97-10066. Agency Information Collection Activity Under OMB Review  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 75 (Friday, April 18, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 19159-19162]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-10066]
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    Reports, Forms and Recordkeeping Requirements
    
    
    Agency Information Collection Activity Under OMB Review
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Department of Transportation (DOT) will submit the 
    following emergency processing public information collection requests 
    (ICRs) to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and 
    clearance under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13, 44 
    U.S.C. Chapter 35). The DOT is publishing a notice in the Federal 
    Register, informing the public of DOT's plan to submit to OMB, 13 
    information collections for reinstatement, some with changes, of 
    previously approved collections for which approval has expired, under 
    the emergency processing procedures, 5 CFR 1320.13. The titles, 
    descriptions, affected public, with burden estimates are shown below. 
    Because OMB approval is valid for 180 days, DOT is taking appropriate 
    steps to obtain a regular approval.
    
    DATES: Comments on this notice must be received on or before June 17, 
    1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Phillip Leach, DOT Information 
    Collection Clearance Officer, Office of Information Resource 
    Management, Room 7107-R, Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh 
    Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590, Telephone: (202) 366-0770.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Federal Transit Administration (FTA)
    
        Title: University Research and Training Program.
        OMB Control Number: 2132-0547.
        Affected Public: Accredited Institutions of Higher Learning.
        Abstract: 49 U.S.C. 5312 authorizes the Secretary of Transportation 
    to make grants to public and private nonprofit institutions of higher 
    learning to assist in establishing or carrying on comprehensive 
    research in the problems of transportation in urban and rural areas. 
    The information collected is submitted in the form of an application 
    for a grant and is used to determine eligibility of grant applicants 
    and to assure that all FTA and Federal requirements are met. This 
    information also enables FTA and the academic community to properly 
    define subject matter categories and to identify the kinds of 
    organizations that are submitting proposals. Also, the information is 
    essential to support basic and theoretical research within the academic 
    community that will advance the current knowledge base, improve the 
    transportation service provider's decisionmaking and management 
    processes, and assist transit professionals to anticipate significant 
    national issues and trends. The information is also used to report 
    annually to Congress, the Secretary, and to the FTA Administrator on 
    how grantees are responding to national emphasis areas and 
    Congressional direction, and allows FTA to track grantees' use of 
    Federal planning and research funds.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 4,728 hours.
    
        Title: Managerial Training Program.
    
    [[Page 19160]]
    
        OMB Control Number: 2132-0551.
        Affected Public: State and local governments, business or other for 
    profit, and non-profit institutions.
        Abstract: 49 U.S.C. 5323(c) authorizes the Secretary of 
    Transportation to make grants to States and local public transportation 
    services to provide fellowships for training personnel employed in 
    managerial, technical, and professional positions in the public 
    transportation field. The information collected is submitted in the 
    form of an application and is used to determine eligibility and 
    appropriateness of intended training in light of program goals. 
    Collection of information for this program is also necessary to provide 
    documentation that grant applicants and recipients are complying with 
    appropriate FTA Circular C 6300.1A and other Federal requirements. 
    Without this information, FTA would not be able to determine if the 
    goals and objectives as set forth for this program are being met fully, 
    partially, or not at all.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 1,412 hours.
    
    Federal Highway Administration
    
        Title: Statement of Materials and Labor used by Contractors on 
    Highway Construction Involving Federal Funds.
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0033.
        Form Number: FHWA-47.
        Affected Public: Contractors.
        Abstract: The form FHWA-47, ``Statement of Materials and Labor Used 
    by Contractors on Highway Construction Involving Federal Funds,'' is 
    needed to obtain information on the usage of materials and labor in 
    highway construction. Title 29 U.S.C. 2 authorizes the Department of 
    Labor to collect the labor-related information using its own forces or 
    by getting the information from other Federal agencies. An informal 
    agreement has been reached for FHWA to collect the desired data for the 
    Department of Labor. This information is used by FHWA for estimating 
    current material usage and cost distribution on Federal-aid highway 
    construction contracts to aid in planning for future requirements based 
    on anticipated program levels. There is also considerable interest by 
    industry, particularly suppliers of highway construction materials, for 
    the usage information derived from the FHWA-47 forms. This data is 
    collected from contracts of $1,000,000 or more on the National Highway 
    System and is not considered confidential. The respondent must submit 
    the FHWA-47 form after the project has been completed.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 7,475 hours.
        Title: Utility Use and Occupancy Agreements.
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0522.
        Affected Public: Highway authorities.
        Abstract: In carrying out the requirements of 23 U.S.C. 116 to 
    assure Federal-aid highway projects are being properly maintained, the 
    Secretary of Transportation is authorized by 23 U.S.C. 315 to prescribe 
    and promulgate rules and regulations. This authority is delegated to 
    the Federal Highway Administrator at 49 CFR 1.48. Further, 23 CFR 1.23 
    and 1.27 establish the authority and responsibility of the Federal 
    Highway Administrator to prescribe policies and procedures for the use, 
    occupancy, and maintenance of the rights-of-way of Federal-aid 
    projects. Under the Federal-aid highway program, States, or their 
    political subdivisions, actually own the highway rights-of-way. State 
    and/or local highway authorities are responsible for maintaining the 
    highway rights-of-way, which includes controlling utility use of it. 
    The FHWA regulations found in 23 CFR 645, Subpart B require that in 
    controlling utility use on Federal-aid highway projects, the highway 
    authority is to document the terms under which the utility is to cross 
    or otherwise occupy highway rights-of-way. This documentation, 
    consisting of a use and occupancy agreement, is to be in writing and 
    must be contained in the highway authority's files. No submission to 
    the FHWA is required. The use and occupancy agreement issued by the 
    highway authority serves to document the arrangements made between it 
    and a utility to allow the utility to use public right-of-way under the 
    control of the highway authority. These agreements are reviewed 
    periodically by the FHWA to determine whether or not the State is 
    effectively maintaining the highway right-of-way and fulfilling its 
    responsibilities under its utility accommodation policy. The use and 
    occupancy agreements are an important means of controlling the 
    installation of utilities in order to provide a safe environment for 
    highway users.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 552,000 hours.
        Title: Inspection, Repair, and Maintenance.
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0037.
        Affected Public: Motor carriers.
        Abstract: Motor carriers must maintain, or cause to be maintained, 
    records that document the inspection, repair, and maintenance 
    activities performed on their owned and leased motor vehicles. Burden 
    hours will increase due primarily to a revised estimate of the daily 
    usage rate of commercial motor vehicles that increases the estimated 
    frequency of a recordkeeping requirement.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 37,614,867 hours.
        Title: Medical Qualification Requirements.
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0080.
        Affected Public: Medical examiners, medical specialists, 
    physicians, licensed doctors of medicine or osteopathy, motor carriers, 
    and CMV drivers.
        Abstract: The Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984 requires the 
    Secretary of Transportation to prescribe regulations to ensure that the 
    physical qualification of commercial motor vehicle (CMV) operators is 
    adequate to enable them to operate CMVs safely. Information about an 
    individual's physical condition must be collected in order for the FHWA 
    and motor carriers to verify that the individual meets the physical 
    qualification standards for CMV drivers and for the FHWA to determine 
    whether the individual is physically able to operate a CMV safely.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 459,097 hours.
        Title: Operations Plan, Traffic Surveillance and Control.
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0512.
        Affected Public: State and local transportation agencies who 
    utilize federal funds for traffic management projects and contractors 
    involved in ITS/Traffic Management, who may write the implementation 
    plan for the state and local transportation agency.
        Abstract: An implementation plan for a federal aid traffic control 
    project is required from the states and local agencies to assure that 
    there are adequate provisions and resources for the acquisition and 
    operational phases of the project.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 160 hours.
        Title: Developing and Recording Costs for Utility Adjustments.
        OMB Number: 2125-0519.
        Affected Public: 3,000 U.S. Utilities Companies.
        Abstract: Under the provisions of 23 U.S.C. 123, Federal-aid 
    highway funds may be used to reimburse State highway agencies (SHAs) 
    when they have paid for the cost of relocation of utility facilities 
    necessitated by the construction of Federal-aid highway projects. This 
    reimbursement is based on actual costs incurred by a utility company as 
    a result of adjusting its facilities. Payment for ``costs incurred'' is 
    a basic tenet of the Federal-aid program. This general principle is 
    also established in 23 U.S.C. 121 when Federal-aid highway funds are 
    being used to reimburse the State highway agencies for the cost of 
    construction of Federal-aid highway projects. To
    
    [[Page 19161]]
    
    implement these provisions of law, Federal Highway Administration 
    (FHWA) regulations, 23 CFR 645, Subpart A, require that the utility be 
    able to document its costs or expenses for adjusting its facilities. 
    This record of costs then forms the basis for payment by the SHA to the 
    utility company and in turn FHWA reimburses the SHA for its payments to 
    the utility company. A utility company's cost accounting records 
    establish a means of identifying the costs incurred in adjusting 
    utility facilities. The SHA uses these records to verify the costs to 
    base its payments on. The FHWA payment is based on the costs the State 
    pays for. If the utility did not keep a record of its costs, then there 
    would be no documentation of the expenses it would have incurred in 
    adjusting its facilities. If this should occur, there would be no basis 
    for Federal-aid highway fund participation in the costs and, under 23 
    U.S.C. 123, the FHWA would not be able to reimburse the State for 
    utility adjustments. There are approximately 30,000 utility companies 
    in the United States. In any one year, it is estimated that about 10 
    percent, or 3,000, of these utilities will be involved with 
    reimbursable utility adjustments on Federal-aid projects. It is further 
    estimated that each of these 3,000 utilities will have about 3 
    adjustments of its facilities per year on Federal-aid projects. The net 
    impact is approximately 9,000 reimbursable utility adjustments. For a 
    typical adjustment, about 20 hours of staff time (16 hours professional 
    staff; 4 hours secretarial staff) are expended to establish and 
    maintain the record of costs.
        Estimated Annual burden: 180,000 hours.
        Title: Notification Requirements for Commercial Driver License 
    Holders (Previous title: Commercial Driver Licensing and Testing 
    Standards).
        OMB Control Number: 2125-0542.
        Affected Public: Commercial motor vehicle (CMV) drivers.
        Abstract: An active commercial motor vehicle (CMV) driver who holds 
    a commercial driver's license (CDL) is required to notify his/her 
    employer of all traffic law violations, his/her State licensing agency 
    of traffic law convictions in other jurisdictions, and his/her employer 
    of license suspensions. Any person applying for employment as a driver 
    of a CMV for which a CDL is required, must provide his/her prospective 
    employer with his/her employment history for the previous 10 years.
        Estimated Burden Hours: 500,000 hours.
    
    United States Coast Guard (USCG)
    
        Title: Non Destructive Testing Proposal and Results for Pressure 
    Vessels Cargo Tanks on Unmanned Barges.
        OMB Control Number: 2115-0563.
        Affected Public: Owners of inspected barges.
        Abstract: This collection of information requires owners of 
    unmanned barges with tanks that are required to be nondestructively 
    tested (NDT) to submit a proposal which includes the NDT methods and 
    procedures, and locations of the tanks to be tested. The results must 
    also be submitted to identify any defects and to evaluate the 
    suitability of a tank to remain in service. The Coast Guard requires 
    pressure vessel type tanks that are thirty years old and older to be 
    subjected to NDT at 10 year intervals.
        Need: Under 46 U.S.C. 3703, the U.S. Coast Guard is responsible for 
    ensuring safe shipment of liquid dangerous cargoes and has promulgated 
    regulations on board certain barges to ensure that safety standards are 
    met.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 39 hours.
    
        Title: Display of Plans.
        OMB Number: 2115-0135.
        Affected Public: Owners or operators of inspected vessels.
        Abstract: This collection of information requires owners or 
    operators of inspected vessels to display certain vessel plans.
        Need: Under 46 U.S.C. 3305 and 3306, the U.S. Coast Guard is 
    responsible for ensuring the safety of inspected vessels and has 
    promulgated regulations to ensure that safety standards are met. The 
    information contained on these plans will be used by shipboard 
    personnel during routine duties, such as equipment and system 
    maintenance or servicing, as well as under emergency conditions such as 
    fire or flooding. In the event assistance is rendered from external 
    sources, the plans allow for rapid familiarization with the vessels and 
    its system, the information and its availability is crucial in 
    minimizing danger to those on board, damage to the vessel, and the 
    safety of the port and the environment.
        Frequency: On occasion.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 900 hours
    
        Title: Plan Approval and Records for Foreign Vessels Carrying Oil 
    in Bulk.
        OMB Number: 2115-0106.
        Affected Public: Owners or operators of foreign vessels carrying 
    oil in bulk.
        Abstract: This collection of information requires owners or 
    operators of certain foreign vessels carrying oil in bulk to submit 
    documents to the U.S. Coast Guard to determine if vessels meets certain 
    requirements in 33 CFR 157. This collection mainly affects vessels from 
    countries that are not signatory to the International Convention for 
    the Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973, as amended by the 
    Protocol of 1978 relating thereto (MARPOL 73/78).
        Need: Under 46 U.S.C. 3703 and 3703(a), the U.S. Coast Guard is 
    authorized to issue regulations dealing with design, construction, 
    alteration, repair, maintenance, operation and equipping of foreign 
    vessels which carry or are constructed to carry or adapted to carry, 
    oil in bulk. The information will be used to determine if (1) the 
    vessel meets the Double Hull standards in 33 CFR 157.10(d); (2) 
    information is available to vessel personnel to operate the vessel and 
    equipment required and (3) a means is available to appeal U.S. Coast 
    Guard decisions with respect to the regulations and for obtaining those 
    waivers or exemptions permitted by the regulations.
        Frequency: On occasion.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 250 hours.
        Title: Report: Declaration of Inspection.
        OMB Number: 2115-0506.
        Affected Public: Persons in Charge of Transfer Operation.
        Abstract: The collection of information requires a person in charge 
    of onshore and offshore facilities to complete a Declaration of 
    Inspection (DOI) for each bulk transfer of oil and hazardous material 
    conducted and to maintain the DOI onboard the vessel and facility for a 
    one month period.
        Need: 33 U.S.C. 1221 authorizes the Coast Guard to establish 
    procedure, methods, and equipment requirements to prevent the discharge 
    of oil and hazardous material from vessels and both onshore and 
    offshore.
        Estimated Annual Burden: 78,800 hours.
        Frequency: Monthly.
        Send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, 
    Office of Management and Budget, 725-17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 
    20503, Attention DOT Desk Officer. Comments are invited on: whether the 
    proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of the functions of the Department, including whether the 
    information will have practical utility; the accuracy of the 
    Department's estimate of the burden of the proposed information 
    collection; ways to enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the 
    information to be collected; and ways to minimize the burden of the 
    collection of information on respondents, including the use of
    
    [[Page 19162]]
    
    automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
    technology.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on April 11, 1997.
    Diane Litman,
    Clearance Officer, United States Department of Transportation.
    [FR Doc. 97-10066 Filed 4-17-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-22-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/18/1997
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
97-10066
Dates:
Comments on this notice must be received on or before June 17, 1997.
Pages:
19159-19162 (4 pages)
PDF File:
97-10066.pdf