30 Day FR Notice

30 Day FR notice Smoke Alarms.pdf

Survey on Usage and Functionality of Smoke Alarms and Carbon Monoxide Alarms (SCOA) in US Households

30 Day FR Notice

OMB: 3041-0180

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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 127 / Monday, July 2, 2018 / Notices
Deletions
On 5/18/2018 (83 FR 97) and
5/25/2018 (83 FR 102), the Committee
for Purchase From People Who Are
Blind or Severely Disabled published
notices of proposed deletions from the
Procurement List.
After consideration of the relevant
matter presented, the Committee has
determined that the products listed
below are no longer suitable for
procurement by the Federal Government
under 41 U.S.C. 8501–8506 and 41 CFR
51–2.4.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
I certify that the following action will
not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The major factors considered for this
certification were:
1. The action will not result in
additional reporting, recordkeeping or
other compliance requirements for small
entities.
2. The action may result in
authorizing small entities to furnish the
products to the Government.
3. There are no known regulatory
alternatives which would accomplish
the objectives of the Javits-WagnerO’Day Act (41 U.S.C. 8501–8506) in
connection with the products deleted
from the Procurement List.

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End of Certification
Accordingly, the following products
are deleted from the Procurement List:
Products
NSN(s)—Product Name(s):
MR 1188—MR Towel Set, Christmas,
Includes Shipper 11188
MR 1189—Drying Mat, Microfiber, Holiday
Themed
MR 1162—Apron, Father’s Day
MR 863—Lint Remover, Roller Type
MR 864—Refill, Lint Roller
Mandatory Source of Supply: Alphapointe,
Kansas City, MO
NSN(s)—Product Name(s):
MR 358—Serving Bowl, Patriotic, Plastic
7Qt
MR 351—Containers, Storage, 20PG
MR 329—Silicone Mini Turner
MR 1056—Mop, Spray, Wet
MR 328—Silicone Mini Brush
MR 318—Set, Mixing Bowl, Spill-Free, 3PC
MR 302—Silicone Batter Spoon
MR 303—Silicone Whisk
MR 304—Silicone Tong w/Locking Handle
Mandatory Source of Supply: Industries for
the Blind, Inc., West Allis, WI
NSN(s)—Product Name(s):
MR 10658—Loopity Loop Sipper, 11Ounce, Includes Shipper 20658
MR 10657—Pop Tart Saver, Includes
Shipper 20657
MR 10732—Hershey’s Lava Cake Maker,
Shipper 20732
MR 10733—Reese’s Lava Cake Maker,
Shipper 20732

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MR 10659—Container Set, Soup and Salad,
Includes Shipper 20659
MR 10731—Garden Colander. Includes
Shipper 20731
Mandatory Source of Supply: Winston-Salem
Industries for the Blind, Inc., WinstonSalem, NC
NSN(s)—Product Name(s): MR 3211—
Ouchless Headband Flat
Mandatory Source of Supply: Association for
Vision Rehabilitation and Employment,
Inc., Binghamton, NY
NSN(s)—Product Name(s): MR 896—Turner,
Flexible, Thin, 11.5″ x 12″ x 4″
Mandatory Source of Supply: Cincinnati
Association for the Blind, Cincinnati, OH
The following information is applicable to
all products listed above.
Contracting Activity: Defense Commissary
Agency
NSN(s)—Product Name(s): 7530–01–600–
2030—Notebook, Stenographer’s,
Biobased Bagasse Paper, 6 x 9″, 80
sheets, Gregg Rule, White
Mandatory Source of Supply: The Arkansas
Lighthouse for the Blind, Little Rock, AR
Contracting Activity: General Services
Administration, New York, NY
NSN(s)—Product Name(s):
7510–01–545–3765—DAYMAX System,
2017, Calendar Pad, Type I
7510–01–545–3730—DAYMAX System,
2017, Calendar Pad, Type II
Mandatory Source of Supply: Anthony
Wayne Rehabilitation Ctr for
Handicapped and Blind, Inc., Fort
Wayne, IN
Contracting Activity: General Services
Administration, New York, NY
NSN(s)—Product Name(s): 6532–00–197–
8201—Hood, Operating, Surgical, White
Mandatory Source of Supply: UNKNOWN
Contracting Activity: Department of Veterans
Affairs, Strategic Acquisition Center
Amy Jensen,
Director, Business Operations.
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P

CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. CPSC–2018–0002]

Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request—Survey
on Smoke and Carbon Monoxide
Alarms
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:

As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), the Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC) announces
that CPSC has submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), a new
proposed collection of information by

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the agency on a survey that will
estimate the use of smoke and carbon
monoxide (CO) alarms in United States
households. In the Federal Register of
March 20, 2018 (83 FR 12178), CPSC
published a notice announcing the
agency’s intent to seek approval of this
collection of information. CPSC
received several comments in response
to that notice. After review and
consideration of the comments, by
publication of this notice, the
Commission announces that CPSC has
submitted to the OMB a request for
approval of this collection of
information.
Written comments on this
request for approval of information
collection requirements should be
submitted by August 1, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments about
this request by email: OIRA_
submission@omb.eop.gov or fax: 202–
395–6881.
Comments by mail should be sent to
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attn: OMB Desk Officer for the
CPSC, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, 725 17th Street
NW, Washington, DC 20503. In
addition, written comments that are sent
to OMB also should be submitted
electronically at http://
www.regulations.gov, under Docket No.
CPSC–2018–0002.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charu Krishnan, Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814; (301)
504–7221, or by email to: CKrishnan@
cpsc.gov.
DATES:

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

[FR Doc. 2018–14093 Filed 6–29–18; 8:45 am]

SUMMARY:

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A. Comments
On March 20, 2018, the CPSC
published a notice in the Federal
Register announcing the agency’s intent
to seek approval of a new collection of
information on a national in-home
survey that will estimate the use and
functionality of smoke and CO alarms in
households, as well as user hazard
perceptions regarding such alarms. (83
FR 12178). CPSC received three
comments in response to that notice.
Two commenters did not address the
survey or any issues related to the
survey, but instead, raised concerns
about climate change. One commenter,
the International Code Council (ICC),
supported the information collection.
The ICC stated that it promulgates
residential and commercial building
safety codes and that having reliable
data to analyze the scope of use and
effectiveness of the detection devices
will improve public safety.

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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 127 / Monday, July 2, 2018 / Notices

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Accordingly, after consideration of
these comments, CPSC will request
approval from OMB for this collection
of information.
B. Survey
CPSC has entered into a contract with
Eureka Facts to conduct a national inhome survey that will estimate the use
and functionality of smoke and CO
alarms in households, as well as user
hazard perceptions regarding such
alarms. The information collected from
this survey will provide CPSC updated
national estimates regarding the use of
smoke alarms and CO alarms in
households, based on direct observation
of alarm installations. The survey also
will help CPSC identify the groups that
do not have operable smoke alarms and/
or CO alarms and the reasons they do
not have such alarms. With this
information, CPSC will be able to target
its messaging better and improve
consumer use and awareness regarding
the operability of these alarms. In
addition, the survey results will help to
inform CPSC’s recommendations to
voluntary standards groups and state/
local jurisdictions regarding their codes,
standards, and/or regulations on smoke
and CO alarms.
The survey seeks to collect
information from 1,185 households
within the United States, with an initial
group of 50 households that will be
processed and analyzed to identify any
issues regarding the survey instrument
and data collection procedures. The
survey will use a mixed-mode,
multistage approach to data collection.
The data will be collected through two
modes: Face-to-face in-home interviews
and telephone surveys. The survey
instrument will be programmed on
Vovici software and will be
administered via in-home interviews
using a Computer-Assisted Personal
Interview (CAPI) format, or by
telephone, using a Computer-Assisted
Telephone Interview (CATI) format.
Smoke alarms are more prevalent in
homes than CO alarms are. Accordingly,
during the screening process, if
respondents indicate that they have a
smoke alarm that may be tested directly,
the respondents will be scheduled for
an in-home interview for the full survey.
However, if the smoke alarm cannot be
tested directly because the household
does not have a smoke alarm installed,
or the smoke alarms are connected to a
central alarm system that will notify the
police or fire department, the
respondent is not eligible for the inhome survey. Instead of the in-home
survey, these households would be
given a subset of survey questions about
safety attitudes and demographics that

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would be collected over the telephone.
For participants eligible for in-home
interviews, a two-member survey team
will ask household residents questions
related to installed smoke and CO
alarms. The survey team will then test
residents’ smoke and CO alarms. If any
of the alarms do not work, the survey
team will offer to replace the alarms free
of charge.
C. Burden Hours
The survey interview will take 20 to
60 minutes to conduct, depending on
whether the survey is administered by
telephone (about 20 minutes), or by an
in-home interview (60 minutes). We
estimate the number of survey
respondents to be 1,185. We estimate
the total annual burden hours for
respondents to be 1,422 hours, based on
the total time required to respond to the
invitation, screener, and the actual
survey. The monetized hourly cost is
$35.64, as defined by the average total
hourly cost to employers for employee
compensation for employees across all
occupations as of September 2017,
reported by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. Accordingly, we estimate the
total annual cost burden to all
respondents to be $50,680. (1,422 hours
× $35.64 = $50,680.). The total cost to
the federal government for the contract
to design and conduct the survey is
$721,773.
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2018–14140 Filed 6–29–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P

DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
Defense Science Board; Notice of
Federal Advisory Committee Meeting
Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering, Defense
Science Board, Department of Defense.
ACTION: Notice of Federal Advisory
Committee meeting.
AGENCY:

The Department of Defense
(DoD) is publishing this notice to
announce that the following Federal
Advisory Committee meeting of the
Defense Science Board (DSB) will take
place.
DATES: June 27, 2018 from 8:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m.–June 28, 2018 from 8:00 a.m.
to 3:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The Executive Conference
Center, 4075 Wilson Boulevard, 3rd
Floor, Arlington, VA 22203.
SUMMARY:

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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Defense Science Board Designated
Federal Officer (DFO) Mr. Edward C.
Gliot, (703) 571–0079 (Voice),
(703) 697–1860 (Facsimile),
edward.c.gliot.civ@mail.mil (Email).
Mailing address is Defense Science
Board, 3140 Defense Pentagon, Room
3B888A, Washington, DC 20301–3140.
Website: http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/.
The most up-to-date changes to the
meeting agenda can be found on the
website.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
meeting is being held under the
provisions of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act (FACA) (5 U.S.C.,
Appendix), the Government in the
Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. 552b), and 41
CFR 102–3.140 and 102–3.150.
Purpose of the Meeting: The mission
of the DSB is to provide independent
advice and technical enterprise. The
objective of the meeting is to obtain,
review, and evaluate classified
information related to the DSB’s
mission. The meeting will focus on DoD
dependence on the U.S. electric power
grid, homeland air defense, maritime
situational awareness, threats and
promise of biotechnology, countering
autonomous systems, technical
approaches to counter-intelligence,
resilient positioning, navigation and
timing, various undersea issues, gray
zone conflict, resilience of the defense
industrial base, and logistics.
Agenda: The 2018 Summer Study
meeting will begin on Wednesday, June
27, 2018 at 8:00 a.m. with opening
remarks from Mr. Edward Gliot, DSB
Executive Director, Dr. Craig Fields,
DSB Chairman and Dr. Eric Evans, Vice
Chairman. Following opening remarks,
Defense Science Board members will
hold classified small group discussions
covering DoD dependence on the U.S.
electric power grid, homeland air
defense, maritime situational awareness,
threats and promise of biotechnology,
countering autonomous systems,
technical approaches to counterintelligence, resilient positioning,
navigation and timing, various undersea
issues, gray zone conflict, resilience of
the defense industrial base, and
logistics. After break, DSB members will
hold a plenary session of classified
discussion covering DoD dependence on
the U.S. electric power grid, homeland
air defense, maritime situational
awareness, threats and promise of
biotechnology, countering autonomous
systems, technical approaches to
counter-intelligence, resilient
positioning, navigation and timing,
various undersea issues, gray zone
conflict, resilience of the defense

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