96-33016. Trade Regulation Rule Concerning Games of Chance in the Food Retailing and Gasoline Industries  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 250 (Friday, December 27, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 68143-68144]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-33016]
    
    
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    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR Part 419
    
    
    Trade Regulation Rule Concerning Games of Chance in the Food 
    Retailing and Gasoline Industries
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Repeal of rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission announces the repeal of the Trade 
    Regulation Rule concerning Games of Chance in the Food Retailing and 
    Gasoline Industries. The Commission has reviewed the rulemaking record 
    and determined that due to changes in industry practices, the Rule no 
    longer serves the public interest and should be repealed. This notice 
    contains a Statement of Basis and Purpose for repeal of the Rule.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: December 26, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Requests for copies of the Statement of Basis and Purpose 
    should be sent to Public Reference Branch, Room 130, Federal Trade 
    Commission, 6th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue N.W., Washington, D.C. 
    20580.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John M. Mendenhall, Federal Trade 
    Commission, Cleveland Regional Office, Suite 520A, 668 Euclid Avenue, 
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114, (216) 522-4210.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Statement of Basis and Purpose
    
    I. Background
    
        The Commission promulgated the Trade Regulation Rule concerning 
    Games of Chance in the Food Retailing and Gasoline Industries (Games of 
    Chance Rule), 16 CFR Part 419, on August 16, 1969 (34 FR 13302). The 
    purpose of the Rule was to address abuses that were uncovered during 
    Commission and Congressional investigation into the use of games of 
    chance for promotional purposes in the food retailing and gasoline 
    industries. In both industries, it appeared that the winning game 
    pieces were being distributed in a manner not determined by chance but 
    calculated to have maximum promotional impact. In order to prevent 
    future abuses, the Rule required various pending-game and post-game 
    disclosures, as well as certain procedures for operating a game of 
    chance.
        Pending-game disclosures included: (1) The number of prizes in each 
    ``category or denomination;'' (2) the odds-of-winning each prize; (3) 
    the number of retail outlets participating in the game; (4) the 
    geographic area covered by the game; and (5) the end date. If the game 
    extended beyond 30 days, the Rule required weekly updating of 
    disclosures of the odds-of-winning and the number of prizes. Post-game 
    disclosures included: (1) The list of winners and the amount or value 
    of each prize; (2) the total number of game pieces distributed; (3) the 
    number of prizes in each ``category or denomination'' that were made 
    available; and (4) the number of prizes actually awarded. Procedural 
    requirements included a hiatus between games; a prohibition against 
    terminating a game prior to distribution of all game pieces; a 
    prohibition against replenishing of game pieces or prizes during a 
    game; and a three-year record-keeping requirement.
        The Commission amended the Rule once in 1981. The amendments 
    alleviated some reporting requirements, dropped certain requirements of 
    the ``winners list'' provision, and shortened the required hiatus 
    between games.1
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         1  16 CFR 419.1(e), -(f) (1995); 46 FR 36840 (July 16, 1981).
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        After the 1981 amendments, advertising and broadcasting trade 
    associations filed a petition seeking exemption from the disclosure 
    requirements for broadcast advertising of games. The petition asserted 
    that games of chance could not be advertised in the broadcast media if 
    full disclosures regarding prizes and odds of winning were required. In 
    response to the petition, the Commission granted a temporary exemption 
    from disclosure requirements for broadcast advertising.2
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         2  48 FR 1046 (Jan. 10, 1983).
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        In a related action, the Commission issued an Advance Notice of 
    Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) to request comments about whether the 
    Commission should make the exemption permanent and whether to revise 
    other aspects of the Rule.3 The commenters who responded to the 
    ANPR consisted of members of the supermarket, gasoline, advertising, 
    game promotion, and broadcasting industries, and lawyers with 
    experience in representing such industries.
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         3  48 FR 265 (Jan. 4, 1983).
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        Based upon comments received in response to the ANPR and the 
    staff's analysis, the Commission published its Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking (NPR).4 The major proposals of the NPR were to amend 
    the Rule to: (1) drop certain disclosures in advertising and 
    promotional materials; (2) raise the threshold for winners lists 
    disclosures to prizes of $50.00 and over; (3) permit replenishment of 
    prize game pieces; and (4) drop the waiting period required between 
    games. In 1995, the Presiding Officer re-opened the record for 
    additional comments, particularly regarding whether there was a 
    continuing need for this Rule.5
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         4  53 FR 39103 (Oct. 5, 1988).
         5  60 FR 38474 (July 26, 1995).
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        The Commission received seven comments in response to the NPR and 
    seven in response to the 1995 request for additional comments. These 
    commenters included members of the advertising, broadcasting, game 
    promotion, and game user industries.6 A number of these commenters 
    urged rescission of the Rule, stating that it discriminated unfairly 
    against certain types of retailers and that there was no record of 
    abuse to justify retaining the Rule.7 Others urged retention of a 
    modified Rule in order to protect consumers from possible 
    deception.8 Finally, some commenters stated that if the Commission 
    were to retain the Rule, it should be expanded to include other
    
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    industries in order to remove the discriminatory effect against grocery 
    stores and gasoline stations.9 As with the response to the ANPR, 
    the Commission received no comments from any public interest groups, 
    government agencies or consumers.
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         6  Those filing comments on the NPR included: The 
    Promotion Marketing Association of America, Inc.; CBS; Leo Burnett 
    Company, Inc.; Association of Retail Marketing Services; Incentive 
    Federation, Inc.; Producers Alliance on Rulemaking; and the Food 
    Marketing Institute. No prospective witness filed a request to 
    testify at a hearing, and the Presiding Officer therefore issued a 
    Notification of Cancellation of Public Hearings and Rebuttal Period. 
    53 FR 39103 (1988). Parties responding to the 1995 notice re-opening 
    the record included: the Food Marketing Institute; the Minnesota 
    Service Station and Convenience Store Association; the National 
    Association of Broadcasters; the National Association of Convenience 
    Stores; The Promotion Marketing Association of America, Inc.; 
    Society of Independent Gasoline Marketers of America; and Triplex 
    Marketing, Inc.
         7  Those urging rescission included: the Food Marketing 
    Institute; the National Association of Convenience Stores; Society 
    of Independent Gasoline Marketers of America; and The Promotion 
    Marketing Association of America, Inc.
         8  Producer's Alliance on Rulemaking; Triplex Marketing, 
    Inc.; and the Minnesota Service Station and Convenience Store 
    Association.
         9  E.g., the Food Marketing Institute.
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        The Final Staff Report 10 and the Presiding Officer's Report 
    11 on the proposed rulemaking both recommended rescission of the 
    Rule. The reports were placed on the public record and public comments 
    were invited.12 No public comments were received on the reports 
    and their joint recommendation to the Commission to rescind the Games 
    of Chance Rule. The reasons for repeal of the Rule, as set forth in 
    these two reports, are summarized below.
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         10  Federal Trade Commission Staff, Final Staff Report to 
    the Federal Trade Commission, Games of Chance in the Food Retailing 
    and Gasoline Industries (1996).
         11  Federal Trade Commission Presiding Officer, Report of 
    the Presiding Officer on a Trade Regulation Rule Proceeding: 
    Proposed Amendment of the Games of Chance Trade Regulation Rule 
    (1996).
         12  61 FR 29039 (June 7, 1996).
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    II. Basis for Repeal of Rule
    
        The Commission has determined to repeal the Games of Chance Rule 
    based on an analysis of the rulemaking record. The Commission bases its 
    rescission on the following reasons:
        1. In the 27 years since the Rule was promulgated, there have been 
    no enforcement actions for violations of the Rule. It appears that the 
    abuses that prompted adoption of this Rule have largely disappeared.
        2. The Rule has become outdated. It covers only a limited sector of 
    retail businesses that use games of chance in their promotions. During 
    the 1960s, grocery stores and gasoline stations were the primary users 
    of games. Today, however, businesses not covered by the Rule, such as 
    fast food restaurants and soft drink bottlers, use games of chance as 
    much as, or even more often than, those that are covered by the Rule. 
    Generally, even businesses that are not covered voluntarily make some 
    of the more important required disclosures, such as the prizes offered 
    and the odds of winning them.
        3. The Rule may have an adverse effect on businesses that must 
    comply with all of the Rule's requirements, but are competing with 
    other firms that are not regulated by the Rule. In recent years, the 
    distinctions between types of retailers have become blurred. Many 
    stores other than traditional grocery stores now sell food items, and 
    grocery stores often sell prepared food like restaurants. Thus, 
    although various retailers sell food, only grocery stores must incur 
    costs to comply with the Rule. This disparity in treatment could be 
    addressed by expanding the Rule to cover all retailers using games of 
    chance. There is, however, no evidentiary basis in the record for 
    expansion.
        4. The states are in a good position to control the activities of 
    retailers operating games of chance because such retailers have a 
    physical presence in the states where they do business. Many states 
    traditionally have been involved in the oversight of games of chance 
    and sweepstakes, particularly where such games may violate a state's 
    public policy against commercial lotteries.
        5. This rulemaking has generated very little interest, indicating a 
    lack of importance of this Rule in today's marketplace.13 
    Significantly, no comments were filed in response to the recommendation 
    of the Presiding Officer's Report and the Final Staff Report that the 
    Commission repeal the Games of Chance Rule.
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         13  In fact, a survey conducted for the rulemaking staff 
    by Opinion Research Corporation showed that generally consumers do 
    not base shopping decisions on the use of games of chance by 
    retailers. Opinion Research Corporation, Survey to Assess the 
    Effectiveness of the Games of Chance Trade Regulation Rule (1987).
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        All of these reasons indicate that the Rule is outdated and no 
    longer necessary to protect consumers. It appears that the costs of the 
    Rule now outweigh its benefits. Should abuses recur in the future, both 
    the Commission and the states can use case-by-case law enforcement to 
    prosecute those engaging in unfair or deceptive practices in the use of 
    games of chance.
    
    III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-12, requires 
    that the agency conduct an analysis of the anticipated impact of the 
    repeal of the Rule on small businesses.14 The purpose of a 
    regulatory flexibility analysis is to ensure that the agency considers 
    the impact of a regulatory action on small entities and examines 
    regulatory alternatives that could achieve the regulatory purpose while 
    minimizing burdens on small entities. However, Section 605 of the RFA, 
    5 U.S.C. 605, provides that such an analysis is not required if the 
    agency head certifies that the regulatory action will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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         14  The RFA addresses the impact of rules on ``small 
    entities,'' defined as ``small businesses,'' ``small governmental 
    entities,'' and ``small [not-for-profit] organizations,'' 5 U.S.C. 
    601. The Games of Chance Rule does not apply to the latter two types 
    of entities.
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        Because the Games of Chance Rule covers retail food stores and 
    gasoline stations, it may affect a substantial number of small 
    entities. However, repeal of the Rule will not have a significant 
    economic impact upon such entities. Disclosures and record-keeping 
    requirements that are eliminated may involve a small cost savings to 
    such retailers, but the effect will not be significant. Grocery stores 
    and gasoline stations using games of chance, however, will be able to 
    continue making those disclosures deemed most important to their 
    customers or that are required by state law. Moreover, the Commission 
    is not aware of any existing federal laws or regulations that would 
    conflict with repeal of the Rule. Therefore, based on available 
    information, the Commission certifies that repeal of the Games of 
    Chance Rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities.
    
    IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Games of Chance Rule imposes third-party disclosure and record-
    keeping requirements that constitute information collection 
    requirements for which the Commission has obtained clearance under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., Office of Management 
    and Budget (OMB) Control Number 2084-0067. Accordingly, repeal of the 
    Rule would eliminate any burdens on the public imposed by these 
    disclosure and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 419
    
        Advertising, Foods, Gambling, Gasoline, Trade practices.
    
    PART 419--[REMOVED]
    
        The Commission, under authority of Section 18 of the Federal Trade 
    Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. 57a, amends chapter I of title 16 of the Code 
    of Federal Regulations by removing Part 419.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 96-33016 Filed 12-26-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
12/26/1996
Published:
12/27/1996
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Repeal of rule.
Document Number:
96-33016
Dates:
December 26, 1996.
Pages:
68143-68144 (2 pages)
PDF File:
96-33016.pdf
CFR: (1)
16 CFR 419