99-28876. Citrus Canker Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 213 (Thursday, November 4, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 60088-60092]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-28876]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
    
    7 CFR Part 301
    
    [Docket No. 99-080-1]
    
    
    Citrus Canker Regulations
    
    AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Interim rule and request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: We are amending the citrus canker regulations to allow citrus 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas to be moved into a 
    quarantined area for packing and then moved from that quarantined area 
    to any destination in the United States, including commercial citrus-
    producing areas. The citrus fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas would have to be moved and handled according to specific 
    conditions designed to prevent the artificial spread of citrus canker, 
    including conditions to prevent its commingling with, and possible 
    contamination by, citrus fruit produced within a quarantined area. We 
    are taking this action to relieve unnecessary restrictions on regulated 
    fruit originating outside a quarantined area but packed within a 
    quarantined area.
    
    DATES: This interim rule was effective October 29, 1999. We invite you 
    to comment on this docket. We will consider all comments that we 
    receive by January 3, 2000.
    
    ADDRESSES: Please send your comment and three copies to: Docket No. 99-
    080-1, Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS, Suite 3C03, 
    4700 River Road, Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737-1238. Please state that 
    your comment refers to Docket No. 99-080-1.
        You may read any comments that we receive on this docket in our 
    reading room. The reading room is located in room 1141 of the USDA 
    South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, 
    DC. Normal reading room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through 
    Friday, except holidays. To be sure someone is there to help you, 
    please call (202) 690-2817 before coming.
        APHIS documents published in the Federal Register, and related 
    information, including the names of organizations and individuals who 
    have commented on APHIS rules, are available on the Internet at http://
    www.aphis.usda.gov/ppd/rad/webrepor.html.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Stephen Poe, Operations Officer, 
    Program Support Staff, PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road, Unit 134, 
    Riverdale, MD 20737-1236; (301) 734-8247.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Citrus canker is a plant disease that affects plants and plant 
    parts, including fresh fruit, of citrus and citrus relatives (Family 
    Rutaceae). Citrus canker can cause defoliation and other serious damage 
    to the leaves and twigs of susceptible plants. It can also cause 
    lesions on the fruit of infected plants, which renders the fruit 
    unmarketable, and cause infected fruit to drop from the trees before 
    reaching maturity. The aggressive A (Asiatic) strain of citrus canker 
    can infect susceptible plants rapidly and lead to extensive economic 
    losses in commercial citrus-producing areas.
        The regulations to prevent the interstate spread of citrus canker 
    are contained in 7 CFR 301.75-1 through 301.75-14 (referred to below as 
    the regulations). The regulations restrict the interstate movement of 
    regulated articles from and through areas quarantined because of citrus 
    canker and provide conditions under which regulated fruit may be moved 
    into, through, and from quarantined areas for packing. The regulations 
    currently list parts of Broward, Collier, Dade, and Manatee Counties, 
    FL, as quarantined areas for citrus canker.
        Among the entities that are affected by the restrictions of the 
    regulations are producers of regulated fruit and packing plants that 
    handle regulated fruit. With regard to the packing and movement of 
    regulated fruit, the regulations have provided for the three sets of 
    circumstances that may face producers and packers when areas within a 
    State are quarantined for citrus canker:
         The regulated fruit is both produced and packed in a 
    quarantined area (Sec. 301.75-7(a));
         The regulated fruit is produced in a quarantined area and 
    packed outside the quarantined areas (Sec. 301.75-4(d)(2)(ii)); and
         The regulated fruit is produced outside the quarantined 
    areas and packed in a quarantined area (Sec. 301.75-7(b)).
        In each of these three situations, the regulations provide specific 
    conditions that must be met in order for the fruit to qualify for 
    interstate movement after packing, and in each case the regulated fruit 
    may not be moved into commercial citrus-producing areas of the United 
    States after packing.
    
    [[Page 60089]]
    
        When the most recent additions were made to the quarantined areas 
    in an interim rule effective January 26, 1999, and published in the 
    Federal Register on February 1, 1999 (64 FR 4777-4780, Docket No. 95-
    086-2), approximately 13 citrus fruit packing plants fell within the 
    quarantined areas. It has come to our attention that at least one of 
    the packing plants located in the quarantined areas could expect to 
    encounter significant financial hardship as a result of that quarantine 
    action due to the fact that a large portion of the packer's business 
    involves shipping gift fruit to areas of Florida located outside the 
    quarantined areas. As noted in the previous paragraph, regulated fruit 
    packed in a quarantined area may not be moved into commercial citrus-
    producing areas, so the operator of this packing plant could expect to 
    see his business drastically curtailed as a direct result of the 
    inclusion of his plant in a quarantined area.
        In an effort to minimize the expected significant economic effects 
    on this, and potentially other, fruit packing operations, we reexamined 
    our citrus canker regulations with an eye toward identifying potential 
    alternatives to the prohibition on the movement of regulated fruit that 
    has been packed within a quarantined area. After consulting with our 
    Citrus Canker Eradication Program staff, various citrus packer groups, 
    and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, we 
    concluded that a regulatory approach that incorporated the segregation 
    of fruit within the packing plant--i.e., keeping regulated fruit 
    produced outside the quarantined areas physically separated from 
    regulated fruit produced within a quarantined area--and other 
    safeguards would allow packing plants located within a quarantined area 
    to move regulated fruit from outside a citrus canker quarantined area 
    into a quarantined area for packing under certain conditions and then 
    ship it to any area of the United States, including commercial citrus-
    producing areas. This approach is consistent with Sec. 301.75-
    4(d)(2)(ii) of the regulations, which provides conditions, including 
    fruit segregation, that allow regulated fruit produced both within and 
    outside the quarantined areas to be packed in plants located outside 
    the quarantined areas without affecting the ability of those plants to 
    move regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined areas to any 
    destination, including commercial citrus-producing areas. Similarly, 
    Florida's State-run Caribbean fruit fly (Carib fly) program has for 
    several years successfully provided for fruit produced both within and 
    outside the areas regulated for Carib fly to be packed in plants 
    located within regulated areas under conditions that include fruit 
    segregation.
        Based on these considerations, we have amended the citrus canker 
    regulations to provide conditions under which regulated fruit produced 
    outside the quarantined areas may be packed within a quarantined area 
    and subsequently moved into any area of the United States, including 
    commercial citrus-producing areas. These conditions, which incorporate 
    features drawn from elsewhere in our citrus canker regulations and 
    include specific documentation, cleaning, disinfection, and handling 
    requirements in addition to fruit segregation, are explained in detail 
    below.
        We believe that most producers and packers of regulated fruit will 
    be willing to observe the conditions set forth in this interim rule in 
    order to qualify regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined areas 
    but packed within a quarantined area for movement to all areas of the 
    United States, including commercial citrus-producing areas. However, we 
    acknowledge that there may be some producers or packers who wish to 
    continue to use the current provisions in Sec. 301.75-7(b) for the 
    packing of fruit within a quarantined area, which is not then eligible 
    to be shipped to commercial citrus-producing areas. These provisions 
    may be preferred by packers who do not wish to take the extra step of 
    keeping regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined areas 
    segregated from fruit produced within a quarantined area. Therefore, we 
    are retaining the original provisions of Sec. 301.75-7(b) in this 
    interim rule; those provisions will now be found in Sec. 301.75-
    7(b)(1).
        New Sec. 301.75-7(b)(2) contains conditions under which regulated 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas but packed within a 
    quarantined area may be moved interstate to any area of the United 
    States, including commercial citrus-producing areas. We have revised 
    the introductory text of Sec. 301.75-7(b) to indicate that there are 
    now two options available to qualify regulated fruit produced outside 
    the quarantined areas for subsequent movement when that fruit is packed 
    in a plant located within a quarantined area.
        Under the provisions of new paragraph Sec. 301.75-7(b)(2), 
    regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined areas but packed in a 
    plant located within a quarantined area will be eligible for movement 
    into any area of the United States, including commercial citrus-
    producing areas, under the following conditions:
        Documentation. The regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas must be accompanied to the packing plant by a document that 
    states the location of the grove where the fruit was produced, the 
    variety and quantity of fruit, the address to which the fruit will be 
    delivered for packing, and the date the movement of the fruit began. 
    This documentation serves to establish that the regulated fruit was 
    produced in an area outside the quarantined areas and, by providing a 
    record of the amount and type of fruit in the shipment, helps ensure 
    that regulated fruit from other sources is not added to the shipment 
    during movement.
        Unloading and loading. The regulated fruit produced outside the 
    quarantined areas must be moved through the quarantined area without 
    being unloaded, and no regulated article may be added to the shipment 
    in the quarantined area. Keeping the regulated fruit produced outside 
    the quarantined areas separated from fruit produced within a 
    quarantined area is one of the primary safeguards of these new 
    provisions, so this requirement is necessary to ensure that the 
    integrity of the shipment is maintained from the time the fruit is 
    loaded in the nonquarantined production area to the time it is unloaded 
    at the packing plant. Producers or packers who wish to pick up 
    additional regulated fruit produced within the quarantined area while 
    en route to the packing plant may still do so under the provisions of 
    Sec. 301.75-7(b)(1), but, as noted above, fruit from that packing plant 
    will be ineligible for movement into commercial citrus-producing areas.
        Protecting the shipment. The regulated fruit produced outside the 
    quarantined areas must be completely covered, or enclosed in containers 
    or in a compartment of a vehicle, both during its movement to a packing 
    plant in a quarantined area and during its movement from a packing 
    plant in a quarantined area to destinations outside that quarantined 
    area. This requirement is necessary to protect the regulated fruit 
    produced outside the quarantined areas from the possibility of 
    contamination during its movement through the quarantined area.
        Segregation and treatment. At the packing plant, the regulated 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas must be stored separately 
    from, and have no contact with, regulated fruit produced in a 
    quarantined area. Any equipment at the packing plant that comes in 
    contact with regulated fruit produced in a quarantined area must be
    
    [[Page 60090]]
    
    treated in accordance with Sec. 310.75-11(d) of this subpart before 
    being used to handle any regulated fruit not produced in a quarantined 
    area. Requiring the regulated fruit produced outside a quarantined area 
    to be segregated from other fruit within the packing plant will prevent 
    the commingling of the two types of fruit, thus preventing the 
    contamination that could occur as a result of that commingling, and 
    will ensure that only fruit produced outside the quarantined areas is 
    moved interstate to commercial citrus-producing areas. Similarly, the 
    application of the cleaning and disinfection measures of Sec. 301.75-
    11(d) to the handling equipment in the plant will prevent regulated 
    fruit produced outside a quarantined area from becoming contaminated by 
    equipment that has been used to handle fruit produced within a 
    quarantined area.
        Fruit treatment. The regulated fruit produced outside the 
    quarantined areas must be treated at the packing plant in accordance 
    with Sec. 301.75-11(a) of the regulations. While regulated fruit 
    produced outside a quarantined area does not present the same citrus 
    canker risks as fruit produced within a regulated area, we are 
    nonetheless requiring it to be treated with sodium hypochlorite or 
    sodium o-phenyl phenate (SOPP) in accordance with Sec. 301.75-11(a) as 
    a redundant safeguarding measure, given that the fruit is being packed 
    within a quarantined area and will be eligible for movement into 
    commercial citrus-producing areas. Beyond the role of those treatments 
    in mitigating the risks posed by citrus canker, we understand that 
    sodium hypochlorite and SOPP treatments, as well as additional measures 
    such as fruit waxing, are standard packing industry practices even 
    outside the quarantined areas because such measures help prevent fruit 
    spoilage. That consideration, plus the fact that packing plants within 
    the quarantined areas are already equipped to apply the required 
    treatments, lead us to believe that this requirement will not impose 
    any additional burdens on the operators of packing plants.
        Handling of culls and debris. Due to the likelihood that they will 
    be commingled with similar regulated articles collected from regulated 
    fruit produced in a quarantined area, all leaves, litter, and culls 
    collected at the packing plant from the shipment of regulated fruit 
    produced outside the quarantined areas must be handled as prescribed in 
    Sec. 301.75-4(d)(2)(ii)(E) of the regulations. Paragraph (d) of 
    Sec. 301.75-4 contains the conditions that must be met in order for 
    less than an entire State to be designated as a quarantined area; those 
    conditions include the specific provisions for the intrastate movement 
    and handling of leaves, litter, and culls cited above as appearing in 
    Sec. 301.75-4(d)(2)(i)(E). Those requirements, which include the 
    incineration or burying in a fenced public landfill of such articles 
    and the option of processing culls into a product other than fresh 
    fruit (e.g., juice or juice concentrate), are intended to prevent the 
    artificial spread of citrus canker that could occur through the 
    movement of leaves, litter, and culls. Given that it usually takes some 
    time before a sufficiently large load of, for example, leaves and 
    litter to be collected to warrant a trip to the landfill, we believe 
    that it is likely that packing plant operators will store the leaves, 
    litter, and culls collected from the shipment of regulated fruit 
    produced outside the quarantined areas with similar articles collected 
    from shipments of regulated fruit produced within the quarantined area. 
    Therefore, we believe that it is necessary to require that all those 
    regulated articles, regardless of their origin, be handled in the same 
    manner as the regulated articles presenting the highest risk.
        Certificate. The regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas maybe moved interstate from the packing plant to any destination 
    if it is accompanied by a certificate issued in accordance with 
    Sec. 301.75-12 of the regulations. The certificate will provide 
    documentation that the requirements of this interim rule have been met. 
    Under the regulations, a certificate is used to authorize the 
    interstate movement of a regulated article from a quarantined area into 
    any area of the United States, and a limited permit is used to 
    authorize the movement of regulated articles from the quarantined 
    areas, but with restrictions on the areas of the United States into 
    which the articles may be moved. Because regulated fruit produced 
    outside the quarantined areas and handled in accordance with the new 
    provisions of this interim rule will be eligible for movement to any 
    area of the United States, including commercial citrus-producing areas, 
    a certificate, and not a limited permit, will be required.
        Regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined areas can be 
    packed within a quarantined area and moved into any area of the United 
    States, including commercial citrus-producing areas, under the 
    conditions set forth in this interim rule without contributing to the 
    artificial spread of citrus canker. Although our pest data sheet for 
    citrus canker \1\ indicates that the causal pathogen could potentially 
    move long distances on diseased fruit, that data sheet also states that 
    there is no authenticated example of a citrus canker outbreak that was 
    initiated by diseased fruit. If diseased fruit is an unlikely pathway 
    for the spread of citrus canker, then it is reasonable to expect that 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas, which is the only fruit 
    affected by this rule, will present an even lower risk, even if it is 
    packed within a quarantined area. Given the preponderance of evidence 
    and expert opinion that the long-distance spread of citrus canker 
    occurs primarily through the movement of infected planting and 
    propagative materials, and given the absence of documented cases of 
    citrus canker outbreaks attributable to the movement of infected fruit, 
    we have concluded that regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas and handled, treated, and packed under the conditions of this 
    rule will present a negligible disease risk.
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        \1\ This pest data sheet may be obtained from the person listed 
    under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
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    Immediate Action
    
        The Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service 
    has determined that there is good cause for publishing this interim 
    rule without prior opportunity for public comment. Immediate action is 
    necessary to provide, prior to the start of the winter shipping season, 
    conditions under which regulated fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas but packed within a quarantined area may be moved into any area 
    of the United States, including commercial citrus-producing areas.
        Because prior notice and other public procedures with respect to 
    this action are impracticable and contrary to the public interest under 
    these conditions, we find good cause under 5 U.S.C. 553 to make this 
    action effective upon signature. We will consider comments that are 
    received within 60 days of publication of this rule in the Federal 
    Register. After the comment period closes, we will publish another 
    document in the Federal Register. The document will include a 
    discussion of any comments we receive and any amendments we are making 
    to the rule as a result of the comments.
    
    Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12866. The rule 
    has been determined to be not significant for the purposes of Executive 
    Order 12866
    
    [[Page 60091]]
    
    and, therefore, has not been reviewed by the Office of Management and 
    Budget.
        This rule amends the citrus canker regulations to allow citrus 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas to be moved into a 
    quarantined area for packing and then moved from that quarantined area 
    to any destination in the United States, including commercial citrus-
    producing areas. The citrus fruit produced outside the quarantined 
    areas would have to be moved and handled according to specific 
    conditions designed to prevent the artificial spread of citrus canker, 
    including conditions to prevent its commingling with, and possible 
    contamination by, citrus fruit produced within a quarantined area. We 
    are taking this action to relieve restrictions that are no longer 
    warranted due to our development of alternatives to address the disease 
    risks presented by regulated fruit packed within a quarantined area.
        The overall economic effect of this interim rule is expected to be 
    small. Prior to this interim rule, the regulations already provided for 
    fruit produced within a quarantined area to be packed in plants located 
    outside the quarantined areas and vice versa, and the experience of the 
    cooperative Citrus Canker Eradication Program administered by APHIS and 
    the State of Florida has shown that packing fresh fruit from 
    quarantined and nonquarantined areas in the same facility can be safely 
    conducted. Whereas the regulations had previously prohibited regulated 
    fruit packed within a quarantined area from being moved into commercial 
    citrus-producing areas of the United States, regardless of where the 
    fruit was produced, this interim rule provides conditions under which 
    packing plants located within a quarantined area may ship regulated 
    fruit produced outside the quarantined areas to all areas of the United 
    States, including commercial citrus-producing areas. In so doing, this 
    interim rule makes it possible for packing plants to move regulated 
    fruit into markets that had been denied to them from the time the 
    plants were included in a quarantined area.
    
    Effect on Small Entities
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires that agencies specifically 
    consider the economic effects of their rules on small entities. The 
    Small Business Administration's (SBA) definition of a ``small entity'' 
    packaging fresh or farm-dried fruits and vegetables is one whose total 
    sales are less than $5 million annually. In 1997, there were 850 firms 
    in Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) 0723, Crop Preparation 
    Services for Market in the United States, which includes fresh citrus 
    packers. Under SBA guidelines, 634 of these 850 firms (74 percent) 
    would be considered small entities.
        Within the quarantined areas, there are approximately 13 citrus 
    fruit packers and 13 gift fruit shippers that could be affected by this 
    rule. We do not currently have the data necessary to determine the 
    percentage of these businesses that would be considered small entities 
    under the SBA's criteria. However, while we expect that this rule will 
    allow some of those packing plants to maintain their established 
    business patterns and others to reestablish business relationships that 
    were disrupted by the packing plants' inclusion in the areas 
    quarantined for citrus canker, the overall economic effect of this rule 
    is expected to be small.
        Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and 
    Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action will 
    not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
    
    Executive Order 12372
    
        This program/activity is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic 
    Assistance under No. 10.025 and is subject to Executive Order 12372, 
    which requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local 
    officials. (See 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V.)
    
    Executive Order 12988
    
        This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil 
    Justice Reform. This rule: (1) Preempts all State and local laws and 
    regulations that are inconsistent with this rule; (2) has no 
    retroactive effect; and (3) does not require administrative proceedings 
    before parties may file suit in court challenging this rule.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This rule contains no new information collection or recordkeeping 
    requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 
    et seq.).
    
    List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 301
    
        Agricultural commodities, Plant diseases and pests, Quarantine, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Transportation.
    
        Accordingly, 7 CFR part 301 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 301--DOMESTIC QUARANTINE NOTICES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 301 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 147a, 150bb, 150dd, 150ee, 150ff, 161, 162, 
    and 164-167; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.2(c).
    
        2. In Sec. 301.75-7, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
    
    Sec. 301.75-7  Interstate movement of regulated fruit from a 
    quarantined area.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Regulated fruit not produced in a quarantined area. Regulated 
    fruit not produced in a quarantined area but moved into a quarantined 
    area for packing may be subsequently moved out of the quarantined area 
    only if all the conditions of either paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this 
    section are met.
        (1) Conditions for subsequent movement into any area of the United 
    States except commercial citrus-producing areas. (i) The regulated 
    fruit was accompanied to the packing plant by a bill of lading stating 
    the location of the grove in which the regulated fruit was produced.
        (ii) The regulated fruit was treated in accordance with 
    Sec. 301.75-11(a) of this subpart.
        (iii) The regulated fruit is free of leaves, twigs, and other plant 
    parts, except for stems that are less than one inch long and attached 
    to the regulated fruit.
        (iv) The regulated fruit is accompanied by a limited permit issued 
    in accordance with Sec. 301.75-12 of this subpart.
        (2) Conditions for subsequent movement into any area of the United 
    States including commercial citrus-producing areas. (i) The regulated 
    fruit is accompanied by a bill of lading that states the location of 
    the grove where the fruit was produced, the variety and quantity of 
    fruit, the address to which the fruit will be delivered for packing, 
    and the date the movement of the fruit began.
        (ii) The regulated fruit is moved through the quarantined area 
    without being unloaded and no regulated article is added to the 
    shipment in the quarantined area.
        (iii) The regulated fruit is completely covered, or enclosed in 
    containers or in a compartment of a vehicle, both during its movement 
    to a packing plant in a quarantined area and during its movement from a 
    packing plant in a quarantined area to destinations outside that 
    quarantined area.
        (iv) At the packing plant, regulated fruit produced outside the 
    quarantined areas is stored separately from and has had no contact with 
    regulated fruit produced in a quarantined area. Any equipment at the 
    packing plant that comes in contact with regulated fruit
    
    [[Page 60092]]
    
    produced in a quarantined area is treated in accordance with 
    Sec. 310.75-11(d) of this subpart before being used to handle any 
    regulated fruit not produced in a quarantined area.
        (v) The regulated fruit is treated at the packing plant in 
    accordance with Sec. 301.75-11(a) of this subpart.
        (vi) Due to the likelihood that they will be commingled with 
    similar regulated articles collected from regulated fruit produced in a 
    quarantined area, all leaves, litter, and culls collected from the 
    shipment of regulated fruit at the packing plant are handled as 
    prescribed in Sec. 301.75-4(d)(2)(ii)(E) of this subpart.
        (vii) The regulated fruit is accompanied by a certificate issued in 
    accordance with Sec. 301.75-12 of this subpart.
    
        Done in Washington, DC, this 29th day of October 1999.
    Craig A. Reed,
    Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
    [FR Doc. 99-28876 Filed 11-3-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-34-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/29/1999
Published:
11/04/1999
Department:
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim rule and request for comments.
Document Number:
99-28876
Dates:
This interim rule was effective October 29, 1999. We invite you to comment on this docket. We will consider all comments that we receive by January 3, 2000.
Pages:
60088-60092 (5 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 99-080-1
PDF File:
99-28876.pdf
CFR: (8)
7 CFR 301.75-11(a)
7 CFR 301.75-7(b)(1)
7 CFR 310.75-11(d)
7 CFR 301.75-4(d)(2)(i)(E)
7 CFR 301.75-4(d)(2)(ii)(E)
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