99-3579. Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management and Budget  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 30 (Tuesday, February 16, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 7645-7646]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-3579]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    
    Public Information Collections Approved by Office of Management 
    and Budget
    
    February 4, 1999.
        The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has received Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) approval for the following public 
    information collections pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995, Public Law 104-13. An agency may not conduct or sponsor and a 
    person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless 
    it displays a currently valid control number. For further information 
    contact Shoko B. Hair, Federal Communications Commission, (202) 418-
    1379.
    
    Federal Communications Commission
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0484.
        Expiration Date: 01/31/2001.
        Title: Amendment of Part 63 of the Commission's Rules to Provide 
    for Notification of Common Carriers of Service Disruptions--Section 
    63.100.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 52 respondents (reporting approximately 4 
    times a year); 5 hours per response (avg.); 1040 total annual burden 
    hours.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion.
        Description: Section 63.100 of the Commission's rules requires that 
    ``any local exchange or interexchange common carrier that operates 
    transmission or switching facilities and provides access service or 
    interstate or international telecommunications service that experiences 
    an outage on any facilities which it owns or operates must notify the 
    Commission if such service outage continues for 30 or more minutes. 
    Satellite carriers and cellular carriers were exempt from this 
    reporting requirement.'' An initial and a final report is required for 
    each outage. The reports enable us to monitor developments affecting 
    telecommunications reliability; to serve as a source of information for 
    the public; to encourage and, where appropriate, assist in 
    dissemination of information to those affected; and to take immediate 
    steps, as needed, and after analyzing the information submitted, to 
    determine what, if any, other action is required. The Commission's 
    Office of Engineering and Technology (OET) receives the initial outage 
    and incident reports through the Commission's Watch Officers to whom 
    the carriers report within 120 minutes or, in the case of outages 
    affecting 50,000 customers, within 3 days of the carrier's knowledge 
    that the outage is reportable. If OET did not receive the information 
    in the reports for analysis and further investigation, the Commission 
    would have considerable difficulty determining the state of network 
    reliability. It would depend on delayed, incomplete and second hand 
    analysis as a basis for recommending any future Commission action that 
    might be needed to encourage carriers to enhance their reliability 
    efforts. It would have difficulty determining the implementation and 
    efficacy of its own and industry's present and future recommendations 
    for enhancing reliability. It would be less able to spot reliability 
    weaknesses as they begin to appear in the rapidly changing networks. 
    The reporting requirement will facilitate FCC monitoring of the 
    reliability of service being provided and enable it to take swift 
    remedial action as required. The reporting requirement is essential to 
    the FCC's mission of ensuring that the public is protected from major 
    disruptions to telephone services. Information required in the initial 
    reports includes identification of the carrier and a carrier contact 
    person, date and time of commencement of the outage, geographical area 
    affected, estimated number of customers affected, duration of the 
    outage, estimated number of blocked calls during the outage, apparent 
    or known cause of the incident, including the name and type of 
    equipment involved and the specific part of the network affected, 
    methods used to restore service and the steps taken to prevent 
    recurrence of the outage. Not later than thirty days after an outage or 
    incident, the carrier must file with the Chief, Office of Engineering 
    and Technology (OET) a final service disruption report providing all 
    available information on the service outage, including any information 
    not contained in its initial report. Information collected has been 
    used by the Commission staff to determine weaknesses to reliability and 
    to formulate new tasks for the Network Reliability and Interoperability 
    Counsel (NRIC), a Federal Advisory Committee formed by the Commission 
    to advise it on matters of network reliability. Obligation to respond: 
    Mandatory.
    
        OMB Control No.: 3060-0876.
        Expiration Date: 06/30/99.
        Title: USAC Board of Directors Nomination Process (47 CFR 54.703) 
    and Review of Administrator's Decision (47 CFR Sections 54.719-54.725).
        Form No.: N/A.
        Respondents: Business or other for profit.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 22 respondents; 25.4 hours per response 
    (avg.); 560 total annual burden hours.
        Estimated Annual Reporting and Recordkeeping Cost Burden: $0.
        Frequency of Response: On occasion; annually; third party 
    disclosure.
        Description: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (1996 Act) directed 
    the Commission to initiate a rulemaking to reform our system of 
    universal service so that universal service is preserved and advanced 
    as markets move toward competition. To fulfill that mandate, based on 
    the recommendations of the Federal-State Joint Board on Universal 
    Service, the Commission adopted a Report and Order in CC Docket No. 96-
    45 on May 7, 1997 to implement the congressional directives set out in 
    section 254 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended by the 1996 
    Act. In a Report and Order (released July 18, 1997), the Commission 
    appointed the National Exchange Carrier Association, Inc. (NECA) the 
    temporary administrator of the universal service support mechanisms, 
    subject to its creating a separate subsidiary, the Universal Service 
    Administrative Company (USAC), to administer the support programs. The 
    Commission also directed NECA, as a condition of its appointment as 
    temporary administrator, to create two unaffiliated corporations to 
    administer portions of the schools and libraries and rural health care 
    programs. NECA established the Schools and Libraries Corporation (SLC) 
    and the Rural Health Care Corporation (RHCC).
        In connection with supplemental appropriations legislation enacted 
    on May 1, 1998, Congress directed the Commission to establish a single 
    entity to administer federal universal service. In a May 8, 1998 Report 
    to Congress, the Commission proposed that, by January 1, 1999, USAC 
    would serve as the single entity responsible for administering all of 
    the universal service support mechanisms including the schools and 
    libraries and rural health care support mechanisms.
    
    [[Page 7646]]
    
        On November 20, 1998, the Commission released an Order directing 
    the merger of SLC and RHCC into USAC as the single entity responsible 
    for administering the universal service support mechanisms as of 
    January 1, 1999. The Order adopts rules that will govern USAC following 
    the required merger. Certain portions of these rules contain 
    collections of information. First, the Order instructs industry and 
    non-industry groups to submit to the Commission for approval 
    nominations for individuals to be appointed to the USAC Board of 
    Directors. (No. of respondents: 12 respondents; hours per response: 20 
    hours; total annual burden: 240 hours). Second, the Order adopts 
    procedures for Commission review of USAC decisions, including the 
    general filing requirements pursuant to which parties must file 
    requests for review. An affected party would be permitted to file a 
    petition for Commission review with the Bureau within thirty days of an 
    action taken by USAC. The appellant must state specifically its 
    interest in the matter presented for review. The appellant also must 
    provide the Commission with a full statement of relevant, material 
    facts with supporting affidavits and documentation. In addition, the 
    appellant must state concisely the question presented for review, with 
    reference, where appropriate, to the relevant Commission rule, 
    Commission order, or statutory provision. The appellant also must state 
    the relief sought and the relevant statutory or regulatory provision 
    pursuant to which such relief is sought. If an appellant alleges 
    prohibited conduct by a third party, the appellant shall serve a copy 
    of the appeal on such third party, who shall have an opportunity to 
    file an opposition. Similarly, appellants shall serve on USAC a copy of 
    the appeal of a USAC decision filed with the Commission. See 47 CFR 
    Sections 54.719-54.725. (No. of respondents: 10; hours per response: 32 
    hours; total annual burden: 320 hours). The information will be used by 
    the Commission to select USAC's Board of Directors and to ensure that 
    requests for review are filed properly with the Commission. The 
    information requested is not otherwise available. Without such 
    information, the Commission could not appoint a representative body to 
    USAC's Board of Directors nor resolve requests for review and, 
    therefore, could not fulfill its statutory responsibility in accordance 
    with the Communications Act of 1934, as amended. Obligation to respond: 
    required to obtain or retain benefits.
        Public reporting burden for the collections of information is as 
    noted above. Send comments regarding the burden estimate or any other 
    aspect of the collections of information, including suggestions for 
    reducing the burden to Performance Evaluation and Records Management, 
    Washington, D.C. 20554.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas
    Secretary
    [FR Doc. 99-3579 Filed 2-12-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/16/1999
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
99-3579
Dates:
01/31/2001.
Pages:
7645-7646 (2 pages)
PDF File:
99-3579.pdf