Supporting Statement OMB 3060-1133 May 2015

Supporting Statement OMB 3060-1133 May 2015.doc

Application for Permit to Deliver Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations (FCC Form 308) - 47 CFR 73.3545 and 47 CFR 73.3580

OMB: 3060-1133

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Application for Permit to Deliver OMB Control No: 3060-1133 Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations July 2015

(FCC Form 308) – 47 C.F.R. 73.3545 and 73.3580



SUPPORTING STATEMENT


A. Justification:


  1. The Federal Communications Commission ("Commission") is requesting that the Office of

Management and Budget (OMB) approve the extension of OMB Control No. 3060-1133 titled, "Application for Permit to Deliver Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations FCC Form 308) – 47 C.F.R. 73.3545 and 73.3580."


Application for Permit to Deliver Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations (FCC Form 308)


Pursuant to 47 C.F.R. Section 73.3545, applicants use the FCC Form 308 to apply, under Section 325(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, for authority to locate, use, or maintain a studio in the United States for the purpose of supplying program material to a foreign radio or TV broadcast station whose signals are consistently received in the United States, or for extension of existing authority.


Section 73.3545 states that “application under section 325(c) of the Communications Act for authority to locate, use, or maintain a broadcast studio in connection with a foreign station consistently received in the United States, should be made on FCC Form 308, Application for Permit to Deliver Programs to Foreign Broadcast Stations.” An informal application may be used by applicants holding an AM, FM or TV broadcast station license or construction permit. Informal applications must, however, contain a description of the nature and character of the programming proposed, together with other information requested on Page 4 of Form 308.”


Almost all applicants submit the FCC Form 308 to the Commission. However, applicants have the option to submit an informal application to the Commission by letter in lieu of the form.

Currently, the FCC Form 308 is only available to the public in paper form. We anticipate that the Excel version of the FCC Form 308 will be made available to the public on the FCC Forms page of the FCC's website, http://www.fcc.gov/ in 2016. This change will benefit the public because the form will be readily available on the Commission’s website 24 hours a day/7 days a week. Furthermore, it saves time and postage costs for FCC staff because the form does not have to be mailed to the applicant and reduces the agency’s printing costs.


The form consists of the questions that are essential to obtain the legal and technical information in order to grant authority to U.S. broadcasters to supply program material to a foreign radio or TV broadcast station whose signals are consistently received in the U.S., or to extend the current authority.


FCC Form 308 applicants now have the option to file their applicants in the Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS) and make their payment of their application filing fees electronically in the FCC Fee Filer System.  Please note that this method is optional rather than mandatory. We believe that the availability of this option will substantially decrease or eliminate paper filings of FCC Form 308’s with the Commission. This option will save time for the applicant and Commission staff. There are no other changes to the information collection, including burden estimates.


The FCC Form 308 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 Section 325(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended.


2. The information collected pursuant to the rules set forth in 47 CFR Part 73, Subpart H, are applicable to all AM, FM, TV and Class A TV broadcast services, including both commercial and noncommercial stations. Subpart H consists of rules related to the licensing and operation of such stations such as the station license period; station main studio location; transferring a station; antenna structure, marking and lighting; station inspections by the FCC; broadcasting emergency information; and processing of international broadcast station applications. If this information were not collected from the respondents on the application form, the Commission would not be able to ensure that commercial and noncommercial radio and television broadcasters meet the legal and technical requirements essential to operate radio and TV stations and to prevent harmful interference among broadcast stations and other telecommunications facilities.


Broadcasters are subject to the local public notice provisions stated in Section 73.3580 of Subpart H. The Commission adopted Section 73.3580 in order to ensure that the public is informed of a station’s filing of an application or amendment by advertisements in local newspapers. The public is kept abreast of the stations’ existence in a local area or plans to locate in a specific local area through such advertisements. Section 73.3580 also requires that certain applications be maintained on file for public inspection at a stated address in the community in which the station is located or is proposed to be located. If the Commission did not collect this information from the respondents, the public would not be informed of the existence of new broadcast stations within their local communities. The availability of such information serves the public interest by ensuring that all members of the public are aware of the existence of various radio and TV broadcast services so that they can make informed choices as American consumers.


3. Currently, the FCC Form 308 is in paper form. The Excel version of the form will be made available to the public on the forms page of the FCC’s website. This form can be printed from the webpage and completed by hand. Approximately 20 percent of the information will be collected electronically in the future since the application will be retrieved from the Commission’s website. Within 5-7 years, the Commission plans to make the FCC Form 308 available to the public in an enhanced system that will house all FCC applications for various domestic and international telecommunications services, including but not limited to, licenses for broadcast, earth stations and satellite services.


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 broadcast rules is approximately 26 and only a small percentage, if any, of the 26 could be categorized as a small entity. Also, the paperwork burdens accounted for in this collection are minimal.


6. Without this collection of information, the Commission would not be able to ascertain whether the main studio owner in the US meets various legal requirements or the foreign broadcast facility, which receives and retransmits programming from the main studio in the U.S. meets various technical requirements that prevent harmful interference to other broadcast stations or telecommunications facilities.


7. This information collection does not contain any new information collection requirements that are not consistent with the general information collection guidelines in 5 C.F.R. § 1320.


8. A 60-day notice was published in the Federal Register (80 FR 28270) to solicit comments from the public on the extension of this collection. The 60-day comment period began on May 18, 2015 and ended on July 17, 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 burden hours for the 26 respondents is as follows:





FCC Form 308



Number of Responses



Frequency of Response & Hours

Number of Responses

X Hour/Response =

Burden Hours

47 CFR 73.3545

Complete FCC Form 308 for authority

to locate, use, or maintain a studio in the U.S.

22

1 hour/response

On-occasion



22 hours

47 CFR 73.3545

Informal application made by letter for authority to locate, use or maintain a studio in the U.S.

1

1 hour/response

On-occasion

1 hour

47 CFR 73.3545

Complete FCC Form 308 for Special Temporary Authority (STA)

3

2 hours/response

On-occasion

6 hours

47 CFR 73.3580

Local public notice provisions to inform public of stations’ existence in local area or plans to relocate in a specific local area

22

1 hour/response

On-occasion

22 hours

47 CFR 73.3580

Recordkeeping requirement – Certain applications must be maintained on file for public inspection at a stated address in the community in which the station is located or is proposed to be located

22

1 hour/ recordkeeping requirement/response

22 hours

Total:


70

Annual

Responses



1 - 2

Hours

Per Response

73

Annual

Burden Hours


The annual “in-house costs” to the applicants is calculated as follows: 73 annual burden hours

x $60/hour = $4,380.00 Therefore, the total annual “in-house cost” to the respondents for this collection of information is $4,380.00.


13. The cost estimates are as follows: (a) total capital and start-up cost component: $0.

and (b) total operation and maintenance and purchase of services component: $26,451.

A cost summary is provided below.

FCC Form 308


Responses

Hours

Costs

Total

Application Fees1


23

N/A

$95

per application


$2,185

Outside

Legal/Engineering

Assistance


26

2

Hours

per submission

$2752

per hour


$14,300

Newspaper notices pursuant to 47 CFR § 73.35803


22

N/A

$4534

$9,966

Total:





$26,451

Total Estimated Costs


14. The estimate of annualized cost to the Federal government is summarized in the chart below. As shown in the chart, the annualized costs to the Federal government are $19,468.88


Federal Government Staff

Number of Staff

Salary Per Hour


Annual Burden Hours


Annualized Costs

GS-12/Step 5 Telecommunications Support Specialist

1

$41.48

33

$1,368.84

GS-15/Step 5 Engineers

3

$68.56

66

$13,574.88

GS-15/Step 5 Attorney

1

$68.56

66

$4,524.96


5



$19,468.68


15. There are no program changes or adjustments in this information 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.

1 There is no application fee for filing a Special Temporary Authority (STA) with the Commission. However, applicants who choose to file an informal application with the Commission by letter pay the same fee as applicants who file the FCC Form 308 with the Commission.

2 The Commission calculated the hourly salary for the attorney as $300.00/hour and the engineer as $250/hour for an average figure of $275.00/hour.

3 This notice must be published in a local newspaper of general circulation at least twice a week for two consecutive weeks in a three-week period (4 publications).

4 This figure was calculated as follows: 113.25 publication fee/notice x 4 publications = $453 in publication costs.

6



File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleDraft/jstify
AuthorPREITZEL
Last Modified ByCathy Williams
File Modified2015-05-19
File Created2015-05-12

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