30-day FRN

30-day Notice 5-31-17.pdf

Procedural Requirements for Requests for Interpretative, No- Action and Exemptive Letters

30-day FRN

OMB: 3038-0049

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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 31, 2017 / Notices
4. Community Activities and Issues
5. Education and Outreach Initiatives
C. Update on Marianas Trench Marine
National Monument Management
Plan and Sanctuary Request
D. Marine Conservation Plans (Action
Item)
1. Territory of Guam
2. Commonwealth of Northern
Mariana Islands
E. Advisory Group Reports and
Recommendations
1. Advisory Panel
2. Non-Commercial Fisheries
Advisory Committee
3. FDCRC
4. SSC
F. Fishery Rights of Indigenous
People Standing Committee
Recommendations
G. Public Hearing
H. Council Discussion and Action
Wednesday, June 21, 2017, 6 p.m. to 9
p.m.,
Fishers Forum—From Boat to Web:
Understanding Catch Reporting and
Fishery Monitoring

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Thursday June 22, 2017, 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m.
10. Hawaii Archipelago & Pacific
Remote Island Areas (PRIA)
A. Moku Pepa
B. Legislative Report
C. Enforcement Issues
D. Community Issues
1. Promise to Paeaina
2. Moomomi Community-based
management plan meetings
E. Re-specification of annual catch
limits for the main Hawaiian island
Kona crab fishery (Action Item)
F. Options for Fishing Regulations in
the NWHI MEA (Action Item)
G. Marine Conservation Plan for PRIA
and Hawaii (Action Item)
H. Report on MHI Bottomfish
Working Group Meeting
I. State of Hawaii Coral Reef
Bleaching Management Plan
J. Education and Outreach Initiatives
K. Advisory Group Report and
Recommendations
1. Advisory Panel
2. Non-Commercial Fisheries
Advisory Committee
3. FDCRC
4. SSC
L. Fishery Rights of Indigenous
People Standing Committee
Recommendations
M. Pelagic & International Standing
Committee Recommendations
N. Public Hearing
O. Council Discussion and Action
11. American Samoa Archipelago
A. Motu Lipoti
B. Fono Report

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C. Enforcement Issues
D. Community Activities and Issues
E. Fisheries Development
1. Longline Dock Update
2. Aunu’u Fishermen Development
3. Tutuila and Manu’a Alia Repair
4. Fishermen Training Program and
Lending Scheme
5. Working Alia Project
6. Fagatogo Fish Market & Bottomfish
Export
7. Manu’a Fishermen Cooperatives
F. Shark Law Revision
G. Education and Outreach
1. AmeriCorps and Kupu Hawaii
Climate Change Resilience
Internship Program
2. Graduating Scholarship Students
Employment
3. Summer Fisheries High School
Course
H. Advisory Group Reports and
Recommendations
1. Advisory Panel
2. FDCRC
3. SSC
I. Fishery Rights of Indigenous People
Standing Committee
Recommendations
J. Public Comment
K. Council Discussion and Action
12. Administrative Matters
A. Financial Reports
B. Administrative Reports
C. Update on information inquiries
and responses
D. Council Family Changes
1. Marine Planning and Climate
Change Committee
2. Advisory Panels
3. Others
E. Report on the annual CCC meeting
F. SOPP Changes
1. Report of the legislative committee
G. Meetings and Workshops
H. Other Business
I. Fishery Rights of Indigenous People
Standing Committee
Recommendations
J. Executive and Budget Standing
Committee Recommendations
K. Public Comment
L. Council Discussion and Action
13. Other Business
Non-emergency issues not contained
in this agenda may come before the
Council for discussion and formal
Council action during its 170th meeting.
However, Council action on regulatory
issues will be restricted to those issues
specifically listed in this document and
any regulatory issue arising after
publication of this document that
requires emergency action under section
305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
provided the public has been notified of
the Council’s intent to take action to
address the emergency.

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Special Accommodations
These meetings are accessible to
people with disabilities. Requests for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to
Kitty M. Simonds, (808) 522–8220
(voice) or (808) 522–8226 (fax), at least
five days prior to the meeting date.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: May 26, 2017.
Tracey L. Thompson,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–11283 Filed 5–30–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P

COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Agency Information Collection
Activities Under OMB Review
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:

In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
(PRA), this notice announces that the
Information Collection Request (ICR)
abstracted below has been forwarded to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and comment. The
ICR describes the nature of the
information collection and its expected
costs and burden.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before June 30, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Comments regarding the
burden estimate or any other aspect of
the information collection, including
suggestions for reducing the burden,
may be submitted directly to the Office
of Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIA) in OMB within 30 days of this
notice’s publication by either of the
following methods. Please identify the
comments by ‘‘OMB Control No. 3038–
0049.’’
• By email addressed to:
OIRAsubmissions@omb.eop.gov or
• By mail addressed to: the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget,
Attention Desk Officer for the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, 725 17th Street NW.,
Washington DC 20503.
A copy of all comments submitted to
OIRA should be sent to the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) by either of the
following methods. The copies should
refer to ‘‘OMB Control No. 3038–0049.’’
• By mail addressed to: Christopher
Kirkpatrick, Secretary of the
SUMMARY:

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24956

Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 31, 2017 / Notices

Commission, Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20581;
• By Hand Delivery/Courier to the
same address; or
• Through the Commission’s Web site
at http://comments.cftc.gov. Please
follow the instructions for submitting
comments through the Web site.
A copy of the supporting statements
for the collection of information
discussed herein may be obtained by
visiting http://RegInfo.gov.
All comments must be submitted in
English, or if not, accompanied by an
English translation. Comments will be
posted as received to http://
www.cftc.gov. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. If you wish the
Commission to consider information
that you believe is exempt from
disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act, a petition for
confidential treatment of the exempt
information may be submitted according
to the procedures established in § 145.9
of the Commission’s regulations.1
The Commission reserves the right,
but shall have no obligation, to review,
pre-screen, filter, redact, refuse or
remove any or all of your submission
from http://www.cftc.gov that it may
deem to be inappropriate for
publication, such as obscene language.
All submissions that have been redacted
or removed that contain comments on
the merits of the ICR will be retained in
the public comment file and will be
considered as required under the
Administrative Procedure Act and other
applicable laws, and may be accessible
under the Freedom of Information Act.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jocelyn Partridge, Special Counsel,
Division of Clearing and Risk, (202)
418–5926, email: jpartridge@cftc.gov;
Meghan Tente, Special Counsel,
Division of Clearing and Risk, (202)
418–5785, email: mtente@cftc.gov; Jacob
Chachkin, Special Counsel, Division of
Swaps and Intermediary Oversight,
(202) 418–5496, email: jchachkin@
cftc.gov; or Dana Brown, Paralegal
Specialist, Division of Market Oversight,
(202) 418–5093, email: dbrown@
cftc.gov; or (202)418–5093.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Procedural Requirements for
Requests for Interpretative, No-Action
and Exemptive Letters (OMB Control
No. 3038–0049). This is a request for an
extension of a currently approved
information collection.
Abstract: An agency may not conduct
or sponsor, and a person is not required
1 17

CFR 145.9.

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to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB number. This
collection covers the information
requirements for voluntary requests for,
and the issuance of, interpretative, noaction, and exemptive letters submitted
to Commission staff pursuant to the
provisions of § 140.99 of the
Commission’s regulations,2 and related
requests for confidential treatment
pursuant to § 140.98(b) 3 of the
Commission’s regulations. It includes
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The collection requirements described
herein are voluntary. They apply to
parties that choose to request a benefit
from Commission staff in the form of the
regulatory action described in § 140.99.
Such benefits may include, for example,
relief from some or all of the burdens
associated with other collections of
information, relief from regulatory
obligations that do not constitute
collections of information,
interpretations, or extensions of time for
compliance with certain Commission
regulations. It is likely that persons who
would opt to request action under
§ 140.99 will have determined that the
information collection burdens that they
would assume by doing so will be
outweighed substantially by the relief
that they seek to receive.
The information collection associated
with § 140.99 of the Commission’s
regulations is necessary, and would be
used, to assist Commission staff in
understanding the type of relief that is
being requested and the basis for the
request. It is also necessary, and would
be used, to provide staff with a
sufficient basis for determining whether:
(1) Granting the relief would be
necessary or appropriate under the facts
and circumstances presented by the
requestor; (2) the relief provided should
be conditional and/or time-limited; and
(3) granting the relief would be
consistent with staff responses to
requests that have been presented under
similar facts and circumstances. In some
cases, the requested relief might be
granted upon the condition that those
who seek the benefits of that relief fulfill
certain notice and other reporting
obligations that serve as substituted
compliance for regulatory requirements
that would otherwise be imposed. In
some cases, the conditions might
include reporting or recordkeeping
requirements that are necessary to
ensure that the relief granted by
2 17 CFR 140.99. An archive containing CFTC
staff letters may be found at http://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/CFTCStaffLetters/index.htm.
3 17 CFR 140.98(b).

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Commission staff is appropriate. In
some cases, the parties obtaining relief
may be subject to reporting and
recordkeeping requirements that are
necessary to monitor for the parties’
compliance with the conditions
imposed. The foregoing categories may
or may not be overlapping. Once again,
it is likely that those who would comply
with these conditions will have
determined that the burden of
complying with the conditions is
outweighed by the benefit of the relief
that they seek to receive. The
information collection associated with
§ 140.98(b) of the Commission’s
regulations is necessary to provide a
mechanism whereby persons requesting
no-action, interpretative and exemption
letters may seek temporary confidential
treatment of their request and the
Commission staff response thereto and
the grounds upon which such
confidential treatment is sought.
On March 29, 2017, the Commission
published in the Federal Register notice
of the proposed extension of this
information collection and provided 60
days for public comment on the
proposed extension, 82 FR 15514,
March 29, 2017 (‘‘60-Day Notice’’).
Burden Statement: In order to
establish estimates of the annual
information collection burden
associated with the exemptive, noaction and interpretative letters that
may be issued by Commission staff
during the three year renewal period,
Commission staff reviewed the letters of
this type that were issued by
Commission staff during 2016. This
timeframe was chosen because it was
believed that such recent experience
would be indicative of both the quantity
of requests that Commission staff
expects to receive and the quantity of
letters that Commission staff expects to
issue on an annual basis during the
renewal period and the information
collection burdens that may be
associated with them. In some cases, the
relief granted in 2016 is unlikely to be
requested again as it has been
superseded by a Commission
rulemaking. The projected burden
estimates for the renewal period were
not reduced accordingly in order to
account for the possibility that new
issues may arise. It is also possible that
certain relief granted in 2016 may be
superseded by a future Commission
rulemaking. As future rulemakings and
their effective dates are speculative, the
estimates for the renewal period have
not been reduced to account for
potential rulemakings.
The annual respondent burden for
this collection during the renewal
period is estimated to be as follows:

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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 31, 2017 / Notices
Estimated Number of Respondents:
284.
Estimated Average Annual Burden
Hours per Respondent: 9.5.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 2,704.
Frequency of Collection: Occasional.
Type of Respondents: Respondents
include persons registered with the
Commission (such as commodity pool
operators, commodity trading advisors,
derivatives clearing organizations,
designated contract markets, futures
commission merchants, introducing
brokers, swap dealers, and swap
execution facilities); persons seeking an
exemption from registration; persons
whose registration with the Commission
is pending; trade associations and their
members; eligible contract participants;
and other persons seeking relief from
discrete regulatory requirements.

burden hours related to a request for
confidential treatment made pursuant to
§ 140.98(b) of the Commission’s
regulations.4
The burden hours associated with
requests for exemptive, no-action and
interpretative letters include both the
drafting and filing of the request itself
as well as performing the underlying
factual or legal analysis generally to
comply with the information collection.
The burden hours associated with
individual requests will vary widely,
depending upon the type and
complexity of relief requested, whether
the request presents novel or complex
issues, the relevant facts and
circumstances, and the number of
requestors or other affected entities. The
Commission provides estimates of the
amount of time that any requestor
spends on any particular request as each
request is unique, based upon the
preceding factors.

There are no capital costs or operating
and maintenance costs associated with
this collection.
These estimates, as set forth in greater
detail below, include the burden hours
for complying with the information
requirements for exemptive, no-action
and interpretative letters contained in
§ 140.99(c) of the Commission’s
regulations; effecting the filing of such
letters pursuant to § 140.99(d);
providing notice to Commission staff of
materially changed facts and
circumstances pursuant to
§ 140.99(c)(3)(ii); complying with any
conditions and monitoring that may be
contained in a grant of no-action or
exemptive relief pursuant to § 140.99(e);
complying with requirements to make
disclosures to third parties; and
preparing and submitting withdrawals
of requests for exemptive, no-action and
interpretative letters, as provided in
§ 140.99(f). The estimates also include
Estimated
annual
respondents

Estimated
annual reports
or records per
respondent

Total annual
responses

Estimated
average
number of
hours per
response

Estimated
annual
burden
hours

REPORTING
§ 140.99(c)—information requirements for letters ...........................
§ 140.99(d)—filing requirements ......................................................
§ 140.99(c)(3)(ii)—materially changed facts and circumstances .....
§ 140.99(e)—staff response (conditions imposed) ..........................
§ 140.99(f)—withdrawal of requests ................................................
§ 140.98(b)—requests for confidential treatment .............................

78
78
5
16
5
42

1
1
1
1
1
1

78
78
5
16
5
42

24.7
1
3
5
1
1

1,930
78
15
80
5
42

Total Reporting .........................................................................

224

1

224

9.6

2,150

RECORDKEEPING
§ 140.99(e)—staff response (conditions imposed) ..........................
Disclosures to Third Parties .............................................................

54
6

4
56.4

216
338

1
1

216
338

Total ..........................................................................................

284

2.7

778

3.5

2,704

Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.

Air Force Scientific Advisory
Board, Department of the Air Force,
DOD.

The United States Air Force
Scientific Advisory Board plans to hold
its Summer Session Board meeting on
June 15, 2017. Portions of this meeting
will be open to the public.
DATES: The meeting date is June 15,
2017, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The Beckman Center of
National Academies of Science and
Engineering, 100 Academy Drive, Irvine,
California 92617.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
Scientific Advisory Board meeting
organizer, Major Mike Rigoni at
michael.j.rigoni.mil@mail.mil or (703)
695–4297, United States Air Force

Scientific Advisory Board, 1500 West
Perimeter Road, Ste. #3300, Joint Base
Andrews, MD 20762.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the
provisions of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act of 1972 (5 U.S.C.,
Appendix, as amended), the
Government in the Sunshine Act of
1976 (5 U.S.C. 552b, as amended), and
41 CFR 102–3.150, the Department of
Defense announces the United States
Air Force (USAF) Scientific Advisory
Board (SAB) Summer Board meeting
will take place on 15 June 2017 at the
Beckman Center of The National
Academies of Science and Engineering,
located at 100 Academy Drive, Irvine,
California 92617. The purpose of this

4 The Commission now includes the collection of
information related to Commission regulation

41.3(b), which involves exemption requests from
certain intermediaries, under OMB number 3038–

0059 and, as such, is no longer including it in this
OMB number.

ACTION:

Dated: May 24, 2017.
Robert N. Sidman,
Deputy Secretary of the Commission.

SUMMARY:

[FR Doc. 2017–11114 Filed 5–30–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P

DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

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Department of the Air Force
United States Air Force Scientific
Advisory Board Notice of Meeting
AGENCY:

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Meeting notice.

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