2023-12921. Continuing Education for Licensed Customs Brokers

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    AGENCY:

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland Security.

    ACTION:

    Final rule.

    SUMMARY:

    This document adopts as final, with changes, proposed amendments to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) regulations requiring continuing education for individual customs broker license holders (individual brokers) and the framework for administering this requirement. By requiring individual brokers to remain knowledgeable about recent developments in customs and related laws as well as international trade and supply chains, CBP's framework will enhance professionalism and competency within the customs broker community. CBP has determined that this framework will contribute to increased trade compliance and better protection of the revenue of the United States.

    DATES:

    This final rule is effective as of July 24, 2023.

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    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

    Elena D. Ryan, Special Advisor, Programs and Policy Analysis, Regulations and Rulings, Office of Trade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, at (202) 325–0001 or CONTINUINGEDUCATION@cbp.dhs.gov; and, Sharolyn J. McCann, Director, Commercial Operations, Revenue and Entry, Office of Trade, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, at (202) 384–8935, Sharolyn.j.mccann@cbp.dhs.gov.

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    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

    Table of Contents

    I. Background and Summary

    A. Authority for the Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    B. Prior Related Publications

    C. Overview of Licensing Requirements for Individual Brokers

    D. Initial Certification Date

    E. CBP Implementation of the Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    II. Summary of Changes From the Proposed Regulations

    III. Discussion of Comments

    A. The Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    B. Certification Dates

    C. Individuals to Whom the Requirement Applies

    D. Completing the 36 Continuing Education Credits

    E. Recordkeeping

    F. CBP-Selected Accreditors

    G. Qualified Continuing Broker Education

    H. The Accreditation Process

    I. Enforcement

    IV. Conclusion

    V. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements

    A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563

    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    C. Paperwork Reduction Act

    VI. Signing Authority

    VII. List of Subjects

    I. Background and Summary

    A. Authority for the Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    Section 641 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1641), provides that individuals and business entities must hold a valid customs broker's license and permit to transact customs business on behalf of others. The statute also sets forth standards for the issuance of broker licenses and permits, provides for disciplinary action against customs brokers in the form of suspension or revocation of such licenses and permits or assessment of monetary penalties and provides for the assessment of monetary penalties against persons for conducting customs business without the required broker's license.

    Section 641 authorizes the Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury) to prescribe rules and regulations relating to the customs business of brokers as may be necessary to protect importers and the revenue of the United States and to carry out the other provisions of section 641. See19 U.S.C. 1641(f). That authority was delegated to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as a result of the enactment of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–296, 116 Stat. 2142).[1] Accordingly, the Secretary of DHS is authorized to prescribe rules and regulations relating to the customs business of brokers as may be necessary to protect importers and the revenue of the United States and to carry out the other provisions of section 641. See19 U.S.C. 1641(f).

    Furthermore, 19 U.S.C. 1641(b)(4) imposes upon customs brokers the duty to exercise responsible supervision and control over the customs business that it conducts. The statute also permits the Secretary of DHS to test persons for their knowledge of customs and related laws prior to issuing a license. See19 U.S.C. 1641(b)(2). Based upon 19 U.S.C. 1641, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has promulgated regulations setting forth additional obligations of customs brokers pertinent to the conduct of their customs business. CBP believes that maintaining current knowledge of customs laws and procedures is essential for customs brokers to meet their legal duties. Requiring a customs broker to fulfill a continuing education requirement is the most effective means to ensure that the customs broker keeps up with an ever-changing customs practice after passing the broker exam and subsequently receiving the license.

    B. Prior Related Publications

    On October 28, 2020, CBP published an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) in the Federal Register (85 FR 68260) soliciting comments on a potential framework of continuing education requirements for licensed customs brokers. CBP sought to gather information and data from the broader customs community, analyze the potential impact of such a framework on the customs brokers, and consider whether such a requirement would contribute to increased trade compliance. The ANPRM provided for a 60-day public comment period, which closed on December 28, 2020. CBP received 29 comments in response to the ANPRM.

    These comments were addressed in a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) that CBP published in the Federal Register (86 FR 50794) on September 10, 2021, announcing a proposed framework for individual customs broker license holders (individual brokers) to administratively maintain their license through completion of qualified continuing broker education. [2] Start Printed Page 41225 CBP proposed to require individual brokers to complete at least 36 continuing education credits per triennial period with limited exceptions. The NPRM provided for a 60-day public comment period, which closed on November 9, 2021.[3] CBP received 70 comments in response to the NPRM.

    Below is a summary of the rationale provided for the rule. For a more detailed discussion, including background information for the development of this rule, please refer to the NPRM.

    C. Overview of Licensing Requirements for Individual Brokers

    CBP is responsible for administering the licensing requirements for customs brokers and sets forth those requirements in part 111 of title 19 of the Code of Federal Regulations (19 CFR part 111). A prospective customs broker must pass a broker exam administered by CBP which is designed to determine the individual's knowledge of customs and related laws, regulations and procedures, bookkeeping, accounting, and all other appropriate matters. Subsequently, the individual submits an application for a broker's license. If CBP finds that the applicant is qualified, following an investigation, and has paid all applicable fees, then CBP will issue a broker's license. In order to qualify for a license, an individual must be a United States citizen who is at least 21 years of age and not an officer or employee of the United States Government, be in possession of good moral character, and pass a broker exam administered by CBP. See19 CFR 111.11.

    Customs brokers administratively maintain a license through the filing of reports pursuant to 19 U.S.C. 1641(g) and 19 CFR 111.30(d) (the triennial status report), the payment of fees required in 19 CFR 111.96, and notifications to CBP as set forth in 19 CFR 111.30, as well as fulfilling other legal obligations. [4] See generally19 CFR 111.21–111.45. This document finalizes an additional administrative requirement, i.e., completion of the continuing broker education requirement, for individual brokers to maintain their licenses. As discussed in greater detail in the NPRM, recent developments have demonstrated the need for key parties involved in importing, exporting, claiming drawback, etc., to keep up to date on training and continuously build and maintain their knowledge of current requirements.[5]

    D. Initial Certification Date

    As detailed in Section II and in the responses to relevant comments in Section III below, individual brokers will be required to certify compliance with the continuing broker education requirements (trainings and educational activity that have been accredited by a CBP-selected accreditor or identified by CBP per § 111.103(a)) as part of the filing of their 2027 triennial status reports (approximately between December 15, 2026, and February 28, 2027). To allow for the full implementation of the continuing education requirement, CBP will reduce the number of required continuing education credits for the triennial period beginning on February 1, 2024. It is important to note that the proration will only affect the triennial period between 2024 and 2027 and all triennial periods thereafter will require the completion and certification of completion of 36 continuing education credits. For the triennial period beginning on February 1, 2024, CBP will reduce the 36 continuing education credits, required to be completed, by six credits for approximately every six months that elapse between February 1, 2024 and the compliance date on which individual brokers may begin completing qualified continuing broker education courses, as announced in a Federal Register notice, following the publication of this final rule. Along with specifying the number of required continuing education credits the Federal Register notice will also announce the date on which qualified continuing broker education courses will be available to individual brokers to begin meeting the requirement. CBP will publish this Federal Register notice at least 30 days prior to the compliance date announced therein. No educational activities or trainings completed before the compliance date announced in the Federal Register notice will qualify towards the continuing education credits required to be completed by the filing of the 2027 triennial status report.

    E. CBP Implementation of the Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    To ensure qualified trainings and educational activities are available to individual brokers, CBP will take certain necessary steps to implement the continuing broker education requirement. To collect information about standards and to identify qualified accreditors, CBP is utilizing the System for Award Management (SAM), which will involve a Request for Information (RFI) and Request for Proposals (RFPs).[6] Subsequently, CBP will announce the CBP-selected accreditors on its website at CBP.gov, to ensure that all individual brokers are aware of the selected accreditors. Afterwards, CBP, in conjunction with the CBP-selected accreditors, will establish standards and guidelines for qualified continuing broker education, including information on how and when CBP-selected accreditors will begin considering trainings and educational activities for accreditation. Finally, CBP will announce the initial qualified continuing broker education trainings and educational activities available to individual brokers and the means through which individual brokers may identify additional qualified trainings and educational activities.

    II. Summary of Changes From the Proposed Regulations

    CBP received 70 comments in response to the NPRM. As more fully discussed in Section III below, CBP carefully considered all public comments to the NPRM and determined to finalize the continuing broker education framework with minor changes. While considering the public comments, CBP identified five changes that would reduce confusion and increase the intended flexibility of the continuing broker education requirement, and one nomenclature change intended to provide clarity and consistency. CBP is also changing one amendatory instruction to account for an amendment made by another final Start Printed Page 41226 rule document [7] that amended the broker regulations in part 111 between the issuance of the NPRM and this document, as described in more detail below.

    In the NPRM, CBP did not specify when individual brokers would be expected to certify completion of the initial three-year cycle of the continuing broker education requirement. See86 FR 50794 (Sept. 10, 2021). In this rule, as discussed in more detail below in the relevant comments, CBP is specifying that the first time at which individual brokers will be required to certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement will be with the filing of their 2027 triennial status reports.

    In the NPRM, at § 111.1, CBP proposed the smallest unit of continuing education credit as one credit per one hour of continuous participation in qualified continuing broker education. See86 FR 50794 (Sept. 10, 2021). In this rule, as discussed in more detail below in the relevant comments, CBP will allow for the recognition of “half credits” (30 minutes of continuous participation in qualifying continuing broker education) as the smallest unit of continuing education credit.

    In the NPRM, in § 111.103(a)(1), CBP proposed that qualified continuing broker education must be offered by a government agency or be approved and assigned continuing education credit by a CBP-selected accreditor. See86 FR 50794 (Sept. 10, 2021). In this rule, as discussed in more detail below in the relevant comments, when qualified continuing broker education is offered by a government agency, CBP will identify the specific qualified continuing broker education opportunities offered by CBP or another government agency, after consultation with the other government agency, that are relevant to customs business and may provide continuing education credit upon completion.

    In the NPRM, in § 111.103(a)(2), CBP proposed four broad categories of recognized trainings or educational activities. See86 FR 50794 (Sept. 10, 2021). In this rule, as discussed in more detail below in the relevant comments, CBP will amend the description of the first category (allowing for seminars, webinars, or workshops) and add a fifth category to allow for self-guided trainings and educational activities which culminate in a retention test.

    In the NPRM, in § 111.103(d), CBP outlined the responsibilities of CBP-selected accreditors towards the accreditation process. See86 FR 50794 (Sept. 10, 2021). In this rule, as discussed in more detail below in the relevant comments, CBP will explicitly prohibit CBP-selected accreditors from denying accreditation to training or educational activity solely because it was previously denied by the CBP-selected accreditor or any other CBP-selected accreditor.

    Additionally, CBP has decided to use the phrase “individual brokers” in the regulations for clarity and consistency when referring to the specific subset of customs brokers affected by the continuing broker education requirement. For clarity, CBP differentiates between the entire body of entities with a valid customs broker license and individuals with a valid customs broker license. For consistency, the entire licensed body is referred to as “customs brokers” and licensed individuals are referred to as “individual brokers.” The continuing education requirement only applies to individual brokers and not to the entire body of customs brokers (which includes individuals, partnerships, associations, and corporations). This final rule document adds the phrase “individual brokers” in §§ 111.0 and 111.1 when referring to the continuing education requirement and adds “individual brokers” elsewhere in the following other §§ of the newly added title of subpart F of part 111: 111.101, 111.102, 111.103, and 111.104. For additional information, please see the relevant comments in Section III below.

    Finally, on October 18, 2022, CBP published a final rule document in the Federal Register entitled “Modernization of the Customs Broker Regulations” (the Part 111 Rewrite). See87 FR 63267. That final rule substantially rewrote part 111 of title 19 of the CFR and made certain changes to 19 CFR 111.30. As such, in this document, CBP has made technical and conforming changes to 19 CFR 111.30(d) from what was proposed in the NPRM to incorporate the structural changes made in the Part 111 Rewrite. CBP is further making a minor change to the section heading of 19 CFR 111.30. CBP had included a sightly revised section heading in the Part 111 Rewrite final rule, as well as in the preceding NPRM [8] but inadvertently failed to include an instruction for the Federal Register to make that change. In addition, CBP is correcting a grammatical error in § 111.19(c) that was made in a concurrent final rule, published in the Federal Register on the same day, entitled “Elimination of Customs Broker District Permit Fee” (87 FR 63262). The term “permit user fee” was inadvertently written as “user permit fee.”

    III. Discussion of Comments

    CBP has carefully considered all comments submitted in response to the NPRM. During the 60-day public comment period, CBP received 70 comments. Of the 70 comments, 68 comments were responsive, one comment was a duplicate, and one comment was beyond the scope of the proposed rule. Of the 68 responsive comments, 57 comments explicitly supported the continuing broker education requirement, while seven comments explicitly disputed the need to have a continuing broker education requirement, with one of the seven comments disputing the application of the requirement to brokers only. Four commenters sought additional information. Generally, the 68 responsive comments addressed multiple topics that CBP has divided, grouped, and addressed below.

    A. The Continuing Broker Education Requirement

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed an additional administrative requirement for individual brokers to maintain their licenses by completing qualified continuing broker education. CBP received many comments expressing support for the continuing broker education requirement and multiple comments disputing the need for a continuing broker education requirement.

    Comment: Many commenters stated that a continuing broker education requirement was necessary. Certain commenters highlighted that the requirement would ensure better outcomes for clients, professionalize the field, ensure individual brokers remained knowledgeable about the law, and help individual brokers avoid costs such as fines and time spent correcting filings. Commenters also highlighted that continuing education promotes compliance and engagement that assists CBP in protecting U.S. borders, increases trade compliance, and helps protect the revenue of the United States.

    Response: CBP appreciates the supportive comments regarding the need for the continuing broker education requirement. CBP concurs with the comments as summarized above and in CBP's opinion those comments support CBP's assessment of the need for a continuing education requirement. Start Printed Page 41227

    Comment: Multiple commenters stated that a continuing broker education requirement is unnecessary because the customs broker licensing exam was a sufficiently effective barrier to entry of unqualified individuals and clearly demonstrated the superior and sufficient knowledge base of individuals passing the exam. Commenters also highlighted that open access to the statutes and regulations and CBP's public communications are sufficient to keep individual brokers informed and knowledgeable.

    Response: CBP disagrees that the licensing exam, free webinars and symposiums, open access to governing statutes and regulations, etc., continue to be sufficient to ensure a professional and up-to-date broker community. For example, the licensing exam ensures an extensive and accurate knowledge base at a certain point in time. (Section 111.102(a)(2) explicitly recognizes this reality and provides newly licensed individual brokers with a waiver of the continuing broker education requirement for the triennial period in which they receive their licenses.) However, the exam does not ensure that an individual broker will maintain an up-to-date knowledge base in the future, particularly when dealing with a very dynamic international trade environment that is changing frequently. Furthermore, free and easy access to CBP information and the regulations does not ensure individual brokers are taking advantage of access and staying informed. Accordingly, continuing education is required, and 36 continuing education credits over three years is a reasonable expectation of someone who holds a Federally issued, professional license.

    Comment: Multiple commenters stated that a continuing broker education requirement was an unnecessary expense and a burden on individuals and companies.

    Response: CBP disagrees that the continuing broker education requirement is an unnecessary expense and a burden. CBP has examined the costs and burdens that the continuing broker education requirement will place on individual brokers and companies and has determined it is not overly burdensome. See Section V, Statutory and Regulatory Requirements, below for more information. Furthermore, CBP will ensure that there will be free qualified continuing broker education activities available to individual brokers through CBP and other U.S. government agency offerings that is available on CBP's website CBP.gov.

    Comment: Multiple commenters requested that the continuing broker education requirement should not present additional costs to individual brokers.

    Response: CBP agrees in principle and does not intend to create a specific financial burden on individual brokers. There will be some burden imposed by the continuing broker education requirement because individual brokers will need to receive 36 continuing education credits over three years. However, CBP believes this burden will not be significant and has taken steps to lessen the burden. See Section V, Statutory and Regulatory Requirements, below for more information. For example, CBP will be providing enough free continuing education credits from CBP online modules and in-person events to cover the 36 continuing education credits required in a triennial period.

    Comment: Multiple commenters expressed concern that a continuing broker education requirement will have an outsized effect concerning time, expense, etc., on small businesses and individual brokers who are working for themselves.

    Response: CBP recognizes that this requirement will have an outsized impact on small businesses relative to larger firms. However, as more fully discussed in the Regulatory Flexibility Act section, CBP does not consider this rule to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. See Section V, Statutory and Regulatory Requirements. While CBP realizes that a greater number of employees of smaller firms will be required to begin continuing education as a result of the rule, CBP designed the continuing broker education requirement so that it is the same for every individual broker. First, every individual broker is required to complete qualified continuing broker education and maintain his or her own records. Second, all qualified continuing broker education must be identified by CBP, as explained in Subsection G below, or accredited by a CBP-selected accreditor. As such, all individual brokers must complete the same requirements and the sources for completing those requirements are restricted in the same way. CBP does recognize that small businesses and individuals, sometimes operating in remote locations, may have a more difficult time finding accredited continuing broker education than individual brokers working in a larger entity in a metropolitan area. Therefore, CBP will ensure that there is a central location on CBP's website for individual brokers to access and find qualified continuing broker education. Additionally, as discussed in the comment response above, CBP will be offering enough free continuing education courses in the form of online modules and in-person events to cover the required 36 continuing education credits in a triennial period.

    Comment: Multiple commenters expressed concern that CBP may be creating a conflict of interest in setting continuing broker education requirements that would benefit CBP as an entity offering continuing broker education, may disadvantage other education providers, create a CBP education monopoly, or allow CBP to create a private education monopoly.

    Response: CBP disagrees that it is creating a conflict of interest that would benefit CBP. The new requirements will give individual brokers significant flexibility on how to meet the continuing broker education requirement. CBP intends for individual brokers to have access to a wide range of private- and public-offered qualified continuing broker education. CBP has provided free, online, education modules and in-person workshops to customs brokers, importers, and other members of the trade community for many years. The modules and workshops are designed to inform participants about practices and procedures when conducting customs business and provide updates to laws, regulations, and policies. CBP will continue to produce and disseminate the modules and workshops because doing so ensures that the trade community is aware of the most important changes or updates. More importantly, CBP will continue to offer the modules for free so that individual brokers have a baseline option to satisfy their continuing broker education requirement that will not allow the formation of a private continuing broker education monopoly and will ensure that CBP does not financially profit from instituting a continuing broker education requirement. CBP will work closely with CBP-selected accreditors to create standards that ensure robust and diverse private sector education offerings exist for individual brokers to access.

    Comment: Two commenters requested that qualified continuing broker education be administered by a government entity and stated that it should not be outsourced to any private parties.

    Response: CBP disagrees as it does not have the resource capabilities to create or administer all trainings or educational activities, nor does it have the capacity to vet or accredit every potentially valid training or educational Start Printed Page 41228 activity that could arise. As mentioned throughout this document, CBP believes a continuing broker education requirement will substantially benefit CBP, importers, exporters, customs brokers, and the trade community in general. CBP intends the continuing broker education requirement to be as attainable and as flexible as possible for individual brokers. Therefore, CBP has determined that a private sector continuing broker education option needs to exist, and that option needs to contain certain safeguards, explained elsewhere in this document, which guarantee individual brokers are receiving the requisite level of quality in the private sector offerings. However, CBP understands the commenter's concerns and believes that, by providing enough CBP-identified, free qualified continuing broker education alternatives, individual brokers will have the flexibility and alternatives that allow the individual broker to complete the continuing broker education requirement in a manner and at a cost that suits his or her individual needs.

    Comment: One commenter requested that the continuing broker education framework include fewer participating entities to allow for easier implementation and to avoid overwhelming or confusing individual brokers.

    Response: CBP disagrees that the number of participating entities should be limited. The continuing broker education program will involve as many parties as are necessary to provide individual brokers with a wide range of trainings, educational activities, and topics, while still being a manageable program. CBP believes individual broker confusion will be minimized by allowing an individual broker to certify that he or she has completed the continuing broker education requirement with the filing of the triennial status report and by allowing an individual broker to maintain his or her own records.

    Comment: One commenter asked CBP to hold monthly meetings in person or virtually with a uniform format to meet the continuing broker education requirement rather than the proposed process.

    Response: CBP already holds regular information sessions, local industry days, and conference calls to inform the trade community of changes in trade law, regulations, procedures, etc. However, CBP has found attendance to be sub-optimal and believes mandating attendance at such sessions would not provide individual brokers enough flexibility. CBP recognizes that many individual brokers specialize in certain areas, and not every topic or new development is equally important to every individual broker. As such, CBP has determined that the best approach to guarantee an informed customs broker community is to allow an individual broker to choose the topics he or she believes will help him or her stay current, informed, and effective in his or her practice area.

    B. Certification Dates

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed that individual brokers be required to certify, with the filing of their triennial status reports, pursuant to 19 U.S.C. 1641(g) and 19 CFR 111.30(d), the completion of 36 continuing education credits of qualified continuing broker education over the prior three years. Multiple commenters expressed concern or sought clarification regarding the requirement's initial and ongoing certification date.

    Comment: Two commenters sought clarification concerning the start and end dates of the three-year triennial period as it relates to the continuing broker education requirement. Specifically, the commenters sought clarification concerning the interaction between the end of a continuing broker education cycle and the triennial reporting period. One commenter suggested new dates for the continuing broker education cycle to better accommodate early filing of the triennial status report. One commenter suggested that CBP consider allowing brokers who exceed the 36-hour requirement for one triennial period to carry over and apply a limited number of continuing education credits to the subsequent triennial period.

    Response: CBP appreciates the opportunity to clarify. The timeline for triennial status reporting is prescribed by 19 U.S.C. 1641(g). Every three years after 1985 is a reporting year and a triennial status report is due on February 1st of the reporting year (the triennial reporting period). However, 19 U.S.C. 1641(g)(2) provides that a customs broker license is suspended only when a customs broker fails to file the required triennial status report by March 1st of the reporting year. CBP allows licensed customs brokers to file triennial status reports over a multi-month period, starting mid-December on a date announced on CBP's website and ending on the last day of February of the reporting year. CBP determined that requiring individual brokers to certify completion of continuing broker education requirements at the same time as filing the triennial status report would significantly simplify and alleviate administrative reporting burdens on individual brokers. CBP does not have discretion to adjust the triennial reporting period. As such, the 36-month cycle of the continuing broker education requirement will end on January 31st and begin on February 1st every three years coinciding with the due date of the triennial status report. That means participation in any qualified continuing broker education on or before the last day of January, marking the end of a triennial reporting period, can only count as qualified continuing broker education for that cycle. Any participation in qualified continuing broker education after the last day of January, marking the end of a triennial reporting period, can only count as qualified continuing broker education for the next three-year triennial reporting period. Individual brokers may continue to file their triennial status reports earlier than the due date but should be certain they have completed 36 continuing education credits in the slightly shorter timeframe. To respond to the last comment, CBP does not allow for individual brokers to carry over any continuing education credits they completed in one triennial period in excess of the 36-hour requirement into the subsequent triennial period. This requirement is meant to encourage individual brokers to maintain a current knowledge base by completing training or educational activities within a three-year period. Training or educational activities completed any time between three to six years prior to the credit being applied to the next triennial period would undercut that purpose.

    Comment: Two commenters requested that CBP implement the continuing broker education requirement with a delayed effective date. The commenters highlighted that a continuing broker education requirement is a significant change within the customs broker community and time must be given for the accreditation process to progress so that enough qualified trainings and educational activities are available for use by individual brokers. Similarly, one commenter requested that CBP establish an effective date that coincides with a complete triennial reporting period.

    Response: CBP agrees that time will be needed to set up the accreditation process. In this final rule, the first triennial reporting period that will require individual brokers to complete the continuing broker education requirement will close on January 31, 2027 (with the triennial status report due on February 1, 2027). See19 U.S.C. 1641(g). As such, CBP is modifying § 111.101 by adding a sentence to the Start Printed Page 41229 end of the section to make it clear that the requirement to certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement will be with the filing of the 2027 status report, and every status report thereafter. Therefore, the first time at which individual brokers will be required to certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement will be with the filing of the 2027 triennial status report. As discussed above, CBP will reduce the number of required continuing education credits for the triennial period beginning on February 1, 2024 and ending on January 31, 2027 by six credit hours for approximately every six month that elapse between February 1, 2024 and the compliance date on which individual brokers may begin meeting the requirement, as announced in a Federal Register notice following the publication of this final rule. Following the 2027 triennial status report, individual brokers will be required to certify completion of the 36-credit continuing broker education requirement with every triennial status report, unless an exception applies as outlined in § 111.102(a).

    C. Individuals to Whom the Requirement Applies

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed a continuing broker education requirement that applies to all individual brokers. CBP proposed that individual brokers who voluntarily suspended their licenses, under 19 CFR 111.52, and individual brokers who have not held their licenses for an entire triennial period, be excepted from the requirement. Multiple comments were received regarding the scope of the continuing broker education requirement, including to whom the requirement would apply.

    Comment: One commenter requested that the continuing broker education requirement not extend to those who are working at a brokerage firm or company because the person practices with customs rulings every day.

    Response: CBP disagrees because individual brokers working in a brokerage firm or company do not transact customs business differently, for the purposes of the continuing broker education requirement, from other individual brokers to warrant different treatment. Individuals transacting customs business are required to have a license unless specifically excepted. See19 CFR 111.2(a). Any individual holding an active customs broker license will be required to certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement when submitting his or her triennial status report, with two limited caveats. Those caveats are: if an individual has not held his or her license for an entire triennial period or if an individual license is voluntarily suspended. If an individual has not held an active customs broker license for an entire triennial period or is reactivating a license that was voluntarily suspended, then that person is required to complete a prorated version of the requirement. In these two scenarios, the required number of continuing education credits that an individual broker must complete will be calculated on a prorated basis of one continuing education credit for each complete remaining month until the end of the triennial period. See19 CFR 111.102(b). Furthermore, the continuing broker education requirement is not linked to the nature of the customs business the individual transacts. Individual brokers have different experiences, specializations, knowledge bases, and day-to-day interactions with customs business. Differentiating among individual brokers based on things such as experience, employer, or specialization would be unworkable and controversial. CBP believes the only fair and consistent way to implement the continuing broker education requirement is to apply the same requirement to all individual brokers.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP exempt individual brokers from the requirement if the licensee is not actively engaged in customs business.

    Response: CBP has determined that an individual holding an active license is the most fair and administrable distinction to determine whether an individual must complete qualified continuing broker education. In the NPRM, CBP explicitly stated that all individual brokers are required to complete the same continuing broker education requirement due to the complex and evolving realm of international trade. As mentioned above, on October 18, 2022, CBP published a final rule entitled “Modernization of the Customs Broker Regulations,” in the Federal Register , which substantially rewrote certain provisions of part 111 of title 19 of the CFR and made certain changes to 19 CFR 111.30. As such, in this document, CBP has made technical and conforming changes to 19 CFR 111.30(d) while maintaining the original intent of the NPRM to apply the continuing broker education requirement to all individual brokers. CBP, through the Part 111 Rewrite, does recognize a difference, under 19 CFR 111.30, between the contents required in a triennial status report submitted by individual brokers “actively engaged in transacting business as a broker” and brokers who are “not actively engaged in transacting business as a broker.” However, filing a triennial status report is required for non-active individual brokers and the continuing broker education requirement will be as well. CBP intends for all individual brokers to be current in their knowledge of transacting customs business and to complete the same continuing broker education requirement. Even brokers who are not actively engaged in transacting business as a broker might nonetheless be leveraging their broker license in other ways, for example, as an employee of a company or as a consultant. Furthermore, a broker could become active at any point in time from a period of inactivity and such brokers must then meet the same levels of professionalism and knowledge as any other broker who has been actively engaged in transacting business. Lastly, if a broker expects to not actively engage in transacting business as a broker for a longer period of time, then that broker could have his or her license voluntarily suspended in accordance with 19 CFR 111.52, and thereby, not be subject to the broker continuing education requirement during the period of voluntary suspension.

    Comment: One commenter asked CBP to extend the continuing broker education requirement to an importer or exporter who transacts customs business solely on his or her own account.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the request because those individuals do not need a customs broker license as they are not transacting customs business on behalf of others. CBP wants to ensure that licensed individual brokers who handle business on behalf of others and are paid for those services are knowledgeable and informed about the applicable laws and regulations in order to provide high quality service to their clients. CBP has consistently recognized that certain limited circumstances and certain specific individuals performing customs business do not require a license. See19 CFR 111.2(a)(2). This final rule does not change the nature of, nor the reason for, those exceptions.

    Comment: One commenter requested that the continuing broker education requirement extend to CBP Officers and personnel.

    Response: CBP disagrees with this request because it is unnecessary. The duties and responsibilities of CBP Officers and personnel are significantly different from those of individual Start Printed Page 41230 brokers. The continuing broker education requirement is designed to address the needs, value, and credibility of individual brokers. This continuing broker education requirement is not designed for any other professional service involved in transacting customs business. It should be noted that CBP Officers and personnel do receive regular training to address their dynamic environments as well as to conduct compliance and enforcement activities related to new laws, regulations, and policies.

    D. Completing the 36 Continuing Education Credits

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed that individual brokers complete 36 continuing education credits of qualified continuing broker education over the three years of a triennial period. CBP also created a definition for continuing education credit. CBP received many comments regarding the definition of continuing education credit and hours required.

    Comment: Many commenters expressed agreement with CBP that 36 continuing education credits of qualifying continuing broker education each triennial period is a reasonable and attainable requirement.

    Response: CBP agrees and notes that 36 continuing education credits over three years is easily prorated as circumstances dictate. For individual brokers, one credit per month should be easy to track and provide sufficient time to identify qualified continuing broker education opportunities capable of meeting the requirement.

    Comment: One commenter felt that 36 continuing education credits should be required annually and not per every triennial period.

    Response: CBP disagrees with this commenter because requiring 36 credits of continuing broker education every triennial period is attainable and easily prorated when necessary. CBP believes that requiring significantly more continuing education credit in an annual or triennial period would significantly increase the burden of the continuing broker education requirement on all individual brokers and may increase non-compliance with the requirement. CBP does not intend to create a new barrier for individuals seeking or maintaining a customs broker license that outweighs the benefits of continuing broker education.

    Comment: One commenter requested that small businesses or businesses with under 10 employees be required to complete fewer continuing broker education credits, such as 24 credit hours.

    Response: CBP disagrees with this request to lower the number of credit hours. Requiring the same number of credit hours ensure fairness and a similar level of education for all brokers. Furthermore, CBP has assessed the effect of this final rule on small businesses, which may be reviewed below in Section V, Statutory and Regulatory Requirements. CBP has determined that there would not be a significant economic impact on small businesses. CBP believes that completing 36 continuing education credits over the span of three years will not be a significant hurdle for individual brokers or the businesses with which they are associated, regardless of the business size, especially given the availability of low-cost or free options.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP recognize the smallest unit of continuing broker education credit as a 30-minute half credit due to the frequency of trainings and educational activities offered for this length of time.

    Response: CBP agrees and has adopted this suggestion in the final rule by revising the definition of continuing education credit found in the proposed amendments to § 111.1. The NPRM had proposed that the first continuing education credit provided by a qualified continuing broker education provider must be one hour of continuous participation in the activity and additional half credits would be approved for each 30 minutes of continuous participation in continuing education thereafter. In this final rule, qualified continuing broker education may award half a credit for 30 minutes of continuous participation and an additional half a credit for each full 30 minutes of continuous participation in continuing education thereafter. CBP believes individual brokers should have the maximum flexibility to complete the continuing broker education requirement. Allowing half credit trainings or educational activities provides for more specialization of topics and more diversity among qualified continuing broker education opportunities available to individual brokers. In addition, CBP modified the proposed language in § 111.103(b)(1) to allow instructors, discussion leaders, and speakers to claim half of one continuing education credit for each full 30 minutes spent on presenting or preparing for a presentation at a training or educational activity as described in § 111.103(a)(2)(i) and (ii).

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP award one full credit for every fifty-five (55) minutes of continuing broker education to allow for breaks, technical issues, etc.

    Response: CBP understands the sentiment and logic behind accounting for variance, but believes the issue is better addressed outside of regulation. For the sake of simplicity and clarity, one credit of qualifying continuing education must come from a training or educational activity that adds up to one continuous hour in length (the time could be one full continuous hour or two full continuous 30-minute segments). CBP recognizes that variances will always exist in how a presenter performs, how much the audience participates, how a participant clicks through an online module, etc. The existence of those variances is one of the many reasons CBP is requiring that qualifying continuing broker education be accredited. Accreditation allows standardization of how many continuing education credits are rewarded from any given activity and will allow for technical difficulties, breaks, etc., to be accounted for and measured consistently. The number of continuing education credits assigned to government-offered trainings and educational activities will follow the same standards as those for accreditation.

    Comment: One commenter noted that eligibility on receiving education credits should be based on the amount of time designated for the material rather than the minutes of continuous participation.

    Response: CBP disagrees as each qualified continuing education activity will provide continuing education credit based on the predetermined amount of continuous participation required to complete the training or educational activity. The actual amount of continuous participation that a specific individual broker takes is not relevant to the calculation. Basically, qualified continuing broker education will have a specific number of continuing education credits assigned based on a determination of the number of continuous 30-minute participation segments required to complete the activity. Activity extending over 30 minutes must have another 30 minutes of continuous participation (totaling one hour of continuous participation) to then count as one continuing education credit and the calculation continues for longer continuing broker education. However, a training or educational activity requiring 45 minutes of continuous participation will only count for half a continuing education credit. Time spent allowing for breaks, pauses, technical issues, excess time answering questions, etc., will not adjust the quantity of continuing Start Printed Page 41231 education credits that an activity will provide. CBP or CBP-selected accreditors will pre-approve the continuing education credit for all qualified continuing broker education. Individual brokers will know the number of continuing education credits before participating in an activity.

    Comment: Multiple commenters highlighted the private sector Certified Customs Specialist (CCS) designation/certification and continuing education program. The commenters specifically asked whether the CCS certification and continued maintenance of the certification would qualify brokers as having met the 36 continuing education credits required in a triennial reporting period for the continuing broker education requirement.

    Response: Until CBP selects accreditors, CBP cannot say for certain whether the education requirement for a CCS certification will meet the continuing broker education requirement of this final rule. CBP has not evaluated the specific training materials required or “continuing education units” (CEU) required to attain the CCS certification. In accordance with this final rule, only qualified trainings or educational activities will provide individual brokers with continuing education credit. As of now, there are no qualified trainings or educational activities because CBP has not identified nor have any CBP-selected accreditors accredited any trainings or educational activities. However, CBP envisions future accreditors will likely determine that trainings and educational activities designed for CCS certification and CEUs will qualify as continuing broker education under § 111.103, given the history of this certificate program and its reputation in the brokerage community. See the economic analysis presented below in Section V, Statutory and Regulatory Requirements.

    Comment: One commenter noted that an individual broker should be allowed to choose which specific trainings to attend based on his or her specific needs and general business environment.

    Response: CBP agrees that individual brokers should be allowed to choose trainings to attend based on their specific needs. The continuing broker education requirement was designed to provide individual brokers the maximum flexibility to complete the requirement from qualified sources. These regulations do not require individual brokers to fill the 36 continuing education credits with specific trainings or educational activities, such as ethics trainings. Individual brokers are encouraged to seek the trainings, educational activity, and topics that best suit their needs during each triennial period. Furthermore, the 36 continuing education credits can be completed at any time during the triennial period.

    E. Recordkeeping

    In the NPRM, to comply with the continuing broker education requirement, individual brokers must certify completion of 36 continuing education credits at the time of filing their triennial status report and must maintain certain records of the qualified continuing broker education completed for three years after certifying completion and make those records available to CBP upon request. In proposed § 111.02, CBP also proposed the minimum data elements required to appear in the maintained records concerning each qualified training or educational activity completed. CBP received multiple comments regarding recordkeeping requirements and procedures.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP should consider alternatives to the proposed recordkeeping requirements and allow for an individual broker to be able to retain an extract of completed coursework from an employer's learning management system.

    Response: CBP agrees with the commenter and the regulations will allow individual brokers such flexibility regarding the location where records may be stored. Individual brokers will be in compliance with the recordkeeping requirement so long as the broker's records meet the criteria of § 111.102(d)(1), and the individual broker is capable of producing the records in a timely manner if requested by CBP. The customs broker license is held by the individual and the responsibility to maintain the license requirements rests with the individual broker. The requirements in § 111.102(d) are designed to provide individual brokers with the flexibility to maintain their continuing broker education records in a manner best suited for them. If an individual broker chooses to maintain all or some of his or her records within an employer's learning management system that is his or her prerogative, but nonetheless the individual broker remains responsible for recordkeeping requirements.

    Comment: Multiple commenters requested that CBP should recognize a transcript or similar electronic certification as encompassing all the essential information for recordkeeping requirements. Additionally, one commenter requested that records that are kept in the normal course of business should meet the standard for required documentation or that CBP should not require a specific form or format.

    Response: CBP agrees with the commenters and intends for individual brokers to have such flexibility maintaining the records of the continuing broker education credits in whatever format is convenient for the individual broker. For that reason, proposed § 111.102(d) had been written to be very general and this final rule adopts the proposed language. If an individual broker's records are complete, contain 36 continuing education credits in a triennial period, and each credit can be connected to the six criteria (§ 111.102(d)(1)(i–vi)), the individual broker will be in compliance. The record may be either physical or electronic and evidentiary documentation of activity or training completion may be physical or electronic. A transcript or similar electronic certification will suffice and, CBP anticipates the identification and accreditation processes will ensure qualifying trainings and educational activities provide individual brokers with the necessary information and documentation of completion meeting the requirements of § 111.102(d). However, it will be incumbent on an individual broker to maintain his or her records in a form that allows the individual broker to easily and timely respond to CBP record requests.

    Comment: One commenter sought greater clarity concerning how individual brokers will be able to prove completion of government-created continuing broker education trainings or educational activity.

    Response: As explained elsewhere in this preamble, CBP is working with Partner Government Agencies (PGAs) to identify specific government-provided online modules and in-person activities that are relevant to customs business as qualifying continuing broker education. CBP will assign the appropriate continuing education credit to the qualified continuing broker education. CBP will work with PGAs to provide information or a record, upon training or activity completion, to individual brokers to satisfy the requirements of § 111.102(d)(1)(i–vi). However, the exact format of the provided record will be determined after CBP has selected accreditors and leveraged their expertise to create consistency for individual brokers between private and public offerings. CBP will provide additional information on its website, CBP.gov, in the future. Start Printed Page 41232

    Comment: One commenter recommended that recordkeeping requirements should be extended to all accredited entities providing continuing education for individual brokers so that individual brokers can rely upon the continuing education organization to provide a record directly to CBP.

    Response: CBP disagrees because records held by providers of accredited trainings and educational activities will not produce data that is easily usable by CBP nor is such a system helpful to individual brokers to ensure that the required number of credits has been completed. Simply put, records maintained by providers of accredited continuing broker education will only demonstrate which individuals attended the provider's specific trainings and educational activities. That data is only useful when reorganized and collated with data from other providers and individual brokers. Such a system is highly susceptible to failure, and the failure would generally fall outside the control of individual brokers even though the individual brokers have the duty to complete the requirement. The chosen recordkeeping requirements place the responsibility of recordkeeping on the individual broker, who is in the best position to maintain the records.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP develop an online reporting portal. Similarly, another commenter asked CBP to develop a means of tracking verifiable continuing education credits through the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) system.

    Response: CBP disagrees as it cannot commit to the development of a tracking tool on CBP.gov or through ACE. CBP may pursue developing an online reporting/ACE tracking tool, but the development of this tool will be dependent on resources and CBP priorities. For that reason, CBP has made the requirements of § 111.102(d) very general and flexible for individual brokers to meet. CBP does anticipate individual brokers will only need to check a box certifying completion of 36 continuing education credits when filing their triennial status reports in the electronic Customs and Border Protection (eCBP) Portal.[9]

    Comment: One commenter mentioned that a CCS certificate presented to the individual broker should satisfy the recordkeeping requirement. The commenter also asserted that the CCS certificate should suffice as proof of completing the continuing broker education requirement and obviate the need to keep individualized records of each activity completed.

    Response: CBP understands the commenter's concerns, however, neither CBP nor a CBP-selected accreditor has formally evaluated whether documents demonstrating CCS certification meet the continuing education requirements. Without formal evaluation, the CCS certification cannot be used to meet the requirements. The recordkeeping requirement in § 111.102(d) requires the individual brokers to maintain a record that states the title, provider, date, credits, and location of accredited activity completed, along with documentary evidence of an individual “broker's registration for, attendance at, completion of, or other activity bearing upon the individual broker's participation in and completion of the qualifying continuing broker education.”

    Comment: Two commenters noted confusion concerning proposed § 111.102(d)(1)(v), regarding the requirement to maintain documentation pertaining to the location of the training or educational activity, and the paragraph's interaction with training done via webinars or other online courses.

    Response: Proposed § 111.102(d)(1)(v) requires that records be maintained as to “[t]he location of the training or educational activity, if the training or educational activity is offered in person.” To clarify that CBP does not differentiate between in-person and online training or educational activity, CBP slightly revised the proposed provision to require that the record include the location of the qualifying continuing education. For trainings or educational activity offered electronically, such as via webinar or online course, the individual broker may simply record the location of the activity as “online.”

    Comment: Two commenters sought additional information concerning CBP requests for continuing education records under proposed § 111.102(d)(2), including the time brokers will have to provide the documentation, whether a set/standardized review will be conducted, and whether the record request would be conducted onsite or electronically. Additionally, many commenters requested that CBP should provide a reasonable timeframe (such as 30 days) for submission of records, particularly when requesting an in-person inspection, under proposed § 111.102(d)(2), in case the broker is away or unavailable.

    Response: The focus of a record request is to ensure compliance with the continuing broker education requirement by reviewing records maintained in accordance with § 111.102(d)(1). Individual brokers must maintain those records in a manner that is capable of retrieval under § 111.102(d)(2). CBP recognizes the recordkeeping requirement is new and will work closely with individual brokers to accommodate the transition. CBP agrees that it is important for brokers to have a reasonable timeframe in place for the submission of records upon request, and thus, CBP added a 30-calendar day timeframe from the date of receipt of CBP's record request in the first sentence of § 111.102(d)(2), which is in accordance with general recordkeeping requirements in 19 CFR part 163. As with other broker matters, CBP will work with the individual broker to ensure production of the records requested in a manner and timeframe that is feasible for CBP and the individual broker.

    F. CBP-Selected Accreditors

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed that qualified continuing broker education must either be created by the government or accredited by a CBP-selected accreditor. CBP also outlined the process for selecting accreditors and the responsibilities of CBP-selected accreditors. CBP received comments regarding the selection criteria and process for selecting accreditors.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP become an accreditor because it would give CBP the ability to monitor the training that individual brokers are receiving, provide for a cost-efficient accreditation process, and provide individual brokers with a secure accreditor to prevent disclosures of confidential business processes.

    Response: CBP disagrees as CBP believes a public-private partnership is necessary to ensure the best qualified continuing broker education opportunities for individual brokers. CBP will select accreditors and the process will provide CBP with a sufficient window into the types of trainings and educational activities receiving accreditation. Additionally, CBP will institute a framework for the trade community to inform CBP of issues or make suggestions concerning continuing broker education. Furthermore, CBP does not have the capacity to vet all potential trainings and educational activity for accreditation, which would likely occur if CBP were to act as a “cost-efficient” accreditor alternative. Finally, the limitations and requirements placed on parties to maintain their accreditor status will prevent disclosure of Start Printed Page 41233 confidential business processes. As such, CBP needs to ensure there is room in the continuing broker education process for private parties to operate.

    Comment: Multiple commenters expressed the belief that CBP's proposed selection of accreditors through SAM would be too cumbersome and time-consuming due to additional and more detailed technical requirements. The commenters also requested that CBP adopt a streamlined accreditation process akin to that used for commercial laboratories that are approved by CBP.

    Response: CBP disagrees that the SAM process would be too cumbersome. SAM is familiar to the public and its use is appropriate in this circumstance. CBP has determined that selection of accreditors will require a contracting-type process. All potential accreditors must be afforded the same access and same opportunity to present their credentials. The system for accrediting commercial laboratories is very involved (including site visits), specific to the unique requirements placed on laboratories addressing concerns about human health and safety and is unnecessary in these circumstances. CBP will only be vetting parties for their capabilities to be accreditors and ensure those selected parties understand the standards for qualified continuing broker education. The accreditation process, discussed above in Section I, requires response to an RFI and RFP, which will produce a binding agreement between the selected party and CBP. The RFI and RFP process will ensure a more dynamic and responsive vetting process and produce a diverse pool of accreditors.

    Comment: One commenter requested that if an applicant's proposal to be an accreditor is deficient for any reason, or if CBP intends to deny the proposal, that the applicant be advised in writing of any deficiency and provided with a reasonable opportunity to amend the proposal.

    Response: In accordance with § 111.103(c), the application process to be an accreditor will be conducted via SAM following the announcement of an RFI and an RFP. The normal process for responding to RFIs and RFPs will apply. All parties desiring to participate as an accreditor should carefully review the RFIs and RFPs and carefully respond to the instructions of the RFIs and RFPs.

    Comment: Multiple commenters requested that certain specific parties be automatically recognized as accrediting organizations without CBP selection, and that this designation should continue indefinitely unless complaints are filed, and a study shows that the party has not fulfilled its obligations as an accreditor.

    Response: CBP disagrees with these comments. No private party will simply be designated as an accreditor without any review process. All parties wishing to be an accreditor will have the same opportunity to submit proposals and demonstrate their credentials.

    Comment: One commenter noted the importance of having a transparent application process with multiple approved accreditors and agreed that CBP-selected accreditors should be required to renew their accreditor statuses on a periodic basis.

    Response: CBP agrees and intends for the RFI and RFP process to be transparent and produce multiple qualified accreditors. CBP anticipates that the accreditation process will require adjustment over time to address standards, add new accreditors, address substandard accreditors, etc. As such, CBP will have accreditor status sunset and publish new RFIs and RFPs to select new accreditors as circumstances require. The first set of CBP-selected accreditors will be approved for three years.

    Comment: One commenter requested that the term of third-party accreditors be extended to six years from the date of approval.

    Response: CBP disagrees because the continuing broker education requirement is new, and the public-private partnership envisioned to designate accredited continuing broker education for individual brokers needs flexibility and a period of applied learning. The period of award must be the same for all parties selected, it must provide enough time for the selected accreditors to establish their systems, it must be short enough to allow new interested parties to enter without waiting too long, and it must be long enough to allow selected parties to accredit sufficient trainings and educational activities. CBP has determined three years is an appropriate period of time and allows CBP to ensure that the accreditor selection process does not interfere with the close of a triennial period. CBP may adjust the contracted period in future RFIs and RFPs as circumstances and hindsight dictate the best practice.

    Comment: Two commenters requested that CBP include specific criteria in proposed § 111.103 that describes required criteria for accreditors.

    Response: CBP disagrees with these commenters and will not add criteria to the regulations at this time. There will be criteria for vetting the proposals received in accordance with § 111.103(c). However, CBP anticipates the criteria will change as CBP makes the first selection of accreditors and then evaluates the outcomes. Therefore, including accreditor criteria in CBP's regulations would be too restrictive at this juncture. The accreditor criteria will be outlined in the RFP issued to solicit potential accreditors, and the RFP is a public document that any party can review.[10]

    Comment: One commenter requested that the employment of a licensed broker be treated as a factor, but not a requirement, to becoming an accreditor.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the commenter, as a licensed broker has passed the exam and has the requisite knowledge to vet trainings and educational activities. CBP believes that parties without a licensed customs broker on staff will have problems vetting trainings and educational activities and may accredit inferior continuing broker education. CBP is cognizant that individual brokers deserve qualified continuing broker education that is useful and accurate. The best way to ensure that accredited trainings and educational activities meet minimum standards is to have the continuing education vetted by licensed customs brokers. As such, and as stated in the NPRM, employment of a licensed customs broker will be a requirement for a party to be an accreditor. CBP may adjust this requirement in future RFIs and RFPs as circumstances dictate.

    Comment: Multiple commenters expressed concern about non-governmental accreditors receiving access to confidential business procedures that a business would not want shared with its competitors.

    Response: CBP appreciates this concern and notes that business procedures are not necessarily outside the scope of continuing broker education if they relate to transacting customs business. However, CBP believes protections related to confidentiality are not appropriate for this regulation and better addressed in the RFPs and in limitations and security expectations placed on accreditors selected by CBP as a requirement/condition to maintain their accreditor status.

    G. Qualified Continuing Broker Education

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed basic standards for trainings and educational activities to qualify as continuing broker education and provide individual brokers with continuing education credit. CBP also proposed specific Start Printed Page 41234 allowances for instructors, discussion leaders, and speakers to receive limited continuing education credit. CBP received multiple comments regarding the validity and type of trainings and educational activities available.

    Comment: Multiple commenters specifically requested information on how an individual interested in continuing broker education will be able to identify appropriate courses or programs.

    Response: Following publication of the Federal Register notice announcing the availability of qualified continuing broker education courses, CBP will publish the initial list of available qualified continuing broker education opportunities on CBP.gov. Furthermore, CBP will ensure there is a central location on CBP.gov that allows individual brokers to identify and link to all available qualified continuing broker education opportunities.

    Comment: Two commenters requested additional information regarding how individual brokers will be able to confirm the validity of any accreditations that a continuing education provider claims to hold.

    Response: CBP and the CBP-selected accreditor will not be accrediting education providers but specific trainings and educational activities. CBP anticipates individual brokers will have several ways to determine what trainings and educational activities are accredited and count for continuing education credit. First, CBP will announce every party that is a CBP-selected accreditor, and the accreditor will provide an open access list that tracks every training and educational activity accredited by that accreditor. Second, CBP will maintain a central location on CBP.gov that lists the accreditors, provides links to the accreditors' listings, and provides access to CBP and PGA continuing broker education opportunities. CBP is exploring additional avenues to inform brokers of available qualified continuing broker education.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP develop a web page on CBP.gov listing all available qualifying training materials provided by CBP and PGAs.

    Response: CBP agrees and intends to do so after CBP has identified a sufficient quantity of qualified trainings and educational activities to include on CBP.gov. The specific page will be announced at a later date.

    Comment: One commenter requested that public meetings, webinars, and other activities, hosted by CBP, be clearly identified as qualifying or not qualifying for continuing education credit.

    Response: CBP agrees that qualifying events hosted by CBP should be clearly identified. The NPRM had proposed that all CBP and other PGA trainings and educational activities relevant to customs business would be qualified continuing broker education. In this final rule, CBP is modifying proposed § 111.103(a)(1)(i) to explicitly state that CBP will identify when a government-offered training or educational activity is related to customs business and qualified continuing broker education. This modification will ensure that individual brokers will be directly informed of when they will receive continuing education credit from government offerings and avoid confusion concerning what qualifies or require individual brokers to parse the scope of “relevant to customs business” on their own. After consultation with the relevant PGA, CBP will identify and collect all existing CBP and PGA trainings and educational activities into one online location with specific details concerning the number of continuing education credits assigned to each. Furthermore, CBP will clearly identify what future events qualify as continuing broker education and the continuing education credits connected to the events.

    Comment: Multiple commenters stated that continuing broker education should not be limited to customs business in the narrow sense and should involve the full range of PGAs with border clearance responsibilities.

    Response: CBP agrees with the commenters in principle. CBP intends for the continuing broker education requirement to be flexible and relevant to individual brokers. CBP recognizes that transacting customs business can cross many issue areas and involve statutes, regulations, policies, and procedures of governing agencies besides CBP. As such, CBP has modified proposed § 111.103 such that, “training or educational activity offered by another U.S. government agency” will qualify as continuing broker education as long as “the content is relevant to customs business as identified by CBP in coordination with the appropriate U.S. government agency when applicable.” CBP believes “relevant to customs business” provides CBP the ability to ensure individual brokers will have access to a wide variety of education topics that cover the range of Trade issues involving other government agencies. As previously noted and in Section II, for the sake of clarity, CBP will clearly identify the government-offered trainings and educational activity, in coordination with PGAs when applicable, that qualify as continuing broker education.

    Comment: One commenter requested additional guidance concerning the specific training and educational activities that CBP will accept from other government agencies and provide a list of pre-approved programs from other government agencies.

    Response: CBP cannot at this point provide additional guidance concerning the specific PGA trainings or educational activities that will qualify as continuing broker education. CBP is working with PGAs to determine what trainings and educational activities exist, what should be identified as qualified continuing broker education, and the number of continuing education credits assignable to each. CBP will provide individual brokers with a list of qualified PGA and CBP offerings in an online format. CBP will update the list as new PGA and CBP trainings and educational activities are available and identified by CBP as relevant to customs business.

    Comment: Multiple commenters sought clarification concerning the cost and credit hours of qualified continuing broker education offered by CBP or PGAs.

    Response: Nearly all CBP and PGA-offered trainings and educational activities that will be eligible for continuing broker education credit will, as they are now, be offered at no cost to interested participants. The number of continuing education credits associated with any given training or educational activity will depend upon the same criteria dictating continuing education credit assigned by accreditors. Additionally, CBP believes, based on existing modules, planned modules, and regularly scheduled events, that CBP will provide individual brokers enough qualified continuing broker education that they will be able to fulfill the continuing broker education requirement from the CBP and PGA offerings alone.

    Comment: Two commenters requested further information as to the meaning of qualifying education. The first commenter requested that CBP adopt a clear set of guidelines as to what constitutes education, potentially including practical case studies and a list of overarching trade topics and aspects of professional development, and second commenter requested that CBP adopt a more specific definition of training and educational activities.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the comments requesting that CBP establish a more specific definition and guidelines as to what constitutes Start Printed Page 41235 education. CBP recognizes that flexibility is necessary in this field to ensure that an adequate quantity and the best quality of qualified continuing broker education is available for individual brokers. At this time, a more precise definition, definitive guidelines, or lists of what constitutes permissible trainings, educational activities, or topics, more detailed than what appears in § 111.103(a) is not practical. CBP, in conjunction with the CBP-selected accreditors, will establish standards and guidelines for continuing broker education. CBP will provide further updates in the future.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP edit the language of the requirements for recognized trainings or educational activities in proposed § 111.103(a)(2) because it does not allow for “asynchronous delivery of on-line training” or “self-guided learning” which can be completed by students on a self-paced, anytime-anywhere basis.

    Response: CBP agrees with these comments and has always intended for self-guided online modules to be viable sources of continuing broker education credit because they represent a significant expansion of the types of education available to individual brokers. The language proposed in the NPRM does not explicitly prohibit self-guided online modules, but the consistent confusion in the comments received has demonstrated that an amendment and additional clarity is warranted. As such, CBP has added a new subparagraph, § 111.103(a)(2)(iii), to explicitly allow for online training and educational activity, whether live or self-guided, that culminates in a retention test. Accordingly, CBP has also renumbered the other four categories and edited proposed § 111.103(a)(2)(i) so that it is clearly delineated from § 111.103(a)(2)(iii), as trainings or educational activity that are led or guided by another individual. This change will allow individual brokers to engage in qualified self-guided learning that also guarantees a minimum level of engagement from the participant.

    Comment: One commenter sought clarification regarding whether online training may be offered in a recorded format, i.e., given by a speaker who records a script of accredited content.

    Response: Online training may be offered in a recorded format if the recording of the script has been approved for continuing education credit by a CBP-selected accreditor. Simply recording an individual reciting content that appears in a different accredited activity will not suffice as continuing education on its own merits. The entire recording must be submitted to a CBP-selected accreditor and accredited. Further, proper documentation of the training must also be available to make clear that the broker received the training from an accredited source and that verifies proper completion of the course.

    Comment: One commenter sought clarification regarding whether online training may be in the form of a slide presentation of accredited content.

    Response: CBP agrees that online training may be in the form of slides if the entire slide deck has been approved for continuing education credit by a CBP-selected accreditor. Please note the changes discussed above, and in Section II, concerning online self-guided learning. Simply taking content or slides that appear in a different accredited activity and combining them into a new presentation will not suffice as continuing education on its own merits. The specific online training must be submitted to a CBP-selected accreditor and accredited.

    Comment: One commenter requested that qualified continuing broker education should be permitted in either a classroom setting or online, as long as such training is taught or overseen by a licensed customs broker, a trade attorney, an experienced consultant, or a qualified representative of CBP or any PGA.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the commenter to the extent this comment seeks an exemption from accreditation if the training is provided by such private individuals. To the extent the commenter seeks to restrict presentation of training to the listed persons, then CBP disagrees with the comment because the request is unnecessarily restrictive. If a training or educational activity qualifies as continuing broker education under § 111.103(a) then it will provide continuing education credit upon completion. The identity of the presenter, instructor, or other attendees is not relevant.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP allow individual brokers to earn continuing broker education credit for time spent publishing subject matter for an accredited course even if the license holder preparing the material is not an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker.

    Response: CBP disagrees with this comment because allowing credit for publication would be unworkable and controversial. CBP does not believe there is a consistent manner to determine how significant an individual's engagement with material is when involved in the publication of educational material. Furthermore, CBP believes that determining when to allocate credits for publishing material would be very controversial and difficult because trainings and educational activities must be accredited before they may count as continuing broker education credit. Certain individual brokers may rely upon publication and then accreditation to meet their continuing broker education requirements and fail to meet the 36 continuing education credits required because an activity is not accredited or does not provide enough credit. CBP believes clarity and consistency are essential to allow individual brokers to meet this new requirement and, therefore, no credit will be awarded for publishing education materials.

    Comment: Two commenters suggested that CBP reconsider its proposal to prevent participation in various federal advisory committees from counting as continuing education.

    Response: CBP disagrees because participation in federal advisory committee meetings is considered a privilege, and the meetings do not serve an educational purpose. As stated in proposed § 111.103(a)(2)(ii), meetings that are conducted in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. App.) (FACA), are expressly excluded as qualified continuing broker education. Individual brokers will not be permitted to claim continuing education credit for their participation in committees, subcommittees, workgroups, and any other group organized under the auspices of FACA, including participating in public meetings. Instead, FACA meetings serve to solicit advice from committee members and to receive input from the public that may later form the basis for government decisions. Not all activities relating to customs business qualify as education, and participation in FACA meetings does not qualify as a training or an educational activity.

    Comment: One commenter requested that a company's in-house training should not be an eligible option for continuing education credit, whether approved by an accreditor or not.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the commenter because declaring in-house training as being unqualified to be continuing broker education would not provide the flexibility to produce the best quality and quantity of continuing broker education opportunities for individual brokers. In-house training is also, presumably, intended to provide individuals within the company the most relevant information on that Start Printed Page 41236 company's processes and best practices, something that is vital to a business's viability and can be inextricably intertwined with legitimate topics concerning transacting customs business. Greater guidance, restrictions, or even liberalization of what constitutes qualified continuing broker education will come after CBP has selected accreditors and consulted with them on working guidelines for accrediting continuing broker education.

    Comment: One commenter sought clarification regarding whether the presenter or speaker of accredited content is required to have certain qualifications.

    Response: CBP will not require that the presenter of an accredited training or educational activity have any specific qualifications. CBP does not require presenters of education material for the customs broker exam to have specific qualifications and will not require such qualifications for the presentation of continuing broker education.

    H. The Accreditation Process

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed regulations detailing the responsibilities of CBP-selected accreditors. CBP also specified a limitation on a CBP-selected accreditor's ability to accredit the entity's own educational activity. CBP reviewed multiple comments regarding the accreditation process.

    Comment: Multiple commenters requested that educational activity (membership meetings, seminars, etc.) offered by broker associations should not require third-party accreditation.

    Response: CBP disagrees because the continuing broker education requirement is new, and no existing trainings or educational activities have been developed with the specific needs of this requirement in mind. Any training or educational activity, not offered by CBP or other U.S. government agency, seeking to provide continuing education credit must be accredited. If existing trainings or educational activities qualify, based on their content and quality, then the activities will receive accreditation.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that a continuing broker education program provider should have the option to apply for and obtain accreditation after the training or educational activity is provided.

    Response: CBP disagrees because post-event accreditation could produce unwelcome confusion. Individual brokers are entitled to consistency and predictability when meeting the continuing broker education requirement. When continuing broker education is completed, the individual broker will know exactly how many continuing education credits he or she earned. Allowing for trainings or educational activities to be accredited after the event has occurred does not serve that purpose and will create confusion. For example, if an individual broker participates in a non-accredited training, believing it will provide 1.5 credits just before the triennial status report is due, but an accreditor approves the activity for 1 credit, then the licensed customs broker has not completed the continuing broker education requirement, through no fault of his or her own. However, the licensed customs broker and CBP will be required to expend valuable time and resources determining the correct number of continuing education credits completed. Furthermore, CBP does not want to create a system that allows for undue pressure to be placed on CBP-selected accreditors to accredit trainings or educational activities because individual brokers believed they would receive credit or a specific amount of credit for attending or participating. As such, CBP will not allow continuing education credit to extend to participation in a continuing broker education program before the training or educational activity was accredited.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that providers of trainings and educational activities should be permitted to request approval from an additional accreditor if initially denied accreditation. The commenters were concerned that an accreditor could deny an applicant's courses for accreditation for competitive reasons or due to lack of familiarity with a subject matter. One commenter asked that the applicant be advised in writing of the reason(s) for denial of accreditation and provided with a reasonable opportunity to amend the denied application for accreditation.

    Response: CBP agrees and always intended to allow applicants of denied trainings and educational activities to either reapply for accreditation or amend an original application. Further, accreditors will provide the applicant seeking approval the reason(s) for the denial of an accreditation of a course. Greater flexibility in the accreditation process will produce better continuing broker education options for individual brokers. CBP believes the accreditation process will be dynamic and wants to ensure parties may re-submit trainings and educational activities for vetting following a denial. As such, CBP has made an amendment to the proposed regulations to guarantee clarity on this topic. Specifically, CBP has edited proposed § 111.103(d) to explicitly prohibit CBP-selected accreditors from denying review or approval of a training or educational activity for continuing education credit solely because it was previously denied by the CBP-selected accreditor or any other CBP-selected accreditor. CBP will address specific processes and timeframes in the RFPs, however, CBP will not be making definitive guidelines concerning accreditation standards at this time. After selecting qualified accreditors, standard guidelines for accreditation will be developed. CBP will provide additional information in the future.

    Comment: Two commenters requested that CBP allow a single accreditation to apply to all programs/classes in a course or to allow blanket accreditation.

    Response: CBP disagrees with these comments as CBP cannot commit to specific accreditation procedures at this time. CBP believes the accreditation process will be flexible to allow greater quantity and quality of continuing broker education opportunities. However, the exact way potential continuing broker education is evaluated, whether courses may be grouped or individually examined, how continuing education credits will be assigned in a symposium or convention, etc., will be determined after CBP has selected qualified accreditors and leveraged their expertise. CBP will provide additional information in the future.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP should enable CBP-selected accreditors to self-certify the party's own training and educational activities.

    Response: CBP disagrees because self-certification of an accreditor's own trainings and educational activities is not viable. CBP is not prohibiting CBP-selected accreditors from also producing qualified continuing broker education. However, to limit the risk of conflicts of interest and self-dealing, CBP must prohibit accreditors from accrediting their own training and educational activities. CBP would be doing a disservice to individual brokers if it selected accreditors that devoted their time to accrediting their own trainings and educational activities instead of vetting the trainings and educational activities of other content providers. Individual brokers deserve to have diverse continuing broker education. If a CBP-selected accreditor's trainings and educational activities meet the standards for accreditation, then a separate accreditor is just as capable of reaching the same conclusion and accrediting. The guidelines and standards for accrediting trainings and educational activities will be Start Printed Page 41237 determined after CBP has selected qualified accreditors and leveraged their expertise. These standards will be followed by every CBP-selected accreditor, as monitored by CBP. CBP will provide additional information in the future.

    Comment: One commenter specifically requested that brokerage firms, regardless of their form, and broker associations should be able to self-certify trainings or educational activities that they deliver in-house or to their members.

    Response: CBP disagrees with this comment as CBP will not allow self-certification of trainings or educational activities, in any form, to limit the risk of conflicts of interest and self-dealings. Furthermore, a training or education activity will only provide continuing education credit to an individual broker if it is accredited by a CBP-selected accreditor or offered by CBP or another U.S. government agency. The guidelines and standards for accrediting trainings and educational activities can best be determined after CBP has selected qualified accreditors and leveraged their expertise. CBP will provide additional information in the future.

    Comment: One commenter requested that the term of valid accreditation for a training or educational activity be extended from one year to two years under proposed § 111.103(d). Another commenter requested that the term of valid accreditation for a training or educational activity be extended to no longer than three years.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the commenters because CBP intends for all qualified continuing broker education to stay current. One of the major goals of the continuing broker education requirement is to ensure individual brokers have the latest information to access and meet their continuing education credit requirements. To that end, outdated trainings or educational activities cannot be allowed to go unchanged for years at a time with the potential to circulate outdated information. CBP believes that requiring all accredited continuing broker education to be reaccredited every year as specified in § 111.103(d), is a small cost compared to the net benefit of ensuring that the trainings and educational activities are reexamined for inconsistencies or updated with new information. If details on a specific topic have not changed, then the training or educational activity will likely receive reapproval.

    I. Enforcement

    In the NPRM, CBP proposed specific consequences for an individual broker who fails to certify completion of his or her continuing broker education. CBP also outlined immediate steps that may be taken by the individual broker to return his or her license to good standing. CBP received several comments regarding enforcement of the requirements. For a more detailed discussion of record requests see Subsection E.

    Comment: One commenter requested that CBP change the language in the NPRM of “false, misleading, or omitting material fact” to include the qualifier “knowingly.”

    Response: CBP disagrees because the regulations finalized in this document only address enforcement actions against individual brokers who fail to certify completion of the continuing education requirement when submitting their triennial status reports. This document does not change in any way 19 CFR 111.53(a), which authorizes CBP to initiate proceedings for the suspension, for a specific period of time, or revocation of the license or permit of a customs broker, if the broker has, among other things, made in any report filed with CBP any statement which was, at the time and in light of the circumstances under which it was made, false or misleading with respect to any material fact, or has omitted to state in any report any material fact which was required. However, CBP notes that individual brokers may face suspension or revocation of their licenses if they violate 19 CFR 111.53(a) when certifying completion of the continuing broker education requirement or when submitting records to CBP under § 111.102(d).

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP provide an automated warning or notification message to individual brokers who fail to include their continuing education credits with their status reports to ensure awareness and that appropriate action is taken. One commenter stated that there should be a way, preferably online, for a broker to verify, and if need be, update the broker's contact information to ensure that CBP has the correct information on file.

    Response: CBP disagrees that it should provide for an automated warning or notification message. All individual brokers should be aware of the continuing education requirement and the requirement to certify completion of the requirement with the filing of the 2027 triennial status report or in any future reporting year. Individual brokers should note that they will only be required to certify completion of the requirement and will not be required to input or attach evidence of the 36 continuing education credits completed with their triennial status reports. Individual brokers will only need to produce their continuing broker education records if CBP requests them under § 111.102(d)(2). Further, CBP cannot say for certain that the eCBP Portal will have the capability to notify an individual broker of a “missing field” when an individual broker is filing the triennial status report. However, individual brokers may verify and/or update their contact information in the ACE Portal to ensure that CBP is sending the notification to the correct address.[11] CBP will send notifications to an individual broker's email address, if an email address is on file, otherwise to an individual broker's physical address.

    Comment: Many commenters requested that CBP provide individual brokers 60 days to respond to a notification of failure to certify compliance with the continuing education requirements before suspension, instead of 30 days as specified in proposed § 111.104. Additionally, one commenter requested that the suspension period of 120 days before license revocation in proposed § 111.104(d) be extended to one year to allow sufficient time for a first-time offender to correct any deficiency and that repeat offenders should be restricted to a period of less than six months to correct deficiencies.

    Response: CBP disagrees with the commenters requesting a longer timeframe to respond because 30 days is a standard window used when CBP is seeking a response or action from customs brokers. Furthermore, the 30-day timeframe in § 111.104 is only triggered in the specific and limited circumstance when an individual broker files an incomplete triennial status report by failing to certify compliance with the continuing broker education requirement. Certifying completion of continuing broker education is an essential requirement and necessary to maintain an active license in good standing. Failure to complete or certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement will have an immediate effect on individual brokers. More importantly, a license suspension under § 111.104(c) can be avoided with taking corrective action on or before 30 calendar days from the date of issuance Start Printed Page 41238 of the notification of the potential suspension. If the license is suspended, an individual broker under § 111.104(d) can still take corrective action on or before 120 calendar days from the date of issuance of the order of suspension. Corrective action can range from certifying completion of the requirement to completing 36 continuing education credits. CBP has determined that 120 calendar days is sufficient time in the most extreme situation for an individual broker to complete all 36 continuing education credits and return to good standing. Furthermore, CBP believes a universally applied timeframe avoids unnecessary and potentially harmful confusion around a substantial license status change. Individual brokers must be aware that CBP is serious about compliance with the continuing broker education requirement, but CBP also wants to ensure minor mistakes can be quickly corrected with limited effect on the license.

    IV. Conclusion

    Based on the analysis of the comments and further consideration, CBP has decided to adopt as final the proposed rule published in the Federal Register (86 FR 50794) on September 10, 2021, as modified by the changes noted in Section II, Summary of Changes from the Proposed Regulations, above and in Section III, Discussion of Comments.

    V. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements

    A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563

    Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess the costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility. This rule is not a “significant regulatory action,” under section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866. Accordingly, OMB has not reviewed this regulation.

    CBP published the proposed rule titled, “Continuing Education for Licensed Customs Brokers,” on September 10, 2021, and received 70 comments from the public.[12] CBP adopts the regulatory amendments specified in the proposed rule with a few changes. After careful consideration of the public comments, CBP has made the following modifications: the recognition of half credits for 30 minutes of continuing broker education; the clarification that CBP will identify, in coordination with other U.S. government agencies when applicable, the qualified continuing broker education offered by a government agency that is relevant to customs business; the clarification that self-guided online modules qualify towards continuing education requirements; and the clarification that content providers may apply to multiple accreditors. With the adoption of the proposed regulatory amendments, CBP applies the 2021 NPRM's economic analysis approach to this final rule, updating the data as necessary. The modifications adopted in this final rule are discussed in greater detail in Sections II and III above, and do not affect the assumptions underlying the economic analysis.

    1. Purpose of Rule

    The final rule requires active individual customs broker license holders (“individual brokers”) to complete 36 hours of continuing education every three years, in line with the triennial status reporting period. A continuing broker education requirement will increase the knowledge base from which brokers work, educate them on changing customs requirements, regulations, and laws, and reduce the number of errors in filings and resultant penalties. CBP believes that requiring continuing broker education will enhance the credibility and value of an individual customs broker license and improve an individual broker's skills, performance, and productivity. Furthermore, CBP believes that mandating continuing broker education will increase the quality of service for individual brokers' clients and importers' compliance with customs laws, which will protect the revenue of the United States and aid in maintaining a high standard of professionalism in the customs broker community.

    2. Background

    On October 28, 2020, CBP published an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM), entitled “Continuing Education for Licensed Customs Brokers,” in the Federal Register (85 FR 68260). The ANPRM presented a basic outline for a continuing broker education requirement for individual brokers and posed questions pertaining to the potential costs and benefits of such a requirement. Some of the public comments that CBP received in response to the ANPRM addressed the questions pertaining to the potential costs and benefits of such a requirement, although very few responses contained specific information or data. Any information that was provided on these issues was taken into account in formulating the analysis in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) of the same title, which CBP published in the Federal Register on September 10, 2021 (86 FR 50794). CBP did not receive comments about CBP's economic analysis of the proposed rule. CBP has adopted a few suggestions from the public comments, as outlined above. In this final rule, CBP describes the new requirement for continuing broker education for individual brokers.

    i. Customs Brokers

    A customs broker assists clients with the importation of goods into the United States, and also with the filing of drawback claims. Customs brokers can be individuals, partnerships, associations, or corporations and must be licensed by CBP. Brokers are responsible for helping clients meet all relevant requirements for importing and submitting drawback claims, submitting information and payments to CBP on their client's behalf, and exercising responsible supervision and control over their employees and customs business.[13] Only licensed customs brokers may perform customs business.[14] Brokers may have expertise in any number of trade-related areas, including entry, admissibility, classification, valuation, and duty rates for imported goods. Some brokers specialize in a specific area of customs business, like drawback or valuation, while others are more general practitioners. As of 2022, there are Start Printed Page 41239 13,952 active individual brokers in the United States.[15]

    To become a licensed customs broker, an eligible individual [16] must pass the Customs Broker License Examination, submit a broker license application and appropriate fees to CBP, and be approved by CBP.[17] Once applicants have passed the broker exam, they may apply for an individual, corporate, partnership, or association license. To maintain the license, the individual broker or the licensed entity (for corporations, partnership, or associations) must submit a triennial status report and requisite fees. The triennial status report and fees must be submitted by February 1, every three years, since 1985.[18] Once an individual has been approved as a customs broker, the primary ongoing requirement for maintaining the license under current regulations is the submission of the triennial status report and appropriate fee in three-year periods. Given the established three-year cycle of triennial status reporting, CBP employs a seven-year period of analysis to calculate costs and benefits that result from this rule, accounting for one year of preparation by CBP and two triennial cycles.

    A broker license may be suspended or revoked, or a monetary penalty assessed, for several violations, ranging from falsifying information on the license application to willfully and knowingly deceiving, misleading, or threatening a client.[19] CBP generally assesses monetary penalties for less serious infractions, such as the incorrect filing of entry forms or the misclassification of goods. However, the majority of civil monetary penalties assessed against brokers for violations of 19 U.S.C. 1641 involve egregious violations or the failure to take satisfactory corrective actions following written notice and a reasonable opportunity to remedy the deficiency, as the penalties process provides noncompliant brokers with several opportunities to avoid or mitigate penalty liability.[20] Monetary penalties may not exceed $30,000 per violation. From 2017–2021, the average penalty assessed was $26,670 and the average collected amount was $2,423 due to mitigations allowed by CBP.[21]

    In the fiscal years from 2017 to 2021, CBP assessed an average of 67 penalties to brokers per year.[22] However, in FY 2017 and FY 2018, CBP assessed 20 and 21 penalties, respectively, while in FY 2019 and FY 2020, CBP assessed over 100 penalties each year, with an additional 71 penalties assessed in FY 2021 (see Table 1). The significant increase in penalties from 2018 to 2019 and into 2020, and the slight decline in 2021 is likely due to rapid changes in the international trade environment in those years, and the experience gained with those changes. During that time, CBP began enforcing several significant changes in the realm of international trade, including new antidumping and countervailing duties (AD/CVD) and the tariffs imposed by the Trump Administration under section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2251), as amended, section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (19 U.S.C. 1862), as amended, and sections 301 through 310 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2411 et seq. ), as amended.[23] These changes affected a significant number of imported goods. CBP provided many opportunities for individual brokers to learn about the changes, including webinars, Question and Answer sessions, public forums, and Federal Register notices. External organizations, like regional broker associations, also provided information regarding these changes to the customs laws, which would have led to greater understanding for individual brokers.

    Although CBP sought information in the ANPRM on the number of companies employing individual brokers who already complete continuing education, CBP did not receive enough specific information to estimate the proportion of companies already providing ongoing training. Comments in response to the NPRM did not yield any more information, though commenters did not take issue with the assumptions made below. Based on information gathered via self-reporting by individual brokers, CBP is aware of about 300 companies that employ at least one individual broker who holds an industry certification that requires annual continuing education.[24] In the fiscal years from 2017 to 2021, a group of about 120 of those companies were responsible for 54 percent of the entries but only nine percent of the penalties.[25] Overall, these 120 companies filed 94,808,248 of the total 174,132,601 entries between 2017 and 2021, but only account for 29 of 337 total penalties assessed in that period.[26] For companies outside of this group, CBP does not know how much continuing education is currently taken.

    Start Printed Page 41240

    Table 1—Annual Penalties Assessed by CBP

    FYNumber of penalties
    201720
    201821
    2019119
    2020106
    202171

    ii. Continuing Education

    Continuing education refers to the training and learning pursued by professionals outside of the formal education system, usually as part of career development. Many licensed professions have some sort of continuing education requirement for license-holders, including attorneys, accountants, medical professionals, and teachers.[27] Continuing education is particularly important for professions characterized by continuously changing rules, standards, and norms. Customs and international trade is one such profession. Since 2000, the United States has added two new preferential trade programs and several new free trade agreements, the most recent being the USMCA, which replaced the NAFTA.[28] Additionally, the logistical aspects of customs have changed significantly over time. For example, CBP introduced the single window, enabling most CBP forms to be submitted electronically through the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE), which was fully implemented in 2016, with added functionalities being deployed on an ongoing basis.

    There have been several other significant changes to the customs environment, including the implementation of the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act (TFTEA), changes in duty rates and tariffs, and the modernization of the drawback requirements. Individual brokers must maintain awareness of and adapt to these changes to provide quality service to clients. However, aside from the broker exam at the beginning of their careers, individual brokers do not currently have any requirements ensuring that they maintain up-to-date knowledge of customs rules, regulations, and practices. As stated above, CBP believes that the vigorous pace and expanding scope of international trade require a more stringent continuing education framework for individual brokers who provide guidance to importers and drawback claimants.

    The effects of continuing education programs are not easily measured and not often the subject of research.[29] Some studies show that various licensed professions do see a mild increase in positive perception of their industry, performance, and professionalism after the implementation of continuing education requirements.[30] Studies have also demonstrated a positive link between continuing education for teachers and student outcomes as well as between continuing medical education and patient outcomes.[31] Additionally, one study found that continuing professional education was correlated to an improvement in financial outcomes for accounting firms, particularly large firms.[32] Finally, a study of Internal Revenue Service-certified tax preparers found that mandatory continuing education was potentially linked to reduced civil penalties, a decrease in non-compliance, and increased accuracy of tax returns.[33]

    Under the terms of this rule, individual brokers will be required to complete 36 hours of qualifying continuing broker education over each three-year reporting period. Qualifying activities will include attending or presenting at accredited events, such as courses, seminars, symposia, and conventions.[34] Online activities, including qualified trainings provided in-house will also be education opportunities. Individual brokers will be required to self-attest to the completion of the required continuing broker education on each triennial status report and maintain records consisting of certain documentation received from the provider or host of the qualifying continuing broker education, if such documentation was made available to the individual broker, and containing information pertaining to the dates, titles, providers, credit hours earned, and location (if applicable) for each training. The records can be in any format ( i.e., electronically or on paper), and the regulations provide CBP with authority to conduct a record request for a period of three years following the submission of the status report.

    iii. Accreditation

    To ensure the quality and relevance of continuing education offerings, they are often accredited by a leading body within the field in question. For example, the American Medical Association (AMA) is accredited to provide training by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education.[35] An accreditor is responsible for reviewing course content and determining the number of credits or hours to be granted for each course.

    Under the final rule, after an application process (using the RFP, as described above), CBP will designate entities outside of CBP to act as accreditors for qualifying continuing broker education. Currently, CBP anticipates releasing, every three years, an RFP soliciting applications to become an accreditor for the continuing broker education program. Every three years following the first cycle, existing accreditors will also apply for renewal. To apply, potential and existing accreditors may submit an application to CBP detailing their standards for accreditation, quality control practices, application process, and other information. A panel of CBP experts will convene to review and approve or deny applications. Once approved, accreditors can begin accepting submissions from program creators or companies seeking accreditation for Start Printed Page 41241 specific programs. However, training or educational activities offered by U.S. government agencies—so long as the content is relevant to customs business as identified by CBP in coordination with the offering agency—do not require accreditation.[36]

    iv. Performance Improvement

    Once brokers have passed the broker exam, thereby proving their basic knowledge and competency to perform the duties of a licensed customs broker at the time of the exam, they are free to practice in perpetuity unless the license is suspended or revoked. The statute dictates that while practicing under the auspices of his or her broker license, a customs broker must maintain responsible supervision and control.[37] CBP's regulations likewise place additional legal obligations upon customs brokers, including, but not limited to, the requirement for exercising due diligence in making financial settlements, answering correspondence, and preparing or assisting in the preparation and filing of information relating to customs business.[38] Staying current on developments in customs law is needed for individual brokers to comply with their legal obligations, but presently there are no standards for how much continuing broker education is needed.

    Under baseline conditions, meaning the world as it is prior to this rule, CBP does not require brokers to complete any additional training or prove their ongoing knowledge. The broker exam only tests knowledge of customs and related laws that are in place at the time of the exam. While the exam ensures that brokers have a solid base level of knowledge when they begin practicing, there is no requirement that they keep up the knowledge, and evidence suggests that as more time passes since brokers took their exam, the more errors they make. Individual brokers who were assessed penalties by CBP between 2017 and 2020 have held their individual broker license for, on average, 37 years. In contrast, the average individual broker license has been held for 24 years. This suggests that as more time passes since the passing of the customs broker exam, more errors are made. Furthermore, the exam does not test for any of the requirements of the more than 40 PGAs involved in regulating imports. Depending on the individual brokers' needs, CBP believes that continuing broker education should also include courses relating to the PGAs' international trade requirements, although there is no minimum requirement for certain subject matters in this rule.

    Given the often fast-paced and evolving nature of the international trade environment, CBP believes that a continuing broker education requirement will help to ensure that individual brokers remain current with their understanding of international trade laws and continue to expand their knowledge of customs regulations and practices. A more competent and educated customs broker community will also prevent costly errors, potentially saving brokers' clients time and money, as well as relieving CBP from expending valuable audit and penalty assessment and collection resources.

    3. Overview of Assessment

    The final rule will result in costs and benefits for individual brokers, accreditors, providers of continuing education, and CBP. Many of the costs for individual brokers come in the form of time spent researching, registering for, attending, and reporting trainings. Individual brokers will also experience some opportunity cost as they forgo time spent on other tasks in favor of fulfilling a continuing broker education requirement. Accreditors must apply to CBP. Though CBP will not charge a fee, the accreditors will need to spend time in creating their applications. Similarly, providers of continuing broker education must apply to accreditors to have their coursework certified. Finally, CBP must designate accreditors, and, following the full implementation of the rule's framework, CBP may request records from individual brokers to confirm compliance.

    The benefits from the final rule will be largely qualitative. A continuing broker education requirement will help to professionalize and improve the reputation of the customs broker community, as well as to improve customer service and outcomes. Quantitatively, continuing education will likely lead to a reduction in errors in documentation and associated penalties assessed by CBP for some infractions and violations. Not only will individual brokers not need to pay the associated penalties, but CBP will save the time of identifying, assessing, and collecting such penalties. Similarly, CBP will likely see a reduction in regulatory audits of individual brokers.

    4. Historical and Projected Populations Affected by the Rule

    The final rule applies to any individual holding an active customs broker license.[39] Individual brokers who have voluntarily suspended their licenses are not required to complete continuing broker education until they elect to reactivate their licenses, at which point the requirements are pro-rated depending upon the timing within the triennial reporting period. Individual brokers who have not held their license for an entire triennial period at the time their first triennial status report is due are also exempted from completing training and reporting in their first triennial status report, though are bound by the terms of the rule in the following years. As of 2022, there are 13,952 active, individual broker licenses. All of those brokers, as well as any brokers who receive their licenses in 2023 will be required to begin complying with the terms of the rule with the 2024–2027 reporting period, with the first certification of compliance due at the time of filing the 2027 triennial status report.[40] Those brokers receiving their licenses in 2024, 2025, and 2026 will begin complying with continuing broker education requirements after completing their first triennial status reports in 2027 and will perform their first certifications in 2030.[41]

    CBP approves approximately 600 new licenses per year, although the number of licenses added annually has been decreasing since at least 2016. See Table Start Printed Page 41242 2 for a summary of licensing history for the previous six years.

    Table 2—Licensing History From 2016–2021

    YearTotal licenses 42Corporate licensesIndividual licenses
    201665321632
    201758016564
    201855827531
    201946415449
    2020 431877180
    202149631465
    Total3,7081333,575

    Based on the compound annual growth rate from 2017–2021, which shows a decline of 4 percent in the number of individual licenses issued, CBP estimates it will issue 447 new individual licenses in 2022, the year preceding the period of analysis.[44] CBP estimates it will issue 2,692 new individual licenses over a seven-year period of analysis from 2023–2029, and 2,261 new individual licenses from 2024–2029, the part of the period of analysis during which brokers will need to fulfill the requirements of the rule (see Table 3). Not all those license holders will be required to complete continuing broker education during the seven-year period of analysis; those brokers receiving their licenses in 2027, 2028, and 2029 will not need to begin compliance until after their first triennial reporting period in 2030. All new individual license holders will need to comply with the terms of the rule once it is in effect and they have completed their first triennial status report. This includes the 13,952 individual brokers licensed and active as of January 2022 as well as the 447 individual brokers projected to receive their licenses in 2022 and the 430 individual brokers projected to receive their licenses in 2023. Individual brokers who receive licenses in 2024–2026 will not need to comply with the rule until after their first triennial reporting period, beginning in 2027. CBP estimates that 1,196 individual brokers will receive licenses from 2024–2026, with 1,065 receiving them from 2027–2029 and completing their first continuing education certification outside the period of analysis. In total, therefore, CBP estimates that 16,026 individual brokers will be required to abide by the rule in the six years from 2024 to 2029.[45] No brokers will be required to comply with the rule in 2023, though brokers licensed that year will need to comply in subsequent years.

    Table 3—Projected Licenses Issued From 2023–2029

    YearTotal licenses issuedCorporate licensesIndividual licensesNew licenses affected by the rule
    2023459294300
    20244422841446  1,343
    2025425273980
    2026409263830
    2027393253691,196
    2028379243550
    2029364233410
    Total2,8711792,6922,539
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.
    Start Printed Page 41243

    Although the majority of active individual brokers will be required to complete continuing education under the rule, feedback from the broker community indicates that many brokers already complete the amount of continuing education that will satisfy this requirement.[47] Many companies that employ individual brokers provide and require in-house training and continuing education. Both independent brokers and brokers employed by brokerages often attend government-sponsored webinars, as well as trade conferences and symposia, which will qualify as continuing broker education under the terms of the rule. Many individual brokers also pursue professional certifications like the National Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Association of America's (NCBFAA) Certified Customs Specialist (CCS) and Certified Export Specialist (CES).[48] Under the baseline, or the world as it is now, these individual brokers likely will be in compliance with the final rule and, assuming similar activities when a continuing education requirement is imposed, will not incur new costs under the new requirements, except for new reporting costs.

    Overall, CBP estimates that approximately 60 percent of individual brokers already pursue continuing education and will be in compliance with the rule.[49] CBP bases this estimation on several factors. First, the NCBFAA estimates that approximately 4,456 individual brokers hold a CCS or CES certification in 2020, representing 32 percent of total individual brokers.[50] In order to maintain these professional certifications, these individual brokers are required to earn 20 continuing education credits per year.[51] Additionally, public comments in response to the ANPRM, as well as discussions between CBP and various broker organizations, indicate that most large businesses employing individual brokers already provide, and often mandate, internal training and continuing education. Based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, approximately 61 percent of those employed within the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry (NAICS code 448510) are not employed by small businesses. A small business within the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry is defined as one whose annual receipts are less than $20.0 million in 2022 dollars ($17,274,816 in 2017 dollars, using the CPI to account for inflation), regardless of the number of employees.[52] Table 4 shows the receipts per firm, in millions of dollars (2017), for firms employing each number of employees.[53] The average firm within Categories 7 and 9 has annual receipts of greater than $17.5 million in 2017 dollars and is considered a large business. These firms employ 161,463 people, or approximately 61 percent of the total employees in the industry.

    Table 4—Small Businesses in the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry, 2017

    Employment size 54Number of employeesPreliminary receipts (all firms, $1,000s) 55Receipts per firm ($)Small business?
    01: Total265,192$67,276,572$4,454,222
    02: <515,9396,315,166708,614Yes.
    03: 5–918,0255,392,9921,974,732Yes.
    04: 10–1920,2885,870,1633,851,813Yes.
    05: <2054,25217,578,3211,335,029Yes.
    06: 20–9949,47713,973,78010,397,158Yes.
    07: 100–49944,71510,886,02830,493,076No.
    08: <500148,44442,438,1292,854,327Yes.
    09: 500+116,74824,838,443105,247,640No.

    Given the proportion of individual brokers working for larger businesses, the feedback on the ANPRM indicating high rates of compliance, the proportion of individual brokers pursing certifications, and input from CBP subject matter experts who frequently interact with the broker community, CBP estimates that approximately 60 percent of individual brokers are already in compliance with the requirements of the rule and will not face new costs, assuming a continuing level of similar activity, aside from recordkeeping and reporting, as a result of the rule's implementation. CBP did not receive any comments on this assumption in response to the NPRM. Start Printed Page 41244 Based on the likely proportion of individual brokers already in compliance, CBP estimates that 6,410 affected individual brokers, or approximately 40 percent, will need to come into compliance with the rule over a seven-year period of analysis (see Table 5). Although we requested comment on our assumption that 60 percent of brokers already spend at least 36 hours per three-year period on continuing education and that the remaining 40 percent of brokers will need to increase their training by the full 36 hours triennially to meet the requirement, the public comments received in response to the NPRM did not address this question. We therefore maintain the same assumption for the final rule.

    Table 5—Projection of Brokers Affected by the Final Rule

    YearTotal licensesProportion in compliance (%)Total licensed brokers affected
    202313,952600
    202414,830605,932
    202514,830605,932
    202614,830605,932
    202716,026606,410
    202816,026606,410
    202916,026606,410
    Total16,0266,410

    Although individual brokers are the primary party affected by the terms of the rule, the rule will also have an impact on CBP, providers of continuing broker education, and the bodies who accredit continuing broker education. Each party will see both costs and benefits under the final rule.

    5. Costs of the Rule

    i. To Brokers

    The primary cost to individual brokers upon implementation of the rule will be those costs associated with finding and attending 36 hours of continuing broker education over a three-year period. These costs include time spent researching reputable and relevant trainings, travel and incidental expenses to attend in-person events like conferences, and the tuition or fees for the courses themselves. Many individual brokers might satisfy the continuing broker education requirement with training supplied by their employers. Other individual brokers, particularly those self-employed or employed by small businesses, will need to seek external training. For external training, individual brokers may attend free webinars, seminars, and trade events sponsored by CBP, other government agencies, and various related organizations like local freight forwarder and broker associations.[56] Alternatively, individual brokers might choose paid trainings, conferences, or symposia, or seek certifications offered by trade organizations or educational institutions. Based on comments received in response to the NPRM, CBP is also clarifying that self-guided, online courses or content, whether free or paid, which culminate in a retention test are also acceptable if accredited.

    CBP does not know exactly which option each individual broker is likely to choose. Many individual brokers already hold certifications, attend webinars, and fulfill internal training requirements, though they may need to increase the number of hours completed to comply with the final rule. Therefore, CBP has estimated a range of costs. Some individual brokers will fulfill their continuing broker education requirements with only free trainings. Others will follow a medium-cost path by opting for a mix of free, lower-cost, and internal trainings. CBP further assumes that individual brokers electing the medium-cost path will travel to attend one major conference or symposium in-person per year. Finally, some will meet requirements by completing only paid courses representing the highest-cost offerings. CBP assumes that individual brokers choosing the higher-cost option will travel to attend an average of two conferences per year.

    There are several organizations that provide continuing education for customs brokers, ranging from regional broker associations to national entities, such as the American Association of Exporters and Importers (AAEI). Continuing broker education that qualifies under the terms of the rule includes webinars, seminars, and trade conferences. The hourly cost of such trainings (excluding free events provided by government agencies and other organizations) usually ranges from around $25 to $70. Fees are often tiered based on membership of the hosting organization. Members of an organization may pay $25 while non-members pay $45. CBP cannot predict which organizations will seek accreditation for their events, although free webinars and trainings hosted by Federal government agencies and identified by CBP will qualify and do not require approval by a CBP-selected accreditor. Therefore, we assume that the average hourly monetary cost will range from $0.00 (low) to $30 (medium) to $50 (high). This assumption is based on current fees charged for various continuing education certifications, webinars, and trade conferences, and CBP did not receive any comments on these assumptions in response to the NPRM.[57]

    In addition to fees, individual brokers will need to spend some time in researching relevant and accredited trainings. CBP assumes that an individual broker will spend approximately three hours finding and registering for continuing broker education during every triennial period, an assumption that was not commented Start Printed Page 41245 upon in response to the NPRM. Many individual brokers are members of both local and national organizations that provide continuing education opportunities and will likely be notified of opportunities via newsletters or listservs. Other individual brokers will need to spend some time finding and verifying accreditation for qualifying events. All individual brokers will spend some time registering for events. Based on an average loaded wage rate of $34.81, the process of researching and registering for trainings will cost brokers approximately $2.90 per credit hour.[58]

    Many individual brokers also travel to attend trade conferences each year. CBP assumes that those individual brokers electing the lower-cost options will forgo travel and either attend virtually (paying only the fee) or not attend at all. CBP assumes that individual brokers in the medium-cost tier will travel to attend one conference each year, while individual brokers in the high-cost tier will travel to attend two conferences.[59] Tuition and fees for conferences, broken down into an hourly rate, are already accounted for in the average costs of $30–$50 per hour. Traveling to attend a single 3-day conference costs approximately $332 in airfare, $288 for lodging, and $177 for meals and incidentals, for a total of $797 for one conference or $1,593 for two conferences (see Table 6).[60] Over the three years of the triennial cycle, attending a single conference per year costs $2,391 and attending two conferences per year costs $4,779. Spread across 36 hours of training, travel costs account for an additional $66 per hour (medium) or $133 per hour (high).

    Table 6—Travel and Incidental Costs To Attend In-Person Events

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    CostGeneral costLowMediumHigh
    Transportation$332$0$332$664
    Hotel2880288576
    Meals & Incidentals1770177354
    Total (Per Year)79707971,593

    To determine the total costs of the rule to a single broker, CBP calculated the costs of tuition for qualifying continuing education, travel to conferences, and research and registration on a per-credit hour basis. As described above, CBP assumes the per-credit hour cost of trainings to range from $0 (low) to $30 (medium) to $50 (high). The cost of research and registration is constant across tiers, as described above, and totals $2.90 per credit hour. The per-credit hour cost of travel is calculated by multiplying the per year cost of attending conferences described in Table 6 by 3 years and then dividing by 36 credit hours per triennial period. This results in costs of $0 (low), $66 (medium), and $133 (high). The total, per-credit hour cost for a single broker therefore comes to $2.90 (low; $0 + $2.90 + $0), $99 (medium; $30 + $2.90 + $66), and $186 (high; $50 + $2.90 + $133).

    Overall, as a result of the rule, an individual broker will likely incur monetary costs ranging from $34.81 (low) to $1,191 (medium) to $2,228 (high) per year to complete 36 hours of continuing education in a three-year period. Over a seven-year period of analysis, these costs sum to $209 (low), $7,148 (medium), or $13,367 (high). See Table 7 for a summary of these costs.

    Start Printed Page 41246

    Table 7—Annual Costs for One Broker

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearHours 61LowMediumHigh
    Costs 62TotalCostsTotalCostsTotal
    20230$0.00$0.00$0$0$0$0
    2024122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    2025122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    2026122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    2027122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    2028122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    2029122.9034.81991,1911862,228
    Total72172095967,1481,11413,367
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    There were 13,952 licensed individual brokers at the beginning of 2022, with 447 and 430 additional brokers projected to receive their licenses in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Therefore, 14,830 brokers will be required to begin complying with the rule in 2024. Additionally, brokers newly licensed in 2024, 2025, or 2026 will be required to begin complying with the rule in 2027, for a total of 16,026 brokers reporting compliance in their 2030 triennial reports. CBP estimates that a total of 6,410 will be required to begin to complete continuing broker education under the terms of the rule in the seven-year period of analysis, based on a current estimated compliance rate of 60 percent (see Historical and Projected Populations Affected by the Rule, above). Therefore, CBP estimates that brokers will incur costs related to searching for training, fees, travel, and incidentals, totaling from $1,288,903 (low) to $44,111,892 (medium) to $82,491,664 (high) over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 8.

    Table 8—Total Annual Training Costs for Individual Broker License Holders

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearBrokers 63LowMediumHigh
    CostTotalCostTotalCostTotal
    20230$0.00$0$0$0$0$0
    20245,93234.81206,4911,1917,067,0132,22813,215,702
    20255,93234.81206,4911,1917,067,0132,22813,215,702
    20265,93234.81206,4911,1917,067,0132,22813,215,702
    20276,41034.81223,1441,1917,636,9522,22814,281,519
    20286,41034.81223,1441,1917,636,9522,22814,281,519
    20296,41034.81223,1441,1917,636,9522,22814,281,519
    Total6,4102091,288,9037,14844,111,89213,36782,491,664
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    To create a primary estimate, CBP assumes that approximately one third of individual brokers will elect the lowest cost path ($34.81 each year), one third will elect the medium-cost path ($1,191 each year), and one third will elect the highest cost path ($2,228 each year) once the rule is in place. CBP did not receive any comments on this assumption in response to the NPRM. Under these conditions, individual brokers who begin pursuing continuing education as a result of the rule will face $42,630,820 in costs related to searching for training, fees, travel, and incidentals over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 9.

    Table 9—Primary Estimate of Training & Travel Costs for Brokers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearTotal brokersBrokers choosing each pathTotal cost
    202300$0
    20245,9321,9776,829,735
    20255,9321,9776,829,735
    20265,9321,9776,829,735
    20276,4102,1377,380,538
    Start Printed Page 41247
    20286,4102,1377,380,538
    20296,4102,1377,380,538
    Total6,41042,630,820
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    All individual brokers, including those who already complete continuing education and will not face new costs for research, tuition, and travel, will also be required to store records of their completed continuing broker education and report their compliance to CBP.[64] Record storage will require maintaining either paper or digital copies of any documentation received from the provider or host of the qualifying continuing broker education and a document of some kind listing the date, title, provider, number of credit hours, and location (if applicable) for each training. To report and certify compliance, individual brokers who file paper-based triennial status reports with CBP will include a written statement in the triennial status report, and individual brokers who file their triennial status reports electronically through the eCBP portal will check a box in the eCBP portal while filing their triennial status report electronically. Individual brokers will further be required to produce their records of compliance if requested by CBP, though CBP will only require individual brokers to maintain their records for the three years following the submission of the triennial status report.[65] CBP estimates that recordkeeping and reporting will take each individual broker 30 minutes (0.5 hours) per year. After the first triennial reporting period in which individual brokers self-attest to completing their training, 10 percent of individual brokers each year will incur the cost of producing records to submit to CBP following a record request, which CBP estimates will take 15 minutes (0.25 hours).[66] Therefore, individual brokers will see $1,652,969 in new reporting and recordkeeping costs over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 10.

    Table 10—Reporting Costs for All Brokers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearBrokersTime for recordkeeping (hours) 67Time for producing records (10% of brokers)Loaded wageTotal
    202300.000.0034.81$0
    202414,8300.500.0034.81258,113
    202514,8300.500.0034.81258,113
    202614,8300.500.0034.81258,113
    202716,0260.500.2534.81292,876
    202816,0260.500.2534.81292,876
    202916,0260.500.2534.81292,876
    Total16,02630.751,652,969
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    To comply with the final rule, individual brokers who do not already do so will be required to spend 36 hours over three years completing continuing broker education in whatever form they choose. Additionally, CBP estimates they will spend three hours per three-year cycle researching and registering for trainings. Finally, individual brokers will need to spend about 30–45 minutes (0.5–0.75 hours) on recordkeeping per year. Overall, individual brokers will need to spend about 40.5 hours over a three-year period, or 81 hours over a seven-year period of analysis, to comply with the rule.

    Some individual brokers will choose to complete their trainings outside of work hours, while others will complete training as part of their assigned duties. Individual brokers will also spend time in researching, registering for, and maintaining records of their continuing broker education, for a total of 12 hours per year of training plus 1.5 to 1.75 hours per year in research and recordkeeping. Based on the average loaded wage rate for brokers of $34.81, the opportunity cost of researching, registering for, attending, and reporting continuing broker education is approximately $17,432,417 over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 11. Start Printed Page 41248

    Table 11—Summary of Opportunity Cost for Brokers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearBrokersHoursLoaded wage rateCost
    202300.0$34.81$0
    20245,93213.534.812,792,787
    20255,93213.534.812,792,787
    20265,93213.534.812,792,787
    20276,41013.534.813,018,019
    20286,41013.534.813,018,019
    20296,41013.534.813,018,019
    Total6,41081243.6717,432,417
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Total costs for all individual brokers, including tuition and travel expenses for those who must begin continuing broker education regimens because of the rule (see Tables 8 and 9) as well as opportunity costs (see Table 11) and reporting costs (see Table 10) for all individual brokers, range from $20,374,289 to $101,577,050. The primary estimate, which accounts for one third of individual brokers choosing each cost tier, comes to $61,716,206 over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 12.

    Table 12—Total Costs for All Brokers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearTotal cost: low estimateTotal cost: medium estimateTotal cost: high estimateTotal cost: primary estimate
    2023$0$0$0$0
    20243,257,39110,117,91316,266,6029,880,635
    20253,257,39110,117,91316,266,6029,880,635
    20263,257,39110,117,91316,266,6029,880,635
    20273,534,03910,947,84717,592,41410,691,433
    20283,534,03910,947,84717,592,41410,691,433
    20293,534,03910,947,84717,592,41410,691,433
    Total20,374,28963,197,278101,577,05061,716,206
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    ii. To CBP

    To implement the requirements of the rule, CBP will need to designate entities or companies as approved accreditors of continuing broker education. To do so, CBP will solicit applications from parties interested in becoming accreditors, or (following the first application cycle) accreditors seeking renewal of their status, by publishing an RFP.[68] A panel of CBP experts will evaluate the applications and select the entities approved or renewed as accreditors. CBP estimates that the process of developing and submitting the RFP will take two personnel 10 hours each. Application evaluation will take a further 40 hours per employee and will require four CBP personnel. The process of designating accreditors will occur before the continuing broker education requirements go into effect, to allow accreditors to be ready for the rule's implementation and ensure equal footing for all providers.[69] Accreditors and CBP will need to complete the process three times in a seven-year period. Overall, designation of accreditors will require six CBP personnel 180 hours total, three times in a seven-year period of analysis, for a cost to CBP of $59,260 (see Table 13).

    Table 13—Costs to CBP To Designate Accreditors

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearPersonnel for RFPPersonnel for evaluationFully-loaded wage rate 70Total hoursTotal
    202324109.7418019,753
    202400109.7400
    202500109.7400
    202624109.7418019,753
    202700109.7400
    202800109.7400
    Start Printed Page 41249
    202924109.7418019,753
    Total59,260
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    CBP's Broker Management Branch (BMB) will also face the costs of requesting records for compliance with the continuing broker education requirement. Although individual brokers will self-attest to their completion of the continuing broker education requirement with each triennial status report, CBP will occasionally conduct record requests by randomly selecting a certain subset of individual brokers to produce records. For the purposes of this analysis, CBP estimates it will select 10 percent of brokers per year, although the record requests will only cover the continuing broker education reported for the most recently completed triennial period. A continuing broker education record request will involve CBP personnel reviewing the reported coursework of the selected individual broker and potentially working with individual brokers to identify gaps or higher quality training opportunities. Such activity will take approximately one hour on average; therefore, CBP estimates that each record request will cost CBP approximately $109.74. For the first four years of the period of analysis, no record request will take place because individual brokers will not yet have reported their training at the end of the first triennial period. For the purposes of this analysis CBP assumes over the next three years, CBP will request records from 10 percent of active individual brokers each year.[71] With about 1,603 record requests performed per year, costs to CBP will amount to $527,603 over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 14.

    Table 14—Record Request Costs for CBP

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearRequestsCost per requestTotal
    20230$0$0
    2024000
    2025000
    2026000
    20271,603110175,868
    20281,603110175,868
    20291,603110175,868
    Total4,809329527,603
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    iii. To Accreditors

    Accrediting bodies interested in becoming designated accreditors for continuing broker education under the terms of the rule will need to apply to CBP during an open RFP period and then re-apply to confirm their status every three years. Costs to respond to the RFP include only the preparation of the application. Overall, CBP estimates that the preparation of an application to CBP to become an accreditor will take two employees 40 hours each, to be completed three times in a seven-year period. Accreditor-applicants will need to apply three times in a seven-year period. Therefore, CBP estimates that CBP-selected accreditors will incur approximately $17,182 in costs over a seven-year period of analysis. See Table 15.

    Table 15—Costs to Accreditors

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearPersonnelLoaded wage rate 72Hours per employeeTotal
    20232$71.5940$5,727
    2024071.5900
    2025071.5900
    2026271.59405,727
    2027071.5900
    2028071.5900
    2029271.59405,727
    Start Printed Page 41250
    Total12017,182
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    iv. To Providers

    Providers of continuing broker education will also face new costs under the terms of the rule. Specifically, providers will need to submit applications to accreditors to have their coursework or events accredited. Officials at the NCBFAA Education Institute estimate that they currently approve approximately 1,000 courses per year. With the rule in place, CBP believes the number of events submitted for accreditation will increase substantially because companies' internal trainings and external offerings will need to be accredited. Therefore, CBP estimated that about 2,000 courses will require accreditation each year. Providers will likely pay a fee and will need to renew their accreditation annually to ensure their coursework remains up to date. The fee for accreditation is likely to vary based on accreditor, but CBP estimates it will average $25.[73] Overall, CBP estimates that providers of continuing broker education for customs brokers will face $350,000 of new costs over a seven-year period of analysis. See Table 16.

    Table 16—Costs to Providers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearCoursesFeeTotal
    20232,000$25.00$50,000
    20242,00025.0050,000
    20252,00025.0050,000
    20262,00025.0050,000
    20272,00025.0050,000
    20282,00025.0050,000
    20292,00025.0050,000
    Total350,000
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Based on the primary estimate, costs total $62,670,250 over the seven-year period of analysis. Using a three percent discount rate, the annualized total costs are $8,799,855. See Table 17 for an annual breakdown and Table 18 for discounting.

    Table 17—Total Costs to All Parties

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearCosts to brokers— primary estimateCosts to accreditorsCosts to providersCosts to CBP— accrediting and requesting 74Total costs
    2023$0$5,727$50,000$19,753$75,480
    20249,880,635050,00009,930,635
    20259,880,635050,00009,930,635
    20269,880,6355,72750,00019,7539,956,116
    202710,691,433050,000175,86810,917,301
    202810,691,433050,000175,86810,917,301
    Start Printed Page 41251
    202910,691,4335,72750,000195,62110,942,781
    Total61,716,20617,182350,000586,86262,670,250
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Table 18—Discounted Total Costs

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    3%7%
    PVAVPVAV
    Costs$54,825,586$8,799,855$46,319,331$8,594,701

    6. Costs Not Estimated in This Analysis

    The parties affected by the rule will also face several, mostly minor costs that CBP is unable to quantify. To provide individual brokers who choose to file their triennial status report electronically through the eCBP portal the ability to self-attest to their continuing broker education completion, CBP will need to include a field within the triennial status report, which is submitted via the eCBP portal. The programming to include this field does not add significantly to the application development budget as CBP constantly makes small changes to many aspects of CBP's authorized electronic data interchanges.

    Additionally, some potential accreditors may face costs related to protesting CBP's initial decisions regarding their proposals to become accreditors. Accreditor-applicants have the right to protest in accordance with procedures set out in the Federal Acquisition Regulations System (FAR). CBP expects these costs to be minor and protests to be rare. Individual brokers' clients may see slight price increases for broker services. As individual broker costs increase, they may pass some of these costs onto their clients in the form of increased prices. However, CBP believes that the per transaction increase in prices will be so small as to be insignificant.

    7. Benefits of the Rule

    This final rule will have many benefits to individual brokers, CBP, and the general public. CBP is able to estimate some of the benefits of the rule, but many others are qualitative in nature. Individual brokers will benefit from improved reputation and a professionalization of the customs broker community while their clients will benefit from better performance and improved compliance. The continuing broker education requirement will provide importers and drawback claimants with greater assurance that their agents are knowledgeable of customs laws and regulations, familiar with operational processes, and can properly exercise a broker's fiduciary duties. The requirements will also help maintain a measure of consistency across all customs brokers. Providers will benefit from increased prestige due to CBP-approved accreditation. Other benefits of the rule are quantitative.

    CBP will benefit from a reduction in regulatory audits of broker compliance. Both CBP and brokers will benefit from fewer errors committed by brokers and fewer penalties assessed by CBP. CBP examined data on broker penalties, regulatory audits, and validation activities between a group of companies who employ one or more individual brokers known to voluntarily hold an industry certification that requires meeting a continuing education requirement and the broader population of brokers (which includes those who voluntarily complete continuing education and those who do not). This group of individual brokers with continuing education represents about 120 companies, which make up 54 percent of entries filed between 2017 and 2021 and 53 percent of entries filed between 2016 and 2021. CBP found that at the 99 percent confidence level, there is a statistically significant difference between these groups. Those who voluntarily hold this certification and complete continuing education have significantly lower rates of penalties, audits, and validation activities. See Table 19.[75] Individual brokers who are not known to have continuing education are assessed 13 times as many penalties per entry filing, are audited seven times as often, and have nine times as many validation activities performed by CBP to investigate discrepancies when compared to companies that are known to employ individual brokers who voluntarily take continuing education.

    Start Printed Page 41252

    Table 19—Enforcement Action Rate for Different Groups

    Enforcement actionTotalBy all other companies (%)By 120 companies with continuing education (%)Ratio
    Penalty3370.000390.00003113 to 1
    Regulatory Audit900.000080.0000117 to 1
    Validation Activity5150.000470.0000519 to 1
    * Rates are defined as the number of enforcement actions divided by the number of entries filed.

    Aside from penalties, CBP enforcement often takes the form of a regulatory audit. Regulatory audits usually occur because a CBP Officer or Import Specialist flags unusual or suspicious activity. CBP then performs a regulatory audit of the broker's activity, investigating the potential infraction, as well as the broker's overall compliance with regulations, rules, and CBP guidance. These audits may lead to a settlement agreement in which a penalty is assessed, but they more often lead to discussion between the broker and CBP as to how the broker can improve compliance and performance. With continuing education in place, CBP believes that fewer regulatory audits will be necessary. From 2016 to 2021, CBP performed 82 regulatory audits of broker compliance, for an average of 14 per year.[76] The number of audits holds approximately steady across the five-year period, so CBP does not believe it likely that the number of audits will grow in the period of analysis. Therefore, CBP projects 96 audits will be performed during the seven-year period of analysis under baseline conditions, or 14 each year. See Table 20.

    Table 20—Projection of Audits and Broker Surveys Under the Baseline

    YearAudits
    202314
    202414
    202514
    202614
    202714
    202814
    202914
    Total96
    * Total does not sum due to rounding.

    CBP estimates that a regulatory audit of broker compliance takes CBP approximately 593 hours, on average.[77] Based on the average fully-loaded wage rate for a CBP Trade and Revenue employee of $109.74 per hour, we estimate the average broker audit costs $65,049. Based on a review of outcomes from the audits completed from 2016–2021, CBP estimates that approximately 40 percent will likely have been avoided had a continuing education requirement been in place. CBP believes that, had customs brokers been required to complete continuing education on an individual level, and, therefore, stayed current on the rules and regulations governing customs business, they would have made fewer errors and avoided the audits. Over a seven-year period of analysis under the terms of the rule, CBP estimates it will avoid 33 audits, for a cost savings of $2,133,623. See Table 21.

    Table 21—CBP Cost Savings From Reduced Regulatory Audit Activities

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearAudits avoidedCost savings per auditTotal savings
    20230$0$0
    2024565,049355,604
    2025565,049355,604
    2026565,049355,604
    2027565,049355,604
    2028565,049355,604
    2029565,049355,604
    Total33390,2972,133,623
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    The number of penalties assessed against brokers between 2017 and 2021 grew significantly. In 2017, CBP assessed 20 penalties, with another 21 penalties assessed in 2018. The number of penalties then jumped in 2019, to 119, with 106 penalties following in 2020 (see Table 1, above). CBP assessed fewer penalties in 2021 relative to 2020, although, with 71 penalties assessed, the number did not return to 2017/18 levels. Between 2017 and 2021, the number of penalties issued increased with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 29 percent. The jump in penalties between 2019 and 2020 is likely attributable to changes in the environment surrounding antidumping and countervailing duty cases, and CBP does not believe that penalties per year will continue to grow at the same rate. This is confirmed by the decrease in penalties issued in 2021. Based on trends before and after the jump, we do not believe that the number of penalties assessed per year will consistently grow at any meaningful rate. The average number of penalties assessed per year of available data after the change in AD/CVD duties (2019–2021) was 99. Based Start Printed Page 41253 on a 0 percent growth rate, CBP estimates that over the seven-year period of analysis from 2023 to 2029, CBP will assess 691 penalties, or an average of 99 penalties per year. See Table 22 for an annual count.

    Table 22—Projection of Penalties Assessed From 2022–2027 Under the Baseline

    YearPenalties
    202399
    202499
    202599
    202699
    202799
    202899
    202999
    Total691

    When CBP assesses a penalty against a broker for a customs violation, CBP incurs the cost of detecting and investigating the violation, as well as determining the appropriate monetary fine and handling any appeals from the broker. The broker must pay the penalty, which is capped at $30,000 by statute. CBP also works with brokers against whom a fine has been assessed to mitigate the penalty, resulting in the collection of amounts that are usually significantly lower. From 2017–2021, monetary penalties collected from individual brokers averaged $2,423. CBP estimates that the entire process of assessing a penalty against a broker, from detection to working through mitigation, costs CBP approximately $6,584 per penalty.[78] With the rule implemented, CBP believes that individual brokers will commit approximately 20 percent fewer penalizable violations.[79] As a result, individual brokers will save approximately $286,883 in fines avoided, while CBP will save approximately $779,593 in processing costs. 80 See Tables 23 and 24.

    Table 23—Penalties Avoided by Brokers

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearPenalties avoidedFines avoided per penaltyTotal
    20230$0$0
    2024202,42347,814
    2025202,42347,814
    2026202,42347,814
    2027202,42347,814
    2028202,42347,814
    2029202,42347,814
    Total11814,538286,883
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Table 24—Costs Avoided by CBP

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearPenalties avoidedCost savings per penaltyTotal
    20230$0$0
    2024206,584129,932
    2025206,584129,932
    2026206,584129,932
    2027206,584129,932
    2028206,584129,932
    2029206,584129,932
    Total11839,506779,593
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    8. Net Impact of the Rule

    The rule will lead to costs for individual brokers in the form of tuition, travel expenses, opportunity cost, and time spent researching, registering for, keeping records of, and reporting continuing broker education. CBP will face the costs of designating accreditors and requesting records from individual brokers. Accreditors will incur the costs of responding to a CBP-issued RFP, and education providers will incur the costs of drafting applications and fees charged by the accreditors for reviewing their accreditation requests. CBP will also see cost savings (benefits) from avoided penalty assessment and avoided

    Start Printed Page 41254

    regulatory audits. CBP has found that companies employing one or more brokers who complete continuing education are statistically less likely to face enforcement actions. Over a seven-year period of analysis, the primary estimate of the net costs totals $59,757,034 (see Table 25). Using a discount rate of three percent, annualized costs total $8,389,981 (see Table 26).

    Table 25—Primary Estimate of Net Costs

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearBenefitsCostsNet costs 81
    2023$0$75,480$75,480
    2024485,5369,930,6359,445,099
    2025485,5369,930,6359,445,099
    2026485,5369,956,1169,470,580
    2027485,53610,917,30110,431,765
    2028485,53610,917,30110,431,765
    2029485,53610,942,78110,457,245
    Total2,913,21662,670,25059,757,034

    Table 26—Primary Estimate of Net Present and Annualized Costs

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    3%7%
    PVAVPVAV
    Savings$2,553,632$409,874$2,162,922$401,337
    Costs54,825,5868,799,85546,319,3318,594,701
    Net Costs52,271,9538,389,98144,156,4098,193,364

    CBP presents four estimates of the net costs depending on the cost of training pursued by each individual broker. The low-cost path assumes all individual brokers will pursue only free trainings and forgo travel. In the medium-cost path, all individual brokers will pursue a mix of free and paid trainings and travel to a single conference or in-person event per year. In the high-cost path, all individual brokers will pursue all paid trainings and travel to two in-person events or conferences per year. The primary estimate assumes that one third of individual brokers will choose each path. Overall, the quantifiable effects of the rule result in a net, annualized cost ranging from $2,583,379 to $13,988,561, using a three percent discount rate over the seven-year period of analysis. A summary of net costs under all four estimates presented in the analysis can be found in Table 27.

    Table 27—Summary of Net Costs

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    EstimateValue3%7%
    PrimaryNet PV Net AV$52,271,953 8,389,981$44,156,409 8,193,364
    LowNet PV Net AV16,095,183 2,583,37913,582,366 2,520,252
    MediumNet PV Net AV53,567,985 8,598,00245,251,723 8,396,603
    HighNet PV Net AV87,152,692 13,988,56173,635,138 13,663,237

    As stated before, many benefits of the rule are qualitative. Individual brokers will benefit from improved reputation and a professionalization of the customs broker community while their clients will benefit from better performance, less non-compliance, and improved outcomes. Providers will benefit from increased prestige due to CBP-approved accreditation. CBP believes that the combination of quantified benefits and unquantified benefits exceed the costs of this rule. CBP requested comment on this conclusion in the NPRM and received no comments in response.

    9. Analysis of Alternatives

    Alternative 1: 72 hours every three years.

    Alternative 1 is the same as the chosen alternative except that the continuing broker education requirement would be raised to 72 hours each triennial period instead of 36 hours. This alternative is modeled on the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) Enrolled Agent program, which requires 72 hours of continuing education every

    Start Printed Page 41255

    three years.[82] An enrolled agent is an individual who may represent clients in matters before the IRS and, like a licensed customs broker, must pass a rigorous examination to prove his or her knowledge and competence, making it a reasonable analog to the CBP program. Once the agent has passed the exam, he or she has unlimited practice rights, providing he or she completes the requisite continuing education.

    CBP has determined that 72 hours every three years would be inappropriate for individual brokers. Were CBP to mandate 72 hours of continuing broker education every three years, individual brokers who already voluntarily pursue continuing education would need to increase the amount of training they complete, often by 100 percent. Costs incurred by both individual brokers who do not already pursue continuing education and those who do would be much greater. Such a requirement would be too onerous, particularly for small businesses, which make up a significant proportion (approximately 39 percent) of the employers of individual brokers. CBP estimates that such a requirement would cost individual brokers up to $284,775,217 over a seven-year period of analysis, or about $17,770 per broker. See Table 28.

    Table 28—Broker Costs Under a 72-Hour Continuing Education Requirement

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearBrokersLowMediumHigh
    CostTotalCostTotalCostTotal
    202313,952$69.62$582,803$2,383$19,946,058$4,456$37,300,226
    202414,83069.62619,4722,38321,201,0384,45639,647,106
    202514,83069.62619,4722,38321,201,0384,45639,647,106
    202614,83069.62619,4722,38321,201,0384,45639,647,106
    202716,02669.62669,4312,38322,910,8554,45642,844,558
    202816,02669.62669,4312,38322,910,8554,45642,844,558
    202916,02669.62669,4312,38322,910,8554,45642,844,558
    Total16,026487.344,449,51316,679152,281,73531,190284,775,217
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    Alternative 2: 36 hours every three years.

    Alternative 2 is the chosen alternative.

    Alternative 3: CBP list of individual brokers voluntarily meeting continuing education standards.

    Under Alternative 3, instead of mandating any kind of continuing education program, CBP would release annually a list of brokerages or companies employing individual brokers who voluntarily provide continuing education to their broker employees. As with Alternative 1, qualifying events would include internal training, government-sponsored webinars, trade conferences and events, and other activities. CBP would draft this list each year by requesting that companies report whether they provide a continuing education program. CBP might request details from the company to ensure the training provided meets a certain threshold for quality and relevance.

    Under baseline conditions, CBP estimates that about 60 percent of individual brokers already complete continuing education on a voluntary basis. CBP does not believe that publishing a list of brokerages that provide continuing education would induce the remaining 40 percent of individual brokers to pursue continuing education, though some individual brokers might do so. Under Alternative 3, those individual brokers who already complete ongoing training would continue to do so, while many of those brokers who do not, would not, absent a mandate, be likely to change. CBP estimates that an additional five percent of brokers might begin a continuing education program in order to be included on CBP's list, representing about 201 additional companies.[83] While fewer individual brokers would face the costs of tuition, travel, and record-keeping, approximately 801 would face these costs of continuing education over the seven-year period of analysis. Additionally, CBP would incur the costs of composing the list each year and companies employing individual brokers would face the costs of applying to be included on the list. Assuming two CBP personnel spend about 40 hours each, annually to compose the list, that one person from each company spends about 10 hours compiling and submitting information to CBP annually, and that one third of affected individual brokers choose each cost path, Alternative 3 results in costs of $10,654,089 over the seven-year period of analysis. See Table 29.

    Table 29—Total Costs under Alternative 3

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearCBP costBrokerage costsBroker costsTotal
    2023$17,558$270,324$1,131,008$1,418,891
    202417,558270,3241,202,8151,490,697
    202517,558270,3241,202,8151,490,697
    202617,558270,3241,202,8151,490,697
    Start Printed Page 41256
    202717,558270,3241,299,8201,587,702
    202817,558270,3241,299,8201,587,702
    202917,558270,3241,299,8201,587,702
    Total122,9091,892,2678,638,91310,654,089
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    If only five percent more individual brokers elect to begin continuing education under the terms of Alternative 3, fewer non-compliance actions would be avoided. CBP estimates that only an eighth as many penalties and audits would be avoided as compared to Alternative 2. Therefore, CBP and individual brokers would avoid two penalties and one audit annually, for a total cost savings of $60,692 per year. However, CBP does not typically include avoided penalties in the overall accounting of costs and benefits of a rule. Therefore, over a seven-year period of analysis, Alternative 3 leads to $364,152 in cost savings.

    Table 30—Total Savings Under Alternative 3

    [2022 U.S. dollars]

    YearSavings for brokersSavings for CBPTotal savings
    2023$0$0$0
    2024060,69260,692
    2025060,69260,692
    2026060,69260,692
    2027060,69260,692
    2028060,69260,692
    2029060,69260,692
    Total0364,152364,152
    * Totals may not sum due to rounding.

    One of the primary goals of the rule is to reduce compliance issues, penalties, and regulatory audits, and CBP does not believe that a system based on voluntary reporting would do enough to reach that goal. With only an additional five percent of brokers pursuing continuing education, Alternative 3 would not do enough to further professionalize the customs broker community, nor would their clients see an appreciable decline in compliance issues. Additionally, such a system would still result in a net cost of about $10.7 million over the seven-year period of analysis. Therefore, CBP believes that Alternative 3 is less preferable than the chosen alternative.

    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. ), as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement and Fairness Act of 1996, requires agencies to assess the impact of regulations on small entities. A small entity may be a small business (defined as any independently owned and operated business not dominant in its field that qualifies as a small business concern per the Small Business Act); a small organization (defined as any not-for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field); or a small governmental jurisdiction (defined as a locality with fewer than 50,000 people). A small business within the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry, the industry that employs individual brokers, is defined as one whose annual receipts are less than $20.0 million in 2022 dollars ($17,274,816 in 2017 dollars, using the CPI to account for inflation), regardless of the number of employees.[84] Data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that approximately 96 percent of businesses in the Transportation Arrangement Industry (NAICS Code 448510) are small businesses (see Table 31). All businesses employing individual brokers under this NAICS Code are affected by this rule. Additionally, some small businesses may elect to become accreditors or training providers. Therefore, CBP concludes that this rule will affect a substantial number of small entities.

    Start Printed Page 41257

    Table 31—Small Businesses in the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry, 2017 85

    Employment size 86Number of firmsNumber of employeesPreliminary receipts (all firms, $1,000s) 87Receipts per firm ($)Small business?
    01: Total15,104265,192$67,276,572$4,454,222
    02: <58,91215,9396,315,166708,614Yes.
    03: 5–92,73118,0255,392,9921,974,732Yes.
    04: 10–191,52420,2885,870,1633,851,813Yes.
    05: <2013,16754,25217,578,3211,335,029Yes.
    06: 20–991,34449,47713,973,78010,397,158Yes.
    07: 100–49935744,71510,886,02830,493,076No.
    08: <50014,868148,44442,438,1292,854,327Yes.
    09: 500+236116,74824,838,443105,247,640No.

    Some small businesses may choose to apply to CBP to become accreditors. Those businesses will face the costs of applying to CBP, the potential costs of any protests they choose to file should they disagree with CBP's decision regarding their proposals, and the costs of being an accreditor. Small businesses may also choose to become training providers and to incur the costs of producing and providing trainings. However, CBP believes that those costs will be recouped by tuition and fees. CBP further expects any costs not directly covered by fees to be minor and included in general business expenses.

    Individual brokers employed by these small businesses will be required to attain 36 hours of continuing broker education every three years under the terms of the rule. They will also face the opportunity cost of attending trainings as well as the costs of recordkeeping, reporting, and participating in any continuing broker education record request initiated by CBP. Accordingly, the impacts of the rule to individual brokers and affected businesses will depend on if the individual broker currently meets the training requirements. Based on public comments in response to the ANPRM and discussions between CBP and various broker organizations, CBP estimates most large businesses employing individual brokers already provide, and often mandate, internal training and continuing education. CBP estimates that these 60 percent of individual brokers already in compliance will not face new costs aside from recordkeeping and reporting. CBP estimates the remaining 40 percent of individual brokers, mostly at smaller businesses, will need to come into compliance with the rule. Using the primary estimate under which one third of individual brokers selects each cost tier, the total cost born by brokers in the first year in which they will face costs due to the rule (2024) is $9,880,635 (see Table 12, above). The rule will affect 5,932 individual brokers in that first year, for an average annualized cost of $1,666 per broker. The average annual receipts for small businesses in the Freight Transportation Arrangement Industry, according to the Census data in Table 31, is $2,174,357.[88] The number of individual brokers employed by each business will vary among the small businesses in question, but assuming an average of four brokers per company,[89] the cost of continuing education for each firm will be approximately $6,663 annually, or about 0.3 percent of annual receipts. CBP generally considers effects of 1 percent or less of annual receipts not to be a significant impact. Accordingly, CBP certifies that this rule does not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

    C. Paperwork Reduction Act

    In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–13, 44 U.S.C. 3507) an agency may not conduct, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of information displays a valid control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The collections of information contained in these regulations are provided for by OMB control number 1651–0034 (CBP Regulations Pertaining to Customs Brokers).

    The rule will require individual brokers to maintain records of completed continuing education (including, among others, the date, title, provider, location (if applicable), and credit hours) and certify the completion of the required number of continuing education credits on the triennial status report. Based on these changes, CBP estimates a small increase in the burden hours for information collection related to customs brokers regulations. CBP will submit to OMB for review the following adjustments to the previously approved Information Collection under OMB control number 1651–0034 to account for this rule's changes. The addition of the self-attestation and submission of records will add about 30–45 minutes (0.5–0.75 hours) per respondent.

    CBP Regulations Pertaining to Customs Brokers

    Estimated Number of Respondents: 13,952.

    Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 1.

    Estimated Number of Total Annual Responses: 0.333.

    Estimated Time per Response: 31.5 minutes (0.525 hours).

    Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 2,442 hours.

    VI. Signing Authority

    This document is being issued in accordance with 19 CFR 0.1(b)(1), which provides that the Secretary of the Treasury delegated to the Secretary of DHS authority to prescribe and approve regulations relating to customs revenue Start Printed Page 41258 functions on behalf of the Secretary of the Treasury for when the subject matter is not listed in paragraph 1(a)(i) of Treasury Department Order No. 100–16. Accordingly, this rule may be signed by the Secretary of DHS (or his or her delegate).

    Start List of Subjects

    List of Subjects in 19 CFR Part 111

    • Administrative practice and procedure
    • Brokers
    • Penalties
    • Reporting and recordkeeping requirements
    End List of Subjects

    Amendments to Regulations

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, Part 111 of title 19 of the Code of Federal Regulations (19 CFR part 111) is amended as set forth below:

    Start Part

    PART 111—CUSTOMS BROKERS

    End Part Start Amendment Part

    1. The general authority citation for part 111 continues to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part Start Authority

    Authority: 19 U.S.C. 66, 1202 (General Note 3(i), Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States), 1624; 1641.

    End Authority Start Amendment Part

    2. Revise the second sentence of § 111.0 to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part
    Scope.

    * * * This part also prescribes the duties and responsibilities of brokers, the grounds and procedures for disciplining brokers, including the assessment of monetary penalties, the revocation or suspension of licenses and permits, and the obligation for individual brokers to satisfy a continuing education requirement.

    Start Amendment Part

    3. In § 111.1, add the definitions “ Continuing broker education requirement ”, “ Continuing education credit ”, “ Qualifying continuing broker education ”, and “ Triennial period ” in alphabetical order to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part
    Definitions.
    * * * * *

    Continuing broker education requirement. “Continuing broker education requirement” means an individual broker's obligation to complete a certain number of continuing education credits of qualifying continuing broker education, as set forth in subpart F of this part, in order to maintain sufficient knowledge of customs and related laws, regulations, and procedures, bookkeeping, accounting, and all other appropriate matters necessary to render valuable service to importers and drawback claimants.

    * * * * *

    Continuing education credit. “Continuing education credit” means the unit of measurement used for meeting the continuing broker education requirement. The smallest recognized unit is half of one continuing education credit, which requires 30 minutes of continuous participation in qualifying continuing broker education, as defined in § 111.103(a). For qualifying continuing broker education lasting more than 30 minutes, half of one continuing education credit may be claimed for every full 30 minutes of continuous participation thereafter. For example, for qualifying continuing broker education lasting more than 60 minutes but less than 90 minutes, only one continuing education credit may be claimed. In contrast, for qualifying continuing broker education lasting 90 minutes, 1.5 continuing broker education credits may be claimed.

    * * * * *

    Qualifying continuing broker education. “Qualifying continuing broker education” means any training or educational activity that is eligible or, if required, has been approved for continuing education credit, in accordance with § 111.103.

    * * * * *

    Triennial period. “Triennial period” means a period of three years commencing on February 1, 1985, or on February 1 in any third year thereafter.

    * * * * *
    Start Amendment Part

    4. In § 111.19, revise the first sentence of paragraph (c) to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part
    National permit.
    * * * * *

    (c) * * * A national permit issued under paragraph (a) of this section is subject to the permit application fee specified in § 111.96(b) and to the customs permit user fee specified in § 111.96(c). * * *

    Start Amendment Part

    5. Amend § 111.30 by revising the section heading and paragraph (d)(2) to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part
    Notification of change in address, organization, name, or location of business records; status report; termination of brokerage business.
    * * * * *

    (d) * * *

    (2) Individual. Each individual broker must state in the report required under paragraph (d)(1) of this section whether he or she is actively engaged in transacting business as a broker.

    (i) If the individual broker is actively engaged in transacting business as a broker, the individual broker must also:

    (A) State the name under which, and the address at which, the broker's business is conducted if he or she is a sole proprietor, and an email address;

    (B) State the name and address of his or her employer if he or she is employed by another broker, unless his or her employer is a partnership, association or corporation broker for which he or she is a qualifying member or officer for purposes of § 111.11(b) or (c)(2);

    (C) State whether or not he or she still meets the applicable requirements of §§ 111.11 and 111.19 and has not engaged in any conduct that could constitute grounds for suspension or revocation under § 111.53; and

    (D) Report and certify the broker's compliance with the continuing broker education requirement as set forth in § 111.102.

    (ii) If the individual broker is not actively engaged in transacting business as a broker, the individual broker must also:

    (A) State the broker's current mailing address and email address;

    (B) State whether or not he or she still meets the applicable requirements of §§ 111.11 and 111.19 and has not engaged in any conduct that could constitute grounds for suspension or revocation under § 111.53; and

    (C) Report and certify the broker's compliance with the continuing broker education requirement as set forth in § 111.102.

    * * * * *
    Start Amendment Part

    6. Add and reserve §§ 111.97 through 111.100.

    End Amendment Part Start Amendment Part

    7. Add subpart F, consisting of §§ 111.101 through 111.104, to read as follows:

    End Amendment Part

    Subpart F—Continuing Education Requirements for Individual Brokers

    111.101
    Scope.
    111.102
    Obligations of individual brokers in conjunction with continuing broker education requirement.
    111.103
    Accreditation of qualifying continuing broker education.
    111.104
    Failure to report and certify compliance with continuing broker education requirement.
    Scope.

    This subpart sets forth regulations providing for a continuing education requirement for individual brokers and the framework for administering this requirement. The continuing broker education requirement is for individual brokers, in order to maintain sufficient knowledge of customs and related laws, regulations, and procedures, bookkeeping, accounting, and all other appropriate matters necessary to render valuable service to importers and drawback claimants. Individual brokers will be required to certify completion of the continuing broker education requirement with the filing of their 2027 Start Printed Page 41259 status report, required under § 111.30(d), and every status report thereafter, in accordance with the provisions of this subpart.

    Obligations of individual brokers in conjunction with continuing broker education requirement.

    (a) Continuing broker education requirement. All individual brokers must complete qualifying continuing broker education as defined in § 111.103(a), except:

    (1) During a period of voluntary suspension as described in § 111.52; or

    (2) When individual brokers have not held their license for an entire triennial period at the time of the submission of the status report as required under § 111.30(d).

    (b) Required minimum number of continuing education credits. All individual brokers who are subject to the continuing broker education requirement must complete at least 36 continuing education credits of qualifying continuing broker education each triennial period, except upon the reinstatement of a license following a period of voluntary suspension as described in § 111.52. Upon the reinstatement of a license following a period of voluntary suspension as described in § 111.52, the number of continuing education credits that an individual broker must complete by the end of the triennial period during which the reinstatement of the license occurred will be calculated on a prorated basis of one continuing education credit for each complete remaining month until the end of the triennial period.

    (c) Reporting requirements. Individual brokers who are subject to the continuing broker education requirement must report and certify their compliance upon submission of the status report required under § 111.30(d).

    (d) Recordkeeping requirements —(1) General. Individual brokers who are subject to the continuing broker education requirement must retain the following information and documentation pertaining to the qualifying education completed during a triennial period for a period of three years following the submission of the status report required under § 111.30(d):

    (i) The title of the qualifying continuing broker education attended;

    (ii) The name of the provider or host of the qualifying continuing broker education;

    (iii) The date(s) attended;

    (iv) The number of continuing education credits accrued;

    (v) The location of the qualifying continuing broker education; and

    (vi) Any documentation received from the provider or host of the qualifying continuing broker education that evidences the individual broker's registration for, attendance at, completion of, or other activity bearing upon the individual broker's participation in and completion of the qualifying continuing broker education.

    (2) Availability of records. In order to ensure that the individual broker has met the continuing broker education requirement, upon CBP's request, the individual broker must make available to CBP the information and documentation described in paragraph (d)(1) of this section on or before 30 calendar days from the date of receipt of CBP's request. CBP can request that the information and documentation be made available for in-person inspection or be delivered to CBP by either hard-copy or electronic means, or any combination thereof.

    Accreditation of qualifying continuing broker education.

    (a) Qualifying continuing broker education. In order for a training or educational activity to be considered qualifying continuing broker education, it must meet the following two requirements:

    (1) Providers of qualifying continuing broker education. The training or educational activity must be offered by one of the following providers:

    (i) Government agencies. Qualifying continuing broker education constitutes any training or educational activity offered by CBP, whether online or in-person, and training or educational activity offered by another U.S. government agency, whether online or in-person, but only if the content is relevant to customs business as identified by CBP in coordination with the appropriate U.S. government agency when applicable. Accreditation is not required for trainings or educational activities offered by U.S. government agencies.

    (ii) Other providers requiring accreditation. Any other training or educational activity not offered by a U.S. government agency, whether online or in-person, will not be considered a qualifying continuing broker education, unless the training or educational activity has been approved for continuing education credit by a CBP-selected accreditor before the training or educational activity is provided.

    (2) Recognized trainings or educational activities. The training or educational activity must constitute one of the following:

    (i) A seminar, webinar, or a workshop, whether online or in-person, whether experienced live or recorded, that is conducted by an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker;

    (ii) A symposium or convention, with the exception of the attendance at a meeting conducted in accordance with the provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. App.), whether online or in-person;

    (iii) Online coursework, a workshop, or a module, conducted as self-guided education, culminating in a retention test;

    (iv) The preparation of a subject matter for presentation as an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker at a training or educational activity described in paragraph (a)(2)(i) or (a)(2)(ii) of this section, subject to the requirements set forth in paragraph (b) of this section; and

    (v) The presentation of a subject matter as an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker at a training or educational activity described in paragraph (a)(2)(i) or (a)(2)(ii) of this section, subject to the requirements set forth in paragraph (b) of this section.

    (b) Special allowance for instructors, discussion leaders, and speakers. (1) Contingent upon the approval by a CBP-selected accreditor, an individual broker may claim half of one continuing education credit for each full 30 minutes spent:

    (i) Presenting subject matter as an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker at a training or educational activity described in paragraph (a)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section; or

    (ii) Preparing subject matter for presentation as an instructor, discussion leader, or speaker at a training or educational activity described in paragraph (a)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section.

    (2) The special allowance for instructors, discussion leaders, and speakers is subject to the following limitations:

    (i) For any session of presentation given at one time, regardless of the duration of that session, an individual broker may claim, at a maximum, one continuing education credit for the time spent preparing subject matter for that presentation pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section.

    (ii) Per triennial period, an individual broker may claim, at a maximum, a combined total of 12 continuing education credits earned in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section.

    (3) Regardless of whether the training or educational activity is offered by a U.S. government agency or another provider, any instructor, discussion leader, or speaker seeking to claim continuing education credit in Start Printed Page 41260 accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this section must obtain the approval of a CBP-selected accreditor.

    (c) Selection of accreditors. The Office of Trade will select accreditors based on a Request for Information (RFI) and a Request for Proposal (RFP) announced through the System for Award Management (SAM) or any other electronic system for award management approved by the U.S. General Services Administration, in accordance with the Federal Acquisition Regulation (48 CFR 1.000 et seq.), for a specific period of award, subject to renewal. The Executive Assistant Commissioner, Office of Trade, will periodically publish notices in the Federal Register announcing the criteria that CBP will use to select an accreditor, the period during which CBP will accept applications by potential accreditors, and the period of award for a CBP-selected accreditor.

    (d) Responsibilities of CBP-selected accreditors. CBP-selected accreditors administer the accreditation of trainings or educational activities other than those described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section for the purpose of the continuing broker education requirement by reviewing and approving or denying such educational content for continuing education credit. A CBP-selected accreditor's approval of a training or educational activity for continuing education credit is valid for one year, and the accreditation may be renewed through any CBP-selected accreditor. CBP-selected accreditors will not deny review or approval of a training or educational activity for continuing education credit solely because it was previously denied by the CBP-selected accreditor or any other CBP-selected accreditor.

    (e) Prohibition of self-certification by an accreditor. CBP-selected accreditors may not approve their own trainings or educational activities for continuing education credit.

    Failure to report and certify compliance with continuing broker education requirement.

    (a) Notification by CBP. If an individual broker is subject to the continuing broker education requirement pursuant to § 111.102 and submits a status report as required under § 111.30(d)(2) but fails to report and certify compliance with the continuing broker education requirement as part of the submission of the status report, then CBP will notify the individual broker of the broker's failure to report and certify compliance in accordance with § 111.30(d). The notification will be sent to the address reflected in CBP's records or transmitted electronically pursuant to any electronic means authorized by CBP for that purpose.

    (b) Required response to notice. Upon the issuance of such notification, the individual broker must on or before 30 calendar days:

    (1) Submit a corrected status report that, in accordance with § 111.30(d), reflects the individual broker's compliance with the continuing broker education requirement, if the individual broker completed the required number of continuing education credits but failed to report and certify compliance with the requirement as part of the submission of the status report; or

    (2) Complete the required number of continuing education credits of qualifying continuing broker education and submit a corrected status report that, in accordance with § 111.30(d), reflects the individual broker's compliance with the continuing broker education requirement, if the individual broker had not completed the required number of continuing education credits at the time the status report was due.

    (c) Suspension of license. Unless the individual broker takes the corrective actions described in paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section on or before 30 calendar days from the issuance date of the notification described in paragraph (a) of this section, CBP will take actions to suspend the individual broker's license in accordance with subpart D of this part.

    (d) Revocation of license. If the individual broker's license has been suspended pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section and the individual broker fails to take the corrective actions described in paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section on or before 120 calendar days from the issuance date of the order of suspension, CBP will take actions to revoke the individual broker's license without prejudice to the filing of an application for a new license in accordance with subpart D of this part.

    Start Signature

    Alejandro N. Mayorkas,

    Secretary, Department of Homeland Security.

    End Signature End Supplemental Information

    Footnotes

    1.  The Homeland Security Act of 2002 generally transferred the functions of the former U.S. Customs Service from the Secretary of the Treasury to the Secretary of DHS and provided that the Secretary of the Treasury retain authority over customs revenue functions, unless specifically delegated to the Secretary of DHS. See6 U.S.C. 212(a)(1). Paragraph 1(a)(i) of Treasury Department Order No. 100–16 contains a list of subject matters over which the Secretary of the Treasury retained authority. See Appendix to part 0 of title 19, Code of Federal Regulations (Appendix to 19 CFR part 0). The other functions of the former U.S. Customs Service not expressly listed in paragraph 1(a)(i) of Treasury Department Order No. 100–16 were transferred from the Secretary of the Treasury to the Secretary of DHS. As paragraph 1(a)(i) of Treasury Department Order No. 100–16 does not list the regulation of customs brokers, the Secretary of the Treasury did not retain authority over this subject matter.

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    2.  For clarity, in this document, CBP will refer to individuals who obtained a valid customs broker's license as an “individual customs broker license holder,” “individual customs broker,” or “individual broker.” “Customs brokers” refers to the entire body of individuals, partnerships, associations, and corporations that have obtained a valid customs broker's license. See19 CFR 111.1.

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    3.  The comments received in response to the NPRM can be viewed in their entirety on the public docket, Docket No. USCBP–2021–0030, which can be accessed through https://www.regulations.gov.

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    4.  Customs brokers have legal obligations, to CBP and to the broker's clientele, including, but not limited to, the exercising of due diligence in making financial settlements, answering correspondence, and preparing paperwork or filings related to customs business. See19 CFR 111.29(a). Under 19 U.S.C. 1641(b)(4), a customs broker has the statutory duty to exercise responsible supervision and control over the customs business that he or she conducts. See also19 CFR 111.1 and 111.28(a).

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    5.  Recent developments, include, but are not limited to, drawback modernization, 83 FR 64942 (Dec. 18, 2018), implementation of the Agreement between the United States of America, the United Mexican States, and Canada (the USMCA), United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement Implementation Act, Public Law 116–113, 134 Stat. 11 (19 U.S.C. Chapter 29), the dramatic increase in low-value shipments (19 U.S.C. 1321(a)(2)(C)), and CBP's updates to 19 CFR part 111, the regulations governing customs brokers and their obligations to clients and CBP. See87 FR 63267 (Oct. 18, 2022) and 87 FR 63262 (Oct. 18, 2022).

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    6.  Access to and additional information about the SAM may be viewed at www.sam.gov.

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    7.  On October 18, 2022, CBP published a final rule document in the Federal Register entitled “Modernization of the Customs Broker Regulations” (the Part 111 Rewrite). See87 FR 63267.

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    8.  85 FR 34836 (June 5, 2020).

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    9.  The eCBP Portal and additional information may be accessed through https://e.cbp.dhs.gov/​ecbp/​#/​main.

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    10.  RFPs may be viewed by the public online at www.sam.gov.

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    11.  The ACE Portal is a web-based entry point for ACE to connect CBP, trade representatives and government agencies who are involved in importing goods into the United States. The eCBP Portal is currently the access point for a new system for electronic payments of licensed customs broker fees. When fully implemented, the eCBP portal will allow for easy collection of many types of duties, taxes, and fees.

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    13.  19 U.S.C. 1641(b)(4). For more details on responsible supervision and control, see 19 CFR 111.1 and 111.28.

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    14.  Customs business is defined as: those activities involving transactions with U.S. Customs and Border Protection concerning the entry and admissibility of merchandise, its classification and valuation, the payment of duties, taxes, or other charges assessed or collected by U.S. Customs and Border Protection upon merchandise by reason of its importation, or the refund, rebate, or drawback thereof. It also includes the preparation of documents or forms in any format and the electronic transmission of documents, invoices, bills, or parts thereof, intended to be filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection in furtherance of such activities, whether or not signed or filed by the preparer, or activities relating to such preparation, but does not include the mere electronic transmission of data received for transmission to CBP. See19 U.S.C. 1641(a)(2).

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    15.  A customs broker may voluntarily suspend his or her license for a number of reasons and may re-activate the license at a later time. A broker's license may also be suspended as part of a penalty. For more information, see 19 CFR 111.52 and 111.53.

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    16.  To be eligible, an individual must be a United States citizen at least 21 years of age, in possession of good moral character, and not be an employee of the U.S. government. For more information, see U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Becoming a Customs Broker (Dec. 12, 2018), available at https://www.cbp.gov/​trade/​programs-administration/​customs-brokers/​becoming-customs-broker.

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    17.  To be approved, a broker who has passed the broker exam must also pass an investigation of his or her relevant background. See19 CFR 111.14.

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    18.  19 CFR 111.30(d). For more information on the triennial status report, see U.S. Customs and Border Protection, 2021 Customs Broker Triennial Status Report FAQs (Feb. 26, 2021), available at https://help.cbp.gov/​s/​article/​Article-1711?​language=​en_​US.

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    20.  In the case of non-egregious violations, CBP will first attempt to work with the broker through the informed compliance process of communication and education. See U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Electronic Invoice Program (EIP) and Remote Location Filing (RLF) Handbook (May 2013), p. 22, available at https://www.cbp.gov/​sites/​default/​files/​assets/​documents/​2016-Dec/​Revised_​eip_​rlf_​handbook_​12-15_​16.pdf. This is an attempt to improve the broker's performance, and precedes the issuance of a pre-penalty notice, which is a written notice that advises the broker of the allegations or complaints against the broker. See id.;19 CFR 111.92(a). If this process fails to remedy the deficiencies, or in case of egregious violations, CBP will issue a pre-penalty notice to the broker, which, inter alia, explains that the broker has the right to respond to the allegations or complaints. See19 CFR 111.92(a). If the broker files a timely response to the pre-penalty notice, CBP will either cancel the case, issue a penalty notice in an amount lower than that provided in the pre-penalty notice, or issue a penalty notice in the same amount as the pre-penalty notice. See19 CFR 111.92(b). Upon the issuance of the penalty notice, the broker is afforded the opportunity to file a petition for relief in accordance with the provisions of 19 CFR part 171, which may result in the cancellation or mitigation of the penalty, and subsequently a supplemental petition for relief. See19 CFR 111.93 and 111.95.

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    21.  19 U.S.C. 1641(d)(2)(B). Penalty information comes from CBP's Seized Currency and Asset Tracking System (SEACATS). Although the average value of assessed penalty is $26,670, CBP allows brokers to mitigate penalties, such that the amount collected is often significantly less, averaging $2,423 from 2017–2021.

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    22.  SEACATS.

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    23.  Trade remedies implemented by CBP include Section 201 trade remedies on solar cells and panels and washing machines and parts; Section 232 trade remedies on aluminum and steel; Section 232 trade remedies on derivatives; and Section 301 trade remedies to be assessed on certain goods from China. See U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Trade Remedies, available at https://www.cbp.gov/​trade/​programs-administration/​trade-remedies (last visited on March 16, 2023).

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    24.  Information was provided by the National Customs Broker and Forwarders Association of America (NCBFAA). Nine companies employ at least 48 brokers certified by programs provided by the NCBFAA's Education Institute (NEI), and often employ more. An additional 292 companies employing at least one individual broker with an NEI certification were identified via a survey of NEI's students.

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    25.  Significant at the 99 percent confidence level.

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    26.  Entry data was pulled from ACE, and penalty data from SEACATS.

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    27.  The number of hours of continuing education required for many professions varies by state as the state is the licensing authority.

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    28.  In October 2000, the United States implemented the Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act, which will expire in 2030 ( https://www.cbp.gov/​trade/​priority-issues/​trade-agreements/​special-trade-legislation/​caribbean-basin-initiative/​cbtpa). The African Growth and Opportunity Act was also enacted in 2000 ( https://ustr.gov/​issue-areas/​trade-development/​preference-programs/​african-growth-and-opportunity-act-agoa). See https://www.state.gov/​trade-agreements/​outcomes-of-current-u-s-trade-agreements/​ for a list of free trade agreements currently in force.

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    29.  “Evaluation of Current Customs Broker Continuing Education Practices and Literature Review of Continuing Education in Other Professions.” Report for CBP prepared by IEC on June 30, 2014. This document is included in the docket for this final rule, which is posted on Regulations.gov.

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    30.   See Bradley, S., Drapeau, M. and DeStefano, J. (2012), The relationship between continuing education and perceived competence, professional support, and professional value among clinical psychologists. J. Contin. Educ. Health Prof., 32: 31–38; O'Leary, P.F., Quinlan, T.J., & Richards, R.L. (2011). Insurance Professionals' Perceptions of Continuing Education Requirements. Journal of Insurance Regulation, 30, 101–117; and Wessels, S. (2007). Accountants' Perceptions of the Effectiveness of Mandatory Continuing Professional Education. Accounting Education, 16(4), 365–378.

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    31.  Darling-Hammond, L., Hyler, M.E., and Gardner, M. (2017). Effective Teacher Professional Development. Learning Policy Institute; Cervero, R. M., & Gaines, J.K. (2014). Effectiveness of continuing medical education: updated synthesis of systematic reviews. Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education.

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    32.  Chen, Y.-S., Chang, B.-G., & Lee, C.-C. (2008). The association between continuing professional education and financial performance of public accounting firms. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 19(9), 1720–1737.

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    33.  Diehl, K. A. (2015). Does Requiring Registration, Testing, and Continuing Professional Education for Paid Tax Preparers Improve the Compliance and Accuracy of Tax Returns?—US Results. Journal of Business & Accounting, 8(1), 138–147.

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    35.   See American Medical Association, About the AMA's CME Accreditation, available at https://edhub.ama-assn.org/​pages/​ama-cme (last accessed on May 11, 2021).

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    36.  Per section 111.103(a)(1)(i), a training or educational activity offered by a U.S. government agency other than CBP must be relevant to customs business.

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    38.   See19 CFR 111.29(a), and 19 CFR part 111 generally for additional obligations.

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    39.  Entities holding corporate, association, or partnership licenses must employ at least one individual broker, who will be required to comply with the rule. See19 CFR 111.11(a) and (b).

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    40.  Triennial status reports are due in February of the reporting year and cover the previous three years. For these brokers, compliance is expected to begin in 2024, with the 2027 triennial status report certifying completion of 36 hours of continuing broker education in 2024, 2025, and or 2026. As discussed above in Section I, D. Initial Certification Date, CBP has the ability to prorate the initial requirements if the rule is implemented part way through the triennial cycle. If needed, CBP will reduce the number of required continuing education credits for the triennial period beginning on February 1, 2024, as deemed necessary based on a revised implementation date. For the purposes of this analysis, CBP assumes a requirement of 36 hours of continuing education to be certified in 2027. To the extent that CBP must delay full implementation and prorate the number of required credits, actual costs for brokers in the triennial cycle from 2024–2027 will be proportionally lower.

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    41.  Although brokers may complete their required broker continuing education at any point in the three years of the triennial period, for ease of presentation, CBP assumes that brokers will complete 12 hours of training each year. Brokers receiving their licenses in 2024, 2025, and 2026 will certify to the completion of their requirements in 2030, covering training taken in 2027, 2028, and 2029.

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    42.  CBP sometimes issues licenses that are later suspended or terminated (either voluntarily or as a penalty). This table includes all licenses issued in these years that remain active as of 2022, as only holders of an active license will need to abide by the terms of the rule.

    43.  The number of licenses applied for and issued in 2020 was significantly lower than in previous years due to the effects of the COVID–19 pandemic and related closures and delays. CBP excluded this year from calculations of growth rates due to its anomalous nature. Data for 2021 indicates that broker license applications have mostly returned to their pre-2020 levels.

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    44.  The rate of decline in licenses can vary based on the years chosen for calculations. In the NPRM, CBP estimated a decline of 12 percent, but data from 2021 indicates that licensing recovered to and increased from levels seen before disruptions from the COVID–19 pandemic, resulting in a reduction in the rate of decline in licenses issued. CBP believes that this recovery is likely to continue for a few more years as the industry adjusts.

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    45.  14,828 individual brokers will certify compliance in the 2027 triennial report (who will comply from 2024–2026) = 13,952 (2022 active) + 447 (2022 new) + 430 (2023 new)). 16,026 individual brokers will certify compliance in the 2030 triennial report (who will comply from 2027–2029) = 14,828 (2024 active) + 414 (2024 new) + 398 (2025 new) + 383 (2026 new).

    46.  All active, licensed, individual customs brokers will begin complying with the rule in 2024, regardless of what year they received their license. The 1,343 licenses newly affected in 2024 include those brokers who received their licenses in 2021, 2022, and 2023 and will complete their first triennial status report in 2024.

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    47.  Feedback was provided in the form of public comments on the ANPRM and was not disputed in public comments on the NPRM. Additional feedback was provided in various meetings and discussions between CBP personnel and customs brokers, as well as at trade conferences and meetings of the Task Force for Continuing Education for Licensed Customs Brokers, a part of the Commercial Customs Operations Advisory Committee (COAC). COAC is jointly appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of DHS and advises the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of Homeland Security on all matters involving the commercial operations of CBP. Meetings of COAC are presided over jointly by the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Tax, Trade, and Tariff Policy of the Department of Treasury and Commissioner of CBP, as described in section 109 of TFTEA. See III. Discussion of Comments, above.

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    48.  We included both individual brokers qualifying as CCS and CES in our analysis as the coursework for both has significant overlap and is relevant to customs business.

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    49.  CBP requested information about the proportion of individual brokers already complying with the rule in the ANPRM. Although CBP did not receive specific information in the public comments, several commenters said they will be compliant and believed that significant numbers of other individual brokers will be as well. Many also noted that their companies require their broker employees to complete continuing education. Public comments in response to the NPRM did not dispute this assumption.

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    50.  Discussion with officials at the NCBFAA on April 5, 2021. This includes individual brokers renewing their certification in 2020, as well as those becoming certified for the first time. The CCS certification program requires enough hours of continuing education to comply with the terms of the rule and the NCBFAA has expressed interest in becoming an accredited provider.

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    51.   See National Customs Brokers & Forwarders Association of America, Inc., Continuing Education available at https://www.ncbfaa.org/​education/​continuing-education. Accessed March 16, 2023.

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    52.  Small business size standards are defined in 13 CFR part 121. To calculate the effects of inflation from January 2017 to January 2022, see https://www.bls.gov/​data/​inflation_​calculator.htm.

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    53.  United States Census Bureau, “2017 County Business Patterns and 2017 Economic Census,” Released March 6, 2020, https://www.census.gov/​data/​tables/​2017/​econ/​susb/​2017-susb-annual.html. Accessed March 15, 2021.

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    54.  Note that some of the categories are sums of other categories. For example, Category 8, <500, is a sum of Categories 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7. Thus, Categories 7 and 9 are not consecutive, but represent all firms employing 100 or more people.

    55.  The Survey of U.S. Businesses (SUSB) from which this data is taken is conducted in years ending in 2 and 7.

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    56.  For example, the Florida Customs Broker and Forwarders Association offers both paid and free events. Information on CBP-hosted webinars can be found at https://www.cbp.gov/​trade/​stakeholder-engagement/​webinars. Many other government agencies also provide webinars on trade-related topics. For example, in 2020, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) hosted a series of webinars on the importation of medical devices in light of the COVID–19 pandemic. See https://www.fda.gov/​medical-devices/​workshops-conferences-medical-devices/​webinar-series-respirators-and-other-personal-protective-equipment-ppe-health-care-personnel-use.

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    57.  CBP does not have information on the cost for an employer to provide training internally, although such information was requested in the ANPRM. CBP believes the cost for internal training will be closer to that of attending external trainings as a member, since member fees are likely much closer to base cost of provision than non-member fees.

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    58.  The median wage rate for brokers is best represented by BLS's Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics estimate for the median hourly wage rate for Cargo and Freight Agents (Occupation Code #43–5011), which was $22.55 in 2021. To account for non-salary employee benefits, CBP multiplied the median hourly wage by the 2021 ratio of BLS's Employer Cost for Employee Compensation quarterly estimate of total compensation to wages and salaries for Office and Administrative Support occupations, the assumed occupational group for brokers. To adjust to 2022 dollars, CBP also assumes an annual growth rate of 4.15% based on the prior year's change in the implicit price deflator, published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Occupational Employment Statistics, “May 2021 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates United States.” Updated March 31, 2022. Available at https://www.bls.gov/​oes/​2021/​may/​oes_​nat.htm, Accessed May 25, 2022. The total compensation to wages and salaries ratio is equal to the calculated average of the 2021 quarterly estimates (shown under Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec) of the total compensation cost per hour worked for Office and Administrative Support occupations ($29.6125) divided by the calculated average of the 2021 quarterly estimates (shown under March, June, Sept., Dec.) of wages and salaries cost per hour worked for the same occupation category ($19.9825). Source of total compensation to wages and salaries ratio data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employer Costs for Employee Compensation. “ECEC Civilian Workers—2004 to Present.” March 2022. Available at https://www.bls.gov/​web/​ecec.supp.toc.htm. Accessed May 25, 2022. Because median hourly wage information was not available for this respondent, CBP adjusted the annual median wage for this respondent to an hourly estimate using the standard 2,080 hours worked per year.

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    59.  Some individual brokers will pay for their travel out of pocket, while other will have their travel expenses covered by their employers.

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    60.  CBP bases these costs off the average, annual price of a domestic flight in 2021, and the General Services Administration's per diem cost for lodging and meals and incidental expenses. For the flight costs, CBP used the inflation-adjusted national average for 2021, annual. Source for flight costs: The Bureau of Transportation Statistics, “Average Domestic Airline Itinerary Fares,” https://www.transtats.bts.gov/​AverageFare/​. Accessed March 21, 2023 (select `Annual' and `2021' from the drop-down menu). To calculate the lodging costs, CBP used the General Services Administration's FY22 standard lodging per diem rate for the Continental United States ($96) and assumed an average stay of 3 nights (3 nights * $96 per night = $288). To calculate the cost of meals and incidentals, CBP used the GSA's meals and incidental expenses reimbursement rate ($59 per day) and again assumed an average stay of 3 days ($59 per day * 3 days = $177). Source for per diem costs: U.S. General Services Administration, “FY22 Per Diem Highlights,” https://www.gsa.gov/​cdnstatic/​FY_​2022_​Per_​Diem_​Rates_​Highlights.docx. Accessed March 21, 2023.

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    61.  Individual brokers may complete whatever number of hours they prefer during each year, so long as it totals 36 hours in three years. CBP designates 12 hours per year both for ease of presentation and to account for pro-rating for individual brokers who re-activate their licenses within the triennial period.

    62.  Costs include tuition/fees, travel costs, and research time costs for each level.

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    63.  Only the 40 percent of individual brokers who do not already complete continuing education will face these costs. The total number of individual brokers affected in the final year of analysis (2029) is the same as the number of individual brokers overall because each year represents the same population with a small amount of growth.

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    64.  Some individual brokers will likely face additional time-costs should they fail to complete and/or report their required continuing broker education and need to take corrective action or reapply for their licenses following revocation (see section 111.104(d) for details). However, CBP only reports the costs affected populations will face to maintain compliance with the rule.

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    65.  Note that many other records must be maintained for five years. The three-year standard applies only to records of continuing education.

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    66.  The exact percentage of record requests made will vary across each triennial reporting period. For the purposes of this analysis, we assume CBP will randomly select 10 percent of individual brokers to request records from each year.

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    67.  Note that only 10 percent of individual brokers will spend 45 minutes per year, while the remaining 90 percent will spend 30 minutes per year. Furthermore, CBP will only begin record requests after the first triennial period during which the rule is in effect.

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    69.   See Section I.E. of this final rule.

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    70.  CBP bases this rate on the FY 2022 salary, benefits, premium pay, non-salary costs, and awards of the national average of CBP Trade and Revenue positions, which is equal to a GS–12, Step 10. This represents the average, fully-loaded wage per hour, including salary, benefits, premium pay, and non-salary costs (assuming 2,080 work hours/year). Source: Email correspondence with CBP's Office of Finance on June 27, 2022.

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    71.  Those individual brokers who have not yet completed a triennial status report since taking their broker exam will be exempt from completing continuing broker education until after their first triennial status report and, therefore, will also be exempt from continuing broker education record requests during that time.

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    72.  The median wage rate for accreditors is best represented by BLS's Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics estimate for the median hourly wage rate for General and Operations Managers (Occupation Code #11–1021), which was $47.10 in 2021. To account for non-salary employee benefits, CBP multiplied the median hourly wage by the 2021 ratio of BLS's Employer Cost for Employee Compensation quarterly estimate of total compensation to wages and salaries for Management, business, and financial occupations (1.4593), the assumed occupational group for accreditors. To adjust to 2022 dollars, CBP also assumes an annual growth rate of 4.15% based on the prior year's change in the implicit price deflator, published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Occupational Employment Statistics, “May 2021 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates United States.” Updated March 31, 2022. Available at https://www.bls.gov/​oes/​2021/​may/​oes_​nat.htm, Accessed May 25, 2022. The total compensation to wages and salaries ratio is equal to the calculated average of the 2021 quarterly estimates (shown under March, June, Sept., Dec.) of the total compensation cost per hour worked for Management, business, and financial occupations ($74.1275) divided by the calculated average of the 2021 quarterly estimates (shown under Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec) of wages and salaries cost per hour worked for the same occupation category ($50.7975). Source of total compensation to wages and salaries ratio data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employer Costs for Employee Compensation. “ECEC Civilian Workers—2004 to Present.” March 2022. Available at https://www.bls.gov/​web/​ecec.supp.toc.htm. Accessed May 25, 2022.

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    73.  This fee is based on that charged by the NCBFAA. Although CBP sought information in the ANPRM on how much accreditors might charge, CBP did not receive specific information. Comments to the NPRM yielded no new information.

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    74.   See Tables 13 and 14.

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    75.  Source of data of companies with at least one individual broker with continuing education: data received from NCBFAA on companies participating in its broker certification program on April 28, 2021. Data on enforcement actions and the number of entries per company was obtained from ACE on April 11, 2021.

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    76.  Data provided by CBP's Regulatory Audit and Agency Advisory Services Directorate on April 11, 2021, and January 31, 2022.

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    77.  Audits conducted from 2015 to 2021 took, on average, 593 hours to conclude. Data provided by the Regulatory Audit and Agency Advisory Services Directorate on January 31, 2022, based on internal metrics.

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    78.  CBP bases this estimate on an average of 60 hours worked per penalty at an average fully-loaded wage of $109.74 per hour for a CBP Trade and Revenue employee, as described above.

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    79.  Approximately 20 percent of the penalties assessed between 2017 and 2021 were for infractions that CBP believes would have been avoided had the individual broker been required to complete continuing education. CBP assumes the rule would eliminate all such violations. The majority of the remaining penalties were for late filing. Penalty data is taken from SEACATS.

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    80.  Penalties are a transfer payment from the broker to CBP that do not affect total resources available to society. Accordingly, CBP does not include penalties or penalties avoided in the final accounting of costs and benefits of this rule. In addition, penalties are an enforcement tool that are intended to bring a noncompliant party in line with existing requirements. Any costs and benefits that result from compliance with the underlying requirement are included in the analysis, but not the enforcement mechanism. In the same way, if a rule results in the seizure of illegal merchandise, CBP does not include the cost of the lost merchandise to the importers.

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    81.  Note that we only include costs of remaining compliant with the rule in the net costs. Similarly, we do not include penalties avoided in the final accounting of benefits.

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    82.   See Internal Revenue Service, Enrolled Agent Information (Apr. 6, 2021), available at https://www.irs.gov/​tax-professionals/​enrolled-agents/​enrolled-agent-information.

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    83.  CBP assumes that large companies employing more than 100 people already have a continuing education program. Therefore, those companies that would need to add continuing education in order to be included on CBP's list would likely be small to medium sized businesses, meaning there would be a significant number of them, employing a few brokers each.

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    84.  Small business size standards are defined in 13 CFR 121.

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    85.  United States Census Bureau, “2017 County Business Patterns and 2017 Economic Census,” Released March 6, 2020, https://www.census.gov/​data/​tables/​2017/​econ/​susb/​2017-susb-annual.html. Accessed March 15, 2021.

    86.  Note that some of the categories are sums of other categories. For example, Category 8, <500, is a sum of Categories 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7. Thus, Categories 7 and 9 are not consecutive, but represent all firms employing 100 or more people.

    87.  The Survey of U.S. Businesses (SUSB) from which this data is taken is conducted in years ending in 2 and 7.

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    88.  To calculate this average, CBP totaled the annual receipts of firms qualifying as small businesses ($6,315,166, $5,392,992, $5,870,163, and $13,973,780 from Table 31 above), then multiplied by 1000 to account for units. Finally, CBP divided by the total number of firms in those categories (8,912, 2,731, 1,524, and 1,344 from Table 31 above).

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    89.  Many brokerages are sole proprietorships and many employ individual brokers who supervise other employees. The average number of employees per firm is seven. CBP assumes the average firm employs four individual brokers and three other employees, such as human resource managers. CBP did not receive any comments on this assumption in response to the NPRM.

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    [FR Doc. 2023–12921 Filed 6–22–23; 8:45 am]

    BILLING CODE 9111–14–P

Document Information

Effective Date:
7/24/2023
Published:
06/23/2023
Department:
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
2023-12921
Dates:
This final rule is effective as of July 24, 2023.
Pages:
41224-41260 (37 pages)
Docket Numbers:
USCBP-2021-0030, CBP Dec. 23-04
RINs:
1651-AB03: Continuing Education for Licensed Customs Brokers
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1651-AB03/continuing-education-for-licensed-customs-brokers
Topics:
Administrative practice and procedure, Brokers, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements
PDF File:
2023-12921.pdf
CFR: (9)
19 CFR 111.97 through 111.100
19 CFR 111.0
19 CFR 111.1
19 CFR 111.19
19 CFR 111.30
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