3060-0169 July 2011
Sections 43.51 and 43.53 – Reports and Records of Communications Common Carriers and Affiliates
This submission is being made pursuant to 44 U.S.C. § 3507 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 to extend existing information collection 3060-0169.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT
A. Justification:
1. Sections 211 and 215 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. Sections 211 and 215, require that the FCC examine transactions of any common carrier relating to the activities of that carrier which may affect the charges and/or services rendered under the Act.
The reports, required by 47 C.F.R. Sections 43.51 and 43.53, are the means by which the FCC gathers information concerning the activities of carriers which it examines.
Section 43.51 requires that any communications common carrier described in paragraph 43.51(b) file with the Commission, within thirty (30) days of execution, a copy of each contract, agreement, concession, license, authorization, operating agreement or other arrangement to which it is a party and any amendments.
Section 43.51 also requires carriers to maintain copies of certain contracts, to have them readily accessible to Commission staff and members of the public upon request and to forward individual contracts to the Commission as requested.
Section 43.53 requires each communications common carrier engaged directly in the transmission or reception of telegraph communications between the continental United States and any foreign country to file a report with the Commission within thirty (30) days of the date of any arrangement concerning the division of the total telegraph charges on such communications other than transiting.
See attached rule sections for complete description of all requirements.
As noted on the OMB Form 83i, this information collection does not affect individuals or households; thus, there are no impacts under the Privacy Act.
The statutory authority for this collection is contained in sections: 1-4, 10, 11, 201-205, 211, 218, 220, 226, 303(g), 303(r) and 332 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 151-154, 160, 161, 201-205, 211, 218, 220, 226, 303(g), 303(r) and 332.
2. The information contained in these reports is used by the FCC to determine whether the activities reported have affected or are likely to adversely affect the carrier’s service to the public or whether these activities result in undue or unreasonable increases in charges. If this information was not reported, the FCC would not be able to ascertain the impact of these activities on the just and reasonable rates required by the Act.
3. The use of improved information technology is not being considered at this time.
4. We know of no duplication of this information. There is no similar information available in this area.
5. The burden has been minimized for all subject to the collection.
6. If these reports were made less frequently instead of as each activity occurs, the FCC would not be able to examine them in a timely manner. The result would be an inability to minimize any adverse affects on the public.
7. We are not aware of any circumstances that require the collection to be conducted in any manner inconsistent with the guidelines in 5 C.F.R. § 1320.5.
8. Pursuant to 5 C.F.R. § 1320.8(d), the Commission placed a 60 day notice in the Federal Register. See 76 FR 25344, dated May 4, 2011. No comments were received.
9. The Commission does not anticipate providing any payment or gift to respondents.
10. No information of a confidential nature is being sought; however, respondents may request materials or information submitted to the Commission be withheld from public inspection under 47 C.F.R. § 0.459 of the Commission’s rules.
11. The information is not of sensitive nature, nor are there any privacy issues.
12. The following represents the estimated hour burden of the information collection. (We note that the burden hour estimates are our best estimate based on our overall experience with this data collection.)
(a) Section 43.51:
(1) Number of respondents: 55.
(2) Frequency of response: On occasion and annual reporting requirements, third party disclosure requirement and recordkeeping requirement.
(3) Total number of responses annually: 1,210.
55 respondents x 5 responses/year = 275 reporting requirements (responses)
55 respondents x 5 third party disclosures/respondent = 275 third party disclosures (responses)
55 respondents x 1 recordkeeping requirement/mo. x 12 mos. = 660 recordkeeping responses
Total: 275 reporting requirements + 275 third party disclosures + 660 recordkeeping = 1,210 responses.
(4) Annual hour burden per respondent: 4.2 hours (average)
Annual burden per respondent to comply with these three requirements is:
16.5 hours/on occasion and annual reporting
1.25 hours/third party disclosure
0.25 hours/recordkeeping
The average burden is 4.17 hours (rounded to 4.2 hours) per respondent.
(5) Total annual hour burden: 5,047 hours.
(6) How the burden was estimated:
The Commission estimates that respondents require approximately 16.5 hours to comply with the reporting requirements for each submission:
55 respondents x 5 reports/year x 16.5 hours/report = 4,538 hours
The Commission estimates that respondents require approximately 1.25 hours to comply with the third party disclosure requirements for each such disclosure:
55 respondents x 5 third party disclosures/year x 1.25 hours/disclosure = 344 hours
The Commission estimates that respondents require approximately 0.25 hours (15 minutes) to comply with the recordkeeping requirements each month. We believe that respondents use sophisticated electronic IT software and automation to minimize the time required to maintain these records:
55 respondents x 12 recordkeeping requirements/year x 0.25 hours/year = 165 hours
Total: 4,538 hrs/reporting + 344 hrs/third party disclosure + 165 hrs/recordkeeping = 5,047 hrs
Estimates of “in house” costs to respondents: Responses are received infrequently as an activity occurs that must be reported to the FCC. These burden estimates are based on senior FCC staff members’ knowledge of and familiarity with the requirements.
The burden varies widely because of differences in activity, size, and complexity of respondents who range from a small carrier operated by only a few individuals and having gross annual revenues of a few thousand dollars to a carrier like AT&T with thousands of employees and several billion dollars in gross annual revenues. In addition, as we noted above, each requirement takes a different amount of time for compliance.
We estimate that respondents use senior staff, earning approximately $45.00/hour, to comply with the reporting and third party disclosure requirements. We also estimate that respondents use clerical staff, earning approximately $25.00/hour, to perform the recordkeeping.
4,538 hours/reporting x $45.00/hour = $204,210.00
344 hours/third party disclosure x $45.00/hour = $15,480.00
165 hours/recordkeeping x $25.00/hour = $4,125.00
Total: $204,210.00 + $15,480.00 + $4,125.00 = $223,815.00
(b) Section 43.53:
(1) Number of respondents: 8.
(2) Frequency of response: On occasion reporting requirement.
(3) Total number of responses annually: 8.
8 respondents x 1 response/year = 8 responses
(4) Annual hour burden: 25 hours per respondent.
(5) Total annual burden: 200 hours.
(6) How the burden was estimated:
8 respondents x 25 hours per respondent = 200 hours.
(7) Estimates of “in house” cost to respondents: Responses are received infrequently as an activity occurs that must be reported to the FCC. These burden estimates are based on senior FCC staff members’ knowledge of and familiarity with the requirements.
The burden varies widely because of differences in activity, size, and complexity of respondents who range from a small carrier operated by only a few individuals and having gross annual revenues of a few thousand dollars to a carrier like AT&T with thousands of employees and several billion dollars in gross annual revenues.
We estimate the total number of respondents to be about 8 per year, taking about 25 hours to comply with the requirement at about $45 per hour.
8 respondents x 25 hours/respondent x 1 response/year x $45/hour = $9,000.00.
Total number of respondents: 55 + 8 = 63 respondents.
Total number of responses annually: 1,210 + 8 = 1,218.
Total annual burden: 5,047 + 200 = 5,247 hours.
Total “Industry Staffing” Costs: $223,815.00 + $9,000.00 = $232,815.00
13. The following represents the Commission’s estimate of the annual cost burden to respondents or record keepers resulting from the collections of information:
(1) Total capital and start-up cost component (annualized over its useful life): $0.
(2) Total operations and maintenance and purchase of services component: $0.
(3) Total annualized cost requested: $0.
14. The estimated annual cost to the Federal government is $331.00 per filing. This is based on an estimate of 6 hours per year for a grade 13, step 8 Public Utilities Specialist plus 2 hours per year for a grade 5, step 7 Public Contract Clerk who files the reports.
Total Cost to Federal Government: 283 filings/reporting requirements x $331.00/filing = $93,673.00
15. There is no change to the Commission burden estimate.
16. The Commission does not anticipate that it will publish any of the information collected.
17. The Commission does not seek approval not to display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information collection.
18. There are no other exceptions to the certification statement for this collection.
B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods:
The Commission does not anticipate that the collection of information will employ statistical methods.
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | 3060-0169 |
Author | SHAIR |
Last Modified By | judith |
File Modified | 2011-07-14 |
File Created | 2011-07-14 |