2125-0620 Supporting Statement 2010

2125-0620 Supporting Statement 2010.docx

Fund Transfers to Other Agencies and Among Title 23 Programs

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Supporting Statement

Fund Transfers to Other Agencies and Among Title 23 Programs


Introduction: This is a new information collection entitled “Fund Transfers to Other Agencies and Among Title 23 Programs” (2125-0620).

Part A. Justification.

1. Circumstances that make collection of information necessary:

Sections 1108, 1119(b), 1935, and 1936 of Public Law 109-59, the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) expanded the transferability of funds to other agencies and among programs. This information collection establishes requirements for initiating the transferring of apportioned and allocated funds between entities and between projects and programs to carry out these provisions of law.

This information collection supports the Department of Transportation’s (DOT’s) Organizational Excellence Goal of improving financial, budget and performance integration strategies. This process requires several participants to work together efficiently in order to successfully complete the process. This information collection will allow each party to be involved in the process as well as ensure that the state’s fund transfer requests are accurately executed, and that the requests are allowable by law.

2. How, by whom, and for what purpose is the information used:

The information collected will be used to transfer funds to other agencies and among programs. State departments of transportation will initiate the transfer process by filling out the proper form for the type of transfer request. The corresponding Division Office will then concur with the state’s transfer request and send it to the appropriate Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) Headquarters office. The information on the form will be used to process the fund transfer. The forms will provide a consistent accurate process for which to request and make these transfers, as well as to provide documentation as to what was requested for historical and auditing purposes.

3. Extent of automated information collection:

This collection will be 100 percent electronic. The forms are available in the Fiscal Information Management System (FMIS), which is a system the states currently use and are familiar with.

4. Describe efforts to identify duplication:

Similar information does not exist. These transfers are initiated by the state when there is a need for a funding transfer.

5. Efforts to minimize the burden on small businesses:

The required information for “Fund Transfers to Other Agencies and Among Title 23 Programs”

will be from the state DOTs only. This collection of information will not impact any small businesses.

6. Impact of less frequent collection of information:

The frequency of this collection depends upon the state’s need to transfer funding. This frequency can vary from state to state and from year to year. Each time a fund transfer is requested the forms associated with this information collection must be filled out to ensure accuracy in the fund transfer as well as provide documentation for historical and auditing purposes.

7. Special circumstances:

Six hundred responses provided by 52 respondents would average out to 11 responses per respondent per year. However, because the respondents will initiate this process based on their individual needs, some state’s may not transfer funding at all in a given year, and larger State’s such as California may submit more than the average.

The end result of this process is an allotment to transfer funding. The information below states the record retention period for allotments and all supporting documentation. This information was taken from the FHWA Records Disposition Schedules for Washington Headquarters at http://wwwcf.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/admi-hq_.htm.

ADMI 10 Allotment Files.  Consist of Forms FHWA-370, Advance of Funds Available for Obligations, used to document all allotments (obligation availability) of funds and correspondence used for supporting documents.  The form shows the initial administrative allotments, initial allotment of construction funds by fiscal year quarters, increase of an allotment of construction funds by periods other than quarterly or annually and an increase of an allotment of funds in one amount for the fiscal year (GRS 7/3).

DISPOSITION:  Destroy 6 years and 3 months after the close of the fiscal year involved.

8. Compliance with 5 CFR 1320.8:

The 60-day Federal Register notice was published on August 19, 2010. There were no comments received.

9. Payments or gifts to respondents:

Payments or gifts will not be provided to state DOTs for submitting their forms.

10. Assurance of confidentiality:

The information to be collected is not considered to be confidential.

11. Justification for collection of sensitive information:

This information collection will not involve questions of a sensitive nature.

12. Estimate of burden hours for information requested:

Each transfer will require the use of 1 of 2 forms. We anticipate 52 respondents (50 state Transportation Departments, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico), approximately 600 responses annually on an as needed frequency, and an average burden per response to be one half hour.


Estimated cost to the respondents is based on an average wage rate of $25.51 per hour, which would equal a total of $7,653 annually, or $3,826.5 annually per form.


Form #1- 300 responses annually at 30 minutes each or 150 annual burden hours.

Form #2- 300 responses annually at 30 minutes each or 150 annual burden hours.


Total 600 responses annually at 30 minutes each or 300 annual burden hours.


Estimated cost to the respondents is based on an average wage rate of $25.51 per hour,


Form # 1 annually cost of $3,826.5; Form #2 annually labor cost of $3826.50, giving us a total labor burden of $ $7653.


13. Estimate of total annual costs to respondents:


There will be no capital/start-up or operation/maintenance costs to the respondents.

14. Estimate of cost to the Federal government:

It will take an average to of two and one-half hours to process each transfer request. Estimated cost to the Federal government is based on an average wage rate of $36.44 per hour, which would equal a total of $54,660 annually, or $27,330 annually per form.

15. Explanation of program changes or adjustments:

There are no changes.

16. Publication of results of data collection:

No plans to publish.

17. Approval for not displaying the expiration date of OMB approval:

There is no such request for this information collection.

18. Exceptions to certification statement:

There are no exceptions to the certification statement for this collection.





File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
File TitleThe Supporting Statement
AuthorFHWA
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-02-01

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