Ss 1076-0155 Final Rule

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Leases and Permits, 25 CFR 162

OMB: 1076-0155

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Supporting Statement A

for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions


OMB Control Number 1076-0155


Leases and Permits, 25 CFR 162


This is a request for revision of 1076-0155 to account for regulatory revisions being made. The regulatory revisions delete current subpart F (non-agricultural leases), and distribute those information collection requirements into three separate subparts addressing residential leasing, business leasing, and wind and solar resource leasing. This results in a change in section numbers. In addition, the regulatory revisions add a few new information collection requirements, explained below. No change is being made to subpart B (agricultural leases) or its information collection requirements.


Terms of Clearance: None


1. Explain the circumstances that make the collection of information necessary.


This information collection is necessary for the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) to implement its leases and permits program for land held in trust or restricted status on behalf of individual Indians and tribes. Public Law 103-177, the “American Indian Agricultural Resource Management Act,” as amended, 25 U.S.C. 415, and 25 U.S.C. 2201 et seq. provide the statutory authority for this program. The regulations at 25 CFR 162, implement the statutory authority. The regulations address agricultural leases, residential leases, business leases, and wind and solar resource leases.


2. Indicate how, by whom, how frequently, and for what purpose the information is to be used. If the information collected will be disseminated to the public or used to support information that will be disseminated to the public, explain how the collection complies with all applicable Information Quality Guidelines.


BIA uses the information it collects to determine whether or not a lease may be approved or granted, the value of such lease(s), the appropriate compensation due to landowners, the amount of administrative fees that must be levied, and the penalties, if any, that should be assessed for violations of lease provisions.


Subpart A of Part 162 (§§ 162.001 through 162.029) provides general provisions. The subparts of Part 162 that have substantive provisions and most of the information collections are:

  • Subpart B (§§ 162.100 through 162.256), which addresses agricultural leases

  • Subpart C (§§ 162.301 through 162.374), which addresses residential leases

  • Subpart D (§§ 162.401 through 162.474), which addresses business leases

  • Subpart E (§§ 162.501 through 162.599), which addresses wind energy evaluation leases (WEELs) and wind and solar resource development (WSR) leases.


These four subparts have parallel information collection requirements, in most instances. Most of this information is collected at the time a lease document is proposed for BIA approval, except that rent payments must occur as established by lease, and penalties, notice of a cured violation, and notice of trespass is collected on an as needed basis. The following chart shows these information collection requirements and how BIA uses the information. The highlighted rows indicate new information collection requirements.


CFR Cite

Information Collection Requirement

BIA Use of Information

162.109
162.204

162.205

162.338(e)

162.438(e)

162.528(d)

162.570(e)

Provide notice of tribal leasing laws, regulations, exemptions

BIA uses this information to confirm that the lease action complies with tribal law. Usually, this information will be in the form of a tribal representative’s signature on a tribal lease. For individually-owned tracts, it may be in a separate document.

162.320(a), 321(a)

162.420(a), 421(a)

162,549(a), 162.550(a)

Request for fair market rental/valuation on tribal land

BIA uses this information to identify whether the tribe would prefer a valuation or fair market rental on its land.

162.320(b), 321(b)

162.420(b), 421(b)

162,549(b), 162.550(b)

Request for waiver of fair market rental/valuation for individually-owned land

BIA uses this information to determine whether it is appropriate to waive the requirement for a valuation or fair market rental.

162.324

162.424

162.553

Agreement to suspend direct pay.

BIA uses this information to determine whether to suspend direct pay.

162.371

162.471

162.596

Notification of good faith negotiations with holdover.

BIA uses this information in its determination whether to pursue action against a holdover for trespass.

162.009

162.207

162.242-244

162. 347, 351, 355, 359

162. 447, 451, 455, 459

162. 529, 534, 565, 572, 576, 580, 584

Submit lease, assignment, amendment, leasehold mortgage for approval

BIA uses this information to determine if the document should be approved.

162.024

162.213

162.338

162.438

162.528

162.563

Provide supporting documentation

BIA uses this information to determine if a lease should be approved in compliance with applicable laws.

162.004

Submit permits to BIA for file

BIA uses this information to determine whether lease actions will pose a conflict with existing permitted actions on a given property.

162.217

162.246

162.343

162.443

162.568

Submit lease for recording at LTRO

BIA uses this information to record the document in the official Indian land title of record at the Land Titles and Records Office (LTRO).

162.234

162.434

162.525

162.559

Provide a bond

BIA uses this information to determine whether the lessee has complied with bond requirements.

162.237

162.437

162.527

162.562

Provide information for acceptable insurance

BIA uses this information to determine whether the lessee has complied with insurance requirements.

162.241

Administrative fees

BIA uses these fees for the purposes established by regulation.

162.247

162.325, 329

162.425, 429

162.523, 551

Pay rent

BIA uses this information as trustee to ensure that Indian landowners are receiving compensation.

162.248
162.368

162.468

162.593

Pay penalties for late payment

BIA uses this information to ensure that the lessee complies with payment provisions.

162.009

162.212


Bidding on advertised lease

BIA uses this information to advertise for leases, where appropriate.

162.008(b)(2)

Use of a minor’s land

BIA uses this information to ensure that a person is authorized to act on an Indian landowner’s behalf.

162.251
162.366

162.466

162.591

Provide notice of curing violation

BIA uses this information to determine whether to pursue further enforcement action.

162.256

162.371

162.471

162.596

Respond to notice of trespass

BIA uses this information to determine whether to pursue further enforcement action.

162.025

162.113


Appealing decisions

BIA uses this information to ensure due process procedures are followed.



3. Describe whether, and to what extent, the collection of information involves the use of automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or other forms of information technology; e.g., permitting electronic submission of responses, and the basis for the decision for adopting this means of collection. Also describe any consideration of using information technology to reduce burden [and specifically how this collection meets GPEA requirements.].


To the extent respondents provide information in written form, rather than orally, BIA accepts the information via fax or e-mail to reduce burden on respondents.


4. Describe efforts to identify duplication.


This information collected under 25 CFR Part 162 is not duplicated in any other data collection. In keeping with the Paperwork Reduction Act and other statutory requirements, the information collected is the minimum needed for the intended purpose.


5. If the collection of information impacts small businesses or other small entities, describe the methods used to minimize burden.


BIA consulted with the tribes and through various tribal-member non-governmental organizations to determine what information collection was necessary to ensure the fair and equitable administration of leases on Indian lands. Through this consultation, the information collection burden has been minimized.


6. Describe the consequence to Federal program or policy activities if the collection is not conducted or is conducted less frequently, as well as any technical or legal obstacles to reducing burden.


The information collection burden cannot be reduced any further without the integrity of the leasing program being jeopardized. Information is collected, as needed, when tribes, tribal entities or individual Indians want to enter into leases for their respective lands. If the collection is not conducted, or is conducted less frequently, the BIA will not be able to properly administer and monitor leases on Indian lands.


7. Explain any special circumstances that would cause an information collection to be conducted in a manner:

* requiring respondents to report information to the agency more often than quarterly;

* requiring respondents to prepare a written response to a collection of information in fewer than 30 days after receipt of it;

* requiring respondents to submit more than an original and two copies of any document;

* requiring respondents to retain records, other than health, medical, government contract, grant-in-aid, or tax records, for more than three years;

* in connection with a statistical survey, that is not designed to produce valid and reliable results that can be generalized to the universe of study;

* requiring the use of a statistical data classification that has not been reviewed and approved by OMB;

* that includes a pledge of confidentiality that is not supported by authority established in statute or regulation, that is not supported by disclosure and data security policies that are consistent with the pledge, or which unnecessarily impedes sharing of data with other agencies for compatible confidential use; or

* requiring respondents to submit proprietary trade secrets, or other confidential information unless the agency can demonstrate that it has instituted procedures to protect the information's confidentiality to the extent permitted by law.


There are circumstances that require exceptions to 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2).

  • The regulations in §162.249, §§ 162.323 and 368, §§ 162.423 and 468, and §§ 162.552 and 593 require that rents and penalties for late payment of rents are due as specified by the lease. While each lease is specific and the regulations do not specify otherwise, there is a potential for responding to a notice of delinquency in less than 30 days.

  • In §162.251, § 162.366, § 162.466, and §162.591, the lessee is given 10 days from the receipt of the notice of lease violation to respond. This is an exception to the 30-day rule because time is of the essence in correcting violations of lease terms. A 30-day period to respond would endanger the integrity of the lease instrument and possibly do irreparable damage to the corpus of the trust resource. In a similar circumstance, a trespass violation requires the alleged trespasser to contact the BIA immediately to explain why a trespass violation notice is in error. Again, the circumstances of a trespass may be of such a serious nature that the 30-day response time would not be appropriate and, furthermore, would harm the corpus of the trust resource.


8. Provide the date and page number of publication in the Federal Register of the agency's notice, required by 5 CFR 1320.8(d), soliciting comments on the information collection prior to submission to OMB. Summarize public comments received in response to that notice (or in response to a PRA statement) and describe actions taken by the agency in response to these comments.


A notice requesting comment on revision of this information collection was published with the proposed rule on November 29, 2012 at 76 FR 73784. While we did not receive any comments specifically stating they were commenting on information collection requirements, a number of the submissions commenting on the rule generally mentioned regulatory provisions related to information collection requirements. We uploaded an excel spreadsheet that compiles these information collection-related comments into one document, since most of the submitted comments relate to the regulations generally. The original source documents are available at www.regulations.gov, or can be provided upon request. The comments and our responses are summarized here (and in the preamble to the final rule):


We received the following comments on section 162.027 and addressed them in the following ways:

  • Expressly include the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in paragraph (b), which states that BIA will adopt environmental assessments and environmental impact statements of other Federal agencies, etc. We incorporated this change by including documents prepared under NAHASDA (25 U.S.C. 4115).

  • Allow BIA to accept NEPA documentation from tribes, in addition to other Federal agencies. We added this requested language.

  • Allow the use of pre-existing NEPA documentation, when appropriate. BIA encourages the use of pre-existing NEPA documentation, when appropriate, but we did not explicitly add this to 162.027(b) since the statement allowing the use of NEPA documentation from other entities addresses this.


We also received the following comments on section 162.338 and addressed them in the following ways:

  • Revise the requirement for a statement from the appropriate tribal authority that the proposed use is in compliance with tribal law because some tribes do not currently examine proposed leases to determine whether the lease complies with land use regulations and, further, do not consider such examination to be within the scope of their responsibility. To accommodate situations where the tribe may not require such a statement, we added the qualifier “if required by the tribe.”

  • Delete the requirement for environmental and archeological reports because this requirement causes lessees to expend resources before even knowing if a lease will be approved. One tribal corporation also stated that the documents required may cause a potential lessee to spend several months conducting due diligence and negotiating a lease, with no certainty of BIA approval. We did not delete this requirement because environmental and archeological assessments are required by statute. To help provide some guidance in the BIA approval process, we added an “acknowledgment process” whereby the parties may submit to BIA a proposed lease while still preparing NEPA documentation or obtaining a valuation. BIA will respond within 10 days identifying any provisions that may justify BIA’s disapproval of a lease. Although this provision does not preclude BIA from identifying other issues at a later time in exceptional circumstances or disapproving the lease, it does provide some measure of certainty that the lease would be acceptable if NEPA, valuation, and any other issues BIA identifies are adequately addressed).

  • Requiring a restoration and reclamation plan:

    • Revise this requirement because this plan may not be appropriate, depending on the land use. We added that a restoration and reclamation plan is required only “if appropriate.”

    • Require only a preliminary plan. We did not incorporate this change because the plan will form the basis for setting the reclamation bond amount, if appropriate.

  • A tribe stated that the requirements for a restoration and reclamation plan, bonding, and a survey may be overwhelming to a new entrepreneur and may cause delays, making it difficult to establish sustainable small Indian-owned businesses on tribal land. BIA requires plans and bonding, where appropriate, to protect the Indian land and the interests of the Indian landowner. We have replaced the requirement for a survey with a requirement for a legal description of the land.

  • Delete the requirement for providing documentation of the lessee’s history with similar projects because many commercial lessees are single-project companies formed specifically for that project, with no previous development history, and, in the WSR context, many renewable energy companies are new and do not have such a history. We addressed this comment by replacing “history in” with “ability to.”

  • Explain BIA’s authority to question a lessee’s technical capability, especially given that the landowner investigates these factors in choosing a lessee. BIA will examine the technical capability only to determine if there is a compelling reason not to approve the lease, and will defer, to the maximum extent possible, to the Indian landowners’ determination that the lease is in its best interest.

  • Explain whether an aliquot part description based on a BLM survey will be acceptable without providing an additional survey. An aliquot part description will be acceptable; however, we have added flexibility to allow for other methods of obtaining a legal description.

  • Delete the requirement for a preliminary plan of development because such a plan may be premature when a tribe or TDHE is working with lending institutions to arrange financing for housing for public purposes. We removed this requirement in those cases in which the tribe certifies the lease is for housing for public purposes.

  • Delete the provision allowing BIA to request “any additional documentation… reasonably necessary for approval” or require BIA to provide a compelling reason for the additional documentation. We deleted this provision in an effort to better define what a complete lease proposal package includes.

  • Allow tribes to waive the mandatory provisions where inappropriate. Tribes can seek a waiver of one or more of these provisions under 25 CFR 1.2.

  • Revise the mandatory provisions to require compliance with all tribal business licensing, land use, permitting, and zoning laws. Compliance with these tribal laws is already required by section 162.014 (PR 162.013).

  • Allow the lessee and tribe the option to develop a cultural mitigation plan in case archeological resources are encountered. Tribes have the option of developing this plan under the NHPA. We did not revise the regulations to include this as it is outside the scope of this rulemaking.


We considered each of these comments and made changes to the regulations where appropriate, as described above. Because these changes do not change the overall estimates of how long it takes to collect and provide this information, the final rule does not make any change to the information collection burden estimates.


Describe efforts to consult with persons outside the agency to obtain their views on the availability of data, frequency of collection, the clarity of instructions and recordkeeping, disclosure, or reporting format (if any), and on the data elements to be recorded, disclosed, or reported. [Please list the names, titles, addresses, and phone numbers of persons contacted.]


BIA consulted with tribes on this rule, including the information collection requirements contained in the rule. In addition, BIA contacted Betsy Hayes-Gonzales, Lease Manager, Lamar Central Outdoor LLC, 77-583 El Duna Court, Suite J, Palm Desert, CA 92211, (760) 327-4500. Lamar Central Outdoor LLC has approximately 100 leases on trust land for which it obtains BIA approval. Ms. Hayes-Gonzales stated that the instructions for what must be submitted are clear, and that the information is available. Ms. Hayes-Gonzales indicated that the time it takes to collect the information varies widely, but a delay of up to several months occurs once the information has been submitted to BIA because the BIA must wait for an appraisal. No changes to the estimates for the information collection have been made as a result of these comments.


9. Explain any decision to provide any payment or gift to respondents, other than remuneration of contractors or grantees.


The respondents will not receive payments or gifts.


10. Describe any assurance of confidentiality provided to respondents and the basis for the assurance in statute, regulation, or agency policy.


There is no assurance of confidentiality provided to respondents concerning this information collection.


11. Provide additional justification for any questions of a sensitive nature, such as sexual behavior and attitudes, religious beliefs, and other matters that are commonly considered private.


There is a potential that some information collected will be of a sensitive nature. In §162.235, § 162.334, § 162.444, § 162.525, and § 162.559, the lessee may be required to post a surety bond to secure performance under the lease. This is necessary if the BIA is to properly administer the leasing program on tribal and individual Indian lands. If the lessee wants to obtain a loan, sensitive information will have to be submitted in order to decide if the loan can be approved.


12. Provide estimates of the hour burden of the collection of information.


The estimated total annual number of respondents is 127,110. The estimated total annual hour burden is 108,975 (rounded up from 108,974.5) hours. The estimated salary burden is $ 3,250,054.


CFR Cite

Description

Respondent Type

No. Respondents

Annual Responses

Burden Hours per Response

Total Annual Burden Hours

Salary Burden

162.109,
162.204,

162.205,

162.338(e)

162.438(e)

162.528(d)

162.570(e)

Provide notice of tribal leasing laws, regulations, exemptions

Tribal

500

500

0.5

250

$ 7,843

162.320(a), 321(a)

162.420(a), 421(a)

162,549(a), 162.550(a)

Request for fair market rental/valuation on tribal land

Tribal

50

50

0.5

25

$ 793

162.320(b), 321(b)

162.420(b), 421(b)

162,549(b), 162.550(b)

Request for waiver of fair market rental/valuation for individually-owned land

Individuals

5,000

5,000

0.5

2,500

$ 74,000

162.324

162.424

162.553

Agreement to suspend direct pay.

Individuals

20

20

0.5

10

$ 296


162.371

162.471

162.596

Notification of good faith negotiations with holdover.

Tribal

100

100

0.5

50

$ 1,586


Individuals

500

500

0.5

250

$ 7,400

162.009

162.207, 242-244

162, 347, 351, 355, 359

162. 447, 451, 455, 459

162. 529, 534, 565, 572, 576, 580, 584

Submit lease, assignment, amendment, leasehold mortgage for approval

Individuals

10,000

10,000

1

10,000

$ 296,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

1

2,500

$ 74,000

Tribal

2,000

2000

1

2,000

$ 63,420

162.024

162.213

162.338

162.438

162.528

162.563

Provide supporting documentation

Individuals

5,000

5,000

0.25

1,250

$ 37,000

Businesses

2,000

2,000

0.25

500

$ 14,800

Tribal

250

250

0.25

62.5

$ 1,982

162.004

Submit permits to BIA for file

Individuals

100

100

0.25

25

$ 740

Businesses

100

100

0.25

25

$ 740

Tribal

100

100

0.25

25

$ 793

162.217

162.246

162.343

162.443

162.568

Submit lease for recording

Individuals

10,000

10,000

0.5

5,000

$ 148,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

0.5

1,250

$ 37,000

Tribal

2,000

2000

0.5

1,000

$ 31.710

162.234

162.434

162.525

162.559

Provide a bond

Individuals

10,000

10,000

0.5

5,000

$ 148,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

0.5

1,250

$ 37,000

Tribal

2,000

2000

0.5

1,000

$ 31,710

162.237

162.437

162.527

162.562

Provide information for acceptable insurance

Individuals

10,000

10,000

0.25

2,500

$ 74,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

0.25

625

$ 18,500

Tribal

2,000

2000

0.25

500

$ 15,855

162.241

Administrative fees

Individuals

10,000

10,000

2

20,000

$ 592,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

2

5,000

$ 148,000

Tribal

2,000

2000

2

4,000

$ 126,840

162.247

162.325, 329

162.425, 429

162.523, 551

Pay rent

Individuals

10,000

10,000

0.25

2,500

$ 74,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

0.25

625

$ 18,500

Tribal

2,000

2000

0.25

500

$ 15,855

162.248
162.368

162.468

162.593

Pay penalties for late payment

Individuals

3,000

3,000

0.25

750

$ 22,200

Businesses

600

600

0.25

150

$ 4,440

Tribal

25

25

0.25

6

$ 198

162.009

162.212


Bidding on advertised lease

Individuals

10,000

10,000

1

10,000

$ 296,000

Businesses

2,500

2500

1

2,500

$ 74,000

Tribal

2,000

2000

1

2,000

$ 63,420

162.008(b)(2)

Use of a minor's land

All

7,250

7,250

3

21,750

$ 643,800

162.251
162.366

162.466

162.591

Provide notice of curing violation

Individuals

100

100

0.5

50

$ 1,480

Businesses

45

45

0.5

23

$ 666

162.256

162.371

162.471

162.596

Respond to notice of trespass

Individuals

100

100

0.5

50

$ 1,480

Businesses

45

45

0.5

23

$ 666

162.025

162.113


Appealing decisions

Individuals

400

400

2

800

$23,680

Businesses

225

225

2

450

$ 13,320

Tribal

100

100

2

200

$ 6,342


Total


127,110

127,110

 

108,975

$ 3,250,054


We are estimating salary using Bureau of Labor Statistics, EMPLOYER COSTS FOR EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION—December 2011 (released March 14, 2012), USDL 12-0450, Table 1, for all civilians, totaling $ 29.60/hour for individuals ($21.14/hour x 1.4 for benefits for individuals) and $31.71/hour for tribes ($21.14/hour x 1.5 for benefits for tribes). The 1.4 and 1.5 multipliers are also derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, EMPLOYER COSTS FOR EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION— December 2011 (released March 14, 2012), USDL 12-0450. See www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf.



13. Provide an estimate of the total annual [nonhour] cost burden to respondents or recordkeepers resulting from the collection of information.


The information collection will not require the purchase of any capital equipment nor create any start-up costs because no equipment purchase is contemplated. Any computers and software used to complete this information collection are part of the respondent’s customary and usual business practices.


The BIA collects fees for processing certain submitted documents as indicated under § 162.241 of the rule. The minimum fee is $20 and the maximum fee is $500. About half the time the fees are waived. The average fee collected is $250, which is collected about 7,252 times, for a total annual amount of $1,813,000.


14. Provide estimates of annualized costs to the Federal Government.


The estimated total annual number of responses reviewed by the federal government, the estimated total annual hour burden, and total salary cost to the federal government are shown in the table below. This hour burden includes careful checking of all records to ensure that none of the information has changed because of new liens, updated title, land records, possible probates.


CFR Cite

Description

Annual Responses

Federal Burden per Response

Total Federal Burden Hours

Federal Salary Cost @ $27.68/hr

162.109,
162.204,

162.205,

162.338(e)

162.438(e)

162.528(d)

162.570(e)

Review notice of leasing laws, regulations, exemptions

500

0.5

250

$ 6,920

162.320(a), 321(a)

162.420(a), 421(a)

162,549(a), 162.550(a)

Request for fair market rental/valuation on tribal land

50

0.5


25


$ 692

162.320(b), 321(b)

162.420(b), 421(b)

162,549(b), 162.550(b)

Request for waiver of fair market rental/valuation for individually-owned land

5,000

0.5

2,500

$ 69,200

162.324

162.424

162.553

Agreement to suspend direct pay.

20

0.25

5

$ 138

162.371

162.471

162.596

Notification of good faith negotiations with holdover.

100

0.25

25

$ 692

500

0.25

125

$ 3,460

162.009

162.207, 242-244

162, 347, 351, 355, 359

162. 447, 451, 455, 459

162. 529, 534, 565, 572, 576, 580, 584

Approving a lease

10,000

1

10,000

$ 276,800

2,500

1

2,500

$ 69,200

2,000

1

2,000

$ 55,360

162.024

162.213

162.338

162.438

162.528

162.563

Review supporting documentation

5,000

0.25

1,250

$ 34,600

2,000

0.25

500

$ 13,840

250

0.25

63

$ 1,744

162.004

Submit permits to BIA for file

100

0.25

25

$ 692

100

0.25

25

$ 692

100

0.25

25

$ 692

162.217

162.246

162.343

162.443

162.568

Recording a lease

10,000

0.5

5,000

$ 138,400

2,500

0.5

1,250

$ 34,600

2,000

0.5

1,000

$ 27,680

162.234

162.434

162.525

162.559

Processing bonds

10,000

0.5

5,000

$ 138,400

2,500

0.5

1,250

$ 34,600

2,000

0.5

1,000

$ 27,680

162.237

162.437

162.527

162.562

Reviewing insurance

10,000

0.25

2,500

$ 69,200

2,500

0.25

625

$ 17,300

2,000

0.25

500

$ 13,840

162.241

Collect administrative fees

10,000

2

20,000

$ 553,600

2,500

2

5,000

$ 138,400

2,000

2

4,000

$ 110,720

162.247

162.325, 329

162.425, 429

162.523, 551

Processing rent

10,000

0.25

2,500

$ 69,200

2,500

0.25

625

$ 17,300

2,000

0.25

500

$ 13,840

162.248
162.368

162.468

162.593

Processing penalties for late payment

3,000

0.25

750

$ 20,760

600

0.25

150

$ 4,152

25

0.25

6

$ 173

162.009

162.212


Reviewing bids for advertised leases

10,000

1

10,000

$ 276,800

2,500

1

2,500

$ 69,200

2,000

1

2,000

$ 55,360

162.008(b)(2)

Reviewing authority for use of a minor's land

7,250

3

21,750

$ 602,040

162.251
162.366

162.466

162.591

Curing violation

100

0.5

50

$ 1,384

45

0.5

23

$ 623

162.256

162.371

162.471

162.596

Review trespass response

100

0.5

50

$ 1,384

45

0.5

23

$ 623

162.025

162.113


Appealing decisions

400

0.5

200

$ 5,536

225

0.5

113

$ 3,114

100

0.5

50

$ 1,384


Total

127,110

 

107,733

$ 2,982,015


We used an average salary of $27.68 per hour ($18.45 x 1.5 for benefits), based on Salary Table 2012-GS Frozen at 2010 Levels. See, 2012 General Schedule (Base) – Hourly Rate (GS 7, Step 5) at www.opm.gov/oca/10tables/indexGS.asp The 1.5 multiplier for benefits is based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics, EMPLOYER COSTS FOR EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION— December 2011 (released March 14, 2012), USDL 12-0450. See www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf.



15. Explain the reasons for any program changes or adjustments.


Because changes are made to move non-agricultural leasing provisions to more specific subparts, some of the regulatory citations have changed. In addition, a few new information collections have been added, as highlighted in the table below. These new information collection requirements allow greater landowner control over Indian land, but require written documentation of landowner decisions and requests to allow BIA to exercise its oversight role in ensuring the trust property is protected.


Current CFR Cite


New CFR Cite

Information Collection Requirement

Explanation of Change

162.109
162.204

162.205

162.109,
162.204,

162.205,

162.338(e)

162.438(e)

162.528(d)

162.570(e)

Provide notice of tribal leasing laws, regulations, exemptions

No change. Previously required, but now listed in specific subparts.

---

162.320(a), 321(a)

162.420(a), 421(a)

162,549(a), 162.550(a)

Request for fair market rental/valuation on tribal land

New.

---

162.320(b), 321(b)

162.420(b), 421(b)

162,549(b), 162.550(b)

Request for waiver of fair market rental/valuation for individually-owned land

New.

---

162.324

162.424

162.553

Agreement to suspend direct pay.

New.

---

162.371

162.471

162.596

Notification of good faith negotiations with holdover.

New.

162.207

162.242-244

162.604(a)

162.610

162.009

162.207, 242-244

162, 347, 351, 355, 359

162. 447, 451, 455, 459

162. 529, 534, 565, 572, 576, 580, 584

Submit lease, assignment, amendment, leasehold mortgage for approval

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.213

162.604(a)

162.024

162.213

162.338

162.438

162.528

162.563

Provide supporting documentation

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

---

162.004

Submit permits to BIA for file

Permits must now be submitted to BIA for file.

162.217

162.246

162.217

162.246

162.343

162.443

162.568

Submit lease for recording

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.234

162.604(c)

162.234

162.434

162.525

162.559

Provide a bond

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.237

162.604(d)

162.237

162.437

162.527

162.562

Provide information for acceptable insurance

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.241

162.241

Administrative fees

No change.

162.247,

162.613

162.247

162.325, 329

162.425, 429

162.523, 551

Pay rent

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.248,
162.616

162.248
162.368

162.468

162.593

Pay penalties for late payment

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.212
162.606

162.009

162.212


Bidding on advertised lease

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.603

162.008(b)(2)

Use of minor’s land

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.251,
162.618

162.251
162.366

162.466

162.591

Provide notice of curing violation

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.256,

162.623

162.256

162.371

162.471

162.596

Respond to notice of trespass

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.

162.113

162.025

162.113


Appealing decisions

No change. Previously required, but now listed in separate subparts.


These new information collections increase the burden hours by 2,910 hours.



16. For collections of information whose results will be published, outline plans for tabulation and publication.


There is no intention to publish this information.


17. If seeking approval to not display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information collection, explain the reasons that display would be inappropriate.


We intend to display the expiration date with the OMB Control Number.


18. Certification.


We are not seeking any exceptions.

13


File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleSupporting Statement for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions
AuthorRuth Bajema
Last Modified Byelizabeth.appel
File Modified2012-07-27
File Created2012-07-27

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