18q-0563-0053-1-9-2006

18q-0563-0053-1-9-2006.doc

Multiple Peril Crop Insurance

OMB: 0563-0053

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UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Federal Crop Insurance Corporation

OMB NUMBER: 0563-0053


TITLE:


Multiple Peril Crop Insurance


PURPOSE:


The purpose for this request to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is for approval of the Information Collection Burden package 0563-0053. This was previously approved for a three year period. This package is amended due to the proposed rule “Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions; and Various Crop Insurance Provisions.” A notice for the request for public comment on information collections was provided within the proposed rule published in the Federal Register on Friday, July 14, 2006, at 71 FR 40194-40252.


Impact of Notice on Public Information Collection Burden


In computing the information collection burden, time was allotted for the entire crop insurance process. Time for decisions and choices a producer may need to make from year to year were considered. The required reports from insurance companies to FCIC were also considered.


The information collection burden on the producer is not the same as the information collection burden on the insurance companies. Some of the data elements collected from the individual producer are the same data elements the insurance companies send to FCIC, however, not all data elements apply to each producer in any given year and some of the data elements that apply to the companies do not apply to producers. Specific circumstances determine which data elements apply. The information collection burden on the producer depends on the crops insured, if it is the first year of the continuous contract, if there is a loss, if options are elected, etc. The producer may have a larger information collection burden the first year by applying for insurance and completing the acreage report. The following years the producer may only have to report acreage and yield information if there is no loss. In the event of a loss, there is an additional information collection burden on the producer. Producers will report specific information by crop for each crop they insure. The insurance companies will generally always have an information collection burden consisting of all of the data elements listed because the data elements will be accumulated from each producer who has insurance with that insurance company. Insurance companies will report data elements to FCIC as specifically required by FCIC and as documented in the Data Acceptance System Handbook (Manual 13) and the Documents Standards Handbook.


It is estimated this information collection burden will be 1,866,457 hours for 1,248,281 respondents with 4,551,705 responses. The number of responses per respondent for the crops included in this information collection package is 3.6. The average burden for each respondent is 1.5 hours.


A. Justification


1. CIRCUMSTANCES MAKING COLLECTION OF INFORMATION NECESSARY:


The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) is a wholly-owned Government corporation created February 16, 1938 (7 U.S.C. 1501). The program was amended previously, but Public Law 96-365, dated September 26, 1980, provided for nationwide expansion of a comprehensive crop insurance program. The Federal Crop Insurance Act (Act), as amended in later years, further expanded the role of the crop insurance program to be the principal tool for risk management by producers of farm products. The Act further required that the crop insurance program operate on an actuarially sound basis. To meet these goals, existing crop programs must be improved and expanded, new crop products developed, and new insurance concepts studied for possible implementation. Meeting these goals requires the collection of a wide range of information (data elements). These data elements are used in part to determine insurance coverage, premiums, subsidies, payments, and indemnities. It allows for other program and administrative operations. It also creates an information database used to support continued development and improvements in crop insurance products available to producers and which meet the goal of a sound insurance program. The Act allows a person to submit a policy, provision of a policy, or rates of premium to the Board for approval. The Act was again amended on June 20, 2000, by Public Law 106-224 which mandated changes to crop insurance regulations, provided for independent review of crop insurance products by persons experienced as actuaries and in underwriting, and gave contracting authority for the development of new products.


The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) offers a Standard Reinsurance Agreement (SRA) to eligible crop insurance companies under which FCIC will reinsure policies that the crop insurance companies issue to producers of agricultural commodities. The SRA contains terms and conditions that apply.


The public can locate an insurance company designated by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to provide crop insurance coverage through the SRA by accessing the Risk Management Agency (RMA) web site at: http://www.rma.usda.gov/. This site provides a listing of crop insurance agents who are affiliated with those crop insurance companies. Addresses and telephones numbers are also included. A person can provide specific information and a listing of agents is provided for the information submitted.

Insurance companies reinsured by FCIC are required to report specific information (data elements) to FCIC as documented in Manual 13 and the Documents Standards Handbook. Crop insurance companies, including their agents, must collect data from producers in order to submit the required data to RMA. RMA does not develop or distribute forms but creates form standards for the insurance companies to use so insurance companies have the appropriate data available to submit to FCIC in required reports. RMA estimates the number of responses per respondent for this information collection package at 3.6 with an estimated burden on respondents of 1,866,457 hours.


The information collection requirements for this amended package are necessary for administering the crop insurance program. Producers are required to report specific data when they apply for crop insurance and report acreage, yields and notices of loss. Insurance companies accept applications; issue policies; establish and provide insurance coverage; compute liability, premium, subsidies, and losses; indemnify producers; and report specific data to FCIC as required in Manual 13. Insurance agents market crop and livestock insurance and service the producer. The following commodities (and Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR), Adjusted Gross Revenue Lite (AGR-Lite), and Nutrient BMP) are included in this information collection package: almonds, apples, avocados, avocado and mango trees, barley, dry beans, beans, blackberries, blueberries, buckwheat, cabbage, canola/rapeseed, cattle, cherries, citrus fruit, citrus trees, clams, corn, sweet corn, cotton, cranberries, figs, flax, forage production, forage seed, forage seeding, grain sorghum, grapes, Hawaiian tropical fruit and tree, hybrid seed corn, hybrid sorghum seed, lentils, macadamia nuts, macadamia trees, millet, mint, mustard, nursery, oats, onions, pasture, peaches, peanuts, pears, dry peas, green peas, pecans, chili peppers, peppers, plums, popcorn, potatoes, prunes, raisins, rangeland, raspberries, rice, wild rice, rye, safflowers, soybeans, stonefruit, strawberries, sugar beets, sugar cane, sunflowers, sweet potatoes, swine, tobacco, tomatoes, walnuts, and wheat.


The insurance cycle begins with an approved application. On or before the sales closing date, the producer contacts an insurance agent associated with an insurance company reinsured by FCIC to obtain information about insurance and apply for coverage. The insurance agent describes the types of insurance that are available, levels of coverage, options and other requirements that may be crop-specific. If the producer elects to apply for insurance coverage, the insurance agent will enter the data on the application using input from the producer, then the producer signs the applicable documents. In order to establish the guarantee, the producer must report to the insurance agent actual planted acreage and production for previous crop years by unit, practice, type, and variety, at the time of application. After the year of application, the producer must report to the insurance agent, actual planted acreage and production, by unit, practice, type, and variety for the previous crop year by the earlier of the acreage reporting date or 45 days after the cancellation date, unless otherwise stated in the Special Provisions. This information is used to complete the production and yield report and establish the producer's approved Actual Production History (APH) yield used to determine insurance coverage, for the covered years, unless the producer qualifies for and elects an exception as specified in the specific crop policy. APH yields must be determined by unit and reported for the appropriate unit. If the producer meets the qualifications, unit arrangements may change every year which makes it more difficult to assure the correct APH yield is reported by unit. The APH production base period contains a maximum of 10 years of production history that may be used to establish the approved APH yield. A minimum of 4 years of actual or RMA established yields are required to establish the APH yield. Generally the production guarantee for each unit is computed by multiplying the percentage of coverage selected by the producer by the approved APH yield for each unit. The production guarantee per acre multiplied by the projected price or price election selected by the producer, as applicable equals the per acre protection. The net protection or insurance liability is determined by multiplying the per acre protection times the insured acres times the producer's share in the crop. Insurance agents must be knowledgeable of the crop policies for each crop they sell and service insurance so they can assist the producer in obtaining insurance and accurately reporting required information. Insurance agents must be certified and receive continuing education each year from the insurance company or a crop insurance service organization. Many crops are insurable by type/variety/practice, some policies have additional options that may be selected, and some policies have distinct exceptions to other policies. Most producers rely on their insurance agents to assist them in timely and accurately reporting all required information.


The producer plants the crop, and insurance attaches to the crop upon planting or attaches as stated in the applicable crop provisions. Annual crops must be planted prior to the final planting date specified in the Special Provisions or the insurance guarantee will be reduced.


FCIC requires crop acreage information to be submitted to the insurance agent by each producer on or before a specific date listed in the Special Provisions. The policies insurance companies sell to producers, that are Codified in the Federal Register at 7 CFR Part 400, contain specific provisions for the reporting of acreage. The Basic Provisions states specific information (data) the producer must submit on the acreage report. The name of the crop, the number of timely planted acres, late planted acres, acres that were prevented from planting, the number of insurable and uninsurable acres, the producer's share of the crop, date planting is completed, name of person sharing in the crop, APH yield, practice, type, class, or variety, location of the acreage, etc., are entered on the acreage report, as applicable, with each line requiring a unit number. This information is used to determine liability, premium, and subsidy. If the producer does not submit crop information by the acreage reporting date, or if the producer fails to report all units, the insurance company may elect to determine by unit, the insurable crop acreage, share, type and practice, or to deny liability on such units. Program procedures require producers to report acreage information to their insurance agent who transmits it to the insurance company, who in turn transmits it to RMA. A summary of coverage is issued by the insurance company to the producer which shows the amount of the producer's protection and the premium based on the commodity information provided by the producer. Insurance agents generally know the producer's farming operation and location and they assist the producer in reporting the correct data by asking the appropriate questions, referencing plat books and maps, comparing previous information available in the producer's office file folder, etc., to verify that the data is reported correctly.


If the crop sustains an insurable loss, the producer gives notice of a loss to the insurance agent who notifies the insurance company. A loss adjuster will make appropriate inspections and record data pertaining to the crop appraisal when adjusting losses, to determine the amount of indemnity owed to the producer. The insurance company will issue an indemnity check to the producer, if applicable.


The producer is notified on or before the contract change date when policy provisions or actuarial documents change for a crop. The producer may accept these changes or make other modifications to the insurance coverage by the sales closing date. If the producer desires to make changes for the crop, the producer may do so by the applicable sales closing date for the effective crop year. If the producer wishes to cancel coverage this must be done in writing by the cancellation date (but not for the year of application).


The insurance policy is continuous unless, prior to the cancellation or termination date, it is canceled in writing by the producer or terminated by the insurance company for debt or any other reason stated in the policy that causes the producer to be ineligible for coverage. Cancellation and termination dates are contained in the policy.


FCIC requires insurance companies to electronically submit specific information to FCIC (see Manual 13). Manual 13 lists the fields of required data by type/exhibit. Exhibits specify formulas, rounding rules, field edits, descriptions, etc. Insurance companies use this information for programming their computers so information can be submitted to RMA in the correct format. (For information collection purposes, RMA is using the types/exhibits information as the data elements). Following is a list of the types/data elements/exhibits and a brief explanation of each:


Type 09 – Fund Designation Record – (Exhibit 09) – Timely acceptance of the Type 09 record is required to establish the eligible crop insurance contract into either the Assigned Risk Fund or the Developmental Fund. Any eligible crop insurance contract not designated by the approved insurance provider to the Assigned Risk Fund or the Developmental Fund will be designated to the Commercial Fund. RMA may accept fund designations records after the Actuarial Data Master (ADM) records have been released for the crop.


Type 10 – Policy Record – (Exhibit 10) - Type 10 records are used to establish a policy and provide information regarding the policyholder and entities with a Substantial Beneficial Interest.


Type 11- Acreage record – (Exhibit 11) - Type 11 records are used to establish premium and liability for each line on the acreage report. The record also identifies the land location and allows reporting of common USDA information.


Type 12 – Payment Record – (Exhibit 12) - Type 12 records are used to record/report payments by producers for each eligible crop insurance contract.


Type 13 – Inventory Value Record – (Exhibit 13) - Type 13 records are used to establish premium and insurance values for Nursery and Aquaculture.


Type 14 – Insurance In Force Record – (Exhibit 14) - Type 14 records establishes the crop, county, plan code and reports the eligible crop insurance contract data determined at sales closing. Type 14 records identify the data elements required for timely reporting of eligible crop insurance contracts.


Type 15 – Yields Record – (Exhibit 15) - Type 15 records are used to record/report APH yield information for designated crops.


Type 17 – Land Identifier Record – (Exhibit 17) - Type 17 records are used to record/report up to ten corresponding legal descriptions and three persons sharing in the crop for the Type 11 record.


Type 20 – Loss Total Record – (Exhibit 20) - Type 20 records are used to identify the application or disbursement of loss payments.


Type 21 – Loss Line Record – (Exhibit 21) - Type 21 records establish the loss amounts for a given eligible crop insurance contract.


Type 22 – Inventory Loss Record (Nursery and Aquaculture) (Exhibit 22) - Type 22 records establish the loss amounts for a given eligible crop insurance contract.


Type 49 – Delete Records – (Exhibit 49) - Type 49 records are used to remove all records for the eligible crop insurance contract from the data base(s) and the duplicate T14 Indexed Sequential Access Method (ISAM) files.


Type 55 – Agent Data – (Exhibit 55) - Type 55 records are used to record/report agent information. The agent records on the database are maintained by the approved insurance providers.


Type 56 – Loss Adjuster Data – (Exhibit 56) - Type 56 records are used to record/report loss adjuster information.


Type 60 – Ineligible Producer Input Record – (Exhibit 60) - Type 60 records are used to submit information regarding a producer's ineligibility status for participation in the crop insurance program.


Type 60E – Ineligible Producer Error Record – (Exhibit 60E) - Type 60E records are generated during the ineligibility tracking edit process to identify errors made during the edit process.


Type 61- Ineligible Producer Output Record – (Exhibit 61) - Type 61 records are generated from the ineligible tracking system database and output to the Ineligible Tracking (IT) output directory on the IP server for all companies. This file is an accumulation created daily after each ITS load of all producers that have been reported as ineligible, their period(s) of ineligibility and their current eligibility status. This also includes persons reported by RMA for suspension/disqualification/debarment.


Type 65 – CAT Fee Receivable Record – (Exhibit 65) - Type 65 records are submitted along with Type 60 records if the debt is all or partially due to unpaid CAT fees.


Type 70 – Reverse 70 Detail Record – (Exhibit 70) - Type 70 records are submitted semi-annually by approved insurance providers for each eligible crop insurance contract to reflect the current status of the approved insurance provider database. Type 70 records replace and reinitialize FCIC's reconciliation database.


Type 71 – Reverse 71 Trailer Record – (Exhibit 71) - Only one Type 71 record is permitted with each semi-annual submission of type 70 records. The counts and amounts are used to validate the summation of type 70 records received.


Type 81 – Policy Holder Tracking Experience Inquiry –Type 81 records track policyholder experience.


AGR/AGR-L – (Exhibits 123, 151)


LRP/LGM – (Exhibits 135-140)


Disbursements – (Exhibit 150)


Enclosed with this information collection package is one exhibit that lists the number of respondents, responses, burden hours, and total cost.


Producers must report specific information if the crop insurance program is to be actuarially sound as mandated by the Act. Section 506(o) of the Act is relative to actuarial soundness and sections 506(h) and 508(f) and (g) of the Act are relative to the collection of information.


2. HOW, BY WHOM, AND PURPOSE INFORMATION IS TO BE USED:


Insurance companies must obtain enough information so insurability, liability, premium, subsidy and indemnities can be accurately determined.


Insurance companies are reinsured by FCIC under the SRA and are required to electronically submit specific and accurate data to FCIC. Loss data must be submitted for the purpose of funding the escrow account. The escrow account balance must be monitored by the companies so they can maintain sufficient collateral coverage to ensure timely funding of all losses. If there is a shortfall of funds in the escrow account, it is the insurance company's responsibility to deposit funds to cover any shortages. Monthly Operations Reports must be submitted for the purpose of making monthly settlements with FCIC regarding reimbursement of administrative expenses, losses, if applicable, and payment of premium to FCIC. A Data Acceptance System (DAS) Error Report must be submitted to Data Quality Section (DQS) for guidance in correcting data rejected in the DAS. The gain or loss of the Company is calculated in the monthly Reinsurance Run Report generated by FCIC from data submitted by the Company. The FCIC (DAS) and Accounting Reports System (ARS) are two integrated data processing systems. DAS receives and validates transmitted data. Data validated by DAS is loaded to RMA databases. The ARS generates all accounting reports containing reinsured company data. Together they provide FCIC with a mechanism to ensure data received is accurate, errors are corrected timely, information contained in Monthly Operations Reports certified by the Companies is accurate for the data validated, and appropriate accounting entries are made in FCIC's Financial Accounting Systems. Annual settlement Operations Reports must continue to be submitted for any month that revised data are submitted. Court action, compliance, audit or investigative related findings by the Government or the insurance company after the September accounting cut-off following 5 years from the beginning of the reinsurance year must be reported to FCIC by the last banking day of each month corresponding to the transaction cutoff date.


Insurance policies are sold exclusively through insurance companies reinsured by FCIC in accordance with the SRA. In addition, insurance companies reinsure a portion of their risk for loss with other reinsurers as well. The insurance companies and their reinsurers assume liability. Insurance liability is determined from the information provided on the acreage report. Insurance companies are compensated for collecting acreage report information in accordance with the SRA. Producers may potentially report some of the same acreage information to both the insurance agent and a government agency. However, it is unrealistic insurance companies would accept acreage report information from any third party, since such information is used to determine the insurance liability an insurance company assumes and establishes the contractual obligations between the producer and the insurance company. As such, the insurance company incurs all financial liability for errors and omissions to the extent the producer is not at fault.


Insurance companies, and their representatives and agents, are liable for information that is reported on the acreage report and subject to legal implications if the information is not recorded or reported correctly. In accordance with the SRA, the insurance company and/or agent may be held responsible for any subsequent loss or indemnity and may be rendered ineligible for reinsurance and a portion or all of any administrative and operating subsidy, if a reinsured company representative or agent makes an error, reports incorrectly, omits information, or misrepresents information. Insurance companies and their agents are required to provide service and benefits to their clients in accordance with the SRA and approved policy provisions and procedures of FCIC.


The information (data) collected may be used by other Federal Agencies, insurance companies reinsured by FCIC, and other agencies that require such information in the performance of their duties. The information may also be furnished to: the Internal Revenue Service, the Department of Justice, or other federal or state law enforcement agencies, credit reporting agencies and collection agencies, and in response to judicial order in the course of litigation. The information requested is elective, but is required to obtain or retain crop insurance benefits. The producer must provide accurate and complete data so insurance companies and FCIC can accurately determine liability, subsidy, premium, and the amount of indemnity due a producer, if applicable, and keep the insurance program actuarially sound. A false claim made to the insurance provider or FCIC, or a false statement made on a matter within the jurisdiction of the Corporation, may subject the maker to criminal and civil penalties under the provisions of 18 U.S.C., 1001, 1006, 1014; 31 U.S.C. 3729, and 3730.


3. USE OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY:

The insurance companies, under the oversight of FCIC, are offering service delivery functions over the Internet. Internet-based services provided by these entities will be offered as an alternative to traditional paper-based delivery mechanisms, which are primarily based on face-to-face interaction between producers and insurance agents. FCIC will continue to work directly with insurance companies to ensure timely implementation with all statutory requirements. FCIC is also working in conjunction with the Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service, and Rural Development to fully integrate web-based information systems. This information is also 508 compliant.


4. EFFORTS TO IDENTIFY DUPLICATION:


The Farm Service Agency (FSA) collects certain information from producers to enable producers to be eligible for program benefits from that agency. Some of this information is a duplication of the information that insurance companies collect from producers and that FCIC requires the insurance companies to report to FCIC. FSA collects much of the same type of information for crops under the Noninsured Crop Assistance Program (NAP). However it is not the same information because NAP is only available for crops produced for food or fiber and for which catastrophic risk protection under section 508(b) of the Federal Crop Insurance Act (7 U.S.C. 1508(b)) is not available.


The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation is the only Federal agency that administers crop insurance. Only pertinent data is requested. FCIC attempts to minimize cost and avoid duplication. Crop insurance has the statutory authority to collect acreage report data, codified regulations mandate it, and the insurance companies reinsured by FCIC are required to collect and to report data accurately and are subsequently liable for the data that must be reported. As an alternative, insurance companies and/or FCIC may furnish pertinent information to other government agencies, when it is available, to prevent duplication of information collection. The crop insurance industry insures approximately 65 percent of all crop land acreage.


5. METHODS TO MINIMIZE BURDEN ON SMALL BUSINESSES OR ENTITIES:


The information collection requirements involve producers of agricultural products who are insured and insurance companies reinsured by FCIC, which includes their agents and representatives. The burden of the information collection will vary depending on whether or not the producer cancels the insurance coverage then reapplies, whether options are elected, the number of crops insured, if the crop is damaged by an insurable cause, if the producer has a first and second crop on the same acreage in the same crop year, etc. RMA strives to minimize the reporting burden but must collect enough information to keep the crop insurance program actuarially sound as mandated by the Act.


6. CONSEQUENCE IF INFORMATION COLLECTION WERE LESS FREQUENT:


If specific information is not collected by the specified dates, the producer may not have insurance coverage or the amount of insurance may be reduced. The crop insurance program would not be administered in an actuarially sound manner if specific information (data) were not collected by the established dates.


If producers and insurance companies did not submit the required data at the specified time, accurate liabilities, premium, and subsidies may not be determined, errors may not be resolved timely, producers may not receive accurate indemnities, payments may be late, crop insurance may not be actuarially sound as mandated in the ACT, crop insurance may operate illegally, etc.


  1. SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE INFORMATION COLLECTIONS


The information collection activities contained herein are not collected more frequently than quarterly from producers. Insurance companies must submit specific required data to RMA on a weekly, monthly, and annual basis. FCIC does not require the respondents to prepare a written response to a collection of information in fewer than 30 days after receipt of it. The respondents are not required to submit more than an original and two copies. Insurance companies maintain records longer than 3 years as a normal business practice. Producers normally maintain records for an indeterminate amount of time because of income tax obligations. No statistical survey is conducted by these collections. No statistical data classification that has not been reviewed and approved by OMB is used. A pledge of confidentiality is not required. No proprietary trade secrets or other confidential information are requested.


The collection of information involves producers and approved insurance providers. Specific information (data) is required to apply for crop insurance, determine program eligibility, report crop information, establish liability, change coverage, determine a loss, etc. Producers must provide records, documents, or other information to the approved insurance provider during an investigation or settlement of a claim. Approved insurance providers may provide late or prevented planting coverage, or provide coverage under a written agreement when coverage would not otherwise be available, etc. Pertinent information must be collected by the established dates to administer the crop insurance program in an actuarially sound manner.


8. FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICE, SUMMARIZATION OF COMMENTS, AND CONSULTATION WITH PERSONS OUTSIDE THE AGENCY:


A notice for the request for public comment on information collections was provided within the proposed rule published in the Federal Register on Friday, July 14, 2006, at 71 FR 40194-40252. No comments regarding this notice were received.


Consultations and submission of comments regarding the administration of the Crop Insurance Act, as amended, are received on an ongoing basis from an insurance service organization and the 15 insurance companies reinsured by FCIC who are under contract with FCIC to sell and service crop insurance (approved insurance providers). RMA also informally consults with the Farm Service Agency and insurance agents in regards to information collection.


9. EXPLAIN ANY DECISION TO PROVIDE ANY PAYMENT OR GIFT TO RESPONDENTS.


A payment or gift will never be provided to respondents for providing the information requested for this crop insurance program.


10. CONFIDENTIALITY PROVIDED TO RESPONDENTS:


The data that is collected is handled according to established RMA procedures for implementing the Privacy and Freedom of Information Act. The information collections comply with the Privacy Act of 1974 and OMB Circular a-130, Responsibilities for the Maintenance of Records About Individuals by Federal Agencies.


11. QUESTIONS OF A SENSITIVE NATURE:


No questions of a sensitive nature are contained in these data elements.


12. ESTIMATE OF INFORMATION BURDEN:


Respondents

Annual Responses

Total Hours

Minutes Per Response

Responses Per Respondent

Private Sector

20,000

750,000

169,678

0.22623733333 (.23)

37.5

Local, State and Tribal Governments

500

1,050

332

0.31619047619 (.32)

2.1

Individuals/Households

1,227,781

3,800,655

1,696,447

0.4463565 (.45)

3.095548

Grand Totals

1,248,281

4,551,705

1,866,457

1.8

3.69


The estimated annual public burden of 1,866,457 hours divided by 1,248,281 projected respondents gives an average burden of 1.5 hours per year for each respondent.


Cost to Respondents: The estimated total burden cost is $13,452,553 per year.


The hourly wage for each respondent was estimated as follows:


Organic Certifying Agent $15.00

Crop Insurance Representative $12.00

Agent $10.00

Producer/Agent/Crop Ins. Rep. $ 9.44

Producer/Crop Ins. Representative $ 9.16

Agent/Producer $ 8.16

Agent/Clerk $ 7.30

Agent/Clerk/Producer $ 6.81

Producer $ 6.32

Clerk $ 6.00


13. TOTAL ANNUAL COST TO RESPONDENTS OR RECORD KEEPERS


The insurance companies report that the average yearly expenses are approximately 2.71 percent of gross premium for telephone lines, transferring data, programming, support and research of data reporting errors, and computer processing time.


The total premium for the 2004 reinsurance year was 4.2 billion. The costs of reporting data, processing data, and software programming would equate to $113,820,000.


14. ANNUAL COST TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT:


There is no cost to the Federal Government for the collection of information. The information is collected by the insurance companies through their representatives and agents. However, approved insurance providers are required to submit specific data to RMA in accordance with Manual 13 and the SRA. RMA estimates it costs the Federal Government $3,600,000 annually to directly receive, store, and format the data from the insurance companies that they have collected. Of this amount $500,000 is for hardware to receive the information, $300,000 is for maintenance and operations of the hardware, $1,500,000 is for application, programming, and database loads for Reinsurance Accounting System/FCIC Data Acceptance System (RAS/DAS), and $1,300,000 is for Federal employee salaries to resolve errors, expense reimbursements and loss payments.


FCIC does not produce or distribute forms. Therefore, there is no cost of producing or distributing forms to the Federal Government.


15. REASONS FOR CHANGES IN BURDEN:


There was an increase in total burden hours due to an adjustment of 624,141 burden hours that was omitted in the previous ICR’s that allowed time to read crop insurance documents each year and a decrease of 217,949 due to program changes. These program changes resulted because FCIC terminated crop insurance coverage on Fresh Market Beans, Cucumbers, and Winter Squash, as well as a variety of changes in the Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions; and Various Crop Provisions. Therefore, RMA is adding an additional 406,184 hours to this ICR for a total of 1,866,457 in total annual burden.


16. TABULATION, ANALYSIS AND PUBLICATION PLANS


Participation data is used by FCIC to make programmatic recommendations and changes, to determine administrative and operating and premium subsidy expenses of the Corporation, and determine producer guarantees, premium, and any applicable indemnities. The data is not planned for publication.


17. REASONS DISPLAY OF EXPIRATION DATE OF OMB APPROVAL IS INAPPROPRIATE.


RMA does not produce or distribute forms, therefore, there is no request to not display an expiration date on forms.


18. EXCEPTIONS to 83-I CERTIFICATION STATEMENT


This information collection meets the certification requirements of SF-83-I, Item 19.


B. COLLECTIONS OF INFORMATION EMPLOYING STATISTICAL METHODS.


The information collections represented in this docket do not employ statistical methods.

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18q0563-0053-2007

File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleUNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
AuthorRisk Management Agency
Last Modified ByShannon & Marissa Persetic
File Modified2007-01-09
File Created2007-01-09

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