Supporting Statement OMB 3060-1056 May 2015

Supporting Statement OMB 3060-1056 May 2015.doc

Application for an International Broadcast Station License

OMB: 3060-1056

Document [doc]
Download: doc | pdf

Application for an International Broadcast Station OMB Control No: 3060-1056

License July 2015


SUPPORTING STATEMENT


A. Justification:


1. The Federal Communications Commission ("Commission") is requesting that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approve an extension of OMB Control No. 3060-1056 (delegated authority collection) titled, "Application for an International Broadcast Station License” (FCC Form 421-IB).


The FCC Form 421-IB will be used by applicants to request licenses to operate international broadcast stations. The FCC Form 421-IB has not been developed yet due to a lack of budget resources and technical staff. After the form has been developed, it will be completed by international broadcasters in lieu of the "Application for an International, Experimental Television, Experimental Facsimile, or a Developmental Broadcast Station," (FCC Form 310).

(Note: The Commission received approval from the OMB for the FCC Form 310 under OMB Control No 3060-1035).


Currently, the FCC Form 310 is shared between the International Bureau and the Media Bureau. The International Bureau and Media Bureau have different information collection requirements. The FCC Form 310 is used by the Media Bureau to request experimental and developmental broadcast licenses and it is used by the International Bureau to request licenses to operate international broadcast stations.


We stated previously that the International Bureau plans to make the FCC Form 421-IB available to the public in the International Bureau Filing System (“MyIBFS”). However, the Commission has long-term plans to develop a new system called the Consolidated Licensing System (“CLS”) that will replace MyIBFS. Therefore, the FCC Form 421-IB will be housed in the CLS in the future rather than in MyIBFS.


The Commission put the FCC Form 421-IB under a separate OMB control number to facilitate the automation of the form in MyIBFS and any changes to the form in the future. The FCC Form 310 will continue to be used by the Media Bureau in connection with the authority to construct or make changes to an experimental broadcast license.

The FCC Form 421-IB does not affect individuals and, therefore, is not subject to the Privacy Act of 1974, as amended.


The Commission has authority for this collection pursuant to the rules set forth in Section 325(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended.


2. The information collected pursuant to the rules set forth in Section 325(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, and in 47 CFR Part 73, Subpart F, is used by the Commission to assign frequencies for use by international broadcast stations, to grant authority to operate such stations and to determine if interference or adverse propagation conditions exist that may impact the operation of such stations. If the Commission did not collect this information, it would not be in a position to effectively coordinate spectrum for international broadcasters or to act for entities in times of frequency interference or adverse propagation conditions. The orderly nature of the provision of international broadcast service would be in jeopardy without the Commission's involvement.


3. The FCC Form 421-IB has not been developed yet due to a lack of budget resources and technical staff. After it has been developed, it will be available to applicants in CLS.

The development of this new application is contingent upon the availability of budget funds. At present, zero (0) percent of this collection is automated.


4. These information collection requirements are not duplicated elsewhere in the Commission’s rules.


5. These information collection requirements do not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities. The total number of entities subject to the Commission’s international broadcast rules is approximately 10 and only a small percentage, if any, of the 10 could be categorized as a small entity. Also, the paperwork burdens accounted for in this collection are minimal.


6. If the Commission did not collect this information, it would not be in a position to effectively coordinate spectrum for international broadcasters or to act for entities in times of frequency interference or adverse propagation conditions. The orderly nature of the provision of international broadcast service would be in jeopardy without the Commission’s involvement.


7. This information collection is not conducted in a manner that is inconsistent with the guidelines in 5 C.F.R 1320.5.


8. A 60-day notice was published in the Federal Register (80 FR 27168) to solicit comments from the public on the extension of this collection. The 60-day comment period began on May 12, 2015 and ended on July 13, 2015. No comments were received from the public.


9. The Commission does not provide any payment or gift to respondents.


10. There is no need for confidentiality pertaining to the information collection requirements in this collection.


11. This collection does not contain questions of a sensitive nature.


12. An estimate of the annual hour burden for the 10 respondents to this collection is as follows:




FCC Form 421-IB


Number

of Responses


Frequency of Response & Hours

Number of Responses

X Hour/Response =

Burden Hours

Complete

Application


10

6 hours/response

On-occasion

60 hours

Total:


10

Annual

Responses


6

Hours

Per Response

60

Annual

Burden Hours


13. The estimated costs of $40,500 are summarized in the chart below.

FCC

Form 421-IB


Respondents


Hours


Costs


Total

Application Fees


10

N/A

$2,400

per application


$24,000

Outside

Legal Assistance

10

3 Hours

$300 per hour

$9,000

Outside Engineering Assistance

10

3 Hours


$250 per hour

$7,500

Total:




$40,500

Total

Cost


14. The estimated annualized costs to the Federal government is $21,939.20 and is calculated

as follows:


10 international broadcast license applications X 32 annual hours = 320 annual hours

(legal review 160 hours; engineering review 160 hours)


GS-855-15/Step 5 Electronics Engineer @ $68.56 per hour X 160 annual

hours = $10,969.60.


GS-905-15/Step 5 Attorney @ $68.56 per hour X 160 annual

hours = $10,969.60.


$10,969.60 + $10,969.60 (Engineer and Attorney) = $21,939.20

(rounded down to $21,939)


15. The Commission does not have any adjustments or program changes to this collection.


16. The results of this information collection requirement will not be published for statistical use.


17. We are seeking approval to not display the expiration date for OMB approval of this information collection. The Commission will use an edition date in lieu of the OMB expiration date. Additionally, the OMB expiration date and OMB control number are “displayed” in

47 CFR 0.408.


18. There are no exceptions to the certification statement.

Part B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods:


Not applicable. This information collection does not employ statistical methods.

4



File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleDraft/jstify
AuthorPREITZEL
Last Modified ByCathy Williams
File Modified2015-05-12
File Created2015-05-06

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy