0623 Supporting Statement Part A 2014

0623 Supporting Statement Part A 2014.pdf

Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for Human Food and Cosmetics Manufactured from, Processed With, or Otherwise Containing, Material from Cattle

OMB: 0910-0623

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Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements for Human Food and Cosmetics
Manufactured From,
Processed With, or Otherwise Containing, Material from Cattle
OMB Control No. 0910-0623
SUPPORTING STATEMENT Part A
Terms of Clearance: None.
A. Justification
1. Circumstances Making the Collection of Information Necessary
FDA’s regulations in §§ 189.5 and 700.27 (21 CFR 189.5 and 700.27) set forth bovine
spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-related restrictions applicable to FDA-regulated human food
and cosmetics. The regulations designate certain materials from cattle as “prohibited cattle
materials,” including specified risk materials (SRMs), the small intestine of cattle not otherwise
excluded from being a prohibited cattle material, material from nonambulatory disabled cattle,
and mechanically separated (MS) beef. Sections 189.5(c) and 700.27(c) set forth the
requirements for recordkeeping and records access for FDA-regulated human food, including
dietary supplements, and cosmetics manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing
material derived from cattle. FDA issued these recordkeeping regulations under the adulteration
provisions in sections 402(a)(2)(C), (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), 601(c), and 701(a) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the FD&C Act) (21 U.S.C. 342(a)(2)(C), (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), 361(c),
and 371(a)). Under section 701(a) of the FD&C Act, FDA is authorized to issue regulations for
the FD&C Act’s efficient enforcement. With regard to records concerning imported human food
and cosmetics, FDA relied on its authority under sections 701(b) and 801(a) of the FD&C Act
(21 U.S.C. 371(b) and 381(a)). Section 801(a) of the FD&C Act provides requirements with
regard to imported human food and cosmetics and provides for refusal of admission of human
food and cosmetics that appear to be adulterated into the United States. Section 701(b) of the
FD&C Act authorizes the Secretaries of Treasury and Health and Human Services to jointly
prescribe regulations for the efficient enforcement of section 801 of the FD&C Act.
These requirements are necessary because once materials are separated from an animal it may
not be possible, without records, to know the following: (1) Whether cattle material may contain
SRMs (SRMs include brain, skull, eyes, trigeminal ganglia, spinal cord, vertebral column
(excluding the vertebrae of the tail, the transverse processes of the thoracic and lumbar
vertebrae and the wings of the sacrum), and dorsal root ganglia from animals less than 30
months old and tonsils and distal ileum of the small intestine from all animals of all ages); (2)
whether the source animal for cattle material was inspected and passed; (3) whether the source
animal for cattle material was nonambulatory disabled or MS beef; and (4) whether tallow in
human food or cosmetics contain less than 0.15 percent insoluble impurities.
FDA is requesting OMB approval of the following information collection provisions:

21 CFR 189.5(c), 700.27(c) – Recordkeeping
FDA’s regulations in §§ 189.5(c) and 700.27(c) require that manufacturers and processors of
human food and cosmetics that are manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise contain,
material from cattle establish and maintain records sufficient to demonstrate that the human food
or cosmetic is not manufactured from, processed with, or does not otherwise contain, prohibited
cattle materials. These records must be retained for 2 years at the manufacturing or processing
establishment or at a reasonably accessible location. Maintenance of electronic records is
acceptable and electronic records are considered to be reasonably accessible if they are
accessible from an onsite location. Records required by these sections and existing records
relevant to compliance with these sections must be available to FDA for inspection and copying.
Existing records may be used if they contain all of the required information and are retained for
the required time period.
21 CFR 189.5(c)(6), 700.27(c)(6) -- Reporting
Because we do not easily have access to records maintained at foreign establishments, FDA
regulations in §§ 189.5(c)(6) and 700.27(c)(6), respectively, require that when filing for entry
with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the importer of record of a human food or cosmetic
manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing, cattle material must affirm that the
human food or cosmetic was manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise contains, cattle
material and must affirm that the human food or cosmetic was manufactured in accordance with
the applicable requirements of §§ 189.5 or 700.27. In addition, if a human food or cosmetic is
manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise contains, cattle material, then the importer of
record must, if requested, provide within 5 business days records sufficient to demonstrate that
the human food or cosmetic is not manufactured from, processed with, or does not otherwise
contain, prohibited cattle material.
21 CFR 189.5(e), 700.27(e) -- Reporting
Request for designation -- Requires that countries seeking to be designated under §§ 189.5(e)
and 700.27(e) send a written request to the Director, Center for Food Safety and Applied
Nutrition (CFSAN).
21 CFR 189.5(e), 700.27(e) -- Reporting
Response to request for review -- Requires that countries that have been designated under §§
189.5(e) and 700.27(e) respond to periodic requests by FDA.
2. Purpose and Use of the Information Collection
FDA’s regulations in §§ 189.5(c) and 700.27(c) require manufacturers and processors of human
food and cosmetics manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing material from
cattle establish and maintain records sufficient to demonstrate that the human food or cosmetics
are not manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing prohibited cattle materials.
These records must be retained for 2 years at the manufacturing or processing establishment or at
a reasonably accessible location. Maintenance of electronic records is acceptable, and electronic
records are considered to be reasonably accessible if they are accessible from an onsite location.
Records required by these sections and existing records relevant to compliance with these

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sections must be available to FDA for inspection and copying. Existing records may be used if
they contain all of the required information and are retained for the required time period.
Because FDA does not easily have access to records maintained at foreign establishments, FDA
regulations in §§ 189.5(c)(6) and 700.27(c)(6), respectively, require that when filing for entry
with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the importer of record of human food or cosmetics
manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing cattle material must affirm that the
human food or cosmetics were manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing
cattle material and must affirm that the human food or cosmetics were manufactured in
accordance with the applicable requirements of §§ 189.5 or 700.27. In addition, if human food
or cosmetics were manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing cattle material,
the importer of record must provide within 5 business days records sufficient to demonstrate that
the human food or cosmetics were not manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise
containing prohibited cattle material, if requested.
As noted above, §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e) provide that a country seeking to be so designated
must send a written request to the Director, Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
(CFSAN). The information the country is required to submit includes information about a
country’s BSE case history, risk factors, measures to prevent the introduction and transmission
of BSE, and other information relevant to determining whether specified risk materials, the small
intestine of cattle not otherwise excluded from being a prohibited cattle material, material from
nonambulatory disabled cattle, or MS (Beef) from the country seeking designation should be
considered prohibited cattle materials. FDA uses the information to determine whether to grant a
request for designation, and whether to impose conditions if a request is granted.
As noted above, §§ 189.5 and 700.27 further state that countries that have been designated under
§§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e) will be subject to future review by FDA to determine whether
designation remains appropriate. As part of this process, FDA may ask designated countries to
confirm that their BSE situation and the information submitted by them in support of their
original application remain unchanged. FDA may revoke a country’s designation if FDA
determines that it is no longer appropriate. Therefore, designated countries may respond to
periodic requests by FDA by submitting information to confirm that their designation remains
appropriate. FDA uses the information to ensure that their designation remains appropriate.
Description of Respondents: Respondents to this information collection include manufacturers,
processors, and importers of FDA-regulated human food, including dietary supplements, and
cosmetics manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing material derived from
cattle, as well as, with regard to §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e), foreign governments seeking
designation under those regulations.
3. Use of Improved Information Technology and Burden Reduction
Sections 189.5(c) and 700.27(c) do not specifically prescribe the use of automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological techniques or other forms of information technology as
necessary for use by firms. Companies are free to use whatever forms of information technology
may best assist them in their recordkeeping. Records on bovine materials and ingredients subject

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to the regulations may be kept in paper or electronic form, as long as they are easily accessible
by FDA should the need arise. As noted above, maintenance of electronic records is acceptable
and electronic records are considered to be reasonably accessible if they are accessible from an
onsite location.
For §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e), FDA does not receive these requests electronically at this time.
The agency estimates that none of the requests for designation (0%) will be submitted
electronically in the next three years.
4. Efforts to Identify Duplication and Use of Similar Information
There is no duplication of reporting or recordkeeping requirements. FDA and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) agencies, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) and the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), have different regulatory
responsibilities with respect to preventing BSE and ensuring food safety. FDA consults with
APHIS and FSIS as part of its evaluation process. Further, FDA takes into consideration
available risk assessments of other competent authorities in conducting its evaluation. Though it
is not required, a previous BSE evaluation by USDA, or by another country or another
competent authority, will be helpful to FDA in its review and may decrease the time needed for
FDA to make a determination.
5. Impact on Small Businesses or Other Small Entities
For §§ 189.5(c) and 700.27(c), FDA estimates that approximately ten percent (10%) of the
respondents are small businesses. These regulations does not significantly impact small
businesses as the records FDA suggests that manufacturers and processors keep are typically
already kept by businesses for tax and other purposes. The same information is requested from
large and small firms and is the minimal amount needed. There is no special burden placed on
small businesses by these information collection provisions. The reporting and recordkeeping
provisions are applicable to all businesses including small businesses. However, FDA aids small
businesses in dealing with the requirements of the FD&C Act through the agency’s Regional
Small Business Representatives and through the scientific and administrative staffs within the
agency.
For §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e), none of the respondents are small businesses; they are foreign
governments.
6. Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently
FDA requires that records on each shipment of bovine ingredients used in food, dietary
supplement, and cosmetic production be kept for two years. Information is necessary on each
shipment of bovine materials to verify that source animals were under 30 months of age, were
ambulatory, and passed USDA inspection. There is no apparent way to minimize the burden of
collecting this information on each shipment.

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Frequency of recordkeeping varies for different processors. FDA does not “collect” these
records as a routine matter. Records are maintained on file at each processing facility and will be
examined there periodically by the FDA.
Delayed or less frequent recordkeeping or reporting would lessen the effectiveness of the
regulations to prevent use of prohibited cattle materials in human food and cosmetics. There is
currently no validated ante-mortem test to reliably detect the presence of the BSE agent or the
presence of prohibited cattle material in human food and cosmetics. Once cattle material such as
brain or spinal cord is separated from the source animal, it may not be possible to determine the
age of the animal from which the material came without records and, therefore, whether the
material is specified risk material. In addition, without records, it may not be possible to
determine whether a product contains material from cattle that were not inspected and passed for
human consumption. Also, a product might contain MS beef without its presence being evident
from the appearance of the product.
Because there is currently no way to test reliably for the presence of the BSE agent or for the
presence of prohibited cattle materials, manufacturers and processors of human food and
cosmetics must depend on records from their suppliers of cattle materials to ensure that their
source material does not contain prohibited cattle materials. Without records documenting the
absence of prohibited cattle materials in source materials, manufacturers and processors of
human food and cosmetics cannot know whether they are adulterating their products by
including prohibited cattle materials. Therefore, a failure of manufacturers and processors to
establish and maintain such records results in human food and cosmetics being prepared under
insanitary conditions whereby they may have been rendered injurious to health. Furthermore,
without adequate records, FDA cannot know whether manufacturers and processors of human
food have complied with the prohibitions against use of prohibited cattle materials. Therefore,
the recordkeeping requirements are necessary for the efficient enforcement of the IFR. Failure to
comply with the recordkeeping requirements would render the affected human food and
cosmetics adulterated under sections 402(a)(4) and 601(a) of the FD&C Act, respectively.
Data collection occurs occasionally for §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e). Only those countries seeking
the designation provided for in §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e) will submit information to FDA. If the
collection is not conducted, the designation will not be available to interested countries.
7. Special Circumstances Relating to the Guidelines of 5 CFR 1320.5
There are no special circumstances associated with this collection of information.
8. Comments in Response to the Federal Register Notice and Efforts to Consult Outside the
Agency
In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.8(d), FDA published a 60-day notice for public comment in the
Federal Register of August 1, 2014 (79 FR 44785). FDA received one comment in response to
the notice. The comment was outside the scope of the four collection of information topics on
which the notice solicits comments and, thus, will not be addressed here.

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9. Explanation of Any Payment or Gift to Respondents
FDA does not provide any payments or gifts to respondents.
10. Assurance of Confidentiality Provided to Respondents
Company records may be consulted during FDA plant inspections. Records that the agency may
copy or take possession of will be treated as records that are exempt from release under the
provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to the maximum extent permitted by that
statute and FDA regulations. Confidential commercial information is protected from disclosure
under FOIA under sections 552(a) and (b) (5 U.S.C. 552(a) and (b)), and by part 20 of the
agency’s regulations (21 CFR part 20). To the extent 21 CFR 20.64 applies, FDA will honor the
confidentiality of any data in investigation records compiled for law enforcement purposes.
11. Justification for Sensitive Questions
This information collection does not involve questions that are of a personally sensitive nature.
12. Estimates of Annualized Burden Hours and Costs
12 a. Annualized Hour Burden Estimate
FDA estimates the burden for this information collection as follows:
21 CFR Section

189.5(c)(6) and 700.27(c)(6)

Table 1.--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden1
No. of
No. of
Total
Respondents
Responses per
Annual
Respondent
Responses
54,825
1
54,825

Average
Burden per
Response
.033
(2 minutes)
80

Total
Hours
1,809

§§ 189.5 and 700.27- request
1
1
1
80
for designation
§§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e)1
1
1
26
26
response to request for review
by FDA
Total
1,915
1
There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.

Except where otherwise noted, this estimate is based on FDA’s estimate of the number of
facilities affected by the final rule entitled, “Recordkeeping Requirements for Human Food and
Cosmetics Manufactured From, Processed With, or Otherwise Containing Material From
Cattle,” published in the Federal Register of October 11, 2006 (71 FR 59653).
Reporting
FDA’s regulations in §§ 189.5(c)(6) and 700.27(c)(6) impose a reporting burden on importers of
human food and cosmetics manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise containing cattle
material. Importers of these products must affirm that the human food or cosmetics are not

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manufactured from, processed with, or otherwise contain prohibited cattle materials and must
affirm that the human food or cosmetics were manufactured in accordance with the applicable
requirements of §§ 189.5 or 700.27. The affirmation is made by the importer of record to FDA
through FDA’s Operational and Administrative System for Import Support. Affirmation by
importers is expected to take approximately 2 minutes per entry line. Table 1 shows 54,825 lines
of human food and cosmetics likely to contain cattle materials are imported annually. The
reporting burden of affirming whether import entry lines contain cattle-derived materials is
estimated to take 1,809 hours annually (54,825 lines multiplied by 2 minutes per line).
FDA’s estimate of the reporting burden for designation under §§ 189.5 and 700.27 is based on its
experience and the average number of requests for designation received in the past 3 years. In
the last 3 years, FDA has not received any requests for designation. Thus, FDA estimates that
one or fewer will be received annually in the future. Based on this experience, FDA estimates
the annual number of new requests for designation will be one. FDA estimates that preparing the
information required by §§ 189.5 and 700.27 and submitting it to FDA in the form of a written
request to the CFSAN Director will require a burden of approximately 80 hours per request.
Thus, the burden for new requests for designation is estimated to be 80 hours annually, as shown
in Table 1, row 2.
Under §§ 189.5(e) and 700.27(e), designated countries are subject to future review by FDA and
may respond to periodic FDA requests by submitting information to confirm their designations
remain appropriate. In the last 3 years, FDA has not requested any reviews. Thus, FDA
estimates that one or fewer will occur annually in the future. FDA estimates that the designated
country undergoing a review in the future will need one-third of the time it took preparing its
request for designation to respond to FDA’s request for review, or 26 hours (80 hours × 0.33=
26.4 hours, rounded to 26). The annual burden for reviews is estimated to be 26 hours, as shown
in Table 1, row 3. The total reporting burden for this information collection is estimated to be
1,915 hours annually.
21 CFR
§§189.5(c) and
700.27(c)
Domestic
Facilities
Foreign Facilities

Table 2.--Estimated Annual Recordkeeping Burden1
No. of
No. of Records
Total Annual
Average
Recordkeepers
per Recordkeeper
Records
Burden per
Recordkeeper
697

52

36,244

916

52

47,632

Total
1

0.25
(15 minutes)
0.25
(15 minutes)

Total
Hours
9,061
11,908
20,969

There are no capital or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.

Recordkeeping
FDA estimates that there are 697 domestic facility relationships and 916 foreign facility
relationships consisting of the following facilities: An input supplier of cattle-derived materials
that requires records (the upstream facility) and a purchaser of cattle-derived materials requiring
documentation (this may be a human food or cosmetics manufacturer or processor). The
recordkeeping burden of FDA’s regulations in §§ 189.5(c) and 700.27(c) is the burden of

7

sending, verifying, and storing documents regarding shipments of cattle material that is to be
used in human food and cosmetics.
In this estimate of the recordkeeping burden, FDA treats these recordkeeping activities as shared
activities between the upstream and downstream facilities. It is in the best interests of both
facilities in the relationship to share the burden necessary to comply with the regulations;
therefore, FDA estimates the time burden of developing these records as a joint task between the
two facilities. Thus, FDA estimates that this recordkeeping burden will be about 15 minutes per
week, or 13 hours per year, and FDA assumes that the recordkeeping burden will be shared
between 2 entities (i.e., the ingredient supplier and the manufacturer of finished products).
Therefore, the total recordkeeping burden for domestic facilities is estimated to be 9,061 hours
(13 hours multiplied by 697), and the total recordkeeping burden for foreign facilities is
estimated to be 11,908 hours (13 hours multiplied by 916), as shown in Table 2.
12 b. Annualized Cost Burden Estimate
FDA estimates the hour burden costs to respondents choosing to submit a request for designation
to be $8,147.20. FDA estimates that the average hourly wage for the employee preparing and
submitting the request for designation would be equivalent to a GS-14/Step-1 rate for the
Washington-Baltimore locality pay area for the year 2014, approximately $50.92/hour.
Doubling this wage to account for overhead costs, FDA estimates the average hourly cost to
respondents to be $101.84/hour. Thus, the overall estimated cost incurred by the respondents is
$8,147.20 (80 burden hours x $101.84/hr = $8,147.20).
FDA estimates the hour burden costs to countries that respond to requests for review by FDA to
be $2,647.84. FDA estimates that the average hourly wage for the employee preparing the
response would be equivalent to a GS-14/Step-1 rate for the Washington-Baltimore locality pay
area for the year 2014, approximately $50.92/hour. Doubling this wage to account for overhead
costs, FDA estimates the average hourly cost to respondents to be $101.84/hour. Thus, the
overall estimated cost incurred by the respondents is $2,647.84 (26 burden hours x $101.84/hr =
$2,647.84).
FDA estimates the recordkeeping and reporting hour burden costs to be approximately
$2,319,711.52 (Table 1, row 1 and Table 2). This estimate is based upon an employee making a
salary equivalent to a GS-14/Step 1 rate for the Washington-Baltimore locality pay area for the
year 2014, approximately $50.92/hour. Doubling this wage to account for overhead costs, FDA
estimates the average hourly cost to respondents to be $101.84/hour. Thus, the overall estimated
cost incurred by the respondents is $2,319,711.52 (22,778 burden hours x $101.84/hour =
$2,319,711.52).
13. Estimates of Other Total Annual Costs to Respondents and/or Recordkeepers/Capital Costs
There are no capital, start-up, operating, or maintenance costs associated with this collection.

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14. Annualized Cost to the Federal Government
It will take FDA approximately 80 hours to review a request for designation. FDA estimates the
hourly cost for review and evaluation to be $50.92/hour, the GS-14/Step-1 rate for the
Washington-Baltimore locality pay area for the year 2014. Doubling this wage to account for
overhead costs, FDA estimates the average hourly cost to be $101.84/hour. Thus, FDA estimates
the cost to the Federal government to be $8,147.20 per review (80 hours x $101.84/hour =
$8,147.20). We estimate that one request for designation will be submitted to FDA annually.
Thus, the total annualized cost to the Federal government is $8,147.20.
It will take FDA approximately 26 hours to review a successful designation. FDA estimates the
hourly cost for this review to be $50.92/hour, the GS-14/Step-1 rate for the WashingtonBaltimore locality pay area for the year 2014. Doubling this wage to account for overhead costs,
FDA estimates the average hourly cost to be $101.84/hour. Thus, FDA estimates the cost to the
Federal government to be $2,647.84 per review (26 hours x $101.84/hour = $2,647.84).
Assuming one review of a successful designation occurs annually, the total annualized cost to the
Federal government is $2,647.84.
Thus, the combined total annualized cost to the Federal government for BSE designation and
review is $10,795.04 ($8,147.20 [review request for designation] ) + ($2,647.84 [review
successful designation]).
FDA’s review of retained records would generally occur as part of its routine or for cause
establishment inspection activities. FDA would devote approximately 5 hours per inspection to
the inspection of records. FDA estimates the annualized cost to the Federal government for the
review of records retained by a firm to be $430.90 per review. In this calculation of cost, FDA
estimates the hourly cost for review and evaluation to be $43.09 per hour, the GS-13/Step-1 rate
for the Washington-Baltimore locality pay area for the year 2014. Five hours multiplied by
$43.09 per hour equals $215.45. To account for overhead, this cost is increased by 100 percent,
making the total annualized cost to the Federal government $430.90 per review. There are 697
domestic facilities. If each was inspected annually, FDA estimates that the total annual cost to
the Federal government would be $300,337.30.
15. Explanation for Program Changes or Adjustments
This collection is being revised. Both the number of annual responses and the number of burden
hours have increased. These increases reflect the incorporation of an expired collection,
previously approved under OMB Control No. 0910-0597, that supports regulatory requirements
the agency promulgated previously. Specifically the number of annual responses has increased
by 138,701 and the annual hour burden by 22,778 which the agency attributes to the inclusion of
the reporting and recordkeeping requirements previously attributed to collection 0910-0597.
16. Plans for Tabulation and Publication and Project Time Schedule
We are not publishing any information received as a result of this information collection.

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17. Reason(s) Display of OMB Expiration Date is Inappropriate
We are not seeking approval to not display the expiration date for OMB approval of the
information collection.
18. Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submissions
There are no exceptions to the certification.

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