additional detail on the revised eFiling
burden analysis for the Final Rule. Staff's analysis applies a similar
learning curve to Full Message Sets, which results in a higher
processing time of 4.75 minutes per message (increased from one minute
in the SNPR), which is consistent with NAM's (113) assessment.
Comment 59: Hansen (115) states that CPSC underestimated the burden
of putting certificate data into the Product Registry using a CSV
spreadsheet, citing an example of bike distributors that carry tens of
thousands of bicycle parts.
Response 59: As stated in response to comment 6, the bicycle
standard is a finished product standard that does not regulate
individual parts of bikes sold separately. However, other CPSC
regulations, such as limits on lead content, lead in paint, and small
parts, could apply to children's bikes and parts of children's bikes
sold separately. Certificates can be entered in bulk into the Product
Registry via a CSV spreadsheet. During the Beta Pilot, importers
demonstrated that they could enter numerous certificates into the
Product Registry using the CSV spreadsheet, resulting in uploads of a
fraction of a second per certificate. Staff conservatively estimate
that it takes 8.7 seconds per certificate to upload multi-certificate
data into the Product Registry.
Comment 60: JPMA (99) states that no statistically validated record
exists to justify the burden assumptions for filing Message Sets. The
commenter states that the assumptions are not realistic. JPMA (99) also
writes that one small-business member advised that they would accrue an
extra $30,000 for document preparation and $40,000 for document prep
full headcount at factory.
Response 60: The Commission's economic analysis is based on
available information and states the basis for each assumption. Most
recordkeeping in this information collection is mandated by sections
14(a) and 16(b) of the CPSA and within CPSC's regulations in part 1107,
1109, and the existing part 1110 rule. Typically, non-children's
product regulations contain a three-year recordkeeping requirement;
children's products require a 5-year record retention period pursuant
to part 1107. The Final Rule increases record retention to five years
for general use products, as proposed. Both the SNPR and the Final Rule
address the additional two years of recordkeeping, as well as record
keeping for additional data items. Note that for eFiled certificates,
CBP already has a 5-year record retention requirement for import
documentation.
Comment 61: Alta (93) states that the manual nature of submitting
data entry into ACE could lead to human errors and delays. The
commenter alleges that repeated filings of certificates via ACE would
be complex, expensive, and labor-intensive for a business such as
theirs with a small staff. The commenter also states that expensive
automation and time-consuming processes would cause undue hardship to
small businesses such as theirs.
[[Page 1821]]
Response 61: The Final Rule does not require repeated filing of the
same certificate data into ACE. CPSC built the Product Registry at the
request of importers to reduce repetitive data entry. Thus, importers
have the option of loading certificate data into CPSC's Product
Registry once before filing an entry, either manually or through batch
uploads, and then filing a short PGA Reference Message Set that links
to the certificate data in the Product Registry each time the product
is imported thereafter. Using a Reference Message Set allows importers
to reference the same certificate data multiple times, each time the
product is imported. CPSC estimates that over 96 percent of importers
will use the Product Registry and Reference Message Sets. Accordingly,
using the Product Registry will simplify import filings, reduce costs,
and reduce filing errors. In practice, most importers file entries and
PGA Message Sets through a customs broker, who would only need to be
supplied with the Unique ID for the Reference Message Set that links
the imported product with certificate data in the Product Registry. Use
of the Product Registry is free of charge. Importers may also use a
Full Message Set that does require entering all certificate data for
each regulated, imported consumer product. Importers that want to gain
eFiling experience before the effective date of the Final Rule can
participate in the expanded Beta Pilot, as discussed in section II of
this preamble.
Comment 621: JPMA (99) states that that no ``one size fits all''
solution should be proposed and that CPSC should create a less
burdensome integrated system with CBP.
Response 62: CPSC did not propose, nor is it testing, a one-size-
fits-all approach. Importers have two options for eFiling certificates,
a Full Message Set or a Reference PGA Message Set and use of the
Product Registry. As described in the SNPR and in this Final Rule, CPSC
has worked on eFiling solutions with CBP and with industry for over ten
years. CPSC undertook creation of the Product Registry at the request
of importers who specifically asked for an IT solution that would
reduce burden, the need for duplicate data entry, and errors. The IT
solutions for CPSC are now ready to be implemented. CPSC's solutions
are integrated with CBP systems, and CBP has participated in the Alpha
and Beta Pilots, and has been specifically consulted regarding the NPR,
SNPR, and the Final Rule.
Comment 63: RILA (126) asserts that the burden estimate in the June
4, 2024, Federal Register notice (June 4 notice) regarding the expanded
Beta Pilot test (89 FR 47922) does not account for the full time to
support gathering and submitting data elements and only reflects the
burden of gathering and submitting data for a limited quantity of
products and their corresponding fillings. RILA states that their
members' approximations of the burden hours per importer are nearly
double or more of the Commission's estimates, depending on the overall
size of the retailer and volume and variety of imported goods. RILA
references two members that participated in the Beta Pilot; one
estimated an annual burden of approximately 500 hours and another
estimated an annual burden of 15,700 hours.
Response 63: One purpose of the eFiling Beta Pilot was to gain
experience with the burden that importers may incur. CPSC gained useful
information from the limited quantity of products and filings made
during the Beta Pilot. Staff advise that the burden of gathering and
submitting data elements during the Beta Pilot only reflects the burden
for a limited quantity of products and corresponding filings; most
participants did not choose to eFile certificates for all of their
imported, regulated products. Additionally, staff observed significant
variation in the burden expressed by Beta Pilot participants and in the
number of certificates that participants filed.
For the Final Rule, CPSC provides revised burden estimates in
sections VII and VIII of this preamble, in part using information
learned from the Beta Pilot. This revised analysis demonstrates that
the burden of the Final Rule is not large on a per importer basis.
However, even if the burden of the Final Rule was much greater than the
inputs used in the revised analysis, burden estimates per firm would
still be non-significant.
O. Legal Comments
Comment 64: Boppy (109) alleges that the SNPR is unconstitutional,
asserting that the manner in which the rule is being promulgated
violates the U.S Constitution's Separation of Powers and Appointments
Clause because the CPSC Commissioners' for-cause removal protections
are unconstitutional. Boppy states that the Supreme Court has
recognized only two limited exceptions to the President's otherwise
``unrestricted'' removal power: (1) an exception for inferior officers
with limited duties and no policymaking or administrative authority,
Seila Law v. CFPB, 140 S. Ct. 2183, 2199-2200 (2020), and (2) an
exception for principal officers who do not exercise executive power,
id. 2198-99 (discussing Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.S.
602 (1935)). Boppy argues that neither the inferior-officer exception
nor the ``Humphrey's Executor exception'' applies because CPSC's
Commissioners are principal (not inferior) officers who exercise
substantial, ``quintessentially executive power [that was] not
considered in Humphrey's Executor.'' Seila Law, 140 S. Ct. at 2200.
Response 64: Federal Courts of Appeals have recently rejected the
same Constitutional arguments made by Boppy. See Consumers' Rsch. v.
CPSC, 91 F.4th 342 (5th Cir. 2024), petition for cert. filed,
(Consumers' Rsch. v. Consumer Prod. Safety Comm'n, No. 23-1323
(petition for cert. denied Oct. 21, 2024)), and Leachco, Inc. v. CPSC,
103 F.4th 748 (10th Cir. 2024), petition for cert. filed, (Leachco,
Inc. v. CPSC, No. 22-7060 (petition for cert. filed on Aug. 9, 2024)).
Consistent with those decisions and the Supreme Court's holding in
Humphrey's Executor v. United States, 295 U.S. 602 (1935), we reject
Boppy's constitutional arguments.
Comment 65: The Toy Association (97) states that requiring each
importer of a product, instead of the manufacturer, to submit a
separate certificate, would be redundant and potentially a Technical
Barrier to Trade (TBT) as defined by the World Trade Organization
(WTO). The JPMA (99) argues that the eFiling requirement in the SNPR is
arbitrary and needlessly burdensome, which may also be a TBT.
Response 65: The Final Rule does not constitute a technical barrier
to trade. The purpose of section 14 of the CPSA, and part 1110, is to
protect the health and safety of U.S. consumers from noncompliant
consumer products. Article 2.2 of the TBT Agreement states that
technical regulations ``shall be no more trade-restrictive than
necessary for the achievement of a legitimate objective, including . .
. the protection of human health and safety.'' Additionally, the
preamble to the TBT Agreement recognizes that ``no country should be
prevented from taking measures necessary . . . for the protection of
human, animal or plant life or health.''
CPSC's requirements are within the scope of the health and safety
provisions of the TBT Agreement. The Toy Association and JPMA appear to
ignore CPSC's long-standing and statutorily required testing and
certification regime. Since 2008, testing and certification
requirements apply to all products subject to a CPSC rule, ban,
standard, or regulation, regardless of the place of manufacture, if
those products
[[Page 1822]]
are imported for consumption or warehousing or distributed in U.S.
commerce. The purpose of section 14 of the CPSA, and part 1110, is to
protect the health and safety of U.S. consumers from noncompliant
consumer products.
Commenters also ignore the lengths to which CPSC has gone since
2008 to streamline requirements for testing and certification. For
example, manufacturers and importers may rely on any other party's
testing or certification pursuant to 16 CFR part 1109. That rule has
been in place for more than 10 years and allows importers that want to
rely on a manufacturer's testing and/or certification, the ability to
do so. Moreover, as described in section II of this preamble, CPSC has
spent the last 10 years working with the industry on two pilots, a
study, building an eFiling program, and developing the Product
Registry, to address importers' concerns about burden and cost.
Sections VII and VIII of this preamble and the experience of Beta Pilot
participants demonstrate that the Product Registry is easy to use and
reduces burden. In fact, CPSC developed the Product Registry in
response to industry's 2013 request to reduce burden, data entry
errors, and potential duplication of effort, for all importers of
regulated products.
It bears repeating that the eFiling requirement does not create new
testing or certification requirements for importers. Since 2207,
importers have been required to provide certificates and the test
reports on which they are based to CPSC and CBP upon request. CPSC is
now requesting this information at the time of entry, as specifically
provided in section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA. This requirement modernizes
the certificate requirement in a manner that does not create undue
burden to importers or create a barrier to trade, and instead assists
compliant importers. CPSC's economic analysis demonstrates that for
compliant importers, the PGA Message Set requirement will not have a
significant impact on small (or large) importers, and thus the
requirement should not create an obstacle to trade.
Finally, as a matter of enforcement discretion, at least in the
initial stages of eFiling, CPSC in general does not intend to request
that CBP deny entry of products into the United States solely based on
a failure to provide eFiled certificate data. However, CPSC will
continue to enforce certificate requirements, for example by refusing
admission under section 17(a)(2) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2066(a)(2), or
requesting CBP to initiate seizure of noncompliant products. Further,
CPSC intends to increase or decrease risk scores based on eFiled data,
which should reduce holds and examinations of compliant products and
better focus resources on non-compliant products.
Comment 66: JPMA (99) asserts that Congress did not plainly set
forth a requirement that certificates be available by eFiling and that
the language in section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA is a distinct requirement.
Therefore, providing a certificate ``upon request'' even in an
electronic format should be maintained as an option.
Response 66: We disagree. Section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA provides
CPSC specific authority to require eFiling for imported consumer
products. Interdicting noncompliant products before they are
distributed in U.S. commerce is an important safety mission of the
Commission. Accordingly, as set forth in response to comment 34, to
allow the Commission to focus limited resources on imported products
that are not in compliance with CPSC regulations, the Final Rule
retains the SNPR's eFiling requirement for all regulated, imported
consumer products. The Final Rule retains the ``upon request''
certificate option for products manufactured in the United States, and
for imported products, to the extent certificate data is not filed at
entry, as required, or is potentially false or misleading.
P. Out of Scope Comments
Comment 67: Hansen (115) opines that the SNPR did not adequately
address the 2013 comments filed by the Bicycle Product Suppliers
Association (BPSA; now PeopleforBikes). Hansen discussed the bicycle
regulation in 16 CFR part 1512 and particularly electric bicycles.
Response 67: The Final Rule is not about the substantive safety
requirements for bicycles. Note, however, that CPSC issued an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking in 2024 related to eBikes, 89 FR 18861
(Mar. 15, 2024), and staff anticipate sending the Commission a proposed
rule related to lithium-ion batteries used in micromobility products,
including eBikes, in the coming months.
The remaining comments primarily discuss technical features of the
eFiling Product Registry. The procedural aspects of data entry and the
user interface of the Product Registry are not addressed in the
regulation text of this Final Rule. Accordingly, if not already
addressed above, CPSC will endeavor to address technical questions in
the guidance materials on our website. Additionally, any firm using the
Product Registry can report software issues, ask questions, or send
suggestions to: [email protected].
V. Description and Explanation of the Final Rule
Below we describe and explain the basis for the Final Rule's
requirements. Because of the number of changes to part 1110, the
Commission proposes to strike and replace the existing 1110 rule in its
entirety, as described below.
A. Purpose and Scope (Sec. 1110.1)
The Commission finalizes the purpose and scope in the Final Rule as
proposed in the SNPR, which states that the rule specifies certificate
content, form, and availability, and requires eFiling certificates for
imported finished products that are required to be certified. The
Commission did not receive any adverse comment on the SNPR's proposal.
B. Definitions (Sec. 1110.3)
The 2013 NPR added to part 1110 13 new definitions to introduce
concepts and terms used in the 1107 and 1109 rules and to clarify the
requirements of part 1110. 78 FR 28080, 28081-82. The SNPR maintained
the additional terms proposed in the 2013 NPR, added several more
terms, and revised several definitions. Newly defined terms included:
``eFiled certificate,'' to differentiate an electronic certificate,
primarily used for domestically manufactured products, from a
certificate for an imported product that is entered via ACE in a PGA
Message Set, and ``Product Registry,'' to describe the CPSC-maintained
repository for certificate data for imported products. The SNPR revised
several definitions to better describe the types of merchandise under
CPSC's jurisdiction, which includes not only consumer products, but
also hazardous substances.
The SNPR also proposed to broaden the definition of ``importer'' as
that term is used in part 1110, beyond the IOR, to allow a party
familiar with the products with a beneficial ownership in the goods to
be the importer responsible for testing and certification. Thus, the
SNPR proposed that the definition of ``importer'' include any entity
that could make entry for consumer products, and qualify as the
importer under the Tariff Act (19 U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B)). Proposed Sec.
1110.3 also defined additional terms to develop the revised definition
of ``importer'' in the SNPR, such as ``importer of record,''
``consignee,'' and ``owner or purchaser.''
Based on the comments, the Final Rule adds two statutory
definitions for ``manufacturer'' and ``private labeler'' and clarifies
several other definitions
[[Page 1823]]
proposed in the SNPR. For example, the Final Rule modifies the
definition of ACE in a manner consistent with the SNPR, but better
aligns with CBP's characterization of their authorized electronic data
interchange system and any successor systems.
Commenters also continued to demonstrate confusion about the
difference between a component part and a finished product, and when a
part of consumer product is a finished product that must be accompanied
by a finished product certificate. By definition, a ``component part''
is not a ``finished product.'' Component part certificates are allowed
by 16 CFR part 1109 but are voluntary. Component part testing or
certification can be relied upon to issue a finished product
certificate, but only finished product certificates must accompany
finished products and be eFiled pursuant to Sec. 1110.13(a)(1).
Component part certificates are not required and should not be eFiled.
Accordingly, to add clarity to the definition of ``component part
certificate,'' the Final Rule adds to the definition that a component
part certificate is voluntary, and, to further reduce confusion, the
Final Rule moves all requirements for component part certificates into
Sec. 1110.19 at the end of the rule.
Relatedly, based on commenters' concerns, the Final Rule also
clarifies the definition of a ``finished product'' by removing the
phrase ``replacement parts,'' as the phrase appears to have a different
and broader meaning to industry than CPSC intended for this rule. The
Final Rule now explains the three criteria required for a product to be
considered a ``finished product'' that must be accompanied by a
finished product certificate--namely, that the product must be: (1)
subject to a CPSC-enforced rule, ban, standard, or regulation; (2)
imported for consumption or warehousing, or distributed in commerce;
and (3) packaged, sold, or held for sale to, or for use by, consumers.
To address comments regarding the role of a ``finished product
certifier,'' the Final Rule adds to the definition the three parties in
section 14 of the CPSA that can be a finished product certifier. These
are the manufacturer and private labeler, as defined in the CPSA, and
the importer, as defined in this rule. See 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(11) and
(a)(12).
The Final Rule also modifies the definition of ``importer'' in
response to comments 7 through 10 in section IV of this preamble and
simplifies related definitions of ``owner or purchaser'' and
``consignee.'' The definitions for ``importer,'' ``owner or
purchaser,'' and ``consignee'' in the Final Rule are intended to
harmonize with the Tariff Act and CBP's implementing regulations that
govern importation procedures but are solely for purposes of this Final
Rule. These definitions do not change CBP requirements for parties
eligible to make entry and are specifically limited to implementation
of CPSC's eFiling requirement and the party CPSC will hold legally
responsible for issuing a finished product certificate for imported,
CPSC regulated finished products. Moreover, these definitions may not
reflect the full scope of the relevant terms under the CPSA or other
statutes implemented by CPSC.
The Final Rule clarifies that, as proposed in the 2013 NPR and
consistent with the SNPR comments, for purposes of this rule, the
``importer'' means the IOR eligible to make entry for imported finished
products under the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C.
1484(a)(2)(B)), who may be an owner, purchaser, or authorized customs
broker. The Final Rule addresses the concerns of commenters stating
that an IOR authorized to make entry for a shipment, such as a broker,
may not have sufficient knowledge of the consumer products to be held
responsible for testing and certification. Accordingly, the definition
also provides that an authorized broker may identify the owner,
purchaser, or consignee of the finished products who authorized the
customs broker to make entry, as the party responsible for compliance
with CPSC certificate requirements. A broker would identify such party
by eFiling certificate data using CPSC's PGA Message Set, which
identifies the finished product certifier responsible for product
certification, as required in Sec. 1110.11(a)(3).
If identified as the finished product certifier in the PGA Message
Set data, the owner, purchaser, or consignee that authorized the broker
to file entry is the party that CPSC would expect to have sufficient
knowledge of the finished products being imported and to understand
that such products must now comply with U.S. laws and regulations,
including compliance with CPSC's testing and certification
requirements.\33\ A broker identifying an owner, purchaser, or
consignee as the party responsible for certification should receive
from that party, either the Unique ID for the Reference PGA Message
Set, linking certificate data in the Product Registry with the
shipment, or all certificate data elements for submitting the Full PGA
Message Set at entry. If an authorized customs broker fails to submit a
PGA Message Set containing CPSC's certificate data elements to identify
the owner, purchaser, or consignee responsible for product
certification, CPSC can hold such a broker legally responsible for
certificate data as set forth in Sec. 1110.15.
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\33\ We note that the party that CPSC holds legally responsible
for certificate data does not mean that this party is responsible
for submitting such data into ACE, because this party may not be the
IOR for the shipment or be another party eligible to make entry
under CBP statutes and regulations.
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The Final Rule also clarifies, for purposes of this rule, the
importer who is legally responsible for CPSC's certificate data for
finished products that must be accompanied by a certificate that are
imported by mail, or for which a de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed. These shipments do not have an IOR.
The ``importer'' definition in the Final Rule specifies the importer
for purposes of CPSC's certificate requirement for these shipments is a
party eligible to make entry for the merchandise pursuant to CBP
statutes and regulations, who may be an owner, purchaser, consignee, or
authorized customs broker. An authorized broker may also identify the
owner, purchaser, or consignee that authorized entry as the finished
product certifier in a PGA Message Set for a de minimis shipment filed
using ET 86.
The Final Rule defines ``owner or purchaser'' and ``consignee'' in
a way consistent with the SNPR, but simplified. The Final Rule
definitions now clarify that these definitions are only for the
purposes of this rule and explain who CPSC may hold responsible for
certificate data, particularly for de minimis and mail shipments that
lack the required certificate data. For this rule, a ``consignee''
means a party who takes custody or delivery of CPSC regulated finished
products for which CPSC certificate data is required. For this rule, an
``owner or purchaser'' means a party who has a financial interest in
the finished products for which CPSC certificate data is required, to
include the actual owner of the merchandise. Because a consumer could
fall within the definitions of purchaser or consignee, the definition
of ``importer'' continues to state, as proposed, that for the purposes
of this rule, CPSC will not typically consider an end consumer
purchasing or receiving products for personal use or enjoyment to be
the importer responsible for certification..
The Final Rule changes a defined term from ``eFiled certificate''
to ``eFile'' because the term ``eFiled certificate'' is not used in the
rule, but the term ``eFile'' or ``eFiled'' is used nine times
throughout the regulation. The
[[Page 1824]]
definition of ``eFile'' is consistent with the SNPR definition of
``eFiled certificate,'' and means to electronically file the required
data elements on a finished product certificate, as described in Sec.
1110.11, into ACE, in the format required in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1). Minor
edits were also made to the definition of ``electronic certificate.''
An ``electronic certificate'' is not an eFiled certificate. An
electronic certificate contains the same certificate information as an
eFiled certificate, but is primarily used to provide an electronic
certificate to CPSC for domestically manufactured products, in the
format described in Sec. 1110.9(c).
Finally, the Final Rule clarifies the definition of ``Product
Registry'' by stating that the finished product certifier that is
required to issue the finished product certificate, as specified in
Sec. 1110.7(a), and who is also required to eFile the certificate data
as set forth in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1), enters finished product
certificate data into the Product Registry. Note that pursuant to Sec.
1110.15, a finished product certifier can rely on other parties to
maintain records, test, or certify products, or enter data into the
Product Registry, but remains legally responsible for the validity,
accuracy, completeness, and availability of finished product
certificates.
C. Finished Products Required To Be Certified (Sec. 1110.5)
The Commission finalizes Sec. 1110.5 as proposed, except for two
minor clarifications. First, Sec. 1110.5 clarifies that finished
products also include ``substances,'' which are regulated under the
Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA). Second, the title of this
section revises ``Products'' to ``Finished products,'' and changes the
phrase ``GCC or CPC, as applicable'' to ``finished product
certificate'' (which encompasses GCCs and CPCs), to more clearly convey
that only finished products are required to be certified. Accordingly,
Sec. 1110.5 explains that a certificate is required only when: (1) the
product is a finished product or substance; (2) the product or
substance is subject to a consumer product safety rule under the CPSA,
or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any other law
enforced by the Commission; and (3) the product or substance is
imported for consumption or warehousing, or is distributed into
commerce.
D. Who Must Certify Finished Products (Sec. 1110.7)
The SNPR required that, unless a specific rule states otherwise,
only importers, as defined in the rule, must issue a certificate for
imported products. However, a private labeler could assume
responsibility for certifying an imported product under the SNPR, if
the private labeler falls within the definition of an importer in Sec.
1110.3.
For domestically manufactured finished products, the SNPR
maintained the 2013 NPR proposal that, unless otherwise required in a
specific rule, the manufacturer must issue the certificate, except for
consumer products or substances that are privately labeled. When a
product is privately labeled, a manufacturer name does not appear on
the product. Accordingly, for such products, placing responsibility on
the private labeler is both pragmatic and appropriate. However, the
SNPR proposed to allow private labelers to continue to rely on a
manufacturer's testing or certification if they choose to do so.
Importantly, if a manufacturer's name appears on a product, the product
is not privately labeled under the definition in section 3 of the CPSA,
15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(12), and the manufacturer would be required to test
and certify the product.
The SNPR moved the requirement regarding the availability of
certificates for imports and domestic products, found in Sec.
1110.7(c) of the existing rule, to Sec. 1110.13.
The Commission finalizes Sec. 1110.7 as proposed in the SNPR with
a clarification specifying that the required certifier is the
``finished product certifier.'' The terms ``finished product
certifier'' and ``finished product certificate'' are used throughout
the regulation to explain certificate responsibilities and content
requirements. The Final Rule is consistent with section 14(g)(1) of
CPSA, which requires that the manufacturer (defined as any person who
manufactures or imports a consumer product) or private labeler must
test and certify products. For domestically manufactured products that
are privately labeled, the private labeler must certify or ensure that
a manufacturer certifies the product. Also, pursuant to the 1109 rule,
a private labeler can rely on a manufacturer's testing or certification
to issue their own finished product certificate. Section 3(a)(12)(B) of
the CPSA defines a privately labeled product as a product with no
manufacturer information on the product or packaging. Therefore, CPSC
is unable to identify any other party to hold responsible for a
noncompliant product. For clarity, the Final Rule adds the statutory
definitions of ``manufacturer'' and ``private labeler'' in 15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11)-(12) to the list of defined terms in Sec. 1110.3.
E. Certificate Language and Format (Sec. 1110.9)
The Final Rule maintains Sec. 1110.9 as proposed in the SNPR, with
the addition of ``finished product certificate'' in place of
``certificate,'' to clarify that the requirements apply to finished
products. Section IV.E of this preamble contains comments and CPSC's
responses regarding Sec. 1110.9. We describe each section of Sec.
1110.9.
The SNPR Sec. 1110.9(a) proposed that an eFiled certificate must
be in English, which is consistent with the statutory requirement and
is necessary for CBP and CPSC IT systems. Proposed Sec. 1110.9(a)
provided that a hard copy or electronic certificate must be in English,
but may also contain the same content in any other language. The
Commission finalizes Sec. 1109.9(a) without substantive change.
Proposed Sec. 1110.9(b) clarified the formats for eFiled and for
hard copy and electronic certificates. The SNPR proposed that an eFiled
certificate must meet the requirements in proposed Sec. 1110.13(a),
and that certificates furnished to retailers, distributors, or to CPSC
pursuant to Sec. 1110.13(b) and (c) may be provided in hard copy or
electronically. The Commission finalizes Sec. 1109.9(b) without
substantive change.
Proposed Sec. 1110.9(c) described the format for the electronic
certificates described in Sec. 1110.13(b) and (c), which are used to
furnish a certificate to retailers or distributors, or to CBP or CPSC
upon request. The SNPR proposed to allow password protection of
certificate information, so long as the password is provided to CPSC or
CBP at the same time as a certificate. This provision applies to
domestic manufacturers and to other certifiers when providing a
password protected electronic certificate to CPSC or CBP; the password
must be provided to the relevant agency at the same time. The
Commission finalizes Sec. 1109.9(c) without substantive change.
F. Certificate Content (Sec. 1110.11)
The 2023 SNPR proposed to require the seven statutory certificate
data elements in the existing rule, and to include only one of the
three additional requirements proposed in the 2013 NPR--attestation.
However, the SNPR provided additional detail on the required data
elements. Below we describe each data element proposed in Sec.
1110.11(a) of the SNPR. Except for a clarifying change to the
attestation requirement, and addition of the terms
[[Page 1825]]
``finished product certificate'' and ``finished product certifier'' in
place of ``certificate'' and ``certifier,'' the Final Rule retains the
requirements as proposed in the SNPR.
Product Identification (Sec. 1110.11(a)(1)): The Final Rule
retains the SNPR proposal to identify the finished product covered by
the certificate, including at least one unique ID from a list of seven
options, and a sufficient product description so that CPSC can match
the finished product to the certificate. Finished product certificates
may contain optional additional IDs to assist with product
identification. The SNPR clarified that ``identification'' means a
unique ID is necessary for eFiling, so that certificates can be better
tracked in the Product Registry and RAM. The SNPR explained that CPSC
expects it would be easier for importers to provide a unique ID that
already exists for the product, instead of having certifiers manage an
additional identifier assigned by CPSC.
The Final Rule also retains the SNPR proposal to expand the term
``description'' as it relates to products to mean a ``sufficient
description to match the finished product to the certificate.''
Currently, the product description in a certificate is sometimes
insufficient to enable CPSC staff to determine whether the certificate
describes the product being examined.
List of Applicable Rules (Sec. 1110.11(a)(2)): Although CPSC
received adverse comments regarding listing applicable subsections of
the ASTM Toy Standard, codified in 16 CFR part 1250, CPSC is
maintaining this requirement as proposed, as further explained in
response to comment 26, to align with sections 14(a)(1) and 14(g) of
the CPSA. The underlying requirement to list applicable rules is
statutory; certificates must provide a list of all applicable rules to
which the product is being certified. The eFiling system makes this
requirement easier for certifiers because CPSC provides a standardized
list of all rules, each assigned a code. When eFiling certificate data,
the certifier will only need to select from these codes, either in the
Full Message Set or in the Product Registry. Additionally, certifiers
of domestically manufactured products, and those certifying using a
Full Message Set, have access to the list of all rule citations and
testing exclusions, which is updated and stored on CPSC's website,
available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/eFiling-Document-Library.
Identification of Certifier (Sec. 1110.11(a)(3)): The Final Rule
retains the SNPR proposal to identify the party certifying compliance
of the finished product(s), including the party's name, street address,
city, state or province, country or administrative region, electronic
mail (email) address, and telephone number. Adding a more specific
street address interprets the statutory requirement for a ``full
mailing address,'' and will assist staff in distinguishing facilities
or locating certifiers for site visits. If a certifying party's
physical location does not have a street address, then a location
identification typical of the country of origin, or a Global
Positioning System (GPS) coordinate, is also permissible. The Final
Rule also retains the SNPR proposal to include an email address, which
will improve communication between CPSC and the certifying party,
particularly across time zones. Note that for imported finished
products, the finished product certifier should be the Business Account
Administrator if using the Product Registry to eFile certificate data.
Contact for Records (1110.11(a)(4)): The Final Rule retains the
SNPR's proposal to provide the identity and contact information for the
individual maintaining records of test results. As with the certifier's
contact information, the Final Rule includes more detail regarding the
concept of a ``full mailing address,'' which includes ``street address,
city, state or province, country or administrative region, electronic
mail (email) address, and telephone number.'' For clarity, and because
this data element requires a name and contact information, the Final
Rule moves the bulleted list of recordkeeping requirements in sections
of the CFR that apply to GCCs and CPCs to the recordkeeping requirement
in Sec. 1110.17 of the Final Rule.
The Final Rule maintains the SNPR clarification that the individual
maintaining records may be a position title, provided that this
position is always staffed and responsive to CPSC's requests. Allowing
a position title instead of an individual is in response to public
comments concerned that the individual maintaining the records of test
results may leave the company or otherwise be unavailable, and that a
position title would provide continuity.
Manufacture Date and Place (1110.11(a)(5)): The Final Rule retains
the SNPR proposal to provide the date when the finished product(s) were
manufactured, produced, or assembled, as further explained in response
to comment 19. The first date of a batch run is the date of
manufacturing. The Final Rule also retains the statutory requirement to
provide the place where the finished product(s) were manufactured.
Section 14(g)(1) of the CPSA requires that each certificate contains
``each party's name, full mailing address, [and] telephone number.''
Therefore, the Final Rule aligns with the statute and with the other
data elements requiring contact information, which includes a name,
street address, city, state or province, country or administrative
region, email address, and telephone number. For this data element, the
contact information must state where the finished product(s) were
manufactured, produced, or assembled. The Final Rule requires this
manufacturer detail, for eFiling in particular, because staff have
experienced situations where it is difficult to distinguish between
multiple firms with similar addresses and contact the correct
manufacturer. If a location does not have a street address, a location
identification typical of the country of origin or a GPS coordinate is
permissible.
Test Date and Place (1110.11(a)(6)): The Final Rule retains the
SNPR proposal, which is also in the existing rule, to provide the date
when the finished product(s) were tested for compliance. The SNPR
amended this requirement to clarify that the required date is the most
recent date of testing. The Final Rule retains this change, which aids
CPSC in assessing the validity and integrity of a certificate, and
promotes consistency across certificates for CPSC and certifiers,
particularly where laboratory testing is done over several days.
The Final Rule also maintains the SNPR proposal, which is in the
existing rule, to provide the place where the finished product(s) were
tested for compliance. As proposed, the Final Rule standardizes the
contact information required, including the name of each third-party
conformity assessment body or other party on whose testing the
certificate depends, and the street address (or locally comparable
location identification), city, state or province, country or
administrative region, email address, and telephone number. The Final
Rule also requires an email address, as proposed, so staff have another
means of contacting the testing laboratory.
Attestation (Sec. 1110.11(a)(7)): The SNPR proposed to include an
attestation by the certifier that the certificate information is true
and accurate and that the certified product complies with all rules,
bans, standards, or regulations applicable to the product under the
CPSA or any other Act enforced by the Commission. The Final Rule
retains the attestation requirement for certificates provided to CPSC
or CBP in hard copy
[[Page 1826]]
or in electronic format, as provided in Sec. 1110.9(c), and clarifies
that the finished product certifier is responsible for the attestation.
For imported products that require an eFiled certificate, the Final
Rule requires an attestation, but clarifies that the eFiling
requirements for both the Full Message Set and the Reference Message
Set already include an attestation. The Full Message Set contains a
check box data element for the attestation. Importers using the Product
Registry must periodically attest to the veracity of the data,
depending on the user's permissions. For eFiled certificates, even if
the importer allows another entity to enter certificate data into the
Product Registry on their behalf, or to certify products on their
behalf, the importer/finished product certifier remains responsible for
the information provided to CPSC, as stated in Sec. 1110.15 of the
Final Rule. Thus, the Product Registry includes built-in, simplified
attestation requirements.
Electronic access to records (Sec. 1110.11(b)): The Final Rule
retains the SNPR proposal in Sec. 1110.11(b) for a certificate to
optionally include a URL or other electronic means, along with the
identification of the custodian of records, to allow for electronic
access of supporting records, such as test records. If certifiers
provide this information, staff can more easily confirm the veracity of
the certificate.
Statutory or regulatory testing exclusions (Sec. 1110.11(c)):
Although CPSC received adverse comments regarding the inclusion of
testing exclusions on certificates, claiming that exclusions are self-
effective, as explained in response to comments 27 and 28 the Final
Rule requires identification of testing exclusions that are codified in
a statute or regulation. CPSC's algorithm will expect either a
certificate citing a CPSC-accepted testing laboratory for each rule, or
reliance on a testing exclusion. Accordingly, as proposed, Sec.
1110.11(c) of the Final Rule requires finished product certifiers to
list all claimed testing exclusions, instead of providing the date and
place where the finished product was tested for compliance.
The requirement to list testing exclusions on a finished product
certificate does not apply to Commission enforcement discretion for
adult wearing apparel or for refrigerator doors. This requirement only
applies to consumer products that are subject to testing and
certification, where a statute or regulation allows for a testing
exclusion for certain products subject to a rule. The Product Registry
lists all available exclusions for each rule, streamlining and
standardizing how to record these exclusions on a certificate. These
exclusions are also updated and maintained on CPSC's website for use in
a Full PGA Message Set and for domestically manufactured products and
CPSC will continue to maintain the list of CPSC rules (citations) and
any associated testing exclusions. CPSC is currently updating and
finalizing this list for use in the expanded Beta Pilot and this Final
Rule. Some finished product certifiers already list testing exclusions
on a certificate and CPSC's website provides guidance on how to do so;
the Final Rule standardizes this requirement for all finished product
certifiers. Note that no certificate is required if a product is not
subject to a safety rule or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation,
or if the product is subject to enforcement discretion (such as adult
wearing apparel relying on 16 CFR 1610.1(d) and household refrigerators
subject to 16 CFR part 1750).
For the Final Rule, CPSC also clarifies that, as a matter of policy
and to reduce burden, importers are not required to file a Disclaimer
Message Set for: (1) products that are not within CPSC's jurisdiction,
(2) non-regulated products within CPSC's jurisdiction; or (3) products
that are regulated but do not require certification. Although the
Commission has authority to require a Disclaimer Message Set for all
consumer products within CPSC's jurisdiction, based on the comments,
and to reduce burden for products that do not have a certificate
requirement at the time of import, CPSC will not require a Disclaimer
Message Set. CPSC updated the CATAIR guideline to reflect this change.
However, CPSC encourages importers to file Disclaimer Message Sets,
where appropriate, meaning when a certificate may be expected, because
this additional information will inform CPSC staff as to why a
certificate does not accompany the shipment, reducing the possibility
of a hold at the port for further inspection.
Duplicative testing not required (Sec. 1110.11(d)): To reduce
burden for certifiers, the Final Rule retains the SNPR proposal in
Sec. 1110.11(d) regarding duplicative testing, but provides more
clarity regarding when this provision applies, based on a comment. The
Final Rule clarifies that finished product certifiers are not required
to conduct the same third party test more than once on each sample when
a rule references, or incorporates fully, another applicable consumer
product safety rule or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under
any other law enforced by the Commission, that contains the same
requirement. This provision is applicable primarily to children's
products that are more likely to have overlapping requirements, such as
those for lead content or small parts that apply specifically to
children's products but also may be required within a product level
safety rule, such as the toy rule or rules for bassinets, strollers, or
other durable infant or toddler products.
G. Certificate Availability (Sec. 1110.13)
Although CPSC received adverse comments regarding the availability
of certificates, arguing that the current ``upon request'' system is
sufficient, section 14(g)(4) of the CPSA specifically provides the
Commission with the authority to, by rule, require eFiling of
certificates for imported consumer products. Moreover, the Commission
has been explaining and demonstrating the benefits of eFiling since at
least 2012, in the Alpha Pilot, Beta Pilot, in establishing the eFiling
program in 2020, and in the SNPR and this Final Rule.
Section 14(g)(3) of the CPSA establishes several requirements
regarding the availability of certificates, which must: ``accompany the
applicable product or shipment of products covered by the same
certificate;'' ``be furnished to each distributor or retailer of the
product;'' and be furnished to the Commission upon request. By
codifying the eFiling requirement, an eFiled certificate meets the
``accompany'' and ``upon request'' requirements of section 14(g)(3).
As explained in response to comments 34, 45, and 65, the Final Rule
retains Sec. 1110.13(a) as proposed in the SNPR. Now that IT solutions
are developed, available, and being tested, the Final Rule points to a
CPSC-specific CATAIR and Product Registry that contain the IT solutions
for eFiling. For example, the Final Rule does not retain a separate
``accompany'' requirement for imported finished products that are
delivered directly to a consumer in the United States, but rather
provides for collecting these certificates through eFiling. However,
finished product certifiers must still provide a finished product
certificate when asked by CPSC or CBP, especially in cases where a
required certificate has not been eFiled or contains false or
misleading information.
The final Sec. 1110.13(a) explains that a finished product
certificate must accompany each finished product or finished product
shipment required to be certified pursuant to Sec. 1110.5.
Additionally, Sec. 1110.13(a) requires that each certificate describe
a single product. One product per certificate allows the RAM to conduct
risk analysis
[[Page 1827]]
on unique products in a shipment, which allows better targeting of
potentially violative products and avoids delaying delivery of
shipments that do not warrant examination.\34\
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\34\ See, for example, Sec. 1107.23, which explains a
``material change'' to a children's product. Products that are not
the same in all material respects cannot be on the same certificate.
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Final Sec. 1110.13(a)(1) states the requirements for finished
products manufactured outside the United States that are offered for
importation into the United States for consumption or warehousing,
including products offered for consumption or warehousing from a
Foreign Trade Zone, or products eligible for the de minimis duty
exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C). As proposed, finished product
certificate data elements required in Sec. 1110.11 must be eFiled at
the time of filing the CBP entry, or entry summary, if both are filed
together, into ACE as provided in CPSC's CATAIR and any revisions of
the CATAIR. CPSC's most recent CATAIR is provided in Tab B of the Staff
Final Rule Briefing Memo.
Section 1110.13(a)(1) of the Final Rule contains minor
clarifications related to international mail shipments, stating that
for products imported by mail, the finished product certifier must
enter the required finished product certificate data elements into
CPSC's Product Registry before the shipment arrives in the United
States.
Section 1110(a)(2), stating requirements for domestically
manufactured products that are required to be certified pursuant to
Sec. 1110.5, is finalized as proposed. The finished product certifier
for these products must issue the required certificate on or before the
finished product is distributed in commerce, and they must make the
finished product certificate available for inspection immediately,
meaning with 24 hours of CPSC's request.
Final Sec. 1110.13(b) maintains the statutory requirement to
``furnish'' a required finished product certificate to each distributor
or retailer, and final Sec. 1110.13(c) maintains the statutory
requirement to make certificates available for inspection immediately
upon request by CPSC or CBP. To be clear regarding the expectation, the
term ``immediately'' means within 24 hours, as explained in the NPR and
the SNPR.
H. Legal Responsibility of Finished Product Certifiers (Sec. 1110.15)
CPSC did not receive adverse comments on this section of the SNPR;
however, the Final Rule provides further explanation, consistent with
the SNPR and with the 1109 rule, regarding how a finished product
certifier may rely on other parties to maintain data, test or certify
component parts or finished products, or enter data into the Product
Registry. The Final Rule continues to state, as proposed, that a
finished product certifier remains legally responsible for the
information in a finished product certificate, including its validity,
accuracy, completeness, and availability. The Final Rule is intended to
accommodate diverse relationships between finished product certifiers
and their trade partners to better facilitate trade. However, the Final
Rule places accountability for certifications and submitted data on the
finished product certifiers, who are ultimately responsible for
ensuring that imported products comply with applicable U.S. law,
including CPSC's required testing and certification. Finished product
certifiers, meaning importers for imported products, will have the
ability in the Product Registry to manage permissions for trade
partners to enter data and/or to certify products, including managing
the roles of specific individuals who enter data or certify products on
the finished product certifier's behalf. Finished product certifiers
should exercise due diligence if they allow another entity to submit
data into the Product Registry or to certify on their behalf.
I. Recordkeeping Requirements (Sec. 1110.17)
CPSC did not receive adverse comments on proposed Sec. 1110.17 in
the SNPR. However, the Final Rule modifies Sec. 1110.17 by moving into
this section the bulleted list of potential certificate-related records
previously in Sec. 1110.11(a)(4). The listed records are the same as
those stated in the SNPR, but they are formatted differently and with
additional explanation. The Final Rule states that finished product
certificates, which include CPCs and GCCs, and related records, must be
maintained for five years, as proposed.
J. Component Part Certificates (Sec. 1110.19)
The Final Rule is consistent with the SNPR proposal; however, based
on continued confusion regarding component part certificates, the Final
Rule adds the purpose of the 1109 rule, explaining that component part
certificates are voluntary, but may be relied upon by a finished
product certifier to issue a finished product certificate. The Final
Rule further explains that component part certificates must not be
eFiled into ACE. The Final Rule continues to set forth the content,
form, and availability requirements for component part certificates.
VI. Effective Dates
The Administrative Procedures Act (APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30 days after publication of the
Final Rule. 5 U.S.C. 553(d). In the SNPR, the Commission proposed that
a Final Rule revising 16 CFR part 1110 become effective 120 days after
publication in the Federal Register, to provide importers time to
onboard with CPSC's Product Registry and upgrade software to send PGA
Message Sets to their broker for eFiling. Based on the public comments
and Beta Pilot participant feedback, CPSC will finalize a longer
effective date of 18 months after a Final Rule publishes in the Federal
Register, except for consumer products and substances that are imported
into an FTZ and subsequently entered for consumption or warehousing.
For products and substances entered for consumption or warehousing from
an FTZ, the Final Rule is effective 24 months after publication of the
Final Rule in the Federal Register.
A. 18-Month Effective Date--Domestic and eFiled Certificates
The Final Rule provides an 18-month effective date for regulated,
domestic products and substances that are required to be certified.
Domestic certificates should not be eFiled. However, the Final Rule
includes three primary changes for domestic certificates:
Sec. 1110.7--Unless otherwise stated in a specific rule,
the manufacturer is the finished product certifier that must issue a
certificate. However, for privately labeled products, the private
labeler is the finished product certifier that must issue a
certificate, unless the manufacturer issues the certificate.
Sec. 1110.11(a)(7)--Include an attestation of compliance.
Sec. 1110.11(c)--Unless otherwise provided by the
Commission, if a finished product certifier is claiming a statutory or
regulatory testing exclusion for an applicable rule, then in addition
to listing all applicable rules, and in lieu of providing the date and
place of testing, the certificate must list the applicable testing
exclusion.
If a product is privately labeled, the Final Rule shifts the
responsibility of certification onto the private labeler, who becomes
the finished product certifier that must certify the product or ensure
that the manufacturer certifies the product. A privately labeled
product
[[Page 1828]]
is one that is branded and does not contain the name of a manufacturer.
Currently, CPSC's website advises that firms list testing exclusions on
certificates; the Final Rule will require certificates to list such
exclusions. Thus, when a rule applies, but a certifier does not test to
the rule because a testing exclusion within a rule or statute applies,
the Final Rule requires that such testing exclusion be listed on the
certificate instead of the name of the testing laboratory. CPSC's
website contains a list of all testing exclusions to include on a
certificate, where applicable.\35\ This additional information will
require certifiers to review the requirement, assess their products,
and align their certificates accordingly. Because domestic
manufacturers and private labelers must reassess their business
relationships and responsibilities, and certificates will now be
required to identify testing exclusions, the Final Rule's effective
date for domestically manufactured products is 18 months after
publication in the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Currently available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/BetaPilotCitationandTestingExclusionCodesv3.xlsx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With regard to eFiled products, CPSC surveyed Beta Pilot
participants to gauge their preparation time for eFiling.\36\ On
average, Beta Pilot participants took five weeks to prepare for the
Beta Pilot and create their Business Account in the Product Registry.
This preparation included attending meetings, reviewing and
understanding CPSC's guidance documents, communicating internally and
externally with trade partners, and organizing certificate data in an
electronic format. Furthermore, Beta Pilot participants stated that
their customs brokers needed to concurrently update their software to
enable transmission of the PGA Message Set into ACE via the Automated
Broker Interface. Several brokers who assisted importers in the Beta
Pilot estimated that this update (either in-house or from a software
developer) takes three to 12 months, with an average of nine months.
Based on this feedback, as well as public comments, the Final Rule is
effective for all imported, products regulated by CPSC 18 months after
publication of the Final Rule in the Federal Register for all entry
types, except for products entered for consumption or warehousing from
an FTZ.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Tab C of Staff's Final Rule Memo contains the Beta Pilot
participant survey responses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. 24-Month Effective Date--Products Entered for Consumption or
Warehousing From an FTZ
For regulated products imported into an FTZ and subsequently
entered for consumption or warehousing, the Final Rule is effective 24
months after publication of a Final Rule in the Federal Register. Based
on discussions with the National Association of Foreign Trade Zones
(NAFTZ) and other importers, updating processes and software to meet
this Final Rule will be particularly challenging for importers using
FTZs. Importers can use FTZs in various ways before entering consumer
products into customs territory for consumption or warehousing. For
example, importers can use an FTZ to: hold products prior to making
entry into the United States; assemble components of products from
various manufacturing sites into finished products; bring products into
compliance with CPSC rules; manufacture components or finished
products; or test and certify finished products. Although products and
materials admitted into an FTZ are accounted for on CBP Form 214, when
products are imported into the United States, CBP allows for entry to
occur on a weekly basis, including estimation of the number of products
removed from an FTZ for entry for consumption. If this estimate is
exceeded, entry must be made for the excess quantity prior to its
removal from an FTZ into customs territory.
CBP's current FTZ import procedure does not allow accurate CPSC PGA
Message Sets to be attached to CBP entries. Commenters (Comment 44),
including the NAFTZ, state that FTZ importers require additional time
before eFiling implementation to build the necessary infrastructure to
accommodate accurate CPSC PGA Message Sets and to troubleshoot issues.
Commenters explain that the First-In-First-Out inventory accounting
method applicable to fungible merchandise within an FTZ uses a Unique
Identifier (UIN) for inventory control and recordkeeping which has no
relationship to the compliance data CPSC requests. Commenters explain
that currently, FTZ imports can only attach the latest certificate
associated with an article/supplier combination and cannot attach a
specific certificate at the inventory level that CPSC's Message Set
requires. Commenters state that FTZ importers will require significant
changes to their current software to comply with an eFiling
requirement. Moreover, commenters allege that FTZ procedures are
incompatible with a requirement to file certificates at entry summary,
because goods imported from an FTZ may have already been shipped to
stores and possibly sold, negating CPSC's ability to place such goods
on hold for examination.
Commenters encourage CPSC to work with the CBP Border Interagency
Executive Council (BIEC) to build a single window concept inclusive of
FTZs and provide a transition period of at least 24 months. CPSC staff
further informs that CBP processes for FTZ imports would also need to
be updated to accommodate an eFiling requirement, but 24 months is
likely necessary for full implementation of eFiling for FTZ-imported
products and substances.
CPSC intends to work with the trade and with CBP in the coming
months, to initiate conversations on software solution(s) that would
best allow compliance with CPSC's Message Set. Once a software solution
is identified, meeting the eFiling requirement will involve software
development, testing, implementation, and troubleshooting. Based on
CPSC's experience with developing and testing IT solutions for the Beta
Pilot, for products entered for consumption or warehousing from an FTZ,
the effective date is 24 months after publication of the Final Rule in
the Federal Register.
VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, requires
agencies to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis unless the head
of the agency certifies that the proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In the SNPR, the Commission certified that the proposed rule would not
have a significant impact on a substantial number of small businesses.
88 FR 85760, 85783. The Commission received additional information
during the SNPR comment period and the eFiling Beta Pilot regarding:
(1) initial startup burden for eFiling; (2) filing fees; (3) Disclaimer
Message Sets (disclaims); and (4) de minimis entry filings. Based on
these comments, the Commission has prepared a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) that includes an analysis of this
additional information. The conclusion of this FRFA is that the cost of
the Final Rule is likely less than one percent of the revenue for a
small firm, and therefore does not impose significant costs to a
substantial number of firms.
[[Page 1829]]
A. Need for Agency Action and Objectives of the Rule
Sections I and II of the preamble describe the need for agency
action and objectives of the Final Rule.
B. Issues Raised by Comments and Resulting Changes
Several SNPR commenters provided additional information regarding
costs to importers and eFilers, including technology and staff-related
costs from initial startup activities for eFiling, filing fees,
disclaims, and de minimis entries. See Comments 53-63 in section IV.N
of this preamble.
C. Small Entities to Which the Rule Will Apply
The Final Rule applies to all importers and domestic manufacturers
\37\ required to issue certificates for products or substances subject
to a CPSC rule, ban, standard, or regulation, that are imported for
consumption or warehousing into the United States or are distributed in
commerce.\38\ The Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
estimated the number of small businesses impacted by the rule. 88 FR
85760, 85783. This FRFA uses these same estimates, which are displayed
in Table 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ The rule also applies to private labelers who may be
contingent or substitute recordkeepers or filers. However, in order
to avoid double counting of impacts, staff developed the analysis
for domestic manufacturers and importers only.
\38\ Part 1107 governs the creation and recordkeeping
requirements for CPCs. Among other requirements, part 1107 requires
that importers and domestic manufacturers of children's products
issue a CPC affirming that the firm has met third party testing
requirements: https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-16/chapter-II/subchapter-B/part-1107.
Table 2--Estimated Number of Small Businesses Impacted by the Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-children Children
Small business products products Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manufacturers................................................... 7,771 18,852 26,623
Importers....................................................... 35,290 211,148 246,438
Number of Small Business........................................ 43,061 230,000 273,061
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 3 presents an estimate of the number of certificates produced
annually by small firms impacted by the Final Rule. These estimates
assume small firms produce 10 percent of the number of certificates the
average firm in their industry produces:
Table 3--Estimated Number of Certificates Produced Annually by Small Firms Impacted by the Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certificates created by small business GCCs CPCs Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manufacturers................................................... 34,438 11,590 46,028
Importers....................................................... 85,002 129,804 214,806
-----------------------------------------------
Total....................................................... 119,440 141,393 260,834
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Compliance, Reporting, and Recordkeeping Requirements of the Rule
1. Potential Impact on Small Firms
This FRFA assesses the economic costs that will be incurred by
small U.S. firms impacted by the Final Rule. Typically, CPSC considers
costs that exceed one percent of gross revenue to be an economically
significant cost impact. This FRFA estimates the cost impact of the
Final Rule on small firms arising from both extended recordkeeping of
GCCs (i.e., the burden associated with the increasing the recordkeeping
period for GCCs from three to five years) and eFiling (which includes
(i) the hourly burden and (ii) the out-of-pocket costs from
electronically filing certificate data for regulated, imported consumer
products).
Small firms face an hourly burden related to uploading or
submitting information via;
The CPSC Product Registry,
Full Message Sets to CBP through a broker,
Reference Message Sets (of certificates uploaded into the
Product Registry) with simplified filings with CBP, and
Disclaimer Message Sets (for products or substances that
do not require a certificate).
In addition to the hourly burden, small importers will face out of
pocket expenses that include: Startup costs, and Filing fees to eFile
certificates.
(a) Extended Recordkeeping of GCCs
The Final Rule requires firms to maintain records of all
certificates for five years. CPC's records are already required to be
kept for a period of five years pursuant to part 1107. Currently,
however, for non-children's products, firms are either required within
specific rules to maintain records for three years or follow the
guidance in the existing part 1110 to maintain records for three years.
Thus, firms supplying non-children products will have to hold
certificates and supporting documentation, such as test reports, for
two additional years after the Final Rule becomes effective.
To estimate this additional burden, the FRFA takes the difference
of the total burden under the current requirements (i.e., baseline) and
total burden with the Final Rule requirements. To estimate the number
of non-children's product certificates that additionally require
recordkeeping with the Final Rule, the FRFA conservatively uses the
number of active certificates and multiplies by five (years). The FRFA
estimates the number of certificates requiring recordkeeping in the
baseline by multiplying the total number of certificates issued
annually by the current recordkeeping period of three (years). The
hourly burden of additional recordkeeping is the difference between
active certificates and baseline certificates (i.e., the increase in
the number of active certificates) multiplied by the estimated 3
seconds it takes to ensure that records of active certificates are kept
in a safe virtual storage location and the provision of routine
maintenance of
[[Page 1830]]
records. The estimated total cost is equal to the number of burden
hours multiplied by the hourly compensation of office and
administrative support occupations \39\ of $35.56.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Bureau of Labor Statistics, ``Employer Costs for Employee
Compensation'', Table 4. Employer Costs for Employee Compensation
for private industry workers by occupational and industry group,
June 2024, ``Total Compensation'' for ``Office and administrative
support occupations'' under ``Goods-producing industries'', https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t04.htm.
\40\ The cost per firm is $0.16. Three seconds per active
certificate represent $0.02963 (3/3600 x $35.56), where $35.56 is
the hourly compensation (includes benefits plus wage) of office and
administrative support occupation in good producing industries as of
June 2024. The estimated number of active GCCs is 597,202 and the
net increase in the number of responses due to the move from 3 to 5
years is 238,881. There are a total of 43,061 small firms producing
GCCs, so the net increase in the average number of active
certificate records is 5.5. The annual cost per firm is then roughly
$0.16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 4 presents staff's estimate of the additional routine annual
recordkeeping burden of the Final Rule to domestic manufacturers and
importers. The total cost of maintaining GCC records for two additional
years is $7,079; of this total $2,041 is a burden to manufacturers and
$5,038 a burden to importers.
Table 4--Estimated Cost of Routine Annual Recordkeeping of GCCs by Small Firms
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to the
Cost of routine GCC recordkeeping for small firms rule With the rule Net change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Active Certificates:
Manufacturers............................................... 103,314 172,191 68,876
Importers................................................... 255,007 425,011 170,004
Burden Hours:
Manufacturers............................................... 86.1 143.5 57.4
Importers................................................... 212.5 354.2 141.7
Cost of the Burden:
Manufacturers............................................... $3,062 $5,103 $2,041
Importers................................................... $7,557 $12,594 $5,038
-----------------------------------------------
Total Change in Cost for Routine GCC Recordkeeping...... $10,618 $17,697 $7,079
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) eFiling of Certificates
Small firms required to eFile finished product certificates, either
a GCC or CPC, are likely to face an hourly burden due to eFiling
activities. Importers will have two methods of filing certificate data
with CBP: a Full Message Set, or a Reference Message Set. While the
Final Rule does not require the use of the Product Registry, CPSC
expects that most small importers will use the Product Registry to
enter and maintain certificate data. The use of Reference Message Sets
along with the Product Registry will likely reduce the time for
storing, transmitting, and eFiling certificates. Full Message Sets are
more burdensome than Reference Message Sets because they require
repeated data entry, maintained by the importer or broker, rather than
relying on CPSC's IT solution, the Product Registry, and a shortened
Reference Message Set.
To achieve compliance with the Final Rule's eFiling requirements,
small importers of products requiring either a GCC or CPC may also
incur out-of-pocket costs from several activities including startup
costs (consisting of the one-time cost of updating technology and
training staff for eFiling) and filing fees. The following sections
present estimates for the hourly burden and out-of-pocket cost for
eFiling.
(i) eFiling Hourly Burden
The burden of eFiling is only a burden on importers. Domestic
manufacturers are unaffected by eFiling.\41\ Within the category of
eFiling, this FRFA considered the hourly costs of entering records in
the:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Except for providing domestic manufacturers with the
ability to upload certificate data into the Product Registry,
eFiling should not affect manufacturers. If each domestic
manufacturer uploaded all the certificates it generated during the
year, the total hourly burden would reach 111 hours. At a total
compensation of $35.56 per hour for Office and Administrative
Support Occupations in Good-producing industries as of June 2024,
the cost of the annual burden to all domestic manufacturers would be
$3,955; roughly $0.15 per manufacturer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPSC Product Registry,
Full Message Sets,
Reference Message Sets, and
Disclaimer Message Sets.
Most importers will upload product certificate records for products
regulated by CPSC into the Product Registry; 96.4 percent of eFilings
by importers will likely use Reference Message Sets to submit
certificate data already stored in the Product Registry based on data
from the eFiling Beta Pilot. The FRFA uses this share for small
importers. The FRFA assumes the remaining 3.6 percent of eFiled
certificates to use a Full Message Set, which requires users to enter
all data fields on a certificate every time a product is imported.
Aside from Reference and Full Message Sets, some importers will
file Disclaimer Message Sets for products or substances that do not
require a certificate. Disclaimer Message Sets are not required but can
be filed for finished products or substances under CPSC's jurisdiction
that would otherwise require a certificate, but do not require one
under the circumstances. Based on data from the Beta Pilot, the FRFA
estimates that Disclaimer Message Sets will account for 14.4 percent of
the total number of Reference and Full Message Sets.
[[Page 1831]]
The Beta Pilot participants provided estimates for this FRFA
regarding the time it would take importers to submit each type of
Message Set. This FRFA assumes that eFilers would become more efficient
over time as eFiling becomes widespread and learning takes place.
Accordingly, this FRFA uses a learning curve \42\ that helps assess the
impact of learning efficiencies in the processing time of Message Sets.
Using this approach, the FRFA estimates that it would take participants
an average of 15.3 seconds \43\ to file a Reference Message Set; half
that amount of time, or 7.6 seconds,\44\ to file a Disclaimer Message
Set; and 4.75 minutes \45\ to file a Full Message Set. Additionally,
each certificate filed in the Product Registry as part of a multi-
certificate data upload would take an average of 8.7 seconds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Staff used the responses of Beta Pilot survey participants
regarding the number of minutes it took them to enter or upload
certificate data, along with the number of certificates each
participant uploaded to estimate the average time per certificate at
different volumes of certificate intake. Specifically, staff found
that participants who entered or uploaded less than 100 certificates
(an average of 39.7 certificates per participant), spend an average
of 3.52 minutes filling out and submitting each Reference Message
Set; while participants who entered/uploaded more than 100
certificates (an average of 409 certificates per participant), spend
an average of 0.2 minutes per Reference Message Set. Staff used
these observations to fit a learning curve with a slope of -0.6147
that implies a 34.7 percent time improvement for every doubling in
the number of certificates processed. To be conservative, staff used
a learning curve slope that is half the size of the slope estimated
from the data (-1.229).
\43\ Staff obtained 15 seconds as the weighted average of 18.6
seconds for importers of children's products (who have less
opportunities for learning as they file a lower number of
certificates per year but generate a higher number of filings as a
group--59.2 percent); and 12.2 seconds for importers of nonchildren
products (who have more learning opportunities by filing a higher
number of certificates per year but generate a lower number of total
filings as a group--40.8 percent). The hypothetical time it would
have taken to file the first certificate through a Reference Message
Set was estimated as the highest average time observed from the Beta
Pilot survey, or 4.64 minutes per certificate.
\44\ Staff considered half the time of a Reference Set is
reasonable given that a Disclaimer Message Set does not require
inputting any certificate data or unique ID.
\45\ Staff assumes that the learning curve slope (-0.6147)
obtained for Reference Message Sets would also apply to Full Message
Sets. Therefore, staff applied a similar learning curve to the
estimated time for the first certificate filed through a Full
Message Set using the average number of Full Message Set generated
by each importer. Staff estimated the time it would have taken to
file the first certificate as the average time to enter and transfer
a single product certificate data to the broker for the submission
of a Full Message Set, as provided by Beta Pilot survey respondents.
This average from the survey was 12 minutes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This FRFA assumes, conservatively, that all importer certificates
will be filed once in the Product Registry. Based on import
surveillance data, this FRFA estimates that 20 Reference Message Sets
will be filed annually per certificate.\46\ Then, using the number of
Reference Message Sets per certificate, this FRFA estimates that 0.7
\47\ Full Message Sets and 3 \48\ Disclaimer Message Sets will be filed
annually per certificate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ For importers of children's products, CPCs are filed with
CBP on average 20 times per year. Note that large suppliers subject
to part 1107 may have to certify and thus eFile many more products
annually. Additionally, importers must eFile GCCs with CBP with each
import; on average 20 times per year per GCC. Like with children's
products, staff expects larger importers to file more frequently,
while smaller importers may only file a few times a year.
\47\ Beta Pilot data suggests that the number of Reference
Message Sets would represent 96.4 percent of the total number of
filings, excluding disclaims. Therefore, each certificate would be
filed as a Full Message Set the remaining 3.6 percent of times, or
0.7 times per year ([20/96.4] x 3.6%).
\48\ Based on data from the Beta Pilot, the number of Disclaimer
Message Sets is roughly 14.4 percent of the total number of Full and
Reference Message Sets. Because a total of 20.7 filings of Full and
Reference Message Sets would be submitted per certificate, then an
average of 3 disclaims would be created annually per existing
certificate, where 3 = 20.7 x 14.4%.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The annual creation of certificates is industry dependent. Firms in
some industries produce a low number of new annual certificates per
year, usually due to lower levels of innovation or product turnover,
while other industries produce a larger number of annual certificates.
Therefore, the cost per firm in some industries may be larger than in
others. For instance, high certificate turnover industries of small
importers include Vinyl Plastic Film (43 annual certificates),
Furniture (25 annual certificates), Special Packaging or PPA (23 annual
certificates), and Clothing and Apparel (13 annual certificates)
Table 5 presents staff's estimate of the number of annual GCC and
CPC filings by importers, under the assumptions discussed earlier.
Table 5--Estimated Annual eFilings by Small Importers Impacted by the Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Filings by importers GCCs CPCs Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Filing in Product Registry.............................. 85,002 129,804 214,806
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker...................... 62,630 95,640 158,271
Transmission of Reference Message Set........................... 1,700,044 2,596,076 4,296,120
Transmission of Disclaims....................................... 254,471 388,593 643,063
-----------------------------------------------
All Filings................................................. 2,102,147 3,210,113 5,312,260
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
Aggregating the processing times per type of certificate filing
with the number of annual filings per certificate, the annual burden of
the Final Rule per certificate would be 9.1 minutes.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ An annual average of 20 Reference Message Set filings per
certificate with each filing taking 15.3 seconds results in 305.8
seconds per certificate. Additionally, one filing per year of
certificate data in the Product Registry takes 8.7 seconds. Then, an
annual average of 0.7 (or 0.7368 to be more accurate) Full Message
Sets per certificate with each taking 4.8 minutes (or 4.7549)
results in an additional 210.21 seconds per year. Finally, an annual
total of 3 disclaims per certificate at 7.6 seconds each total 22.89
seconds. Therefore, the Rule creates an annual time burden per
certificate of 547.6 seconds, or 9.1 minutes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 6 shows the hourly burden on small importers.
Table 6--Estimated Hourly Burden on Small Importers Impacted by the eFiling provision of the Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
eFiling hourly burden on small importers GCCs CPCs Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Filing in Product Registry.............................. 205 314 519
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker...................... 4,963 7,579 12,543
Transmission of Reference Message Set........................... 7,220 11,026 18,247
[[Page 1832]]
Transmission of Disclaims....................................... 540 825 1,366
-----------------------------------------------
All Filings................................................. 12,930 19,744 32,674
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
Given the hourly burden and the $35.56 hourly compensation rate for
each hour of burden, the average annual cost of eFiling per small
importer at high turnover industries will be between $70 and $232,
while in low turnover industries the hourly burden will be as low as
$1.\50\ Given these small amounts, it is unlikely for the cost of the
hourly burden of eFiling to exceed 1% of revenue for the typical small
firm.\51\ Tables 7 shows the estimated annual cost of such burden on
small importers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ Staff expects small importers in industries such as
Architectural Glazing Materials, Bicycle Helmets, and Bunk Beds to
produce less than one certificate per year, on average.
\51\ This FRFA assumes that most small firms file only 10
percent the average number of certificates filed by the average firm
within their NAICS code.
Table 7--Estimated Annual Cost of the Burden of eFiling on Small Importers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost of eFiling hourly burden on importers GCCs CPCs Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Filing in Product Registry.............................. $7,305 $11,155 $18,460
Transmission of Full Message Set to Broker...................... 176,495 269,520 446,015
Transmission of Reference Message Set........................... 256,761 392,090 648,851
Transmission of Disclaims....................................... 19,217 29,345 48,562
-----------------------------------------------
All Filings................................................. 459,778 702,110 1,161,888
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Staff expect small importers to incur a total cost of $1.16
million, which approximates $4.71 per small importer. The estimated
average hourly burden of eFiling for small importers of children's and
non-children's products would be $3.33 and $13.03. These amounts are
unlikely to exceed one percentage of the annual revenue of a typical
small importer.
(ii) eFiling Out-of-Pocket Costs
Startup Costs: eFiling may require some firms to invest in a
combination of new technologies,\52\ as well as training and/or hiring
staff to conduct eFiling activities. Large firms may be able to build
these new technologies themselves. Third-party service providers may
develop tools that large or small firms may use.\53\ Firms are also
likely to train staff on the use of these new technologies and the
updated processes that support eFiling of certificates, including
participating in meetings with their brokers, reading guidance
documents, and communicating and distributing information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ For instance, larger importers and manufacturers may choose
to invest in technology to enable batch uploads of data into the
Product Registry or to submit certificate data to their brokers.
Most small importers are unlikely to have the incentives to develop
in-house tools, but they may purchase third-party software or
services. The Final Rule, however, does not require any specific
investments from large or small importers.
\53\ CPSC does not expect small businesses to invest in
technology due to the creation of CPSC's Product Registry. A small
business only needs a laptop with a hard drive for storing records
and an internet connection to enter certificates into the Product
Registry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A survey conducted among Beta Pilot participants indicated that
firms invested roughly the equivalent of 60 staff hours in preparation
for their participation in the Beta Pilot, including getting trained,
understanding and communicating the guidance, gathering product
information, and coordinating with their brokers. However, most firms
that participated in the Beta pilot are of significant size, which
likely implies the startup times for the average firm may not be as
large. Also, the potential introduction of third-party tools or third-
party support to perform these duties will likely reduce the number of
hours required for setting up the logistics of the average firm to
conduct eFiling activities. Accordingly, the FRFA assumes that the
average firm will invest the equivalent of only one-third of the value
of startup activities, or the monetized equivalent of 20 hours,\54\ in
all startup activities. Many firms could likely hire third parties that
benefit from economies of scale, instead of devoting as many staff
hours to startup tasks; or will use a combination of third-party
vendors and staff to set up eFiling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ This corresponds to a learning factor of 3, one sixth the
size of the learning factor used to estimate processing times for
Reference Message Sets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This FRFA converts the 20 hours of startup time into an average
cost per firm of $1,086 using an average compensation rate for
managerial and administrative occupations.\55\ This startup cost per
firm does not exceed one percent of revenue of the typical small firm
in each of the industries impacted by this Final Rule, as discussed
later in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ As of June 2024, the hourly rate for management,
professional, and related occupations at good producing industries
was $73.02, while the hourly rate for office and administrative
support occupations was $35.56. Staff assumes that the hours
invested in startup activities are one half managerial and one-half
support staff, which produces an average hourly rate of $54.29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Filing Fees: Many importers use import brokers to facilitate
customs filings and reporting with the U.S. government. Brokers
typically charge a fee per entry or per entry line that is filed, and
each entry line may contain one or more product certificates. During
the eFiling Beta Pilot in 2024, brokers had made or were making
technological investments needed for eFiling, and the fees that brokers
would charge for eFiling would cover these investments. This FRFA
includes these broker fees as a cost for importers. While it is
uncertain what changes, and the magnitude of changes, firms would
choose to make to their technology, brokers will likely seek to recover
their investments through fees. Use of the Product Registry will reduce
the
[[Page 1833]]
complexity of Message Sets by allowing importers to supply only a
Unique ID for each product certificate, which may result in less
complex entries and reduced brokers fees.
The fees that brokers charge vary with the complexity of the
Message Set and with the number of Message Sets filed. Most brokers
charge a maximum fee per entry, which reduces the filing fees per
certificate for firms that file multiple certificates per entry. This
FRFA assumes that the majority of importers will choose to file as many
product certificates as possible per entry, and this action will
significantly lower the cost per individual product certificate filed.
The estimated average fee per filing under these conditions is
$0.77.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ Average fees per certificate are estimated assuming a
maximum fee per entry of $25, which is based on information provided
by Beta Pilot participants. Staff then assumes that the average
importer receives an average number of shipments per year, and
estimated the number of certificates per entry dividing the average
number of GCCs and CPCs per year by the average number of shipments.
Finally, the average fees per GCCs and CPCs are estimated dividing
$25 per entry by the average number of certificates included with
each entry; these averages then are weighted by the total number of
GCCs and CPCs to obtain an overall weighted average per certificate
of $0.77.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed, the eFiling burden depends on the number of filings,
the number of annual certificates generated by each small importer, and
the frequency of product imports. This FRFA assumes that each
certificate will generate a total of 23.7 annual filings,\57\ out of
which 20.7 require broker fees \58\ for a total of $15.97 per
certificate. Accounting for the number of certificates filed annually
per NAICS code, the range of fees for an average small importer would
fluctuate between $2 and $686 depending on the industry. This range is
unlikely to exceed one percent of revenue for most small importers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ This number of filings includes 20 Reference Message Sets,
0.7 Full Message Sets, and 3 Disclaimer Message Sets per average
certificate. Most brokers are not expected to charge a fee for
Disclaimer Message Sets.
\58\ Brokers will charge fees for 20.7 filings per certificate.
This number results from adding up the expected number of Reference
Message Sets per certificate (20) with the number of Full Message
Sets (0.7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Overall Cost to Small Importers
CPSC estimates the cost to small importers \59\ of CPSC regulated
products by summing the costs and sub costs from:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ The cost to small domestic manufacturers is non-
significant, only a few cents per firm, and indicated earlier, so it
is not included in this section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
recordkeeping,
eFiling of certificates,
[cir] filing hourly burden,
[cir] eFiling out-of-pocket cost,
[ssquf] startup costs, and
[ssquf] filing fees.
Table 8 shows the cost from the additional recordkeeping and
eFiling requirements on small importers. Small importers, a total of
35,290 small firms, will have to maintain records of GCCs and their
supporting information for two additional years, which generates an
additional annual cost of $5,038.\60\ Additionally, these 35,290 small
importers \61\ will eFile GCCs at a burden of 12,930 hours, which is a
cost of $459,778, and another 211,148 small importers will eFile CPCs
with CBP at a total additional burden \62\ of 19,744 hours, which is a
cost of $702,110. In total, this is 32,674 hours per year and a total
estimated cost of $1.16 million for eFiling's hourly burden.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ If domestic manufacturers were included here, this figure
would increase by $2,041 to $7,079.
\61\ Staff estimates the number of small businesses during the
PRA Analysis by multiplying the estimated proportion of small
businesses for a given NAICS industry by the number of estimated
firms for that industry. For an explanation of how staff estimated
the number of firms see section VIII of this preamble.
\62\ Additional Burden is defined as the difference between
existing burden from statute and other applicable rules and that of
the Final Rule.
Table 8--Total Estimated Initial Cost of the Rule to Small Importers
[First-year costs]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual cost of the final rule to importers GCCs CPCs All
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden.......................... $5,038 $0 $5,038
eFiling Hourly Burden........................................... 459,778 702,110 1,161,888
Total Startup Costs......................................... 38,317,945 229,264,000 267,581,945
Annual Filing Fees.......................................... 1,357,259 2,072,622 3,429,881
eFiling Out of Pocket Cost...................................... 39,675,204 231,336,622 271,011,826
Impact of eFiling on Importers.................................. 40,134,982 232,038,732 272,173,714
-----------------------------------------------
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers......................... 40,140,020 232,038,732 272,178,752
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the hourly burden, small importers of CPSC regulated
products will also bear monetary costs that include total startup costs
of $267.58 million and eFiling fees of $3.43 million for a total out-
of-pocket cost burden of $271.01 million. The total overall cost of the
Final Rule on small importers reaches $272.18 million in the first year
of the Final Rule of which $232.04 are linked to children's product
certificates and $40.14 are linked to non-children product
certificates.
Table 9 presents the corresponding annualized costs of the Final
Rule to small importers. As opposed to Table 8 that shows the total
startup cost, Table 9 presents the annualized startup cost to small
importers over a time span of 30 years at a 2 percent discount
rate.\63\ The total annualized cost to small importers is $16.54
million; $3.53 million for small importers of general use products and
$13.01 million for small importers of children's products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ This is rate of discount or default social rate of time
preference set by Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Guidance for
all effects from the present through 30 years into the future in
Circular A-4 (Regulatory Analysis) of November 2023.
Table 9--Estimated Annualized Cost of the Rule to Small Importers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual cost of the final rule to importers GCCs CPCs All
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden.......................... $5,038 $0 $5,038
eFiling Hourly Burden........................................... 459,778 702,110 1,161,888
Annualized Startup Costs.................................... 1,710,893 10,236,620 11,947,513
Annual Filing Fees.......................................... 1,357,259 2,072,622 3,429,881
[[Page 1834]]
eFiling Out of Pocket Cost...................................... 3,068,152 12,309,242 15,377,394
Impact of eFiling on Importers.................................. 3,527,930 13,011,352 16,539,282
-----------------------------------------------
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers......................... 3,532,968 13,011,352 16,544,320
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 10 presents the average costs of the Final Rule per small
importer. Small importers will incur an average cost of $1,104 per firm
($272.18 million/246,438 small importers) in first-year costs in
connection with the Final Rule's new requirements. The cost per small
importer of non-children's products will be on average $1,137, while
the cost per small importer of children's products will be $1,099. The
difference between these two estimates is mainly driven by a larger
number of certificates created by small importers of non-children's
products.
Table 10--Estimated Average Cost of the Rule per Small Importer
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average cost per small importer GCCs CPCs Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average Additional Recordkeeping Hourly Burden.................. $0.14 $0.00 $0.02
Average eFiling Hourly Burden................................... 13.03 3.33 4.71
Average Annualized Startup Costs............................ 1,085.80 1,085.80 1,085.80
Average Annual Filing Fees.................................. 38.46 9.82 13.92
Average eFiling Out of Pocket Cost.............................. 1,124.26 1,095.62 1,099.72
Average Impact of eFiling per Importer.......................... 1,137.29 1,098.94 1,104.43
-----------------------------------------------
Average Cost of the Rule per Small Importer..................... 1,137.43 1,098.94 1,104.45
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. eFiling Impact as a Percent of Filed Certificate Value
The Final Rule requires importers to eFile certificates with CBP at
entry, at which point the import value of the shipment is tabulated.
This FRFA compares the burden of the eFiling requirements to the
average sales value per certificate filed \64\ for imported products
subject to the Final Rule's eFiling requirement. This approach provides
a pragmatic assessment of the Final Rule's impact on small firms. Table
11 shows the burden cost per certificate filed and its relative cost
impact as a percentage of expected revenue per certificate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Staff obtained the shipment value per certificate filed
from CPSC's division of import surveillance (EXIS). Staff added a
60% markup to estimate the sales value of the imported products.
Table 11--Estimated Annual Impact of the Rule on Small Importers as a Percentage of Revenue
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost as share of estimated revenue per certificate GCCs CPCs All
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Cost of the Rule to Importers............................. $40,140,020 $232,038,732 $272,178,752
Total Number of eFilings.................................... 2,102,147 3,210,113 5,312,260
Average Cost Per eFiling.................................... 19.09 72.28 51.24
Estimated Revenue per Certificate Filed......................... 12,050 12,050 12,050
-----------------------------------------------
Cost as a % of Estimated Revenue per Certificate............ 0.1585% 0.5999% 0.4252%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 11 shows that small importers of general use products will
bear an estimated burden of $19.09 per eFiling and a total initial cost
of $40.14 million during the first year of implementation of the Final
Rule. Small importers of children's products will bear an estimated
$72.28 burden per eFiling for a total initial cost of $232.04
million.\65\ During the first year of implementation of the Final Rule,
the average burden of the Final Rule across importers of all products
regulated by CPSC is $51.24, which represents 0.43 percent of the
average revenue per certificate filed. If these initial cost estimates
are annualized over a 30-year lifespan at a 2 percent discount rate,
small importers will bear an annualized cost of $3.11 per certificate
filing ($1.68 per GCC filing and $4.05 per CPC filing). These equate to
$16.54 million in annualized cost to small importers: $3.53 million to
small importers of general use products and $13.01 million to small
importers of children products. The estimated impact per eFiling for
both importers of general use products and importers of children's
products is well under one percent of the estimated revenue from
selling the imported products associated with each eFiling.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Note that small importers of children's products as a group
include a larger number of firms and eFilings than importers of non-
children's products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Net Impact on Small Businesses
CPSC uses the threshold of one percent of revenue to estimate
whether a given rule will have a significant impact on the small
businesses the rule covers.
Table 12 shows the average revenue for firms smaller than the
largest 50 firms in a given NAICS code.\66\ This segment is
characteristic of smaller firms. The Final Rule impact does not exceed
the threshold of one percent of the average revenue of this subset of
small firms because the overall cost impact of the Final Rule is
minimal. Several NAICS industries have an
[[Page 1835]]
average revenue of slightly under $1 million for firms smaller than the
top 50. However, the one percent threshold (in this case, roughly
$10,000) is greater than both the cost of the Final Rule of $1,137 per
small importers of nonchildren's products, and $1,099 per small
importers of children's products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ ECN Core Statistics Economic Census (2017): Establishment
and Firm Size Statistics for the U.S. https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/economic-census/data/2017/sector00/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the SNPR the Commission requested comments on the average annual
revenues of small businesses within the impacted industries and
alternative industry classifications for SBA purposes, but did not
receive any comments.
Table 12--Average Revenue for Firms Smaller Than the Top 50 by NAICS Industry
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2017 Average revenue for firms smaller than top 50 ($ thousands)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product Min NAICS 1% of
% Small NAICS 1 NAICS 2 NAICS 3 NAICS 1 NAICS 2 NAICS 3 revenue revenue
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Matchbooks......................... 97 339999 325998 ........... $920 $8,491 ........... $920 $9
Bicycle Helmets.................... 83 339113 339920 ........... 4,305 1,979 ........... 1,979 20
CB Band Base Station Antennas...... 75 334220 ........... ........... 5,351 ........... ........... 5,351 54
Walk Behind Power Mowers........... 95 333112 ........... ........... 1,288 ........... ........... 1,288 13
Swimming Pool Slides............... 85 ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ...........
Cellulose Insulation............... 37 322219 322299 ........... 3,445 4,127 ........... 3,445 34
Cigarette and Multipurpose Lighters 97 339999 325998 ........... 920 8,491 ........... 920 9
Garage Door Openers................ 97 332321 332710 335999 5,069 1,806 4,220 1,806 18
Furniture (paint & entrapment), 85 337110 337121 337122 1,115 2,481 771 771 8
Furniture (bunk beds).............
Furniture (bunk beds).............. 85 337124 ........... ........... 979 ........... ........... 979 10
Paints and Coatings................ 90 325211 325510 ........... 18,334 5,321 ........... 5,321 53
ATVs............................... 95 336999 ........... ........... 1,410 ........... ........... 1,410 14
Pools and Spas (VGB Act)........... 85 ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ........... ...........
Fireworks Devices.................. 90 325998 ........... ........... 8,491 ........... ........... 8,491 85
Bicycles........................... 95 336991 ........... ........... 958 ........... ........... 958 10
Carpets and Rugs................... 95 314110 ........... ........... 1,800 ........... ........... 1,800 18
Mattresses......................... 95 337910 ........... ........... 3,400 ........... ........... 3,400 34
Refrigerators...................... 95 333415 335220 ........... 9,159 ........... ........... 9,159 92
Candles w/Metal Core Wicks......... 66 325612 ........... ........... 3,266 ........... ........... 3,266 33
Refuse Bins........................ 62 326199 ........... ........... 12,445 ........... ........... 12,445 124
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Impact on Importers of De Minimis Shipments
Merchandise imported by one person on one day that is accorded a
duty exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C), for which the aggregate
fair retail value in the country of shipment does not exceed $800, is
commonly known as a de minimis shipment. Such merchandise may be
entered under the ``release from manifest'' process or via the ACE
Entry Type 86 Test (89 FR 2630 (Jan 16. 2024)). Merchandise subject to
PGA requirements, such as CPSC's PGA Message Set or certification
requirement for regulated consumer products, is ineligible for entry
under the ``release from manifest'' process. Accordingly, the Final
Rule requires that importers file a type 86 entry for de minimis
shipments to submit CPSC's PGA Message Set. Staff estimate that a
significant number of small importers would need to file type 86 entry
for de minimis shipments containing a product subject to a CPSC rule,
ban, standard, or regulation. These small businesses ship thousands of
units of products through de minimis entries. Staff considered current
entry type 86 shipments in HTS codes that could fall within CPSC's
jurisdiction, although CPSC has no way to determine whether these
shipments contain consumer products or whether such products are
regulated by CPSC. As shown in Figure 1, the median value of a de
minimis shipment is about $30; after applying a direct-to-consumer
markup, staff estimates the sales value is $48.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ The sales value i.e. revenue, of the shipment is the value
of the shipment that CPSC estimates based on trade data plus a
direct-to-consumer markup of 60%. See https://www.shopify.com/retail/product-pricing-for-wholesale-and-retail. CPSC's estimate
relies on de minimis shipments that filed an ET 86 entry, which does
not include shipments that did not file an entry or international
mail shipments. However, CPSC's estimate covers all de minimis
shipments by extrapolating from the data based on the ratios of
products under CPSC jurisdiction for de minimis shipments entered
under Entry Type 86.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 1836]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR08JA25.000
Under current shipping conditions, importers of parties eligible to
file a type 86 entry would likely eFile a single certificate per entry;
this would increase the filing fees per certificate to the point that
it might represent a significant portion (greater than one percent) of
the value of each shipment.
CBP reports that they process approximately 4 million de minimis
shipments a day.\68\ In 2022, CBP reported 685.1 million total de
minimis shipments, which are also called section 321 shipments.\69\
Until this Final Rule is in effect, importers of regulated consumer
products claiming a de minimis exemption are not required to submit
CPSC's PGA Message Set using entry type 86. Accordingly, CPSC currently
does not know how many de minimis shipments per day contain finished
products within CPSC's jurisdiction, nor how many of those finished
products are subject to a rule, ban, standard, or regulation enforced
by CPSC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ https://www.cbp.gov/frontline/buyer-beware-bad-actors-exploit-de-minimis-shipments.
\69\ https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/trade.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The RFA requires consideration of the impact of the Final Rule on
U.S. small businesses. Importers can be either foreign \70\ or domestic
firms and firms of varying sizes. CBP does not classify importers by
size. Accordingly, without additional data on de minimis and mail
shipments, and who uses this mode of importation, CPSC does not have
sufficient information to estimate the number of small U.S. firms that
would be impacted by the Final Rule requirements. To the extent that de
minimis entries are primarily caused by foreign companies, for example,
such costs would not be included in the FRFA impact assessment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ For example, if a consumer received a direct shipment from
a foreign company, no U.S. small business may be involved in the
transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, as a result of the Final Rule, some firms may choose to
cease using entry type 86 if this importation route becomes more
costly, and may choose to bundle shipments using another entry type,
such as an 01 entry for consumption or warehousing. However, CPSC does
not have enough information to determine what percentage of the
impacted firms would be able to structure their import transactions in
a manner to avoid a substantial increase in fees. Additionally, CPSC
does not know whether some of these firms may have other sources of
revenue offsetting the type 86 entry filing requirement or whether some
of these firms are actually subsidiaries of larger firms. Accordingly,
CPSC is currently unable to estimate the impact of the Final Rule on
small U.S. importers of de minimis shipments.
E. Alternatives for Reducing the Adverse Impact on Small Businesses
CPSC considered three alternatives to the Final Rule:
(1) Make eFiling of certificates voluntary, instead of mandatory;
(2) Require PDF submissions of certificates rather than eFiling
certificates; and
(3) Extend the effective date of the Final Rule to 36 months for
all products, regardless of their origin.
Alternative 1 to the Final Rule would allow, rather than require,
certificate data for imported products to be eFiled at entry. If the
Commission adopted this alternative, the certificate would still have
to be available for examination upon request, as it is now. Allowing,
instead of requiring, certificates to be eFiled at entry could reduce
the burden on small businesses, but it would not meaningfully enhance
the Commission's ability to target shipments for examination by using
the additional certificate data elements collected via eFiling, nor to
enforce and verify the accuracy of certificates. This alternative would
largely maintain the status quo, because it is likely that only a few
firms would choose to eFile certificates; therefore, unlike mandatory
eFiling, this alternative would not reduce costly delays at the ports.
Alternative 2 to the Rule would require PDF submissions of
certificates. For imported products, the importer could upload a PDF to
CBP's Document
[[Page 1837]]
Image System. Similar to Alternative 1, this alternative would not
enhance the Commission's ability to target shipments for examination by
using the additional certificate data elements collected via eFiling.
Not only are PDF files not useful for targeting, but CBP is also
unlikely to allow the collection and maintenance of a large volume of
PDFs in ACE, because PDF files require a relatively large amount of
storage space.
Alternative 3 would delay implementation of the Final Rule by
changing the effective date from 18 months for all consumer products
subject to a CPSC rule, ban, standard, or regulation not entered from
an FTZ and 24 months for products and substances entered for
consumption or warehousing from an FTZ, to 36 months for all CPSC
regulated products regardless of their origin. This would allow small
firms importing from non-FTZ areas 24 additional months to implement
any new technology and organizational changes needed for eFiling, train
staff, communicate with partners, and perform quality controls, among
other activities. Alternative 3 did not receive any substantive
comments from small firms importing from non-FTZs indicating a need for
such an extension. The Commission has already extended the 120-day
effective date to 18 months, providing small firms with an ample amount
of time for preparation and implementation activities.
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Final Rule contains information collection requirements that
are subject to public comment and review by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the PRA. 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521. The PRA requires
an agency to publish the following information:
[ssquf] a title for the collection of information;
[ssquf] a summary of the collection of information;
[ssquf] a brief description of the need for the information and the
proposed use of the information;
[ssquf] a description of the likely respondents and proposed
frequency of response to the collection of information;
[ssquf] an estimate of the burden that will result from the
collection of information; and
[ssquf] notice that comments may be submitted to OMB.
44 U.S.C. 3507(a)(1)(D).
The Final Rule creates a new collection of information for
certificates for non-children's products and expands the existing
collection for Third Party Testing of Children's Products, OMB Control
No. 3041-0159. The Children's Product OMB control number would expand
to include eFiling certificates for imported children's products that
are subject to a CPSC rule requiring certification. We update and
summarize that information here.
In accordance with OMB's requirement, the Commission provides the
following information:
Title: (1) Certification of Non-Children's Products; (2) Amendment
to Third Party Testing of Children's Products, approved previously
under OMB Control Number 3041-0159.
Summary, Need, and Use of Information: Sections I and II of this
preamble contain this information.
Respondents and Frequency: For products manufactured outside of the
United States, respondents include importers of consumer products
subject to a CPSC-enforced regulation. For products manufactured within
the United States, respondents include manufacturers and private
labelers of consumer products subject to a CPSC-enforced regulation.
Estimated Burden: CPSC has estimated the respondent burden in hours
and the estimated labor costs to respondents.
Estimate of Respondent Burden: Below we categorize and estimate the
burden created by both the statute and the Final Rule for children's
and non-children's regulated products as follows:
Certificates: The burden associated with the creation of
certificates (GCCs and CPCs). This can be considered a general
recordkeeping burden.
Disclosure: The burden derived from disclosing certificate
information and from furnishing the certificates to these third parties
(distributors and retailers).
Recordkeeping: The burden associated with the initial storage and
routine maintenance of records, including records of the certificates
and any supporting and testing documentation, for a period of five
years.
eFiling: The initial burden from electronically filing the
certificates, using either the CPSC-maintained Product Registry or the
systems provided by the brokers that support importers' activities, as
well as the routine burden on importers submitting associated Full or
Reference PGA Message Sets.
A. Hourly Burden for GCCs
CPSC estimates that there may be 49,364 non-children's products
firms subject to the Final Rule. On average, these firms are expected
to create 27 certificates per year, for a total of 1,333,982
certificates.\71\ CPSC assumes each certificate will require 5 minutes
of labor per certificate, which equates to 111,165 hours spent on their
creation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Totals shown may not exactly match the product of component
parts due to rounding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These same firms must keep the records supporting the certificates
for a period of five years. CPSC assumes recordkeeping will take, on
average, 1 minute for record creation and initial storage and an
additional 15 seconds for the routine annual maintenance of the
certificate record. This annual burden comes to 27,791 hours (1.25
minutes/60 x 1,333,982 certificates).
The firms must also disclose each certificate to retailers and
distributors of the product upon request; thus, staff estimates an
additional 0.25 hours (15 minutes) burden for third-party disclosure.
This sums to 333,495 hours (15 minutes/60 x 1,333,982 certificates).
CPSC estimates the number of responses for eFiling as 23,491,168.
The average filing takes roughly 22 seconds across filing modes. This
adds to an estimated eFiling burden of 144,487 hours (22 seconds/3,600
x 23,491,168).\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ The estimates from the equation may not match the total
number of hours due to rounding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The aggregate burden of the Final Rule for suppliers of non-
children's products is 616,939 hours and has a total cost of
$26,102,580. This estimate includes the burden imposed by statute,
which non-children's products suppliers would bear in absence of the
Final Rule. The net burden from the Final Rule--excluding the statutory
burden--is 146,710 hours \73\ and the net cost is $5,217,007. Table 13
shows that importers of general use products requiring a GCC bear most
of both the statutory burden and the additional burden from the eFiling
requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ This includes the entire eFiling burden of 144,487 hours
and 2,223 hours of additional hours of recordkeeping due to the
increase in the recordkeeping period of GCCs from 3 to 5 years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPSC expects that 82 percent of the firms supplying non-children's
products subject to the Final Rule will be importers with the remaining
18 percent as manufacturers. As shown in Table 13, staff estimate the
statutory burden borne by importers is 480,905 hours (78%) and the
expected burden to manufacturers as 136,034 hours (22%). The net annual
burden of the Final Rule of 146,710 hours can be broken into a
[[Page 1838]]
burden of 146,070 hours borne by importers (99.6%) and 640 hours borne
by manufacturers (0.4%).
Table 13--Total Burden on Non-Children Products Covered by Part 1110
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost per
Total burden Respondents Frequency Responses Response Burden burden hour Total cost
of response time hours \74\ of burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certificates................................................ 49,364 27.0 1,333,982 0.0833 111,165 $73.02 $8,117,279
Disclosure.................................................. 49,364 27.0 1,333,982 0.2500 333,495 35.56 11,859,097
Recordkeeping............................................... 49,364 27.0 1,333,982 0.0208 27,791 35.56 988,258
eFiling..................................................... 40,665 577.7 23,491,168 0.0062 144,487 35.56 5,137,946
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 49,364 557.0 27,493,113 0.0224 616,939 42.31 26,102,580
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Burden from the Rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 49,364 475.9 23,491,168 0.006245 146,710 35.56 5,217,007
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Manufacturers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certificates................................................ 8,699 44.2 384,095 0.0833 32,008 73.02 2,337,219
Disclosure.................................................. 8,699 44.2 384,095 0.2500 96,024 35.56 3,414,607
Recordkeeping............................................... 8,699 44.2 384,095 0.0208 8,002 35.56 284,551
eFiling..................................................... 0 0.0 0 0.0000 0 0.00 0
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 8,699 132.5 1,152,286 0.1181 136,034 44.37 6,036,377
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Burden to Manufacturers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 8,699 0.0 0 0.0000 640 35.56 22,764
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Importers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certificates................................................ 40,665 23.4 949,886 0.0833 79,157 73.02 5,780,059
Disclosure.................................................. 40,665 23.4 949,886 0.2500 237,472 35.56 8,444,491
Recordkeeping............................................... 40,665 23.4 949,886 0.0208 19,789 35.56 703,708
eFiling..................................................... 40,665 577.7 23,491,168 0.0062 144,487 35.56 5,137,946
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 40,665 647.8 26,340,828 0.0183 480,905 41.73 20,066,203
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Burden to Importers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 40,665 577.7 23,491,168 0.0062 146,070 35.56 5,194,243
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
B. Hourly Burden for eFiling CPCs
Section 14 of the CPSA requires third-party testing of children's
products that are subject to an applicable children's product safety
rule to ensure compliance with such rules. Based on this testing,
manufacturers, including importers, are required to certify compliance
of their products to the applicable standards. The burden associated
with certificate production, recordkeeping, and disclosure is already
subject to an OMB control number, 3041-0159, for children's product
testing, as set forth in 16 CFR parts 1107 and 1109. The Final Rule
adds a certificate eFiling requirement for importers of finished
children's products and estimates the reporting burden for this
requirement.
Table 14 presents CPSC's estimate that there are 224,000 small
importers supplying children's products. Commission staff estimates an
average of 152 certificate filings per firm based on assumptions
supported on data from the Division of Import Surveillance and the Beta
Pilot, which means that 34,055,116 shipments related to imported
children's products would be annually required to eFile certificates,
with an estimated eFiling burden of 209,462 hours.\75\ This number only
includes burden imposed by the Final Rule, so the net burden from the
Final Rule is also 209,462 hours, and the cost of this additional
burden from the Final Rule is $7,448,474.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ To estimate the cost of the hourly burden, CPSC staff used
the hourly compensation (benefits plus wage) of management,
professional, and related occupations in goods-producing industries
for the production of certificates ($73.02), and the hourly
compensation of office and administrative support occupations in
good-producing industries for the disclosure, recordkeeping, and
eFiling of certificates ($35.56). These hourly compensation
estimates were obtained from the report on ``Employer Cost for
Employee Compensation'' prepared by the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics as of June 2024. https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t04.htm.
\75\ The average filing takes roughly 22 seconds across filing
modes. This adds to an estimated eFiling burden of 209,462 hours (22
seconds/3,600 x 34,055,116). The result from this equation may not
exactly match the total due to rounding.
\76\ To estimate the cost of the hourly burden of eFiling, staff
used the hourly compensation (benefits plus wage) of office and
administrative support occupations in good producing industries
($35.56). This hourly compensation estimate was obtained from the
report on ``Employer Cost for Employee Compensation'' prepared by
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as of June 2024. https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t04.htm.
[[Page 1839]]
Table 14--eFiling Children's Product Certificates (CPC)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cost per
Total burden Respondents Frequency Responses Response Burden burden hour Total cost
of response time hours \76\ of burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
eFiling..................................................... 224,000 152.0 34,055,116 0.0062 209,462 $35.56 $7,448,474
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Burden from the Rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total................................................... 224,000 152.0 34,055,116 0.0062 209,462 35.56 7,448,474
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Burden Estimate Breakdowns by Imported and Domestically Manufactured
Products
Table 15 provides a summary of the analysis for imported products,
and Table 16 provides a summary of this analysis for domestically
manufactured products.
Table 15--Import Data Analysis by Product
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total CPC GCC
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product Total Total Percent of CPC Percent of GCC
respondents responses Resp as CPC responses Resp as GCC responses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Architectural Glazing Materials... 792 11,717 0 0 100 11,717
Artificial Emberizing Materials... 16 5 0 0 100 5
ATVs.............................. 41 37,795 25 9,449 75 28,346
Baby Changing Products............ 4,027 523,490 100 523,490 0 0
Bassinets and Cradles............. 76 2,299 100 2,299 0 0
Bedside Sleepers.................. 230 75,979 100 75,979 0 0
Bicycle Helmets................... 624 16,300 50 8,150 50 8,150
Bicycles.......................... 194 125,796 50 62,898 50 62,898
Bunk Beds--Furniture.............. 2,076 89,801 75 67,351 25 22,450
Button Batteries.................. 57 523 0 0 100 523
Candles with metal-cored wicks.... 2,616 27,843 0 0 100 27,843
Carpets and Rugs.................. 186 261,374 25 65,344 75 196,031
Carriages and Strollers........... 243 9,030 100 9,030 0 0
CB Antennas....................... 538 12,594 0 0 100 12,594
Cellulose Insulation.............. 5,764 46,511 0 0 100 46,511
Children's folding chairs and 1,273 67,489 100 67,489 0 0
stools...........................
Children's Sleepwear.............. 112 66,855 100 66,855 0 0
Cigarette & Multipurpose Lighters. 69 3,908 0 0 100 3,908
Clacker Balls..................... 4,863 10,243 100 10,243 0 0
Clothing Storage Units............ 2,992 316,923 0 0 100 316,923
Consumer Patching Compounds....... 864 13,101 0 0 100 13,101
Crib mattresses................... 154 8,294 100 8,294 0 0
Cribs............................. 81 14,206 100 14,206 0 0
Dive Sticks and Other Similar 2,003 4,853 100 4,853 0 0
Articles.........................
Drywall........................... 68 35,134 0 0 100 35,134
Electrically Operated Toys or 1,012 15,794 100 15,794 0 0
Articles.........................
Fireworks......................... 132 47,076 0 0 100 47,076
Frame Child Carriers.............. 0 0 100 0 0 0
Furniture......................... 1,092 5,402,165 0 0 100 5,402,165
Garage Door Openers............... 3,451 10,533 0 0 100 10,533
Gates and enclosures.............. 87 7,018 100 7,018 0 0
Hand-Held Infant Carriers......... 0 0 100 0 0 0
High chairs....................... 172 14,990 100 14,990 0 0
Imitation Firearms................ 992 3,853 0 0 100 3,853
Infant Bath Seats................. 73 507 100 507 0 0
Infant Bath Tubs.................. 1,594 5,929 100 5,929 0 0
Infant Bouncer Seats.............. 82 5,224 100 5,224 0 0
Infant Sleep Products............. 739 80,644 100 80,644 0 0
Infant Swings..................... 95 1,388 100 1,388 0 0
Infant Walkers.................... 33 3,183 100 3,183 0 0
Lawn Darts........................ 2,353 4,704 0 0 100 4,704
Liquid Nicotine Packaging......... 536 2,242 0 0 100 2,242
Magnets........................... 908 34,846 0 0 100 34,846
Matchbooks........................ 71 241 0 0 100 241
Mattresses........................ 329 167,504 50 83,752 50 83,752
Pacifiers......................... 146 4,166 100 4,166 0 0
Paints............................ 812 154,543 0 0 100 154,543
Play Yards........................ 71 3,400 100 3,400 0 0
Pool and Spa drain covers......... 2,636 33,397 0 0 100 33,397
Portable Bedrails................. 7,605 29,814 100 29,814 0 0
Portable fuel containers.......... 386 5,974 0 0 100 5,974
Portable gas containers........... 386 5,974 0 0 100 5,974
Portable hook-on chairs........... 564 5,328 0 0 100 5,328
Power Mowers...................... 111 18,865 0 0 100 18,865
Rattles........................... 592 7,939 100 7,939 0 0
Refrigerator doors................ 140 74,190 0 0 100 74,190
Refuse Bins....................... 2,407 2,717 0 0 100 2,717
[[Page 1840]]
Sling Carriers.................... 0 0 100 0 0 0
Soft Infant and Toddler Carriers.. 0 0 100 0 0 0
Special Packaging (PPPA).......... 310 1,410,691 0 0 100 1,410,691
Stationary activity centers....... 37 3,093 100 3,093 0 0
Swimming Pool Slides.............. 886 4,184 0 0 100 4,184
Toddler Beds...................... 76 1,839 100 1,839 0 0
Toys.............................. 1,926 1,349,066 100 1,349,066 0 0
Vinyl Plastic Film................ 729 33,719 50 16,859 50 16,859
Wearing Apparel................... 220 16,290,891 50 8,145,446 50 8,145,446
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 16--Domestic Manufacturer Data by Product Category
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CFR Product categories NAICS NAICS_description Respondents
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 CFR part 1201..................... Architectural Glazing 327211 Flat Glass Manufacturing. 19
Materials.
16 CFR part 1201..................... Architectural Glazing 321911 Wood Window and Door 48
Materials. Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1201..................... Architectural Glazing 326199 All Other Plastics 139
Materials. Product Manufacturing:
Doors and door frames,
plastics, manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1201..................... Architectural Glazing 327215 Glass Product 50
Materials. Manufacturing Made of
Purchased Glass.
16 CFR part 1201..................... Architectural Glazing 332321 Metal Window and Door 45
Materials. Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1305..................... Artificial Emberizing 327999 All Other Miscellaneous 7
Materials. Nonmetallic Mineral
Product Manufacturing:
Asbestos products
(except brake shoes and
clutches) manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1420..................... ATVs.................... 336999 All other transportation 5
equipment manufacturing:
All-terrain vehicles
(ATVs), wheeled or
tracked, manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1203..................... Bicycle Helmets......... 339920 Sporting and athletic 38
goods manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1512..................... Bicycles................ 336991 Motorcycle, bicycle, and 125
parts manufacturing:
Bicycles and parts
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1500.17(a)(13)........... Candles w/Metal Core 339999 All other miscellaneous 1,000
Wicks. manufacturing: candle
manufacturing.
16 CFR parts 1630 and 1631........... Carpets and Rugs........ 314110 Carpet and rug mills..... 185
16 CFR parts 1630 and 1631........... Carpets and Rugs........ 314999 All other miscellaneous 219
textile product mills.
16 CFR part 1204..................... CB Band Base Station 334220 Radio and television 10
Antennas. broadcasting and
wireless communications
equipment manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1209..................... Cellulose Insulation.... 321219 Reconstituted Wood 65
Product Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1210 and 1212............ Cigarette Lighters...... 339999 All other miscellaneous 29
manufacturing: Cigarette
lighters (except
precious metal)
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1261..................... Clothing Storage Units.. 337122 Nonupholstered Wood 2,012
Household Furniture
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1261..................... Clothing Storage Units.. 337127 Institutional Furniture 581
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1507; 16 CFR 1500.17(3) Fireworks Devices....... 325998 All other miscellaneous -
and 1500.17(8). chemical product and
preparation
manufacturing: Fireworks
manufacturing.
16 CFR parts 1213.................... Furniture (bunk beds)... 337122 Nonupholstered Wood 50
Household Furniture
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337122 Nonupholstered Wood 201
entrapment). Household Furniture
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337127 Institutional Furniture 29
entrapment). Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337121 Upholstered Household 73
entrapment). Furniture Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337211 Wood Office Furniture 15
entrapment). Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337212 Custom Architectural 52
entrapment). Woodwork and Millwork
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Furniture (paint & 337214 Office Furniture (except 5
entrapment). Wood) Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1211..................... Garage Door Openers..... 335999 All Other Miscellaneous 9
Electrical Equipment and
Component Manufacturing:
Garage door openers
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1306..................... Lawn Darts.............. 339920 Sporting and Athletic 10
Goods Manufacturing.
15 U.S.C. 1472a...................... Liquid Nicotine 325411 Medicinal and Botanical 278
Packaging. Manufacturing: Nicotine
and derivatives (i.e.,
basic chemicals)
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1262..................... Magnets................. 327110 Pottery, Ceramics, and 7
Plumbing Fixture
Manufacturing--Magnets,
permanent, ceramic or
ferrite, manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1262..................... Magnets................. 332999 All Other Miscellaneous 18
Fabricated Metal Product
Manufacturing--Magnets,
permanent, metallic,
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1202..................... Matchbooks.............. 325998 All other miscellaneous 6
chemical product and
preparation
manufacturing: Matches
and matchbook
manufacturing.
16 CFR parts 1632 and 1633........... Mattresses, Pads, and 337910 Mattress manufacturing... 314
Sets.
16 CFR parts 1632 and 1633........... Mattresses, Pads, and 337121 Upholstered Household 686
Sets. Furniture Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1303..................... Paints and Coatings..... 325510 Paint and coating 100
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1304..................... Patching Compounds...... 327999 All Other Miscellaneous 10
Nonmetallic Mineral
Product Manufacturing:
Asbestos products
(except brake shoes and
clutches) manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1460..................... Portable gas containers. 326199 All Other Plastics 10
Product Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 324110 Petroleum Refineries: 16
Solvents made in
petroleum refineries.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325180 Other Basic Inorganic 94
Chemical Manufacturing--
Fuel propellants, solid
inorganic, not specified
elsewhere by process,
manufacturing; Caustic
soda (i.e., sodium
hydroxide)
manufacturing, Potassium
hydroxide (i.e., caustic
potash) manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325194 Cyclic Crude, 13
Intermediate, and Gum
and Wood Chemical
Manufacturing:
Turpentine.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325199 All Other Basic Organic 156
Chemical Manufacturing:
Fuel propellants, solid
organic, not specified
elsewhere by process,
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325411 Medicinal and Botanical 115
Manufacturing: Dietary
supplements,
uncompounded,
manufacturing.
[[Page 1841]]
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325412 Pharmaceutical 262
Preparation
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325612 Polish and Other 107
Sanitation Good
Manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1700..................... PPPA.................... 325620 Toilet Preparation 236
Manufacturing:
Mouthwashes (except
medicinal)
manufacturing; Permanent
wave neutralizers.
16 CFR part 1301..................... Refuse Bins............. 332439 Other Metal Container 20
Manufacturing: Light
gauge metal garbage cans
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1207..................... Swimming Pool Slides.... 339920 Sporting and athletic 24
goods manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1205..................... Walk Behind Power Mowers 333112 Lawn and garden tractor 29
and home lawn and garden
equipment manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Vinyl Plastic Film...... 326113 Unlaminated Plastics Film 50
and Sheet (except
Packaging)
Manufacturing--Vinyl and
vinyl copolymer film and
unlaminated sheet
(except packaging)
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315110 Hosiery and sock mills... 1
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315190 Other apparel knitting 2
mills.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315210 Cut and sew apparel 72
contractors.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315220 Men's and boys' cut and 13
sew apparel
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315240 Women's, girls', and 34
infants' cut and sew
apparel manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315280 Other cut and sew apparel 11
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1611..................... Clothing And Apparel.... 315990 Apparel accessories and 17
other apparel
manufacturing.
16 CFR part 1210 and 1212............ Multipurpose Lighters... 339999 All other miscellaneous 29
manufacturing: Cigarette
lighters (except
precious metal)
manufacturing.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Additional Recordkeeping Costs
Public comments stated there were additional eFiling costs not
considered in the SNPR. In response to these comments, agency staff
analyzed survey responses and data from the eFiling Beta Pilot
participants and queried import brokers to assess additional potential
out-of-pocket expenses imposed by the Final Rule. As a result of this
assessment, staff conducted an analysis of three additional annual cost
burden categories: (1) startup costs to account for the burden of
organizational meetings, staff training, and setting up accounts and a
data storage system to house the certificate data; (2) fees charged by
brokers to file message sets with CBP; and (3) de minimis filings.
However, for the reasons stated in section VII.D.5 of this preamble,
CPSC has insufficient information for a substantive burden analysis
involving de minimis filings impacted by the Final Rule. Therefore, the
following sub-sections discuss startup costs and filing fees.
1. Startup Burden Cost
eFiling of certificates may require some importers to invest in a
combination of new technologies and training or hiring staff to conduct
eFiling activities. These new technologies may be built in-house by
larger firms. Also, third-party service providers may develop tools and
services that large or small importers could use.\77\ Firms are also
likely to train their staff on the use of these new technologies and
the updated processes that support the eFiling of certificates,
including participating in meetings with their brokers, reading
guidance documents, and communicating and distributing information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ Technology investments may decrease the overall costs
associated with managing certificate data, records, or entering
products into the Product Registry or into a broker's database.
Importers are not required to invest in this technology but larger
firms with more resources at their disposal may do so, provided a
positive return exists on such an investment. To minimize costs,
most firms would likely take advantage of existing broker
technologies and not make unnecessary changes to their system unless
there was a business case to do so. Furthermore, testing facilities
offer suppliers tools to manage and eFile certificate data. Online
tools, such as Interlink by Intertek, can be used by firms of any
size to capture, track, and file GCCs and CPSC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Firms that participated in the Beta Pilot indicated an average of
60 hours of startup time \78\ for training, understanding and
communicating eFiling guidance, gathering product information, and
coordinating with brokers. However, most firms that participated in the
Beta Pilot are of significant size, which implies the startup times for
the average importer likely are not as large. Also, the potential
introduction of third-party tools or third-party support to perform
these duties will likely reduce the number of hours required for
setting up the logistics of the average importer to conduct eFiling
activities. Consequently, CPSC assumes that the average firm would
invest the equivalent of only one-third the time, or 20 hours,\79\ in
all startup activities. More than 264 thousand importers will be
involved in eFiling, so ample room exists for learning and cost
improvements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ We use startup timeframes to estimate startup costs. In
reality, many firms will likely hire third parties to benefit from
the economies of scale, instead of devoting as many staff hours to
startup tasks. This will reduce burden.
\79\ This corresponds to a learning factor of 3, one sixth the
size of the learning factor used to estimate processing times for
Reference Message Sets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 20 hours of startup time converts to an average cost per firm
of $1,086 using the average wage rate of management and administrative
occupations.\80\ Annualizing the average startup cost per firm at a 2%
discount rate over 30 years, the estimated annualized cost equivalent
per firm is $48.48. Table 17 presents a summary of estimated startup
costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ As of June 2024, the hourly rate for management,
professional, and related occupations at good producing industries
was $73.02, while the hourly rate for office and administrative
support occupations was $35.56. CPSC assumes that the hours invested
in startup activities are one-half managerial and one-half support
staff at an average hourly rate of $54.29.
Table 17--eFiling Startup Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
Additional costs of response Importers Frequency Responses Cost per additional
of response response costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GCC Startup Burden............................. 40,665 1 40,665 $48.48 $1,971,475
[[Page 1842]]
CPC Startup Burden............................. 224,000 1 224,000 48.48 10,859,718
----------------------------------------------------------------
Total...................................... 264,665 1 264,665 48.48 12,831,194
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Totals made not sum due to rounding.
2. Filing Fees
Many importers use import brokers to facilitate customs filings and
reporting with the government. Brokers typically charge a fee per entry
or per entry line that is filed, and each entry line may contain one or
more product certificates. The fees that brokers charge vary with the
complexity of the Message Set and with the number of Message Sets
filed. Most brokers charge a maximum fee per entry which reduces the
filing fees per certificate for firms that file multiple certificates
per entry. CPSC assumes that a majority of firms would choose to file
as many product certificates as possible per entry, and this action
will significantly lower the cost per individual product certificate
filed. CPSC estimates the average fee per filing under these conditions
to be $0.77.\81\ Importers are only expected to pay a filing fee for
Reference Message Sets and Full Message Sets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ This figure assumes an average fee per entry of $25,
Average fees per GCCs and CPCs are estimated dividing $25 per entry
by the average number of certificates included with each entry;
these averages then are weighted by the total number of GCCs and
CPCs to obtain an overall weighted average per certificate of $0.77.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 18 presents an estimate of filing fees. CPSC estimates
importers of non-children's products will file 19,697,612 annual
message sets (Full and Reference Message Sets) for a fee. At the
average filing fee per certificate of $0.77, the expected fees for all
GCCs are $15,167,162 in total. CPSC also estimate that importers of
children's products will file 28,555,603, annual message sets for a
fee, and expect filing fees for CPCs to total $21,987,815 annually. The
estimated annual total filing fees paid by all filers is $37,154,976.
These totals exclude de minimis filings.
Table 18--Estimated Annual Filing Fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
Additional cost Importers Filings Responses Cost per filling
with a fee response fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GCC Filing Fees................................ 40,665 484 19,697,612 $0.77 $15,167,162
CPC Filings Fees............................... 224,000 127 28,555,603 0.77 21,987,815
----------------------------------------------------------------
All Importer Filings....................... 264,665 182 48,253,216 0.77 37,154,976
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. Cost to the Federal Government
The estimated annual cost of the information collection
requirements to the federal government in Fiscal Year 2026 (October 1,
2025, through September 30, 2026) is approximately $1.2 million in 2024
dollars, which includes 2,080 staff hours to manage the eFiling program
and $1 million in contracting costs. This estimate for Fiscal Year 2026
is based in part on the annual salary for a mid-level salaried GS-13-5
employee in the Washington, DC metropolitan area (effective as of
January 2024) which is $64.28 per hour.\82\ This represents 67.7
percent of total compensation (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
``Employer Costs for Employee Compensation,'' March 2024, Table 2,
percentage of wages and salaries for all civilian management,
professional, and related employees.\83\ Adding an additional 32.3
percent for benefits brings the average annual compensation for a mid-
level salaried GS-13-5 employee to $94.94 per hour ($64.28 / 0.677).
Assuming that approximately 2,080 hours will be required annually, this
results in an annual labor cost of $197,477.10 ($94.98 per hour x 2,080
hours = $197,477) plus an annual contracting cost of $1,000,000 in IT
development for an annual cost to the government of $1.2 million in
Fiscal Year 2026. Contracting costs are expected to decrease
substantially thereafter. Because eFiling will be fully functional and
firms will be experienced with it, contractor support should only be
required for ongoing operations and maintenance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ $64.28 comes from rounding $64.275 = 133,692 a year/2,080
hours per year. See https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2024/DCB.pdf.
\83\ https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t02.htm
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. OMB Submission
CPSC has submitted the information collection requirements of this
Final Rule to OMB for review in accordance with PRA requirements. 44
U.S.C. 3507(d).
IX. Environmental Considerations
The Commission's regulations address whether the agency is required
to prepare an environmental assessment or an environmental impact
statement. Under these regulations, certain categories of CPSC actions
normally have ``little or no potential for affecting the human
environment,'' and therefore, do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact statement. 16 CFR 1021.5(c).
Rules regarding product certification fall within this categorical
exclusion. 16 CFR 1021.5(c)(2).
X. Preemption
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2075(a), addresses the
preemptive effect of CPSC's consumer product safety standards. Part
1110, however, is a procedural rule, not a consumer product safety
standard. Therefore, the preemption provision of section 26(a) of the
CPSA does not apply to this Final Rule.
XI. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act (CRA; 5 U.S.C. 801-808) states that
before a rule may take effect, the agency issuing the rule must submit
the rule, and
[[Page 1843]]
certain related information, to each House of Congress and the
Comptroller General. 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1). The CRA submission must
indicate whether the rule is a ``major rule.'' The CRA states that the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) determines whether
a rule qualifies as a ``major rule.''
Pursuant to the CRA, OIRA has determined that this Final Rule
qualifies as a ``major rule,'' as defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). To comply
with the CRA, CPSC will submit the required information to each House
of Congress and the Comptroller General.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1110
Administrative practice and procedure, Business and industry,
Certificate, Certification, Children, Component part certificate,
Consumer protection, Electronic filing, Imports, Labeling, Product
testing and certification, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Record retention, Regulated products.
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Commission revises 16 CFR
part 1110 to read as follows:
PART 1110--CERTIFICATES OF COMPLIANCE
Sec.
1110.1 Purpose and scope.
1110.3 Definitions.
1110.5 Finished products required to be certified.
1110.7 Who must certify finished products.
1110.9 Certificate language and format.
1110.11 Certificate content.
1110.13 Certificate availability.
1110.15 Legal responsibility of finished product certifiers.
1110.17 Recordkeeping requirements.
1110.19 Component part certificates.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063, Secs. 3 and 102 of Pub. L. 110-314,
122 Stat. 3016, 3017 (2008), Pub. L. 112-28 (2011).
Sec. 1110.1 Purpose and scope.
This part specifies the entities that must issue certificates for
finished products in accordance with section 14(a) of the Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA), as amended, 15 U.S.C. 2063(a); specifies
certificate content, form, and availability requirements that must be
met to satisfy the requirements of section 14 of the CPSA; requires
importers to file certificates electronically (eFile) with U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (CBP) for imported finished products that are
required to be certified; and clarifies which provisions of this part
apply to component part certificates. This part does not address the
type or frequency of testing necessary to support a certificate.
Sec. 1110.3 Definitions.
(a) The definitions of section 3 of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2052, and
additional definitions in the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act
of 2008 (CPSIA), Pub. L. 110-314, apply to this part.
(b) Additionally, the following definitions apply for purposes of
this part:
Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) means an electronic data
interchange system authorized by CBP for the transmission of data and
documents used to track, control, and process commercial imports,
including entry and entry summary data, and includes any successor CBP
authorized electronic data interchange system.
CBP or Customs means U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Certificate or certificate of compliance means a certification that
the finished products or component parts within the scope of the
certificate comply with the consumer product safety rules under the
CPSA, or similar rules, bans, standards, or regulations under any other
law enforced by the Commission, as set forth on the certificate.
``Certificate'' and ``certificate of compliance'' generally refer to
all four types of certificates, as defined in this section: General
Certificates of Conformity (GCC), Children's Product Certificates
(CPC), finished product certificates, and component part certificates.
Certifier means the party who issues a certificate of compliance.
Children's Product Certificate (CPC) means a certificate of
compliance for a finished product issued pursuant to section 14(a)(2)
of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2063, and part 1107 of this chapter.
Commission or CPSC means the United States Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Component part means a component part of a consumer product or
other product or substance regulated by the Commission, as defined in
Sec. 1109.4(b) of this chapter, that is intended to be used in the
manufacture or assembly of a finished product, and is not intended for
sale to, or use by, consumers as a finished product.
Component part certificate means a voluntary certificate of
compliance for a component part, as defined in this section.
Consignee, for purposes of this part, means a party who takes
custody or delivery of imported finished products for which CPSC
certificate data are required, and may be held legally responsible by
CPSC for the required finished product certificate data as set forth in
Sec. 1110.15.
eFile means to electronically file the required data elements on a
finished product certificate, as described in Sec. 1110.11, into ACE,
in the format required in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1).
Electronic certificate means the set of required data elements on a
finished product certificate, described in Sec. 1110.11, that are
available in, and accessible by, electronic means, in the format
described in Sec. 1110.9(c).
Finished product means a consumer product or other product or
substance, or a part of a consumer product or substance, that is
subject to a consumer product safety rule under the CPSA, or similar
rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any other law enforced by the
Commission, that is imported for consumption or warehousing, or is
distributed in commerce, and that is packaged, sold, or held for sale
to, or for use by, consumers.
Finished product certificate means a certificate of compliance for
a finished product, as defined in this section, that is required by
Sec. 1110.5. There are two types of finished product certificates:
Children's Product Certificates (CPCs) and General Certificates of
Conformity (GCCs).
Finished product certifier means a party who is required to issue a
finished product certificate pursuant to Sec. 1110.7. Pursuant to
sections 14(a)(1) and (2) of the CPSA (15 U.S.C. 2052, 2063(a)(1), and
2063(a)(2)), a finished product certifier must be an importer, as
defined in this section, or a manufacturer or private labeler as
defined in sections 3(a)(11) and (12) of the CPSA (15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11) and (12)).
General Certificate of Conformity (GCC) means a certificate of
compliance for a finished product issued pursuant to section 14(a)(1)
of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1).
Importer, for the purposes of this part, means the Importer of
Record (IOR) eligible to make entry for imported finished products
under the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1484(a)(2)(B)), who
may be an owner, purchaser, or authorized customs broker; provided
that, if the IOR is an authorized customs broker, the customs broker
may identify the owner, purchaser, or consignee of the finished
products who authorized the customs broker to make entry, as the party
responsible for compliance with CPSC certificate requirements as part
of the finished product certificate data filed in CPSC's PGA Message
Set. For finished products imported by mail, or for which a de minimis
duty exemption under 19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C) is claimed, the importer
for purposes of CPSC's certificate requirements is a party
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eligible to make entry for the finished products pursuant to CBP
statutes and regulations, who may be an owner, purchaser, consignee, or
authorized customs broker. For purposes of this rule, CPSC will not
typically consider a consumer purchasing or receiving products for
personal use or enjoyment to be the importer responsible for
certification.
Manufacturer as defined in section 3(a)(11) of the CPSA, means any
person who manufactures or imports a consumer product. 15 U.S.C.
2052(a)(11).
Owner or purchaser, for purposes of this part, means a party who
has a financial interest in imported finished products for which CPSC
certificate data are required, including the actual owner of the
finished products, who may be held legally responsible by CPSC for the
required finished product certificate data as set forth in Sec.
1110.15.
Private labeler as defined in section 3(a)(12) of the CPSA, means
an owner of a brand or trademark on the label of a consumer product
which bears a private label. 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(12). A consumer product
bears a private label if: (i) the product (or its container) is labeled
with the brand or trademark of a person other than a manufacturer of
the product; (ii) the person with whose brand or trademark the product
(or container) is labeled has authorized or caused the product to be so
labeled; and (iii) the brand or trademark of a manufacturer of such
product does not appear on such label.
Product Registry means a database created and maintained by CPSC
that facilitates the electronic submission of required data elements on
a finished product certificate, as provided in Sec. 1110.11, by a
finished product certifier as stated in Sec. 1110.7(a), who is
required to eFile the finished product certificate pursuant to Sec.
1110.13(a)(1). This definition includes any CPSC successor system.
Third party conformity assessment body means a testing laboratory
whose accreditation has been accepted by the CPSC to conduct
certification testing on children's products, as required in Sec.
1107.2 of this chapter.
Sec. 1110.5 Finished products required to be certified.
Finished products subject to a consumer product safety rule under
the CPSA, or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any other
law enforced by the Commission, which are imported for consumption or
warehousing, or are distributed in commerce, must be accompanied by a
finished product certificate.
Sec. 1110.7 Who must certify finished products.
(a) Imports. Except as otherwise provided in a specific rule, ban,
standard, or regulation enforced by CPSC, for a finished product
manufactured outside of the United States that must be accompanied by a
certificate as set forth in Sec. 1110.5, the importer, as defined in
this part, is the finished product certifier that must issue a finished
product certificate that meets the requirements of this part.
(b) Domestic products. Except as otherwise provided in a specific
rule, ban, standard, or regulation enforced by the Commission, for a
finished product manufactured in the United States that must be
accompanied by a certificate, as set forth in Sec. 1110.5, the
manufacturer is the finished product certifier that must issue a
finished product certificate that meets the requirements of this part.
However, if a finished product manufactured in the United States is
privately labeled, the private labeler is the finished product
certifier that must issue a finished product certificate that meets the
requirements of this part, unless the manufacturer issues the finished
product certificate.
Sec. 1110.9 Certificate language and format.
(a) Language. An eFiled finished product certificate must be in the
English language. All other certificates, including hard copy and
electronic certificates, must be in the English language and may also
contain the same content in any other language.
(b) Format. Finished product certificates for finished products
manufactured outside the United States and offered for importation into
the United States for consumption or warehousing are required to be
eFiled using the format required in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1). All other
finished product certificates must be made available as provided in
Sec. 1110.13(b) and (c), and may be provided in hard copy or
electronically, as set forth in subsection (c) of this section.
(c) Electronic certificates. An electronic finished product
certificate meets the requirements of Sec. 1110.13(b) and (c) if it is
identified prominently on the finished product, shipping carton, or
invoice by a unique identifier and can be accessed via a World Wide Web
uniform resource locator (URL) or other electronic means, provided that
the finished product certificate, the URL or other electronic means,
and the unique identifier are accessible, along with access to the
electronic finished product certificate itself, to the Commission, CBP,
distributors, and retailers, on or before the date the finished product
is distributed in commerce. If the electronic finished product
certificate is password protected, the password must be provided at the
same time as the certificate when requested by CPSC or CBP.
Sec. 1110.11 Certificate content.
(a) Content requirements. Each finished product certificate must:
(1) Identify the finished product(s) covered by the certificate.
Finished product certificates must contain at least one of the
following unique identifiers: global trade item number (GTIN), model
number, registered number, serial number, stock keeping number (SKU),
universal product code (UPC), or alternate identifier, along with a
sufficient description to match the finished product to the
certificate. Finished product certificates may also include other
identifiers, such as lot number, model style, and model color, that may
assist with product identification.
(2) State each consumer product safety rule under the CPSA, or
similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under any law enforced by
the Commission, to which the finished product(s) are being certified.
Finished product certificates must identify separately all applicable
rules, bans, standards, or regulations.
(3) Identify the finished product certifier that is certifying
compliance of the finished product(s), as set forth in Sec. 1110.7,
including the party's name, street address, city, state or province,
country or administrative region, electronic mail (email) address, and
telephone number.
(4) Identify and provide contact information (consisting, at a
minimum, of the individual's name, street address, city, state or
province, country or administrative region, email address, and
telephone number) for the individual maintaining records listed in
Sec. 1110.17 on behalf of the finished product certifier. The
individual can be a position title, provided that the position is
always staffed and responsive to CPSC's requests.
(5) Provide the date (month and year, at a minimum) and place
(including a manufacturer name, street address, city, state or
province, country or administrative region, email address, and
telephone number) where the finished product(s) were manufactured,
produced, or assembled. For manufacturing runs over a series of days,
provide the initial date of manufacture (month and year, at a minimum).
(6) Provide the most recent date and place(s) (including for each
third party conformity assessment body or other
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party on whose testing the finished product certificate depends, the
name, street address, city, state or province, country or
administrative region, email address, and telephone number) where the
finished product(s) were tested for compliance with the rule(s),
ban(s), standard(s), or regulation(s) cited in Sec. 1110.11(a)(4).
(7) Provide the finished product certifier's attestation. For
eFiled certificates required in Sec. 1110.13(a)(1), attestations are
included in the Product Registry and in CPSC's Partner Government
Agency (PGA) Message Set CBP and Trade Automated Interface Requirements
(CATAIR) Implementation Guide (including revisions thereto). Paper and
electronic finished product certificates described in Sec. 1110.9(b)
and (c), and required in Sec. Sec. 1110.13(a)(2), (b), and (c), must
include the following attestation by the finished product certifier:
I hereby certify that the finished product(s) covered by this
certificate comply with the rules, bans, standards, and regulations
stated herein, and that the information in this certificate is true
and accurate to the best of my knowledge, information, and belief. I
understand and acknowledge that it is a United States federal crime
to knowingly and willfully make any materially false, fictitious, or
fraudulent statement, representation, or omission on this
certificate.
(b) Electronic access to records. In addition to identification of
the individual maintaining records, as described in Sec.
1110.11(a)(4), a finished product certificate may include a URL, or
other electronic means, which provides electronic access to the
required underlying records to support the certificate as specified in
Sec. Sec. 1107.26 and 1109.5(g) of this chapter, or any other
applicable consumer product safety rule, ban, standard, or regulation
enforced by the Commission.
(c) Statutory or regulatory testing exclusions: Unless otherwise
provided by the Commission, if a finished product certifier is claiming
a statutory or regulatory testing exclusion to an applicable consumer
product safety rule or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation, then
in addition to listing all applicable rules, bans, standards, and
regulations as required under Sec. 1110.11(a)(2), and in lieu of
providing the date and place where testing was conducted for that
regulation under Sec. 1110.11(a)(6), a finished product certificate
shall identify the applicable testing exclusion.
(d) Duplicative testing not required. Although finished product
certificates must list each applicable rule, ban, standard, or
regulation separately, finished product certifiers are not required to
conduct the same third party test on each sample more than once when a
rule references, or incorporates fully, another applicable consumer
product safety rule or similar rule, ban, standard, or regulation under
any other law enforced by the Commission with the same requirement.
Sec. 1110.13 Certificate availability.
(a) Accompanying certificates. A finished product certificate must
accompany each finished product or finished product shipment required
to be certified pursuant to Sec. 1110.5. Each finished product
certificate must describe only one product.
(1) In the case of finished products that are manufactured outside
the United States and are offered for importation into the United
States for consumption or warehousing, including finished products
offered for consumption or warehousing from a Foreign Trade Zone, or
finished products eligible for the de minimis duty exemption under 19
U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C), the finished product certifier must eFile the
finished product certificate data elements required in Sec. 1110.11 at
the time of filing the entry, or the time of filing the entry and entry
summary, if both are filed together, in ACE as provided in CPSC's PGA
Message Set CATAIR Implementation Guide (including revisions thereto).
In the case of finished products that are manufactured outside of the
United States and imported by mail, the finished product certifier must
enter the finished product certificate data elements required in Sec.
1110.11 into CPSC's Product Registry before arrival of the product or
substance in the United States.
(2) In the case of finished products manufactured in the United
States, the finished product certifier must issue the required
certificate on or before the date the finished product is distributed
in commerce and make the finished product certificate available for
inspection immediately, meaning within 24 hours, upon request by CPSC.
(b) Furnishing certificates. A finished product certifier must
furnish the required finished product certificate to each distributor
or retailer of the finished product.
(c) Availability. Finished product certifiers must make finished
product certificates available for inspection immediately, meaning
within 24 hours, upon request by CPSC or CBP.
Sec. 1110.15 Legal responsibility of finished product certifiers.
Finished product certifiers may, directly or through another
entity, maintain an electronic certificate platform. Pursuant to part
1109 of this chapter, a finished product certifier may rely on another
party to test or certify component parts or finished products. Also,
for purposes of Sec. 1110.13(a)(1), a finished product certifier may
rely on another party to enter data into the Product Registry or to
certify finished products on their behalf. The finished product
certifier, identified in Sec. 1110.7, remains legally responsible for
the information in a finished product certificate, including its
validity, accuracy, completeness, and availability.
Sec. 1110.17 Recordkeeping requirements.
Finished product certifiers are required to maintain finished
product certificates and the following records supporting such
certificates for at least five years from the certificate creation
date:
(a) Records of test results on which a GCC is based, and records
described in Sec. Sec. 1109.5(g) and (j) of this chapter (where
applicable).
(b) Records of test results and other records on which a CPC is
based, as required by Sec. 1107.26, and Sec. 1109.5(g) and (j) of
this chapter (where applicable).
(c) Records of test results and other records on which a component
part certificate is based, as required by Sec. 1109.5(g) and (j) of
this chapter.
Sec. 1110.19 Component part certificates.
Pursuant to part 1109 of this chapter, component part certificates
are voluntary, but may be relied upon by a finished product certifier
to issue a finished product certificate. Component part certificates
must not be eFiled in ACE upon importation of a component part.
Certifiers of component parts, and finished product certifiers that
rely on component part certificates to issue a finished product
certificate, must meet the requirements in part 1109 of this chapter.
Component part certificates must meet the same form, content,
recordkeeping, and availability requirements as finished product
certificates, described in Sec. Sec. 1110.9, 1110.11, 1110.13(c),
1110.15, and 1110.17.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2024-30826 Filed 1-7-25; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P