[Federal Register: October 1, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 189)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 55712-55717]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01oc07-20]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
21 CFR Part 1314
[Docket No. DEA-298P]
RIN 1117-AB13
Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005: Fee for Self-
Certification for Regulated Sellers of Scheduled Listed Chemical
Products
AGENCY: Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Department of Justice.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: As part of its implementation of the Combat Methamphetamine
Epidemic Act of 2005 (CMEA), ``regulated sellers'' or persons and
entities selling scheduled listed chemical products at retail locations
are required to self-certify with DEA relative to certain requirements
of the CMEA. The Diversion Control Program is required to recover the
full costs of the certification process, under the Controlled
Substances Act; as such the DEA is proposing to charge regulated
sellers, who are not DEA registrants, a fee for self-certification.
DATES: Written comments must be postmarked, and electronic comments
must be sent, on or before November 30, 2007.
ADDRESSES: To ensure proper handling of comments, please reference
``Docket No. DEA-298'' on all written and electronic correspondence.
Written comments being sent via regular mail should be sent to the
Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Diversion Control, Drug
Enforcement Administration, Washington, DC 20537, Attention: DEA
Federal Register Representative/ODL. Written comments sent via express
mail should be sent to DEA Headquarters, Attention: DEA Federal
Register Representative/ODL, 2401 Jefferson-Davis Highway, Alexandria,
VA 22301. Comments may be directly sent to DEA electronically by
sending an electronic message to dea.diversion.policy@usdoj.gov.
Comments may also be sent electronically through http://www.regulations.gov
using the electronic comment form provided on that
site. An electronic copy of this document is also available at the
http://www.regulations.gov Web site. DEA will accept attachments to
electronic comments in Microsoft Word, WordPerfect, Adobe PDF, or Excel
file formats only. DEA will not accept any file formats other than
those specifically listed here.
Posting of Public Comments: Please note that all comments received
are considered part of the public record and made available for public
inspection online at http://www.regulations.gov and in the DEA's public
docket. Such information includes personal identifying information
(such as your name, address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by the
commenter.
If you want to submit personal identifying information (such as
your name, address, etc.) as part of your comment, but do not want it
to be posted online or made available in the public docket, you must
include the phrase ``PERSONAL IDENTIFYING INFORMATION'' in the first
paragraph of your comment. You must also place all the personal
identifying information you do not want posted online or made available
in the public docket in the first paragraph of your comment and
identify what information you want redacted.
If you want to submit confidential business information as part of
your comment, but do not want it to be posted online or made available
in the public docket, you must include the phrase ``CONFIDENTIAL
BUSINESS INFORMATION'' in the first paragraph of your comment. You must
also prominently identify confidential business information to be
redacted within the comment. If a comment has so much confidential
business information that it cannot be effectively redacted, all or
part of that comment may not be posted online or made available in the
public docket.
Personal identifying information and confidential business
information identified and located as set forth above will be redacted
and posted online and placed in the DEA's public docket file. If you
wish to inspect the agency's public docket file in person by
appointment, please see the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT paragraph.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark W. Caverly, Chief, Liaison and
Policy Section, Office of Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration, Washington, DC 20537; Telephone (202) 307-7297.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 55713]]
Background
DEA implements the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control
Act of 1970, often referred to as the Controlled Substances Act (CSA)
and the Controlled Substances Import and Export Act (21 U.S.C. 801-
971), as amended. DEA publishes the implementing regulations for these
statutes in Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Parts
1300 to 1399. These regulations are designed to ensure that there is a
sufficient supply of controlled substances for legitimate medical,
scientific, research, and industrial purposes and to deter the
diversion of controlled substances to illegal purposes. The CSA
mandates that DEA establish a closed system of control for
manufacturing, distributing, and dispensing controlled substances. Any
person who manufactures, distributes, dispenses, imports, exports, or
conducts research or chemical analysis with controlled substances must
register with DEA (unless exempt) and comply with the applicable
requirements for the activity. The CSA as amended also requires DEA to
regulate the manufacture and distribution of chemicals that may be used
to manufacture controlled substances illegally. Listed chemicals that
are classified as List I chemicals are important to the manufacture of
controlled substances. Those classified as List II chemicals may be
used to manufacture controlled substances.
On March 9, 2006, the President signed the Combat Methamphetamine
Epidemic Act of 2005 (CMEA), which is Title VII of the USA PATRIOT
Improvement and Reauthorization Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-177). The CMEA
amends the CSA to change the regulations for selling nonprescription
products that contain ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, phenylpropanolamine,
their salts, optical isomers, and salts of optical isomers. DEA
implemented the retail provisions of CMEA through an Interim Rule
entitled ``Retail Sales of Scheduled Listed Chemical Products; Self-
Certification of Regulated Sellers of Scheduled Listed Chemical
Products'' published in the Federal Register September 26, 2006 (71 FR
56008, corrected at 71 FR 60609, October 13, 2006). In that Interim
Rule, DEA extensively discussed its intent to publish this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, including the various costs to be included in the
certification fee and the methodology for calculating fees (see
specifically 71 FR 56013-56015, corrected at 71 FR 60609, October 13,
2006).
Section 886a of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) defines the
Diversion Control Program as ``the controlled substance and chemical
diversion control activities of the Drug Enforcement Administration,''
which are further defined as the ``activities related to the
registration and control of the manufacture, distribution and
dispensing, importation and exportation of controlled substances and
listed chemicals.'' The CSA also states that reimbursements from the
Diversion Control Fee Account `` * * * shall be made without
distinguishing between expenses related to controlled substances
activities and expenses related to chemical activities.'' [Pub. L. 108-
447 Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2005]
In addition, Section 111(b)(3) of the Departments of Commerce,
Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations
Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 102-395), codified at 21 U.S.C. 886a(3), requires
that ``fees charged by the Drug Enforcement Administration under its
diversion control program shall be set at a level that ensures the
recovery of the full costs of operating the various aspects of that
program.''
The CMEA of 2005 implements new requirements governing the sale of
scheduled listed chemical products, defined as nonprescription drug
products containing ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine.
As part of these requirements, CMEA requires self-certification for all
regulated sellers of scheduled listed chemical products, defining
regulated seller to mean a retail distributor (including a pharmacy and
mobile retail vendors). The CMEA requires that on and after September
30, 2006, a regulated seller or any of its employees must not sell
scheduled listed chemical products unless it has self-certified to DEA,
through DEA's Web site. The certification requires the regulated seller
to confirm the following:
Its employees who will be engaged in the sale of scheduled
listed chemical products have undergone training regarding provisions
of CMEA.
Records of the training are maintained.
Daily sales to individuals do not exceed 3.6 grams of
ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine. (Mobile retail
vendors must also confirm that sales to an individual in a 30-day
period do not exceed 7.5 grams.)
Nonliquid forms are packaged as required.
Scheduled listed chemical products are stored behind the
counter or in a locked cabinet.
A written or electronic logbook containing the required
information on sales of these products is maintained.
The logbook information will be disclosed only to federal,
State, or local law enforcement and only to ensure compliance with
Title 21 of the United States Code or to facilitate a product recall.
The seller must train its employees and certify before either the
seller or individual employees may sell scheduled listed chemical
products. The certification is subject to the provisions of 18 U.S.C.
1001. A regulated seller who knowingly or willfully certifies to facts
that are not true is subject to fines and imprisonment.
The CMEA also exempts retail distributors from registration
requirements under the CSA; however, in practice, retail distributors
have not previously registered with DEA because they limited their
sales to below-threshold quantities and to products sold in blister
packs.
Self-Certification Fee
DEA considers the self-certification requirements of the CMEA to
fall within the legal definition of control as governed by Section 886a
of the CSA (see above). Accordingly, these activities fall under the
general operation of the Diversion Control Program and are subject to
the requirements of the Appropriations Act of 1993 that mandates that
fees charged shall be set at a level that ensures the recovery of the
full costs of operating the various aspects of the Diversion Control
Program. The self-certification requirements of CMEA fall under these
``various aspects.'' Therefore, DEA is hereby proposing to charge a fee
for each self-certification to comply with these statutory requirements
to ensure that the full costs of operating the Diversion Control
Program are covered by fees as required by law.
The fee for certification will cover all associated costs,
including the initial one-time costs of setting up the certification
program, web site, and programmatic infrastructure, as well as ongoing
costs associated with the provision of certifications, call center
support, maintenance of the self-certification system, printing costs
for certificates that regulated sellers cannot print, financial
management, and other related costs. DEA has established a training
program for its employees to implement new requirements of the CMEA,
and must establish the infrastructure necessary for the self-
[[Page 55714]]
certification program. Required systems include creation of history,
renewal cycles, investigative tools, business validation rules, and
development and maintenance of the self-certification Web site.
Other DEA activities associated with self-certification and
compliance with CMEA include enforcement and judicial proceedings. CMEA
gives DEA the authority to prohibit a regulated seller from selling
scheduled listed chemical products for certain violations of CMEA. If
DEA issues an order to a regulated seller prohibiting that regulated
seller from selling scheduled listed chemical products, the regulated
seller is entitled to an administrative hearing if the seller files a
timely request for a hearing. The costs of these enforcement activities
and the subsequent proceedings must be supported through fees pursuant
to the above described statutory requirements. However, these costs are
not reflected in the proposed self-certification fees contained in this
rulemaking, as DEA is uncertain of their utilization. Once DEA is able
to determine the frequency of use of these tools and their associated
costs, these costs will be recovered through fees associated with self-
certification as established in future rulemakings.
Regulated sellers submit a certification online via the DEA self-
certification web site and will pay a fee by credit card at the time of
each self-certification. DEA calculated this fee based on estimated
set-up costs in Fiscal Year 2006 ($96,000) and Fiscal Year 2007
operating costs ($1,341,000) totaling $1,437,000, as shown in Table 1
below. The initial systems development and set-up costs will not be
repeated in subsequent years. The operational and maintenance costs for
Fiscal year 2008 are estimated to be $811,000. Thus, the total amount
to be recovered for Fiscal Years 2006 through 2008 is $2,248,000. Total
annual costs associated with operating the certification process
include staff costs, operational and administrative costs, web hosting,
monitoring and maintenance costs (including hardware and software
maintenance), and annual inflation adjustments.
To calculate the fee, DEA divided the total costs for Fiscal Years
2006 through 2008 by the anticipated population of affected regulated
sellers of 73,000. As of April 10, 2007, 72,258 retailers had self-
certified that they were in compliance with the rule.
All costs are shown in the table below for Fiscal Years 2006
through 2008. The self-certification costs reflect the cost per each
self-certification per each facility as required by CMEA.
To minimize administrative and collection burdens, it is DEA's
policy to round all fees up to the nearest dollar when calculating
fees. This is done to ensure that the full cost of the Diversion
Control Program is collected as mandated by statute. Therefore, the fee
for self-certifications will be $16.00.
Table 1.--Self-certification Costs and Fee Calculation
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Project detail 2006* 2007 2008 Total cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Planning........................................ $4,000 $37,000 $38,000 $79,000
Design, Development, Deployment................. 44,000 704,000 72,000 820,000
Call Center, Finance, Mail Room, Printing....... 36,000 426,000 433,000 895,000
Maintenance..................................... 12,000 174,000 177,000 363,000
Enhancements.................................... .............. .............. 91,000 91,000
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... 96,000 1,341,000 811,000 2,248,000
Population...................................... .............. 73,000 73,000 ..............
Cost per certification.......................... .............. 19.68 11.11 15.40
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*2006 is only 1 month of operations.
PLANNING............................... 5 - FTE, 3% OF THEIR TIME, 1 -
DI 5% OF THEIR TIME.
Design, Development, Deployment........ 10% allocation of effort.
Creation of Registration System*....... 2 months planning; 6 months
development; 2 months testing,
Q/A, CM, C&A, deployment.
Operations Support Operations include.. Call Center, finance,
distribution & printing.
* Registration system includes creation of history, renewal cycles,
investigative tools, business validation rules.
Table 2.--Calculation of Fee
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number estimated to Self-certification Fee for self-
Cost for FY2006-2008 self-certify and one renewal certification
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$2,248,000 /(73,000 *2) = $15.40 = $16.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Methodology Regarding Establishment of Fee
CMEA specifically states that a separate certification is required
for each separate location at which scheduled listed chemical products
are sold. As such, mobile retail vendors must certify for each location
at which sales transactions occur, e.g., a fairground one week, a
convention center the next, etc. Similarly, large corporate chains such
as chain pharmacies must certify for each individual location at which
scheduled listed chemical products are sold. Each location must self-
certify for itself. In its Interim Final Rule implementing the retail
provisions of the CMEA (71 FR 56008, September 26, 2006; corrected at
71 FR 60609, October 13, 2006), DEA requested comments on who should be
authorized to sign the self-certification for the regulated seller,
given that the person must be in a position to confirm all the self-
certification requirements listed above and should be authorized to
sign documents for the regulated seller.
Additionally, CMEA mandates self-certification for all regulated
sellers irrespective of the extent such entities or persons handle
scheduled listed chemical products. Accordingly, DEA may not alter the
fee structure to account for the extent to which self-certifiers handle
these products. An example would include adjusting self-certification
fees according to sales volume or size of establishment.
[[Page 55715]]
Finally, as mentioned elsewhere in this NPRM, CMEA requires that
all persons selling scheduled listed chemical products at retail self-
certify to DEA, regardless of whether those persons are registered with
DEA to handle controlled substances or List I chemicals.
In a separate Interim Final Rule (71 FR 56008, September 26, 2006;
corrected at 71 FR 60609, October 13, 2006) implementing the retail
provisions of the CMEA, DEA conducted an extensive Economic Impact
Analysis in which it estimated approximately 89,000 persons would self-
certify to sell scheduled listed chemical products at retail. A brief
discussion of this Economic Impact Analysis is found below in this
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. DEA has used this Economic Impact
Analysis in the establishment of fees, as well as actual information
regarding the number of persons self-certified to sell scheduled listed
chemical products, dividing the total costs of self-certification by
the estimated number of persons who will self-certify.
CMEA required persons wishing to continue to sell scheduled listed
chemical products at retail to self-certify with DEA prior to September
30, 2006. In its Interim Final Rule establishing self-certification and
other requirements, DEA established that certification must be renewed
annually. However, to spread the population of self-certifiers
throughout the year (i.e., to prevent all persons who are self-
certified from continuing to renew in the month of September every
year), DEA in its Interim Final Rule indicated that it will assign
self-certifiers to one of 12 groups. Each group will have an expiration
date that will be the last day of a month from 12 to 23 months after
the initial filing. The expiration date is contained in each person's
or entity's self-certification certificate. After the second
certification, regulated sellers will be required to certify annually.
Thus, between September 30, 2006, and the end of Fiscal Year 2008 on
September 30, 2008, all self-certifiers will have initially self-
certified and renewed their certification once, assuming they continue
to sell scheduled listed chemical products at retail.
In implementing the self-certification fee, DEA must comply with
the CMEA as well as the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 1993 that
requires that fees charged shall be set at a level that ensures the
recovery of the full costs of operating the various aspects of the
Diversion Control Program. In developing the self-certification program
and fee structure, DEA considered two options. The first option would
be to set an annual fee for certification. However, this methodology
would not allow DEA to recover the full costs of the program for
certification from fees, as persons selling scheduled listed chemical
products will have initially self-certified prior to establishment of
the fee. Therefore, DEA decided to establish a fixed fee for Fiscal
Years 2006 through 2008, based on the total estimated operating costs
of the self-certification process for those Fiscal Years and the
anticipated population of regulated sellers that will be required to
self-certify. This approach offers a clear fixed fee for this period to
entities required to self-certify.
To relieve administrative burdens for the regulated industry and
DEA, and for simplicity in accounting and auditing, DEA has rounded
these fee calculations up to the nearest dollar. The annual self-
certification fee will be clearly defined on the self-certification web
site. However, in setting this fee DEA notes that it is based on
assumptions about the total number of regulated sellers who will be
required to certify. Should the total number of regulated sellers be
significantly more or less than 73,000, DEA may adjust the
certification fee as appropriate through future rulemakings. Also, as
noted above, this fee does not account for certain enforcement and
judicial costs associated with self-certification. These costs are not
reflected in the proposed self-certification fees contained in this
rulemaking, as DEA is uncertain of their utilization. Once DEA is able
to determine the frequency of use of these tools and their associated
costs, these costs will be recovered through fees associated with self-
certification as established in future rulemakings. In any case, DEA
will not exceed its operating budget as authorized by Congress.
In implementing this fee, DEA also notes that many of the affected
regulated sellers are already registered with DEA to dispense
controlled substances and therefore already pay a registration/
reregistration fee to DEA. The CSA requires that all manufacturers,
importers, exporters, distributors and dispensers (e.g., pharmacies) of
controlled substances, and List I chemicals obtain an annual
registration with DEA. This process also is under the administration of
the Diversion Control Program. For example, pharmacies registered with
the DEA to distribute controlled substances pay a three-year
registration fee of $551 (an annual equivalent of $184). This annual
(or three-year) registration fee supports the operations of the
Diversion Control Program, including program priorities and field
management oversight; coordination of major investigations; drafting
and promulgating of regulations relating to the enforcement of the CSA
and other legislation; advice and leadership on state legislation/
regulation; legal control of drugs and chemicals not previously under
federal control; control of imports and exports of licit controlled
substances and chemicals; program resource planning and allocation, and
investigation, inspection, and cooperative efforts with other law
enforcement entities and the regulated industries, among other
activities.
DEA considered several options regarding charging fees to
registrants and to the new non-registrants regulated pursuant to the
Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005. DEA invites comment on its
proposed decision regarding the structuring of self-certification fees.
DEA considered charging the full costs of the self-certification
aspects of the Diversion Control Program only to registrants. However,
this would mean that registrants would subsidize the self-certification
of non-registrants, and any costs attendant with those self-
certifications. Alternatively, DEA could charge only non-registrants
for the costs of the self-certification aspects of the Diversion
Control Program, as registrants already pay fees to support the
Program. However, if DEA were to charge the $2,248,000 cost of the
self-certification aspects of the Diversion Control Program to the
approximately 18,000 non-registrants, this would result in a renewal
fee of $63 per non-registrant self-certifier. As DEA noted previously,
both registrants and non-registrants are required to self-certify.
Therefore, DEA has elected to spread the costs of self-certification
across all registrants, but to waive the self-certification fee for
persons registered with DEA.
Additionally, in the course of developing the proposed fee
structure, DEA considered an alternative of basing the level of the fee
on the size of a business or the volume of the business's sales. Such a
fee structure, for example, would allow small businesses below a
certain threshold to self-certify without being charged the proposed
$16 self-certification fee. In analyzing this option, DEA considered
whether the $16 fee would pose a significant hurdle for small
businesses and might potentially reduce access to these products if
small businesses opted to discontinue carrying scheduled listed
[[Page 55716]]
chemical products due to the annual cost of self-certification. Such a
fee schedule would need to distinguish between small retailers who sell
limited quantities and similarly-sized retailers who, based on their
unusual sales volume, may present an increased concern about drug
diversion.
However, after careful consideration of this alternative, DEA was
concerned that, while it may have the statutory authority to waive a
fee under certain circumstances, the agency may not have sufficient
statutory authority to collect the kinds of information needed to
administer the type of waiver discussed above. DEA would first need to
determine an equitable threshold for the size of business or volume of
sales below which a waiver would be granted. As DEA does not have
historical information regarding size of business or volume of sales,
and is not aware of a source of such data, such a determination seems
difficult. Further, DEA has concerns about what statute, if any, would
provide statutory authority to collect sales data, or other similar
information, from persons self-certifying to handle scheduled listed
chemical products. If DEA has no statutory authority to collect sales
or other information necessary to enforce the fee waiver, then it
cannot verify sales or other information on which a waiver would
potentially be based, and would have difficulty verifying the veracity
of any waiver provisions. For those reasons, DEA has initially proposed
not to waive the fee for self-certification based on size of business
or volume of sales. DEA invites comment on its interpretation regarding
its statutory authority and how to structure self-certification fees in
the final rule. In addition, DEA would welcome information about what
sort of data might be available to enforce a different fee schedule for
small businesses.
That said, DEA notes that while lowering or eliminating the fee
depending on the size of a business would reduce the financial burden
on small businesses, DEA would have to increase the proposed fee
charged to the remaining covered entities to fully fund the self-
certification program. In addition to the cost of the proposed self-
certification fee, regulated sellers are currently required under
existing DEA regulations to maintain a logbook, store covered products
behind the counter, and train staff concerning sales and recordkeeping.
Because of the costs associated with these existing requirements, DEA
currently does not anticipate that the proposed $16 self-certification
fee will result in a significant incremental increase in the relative
costs of the program for entities carrying covered products, and thus
does not currently believe the fee will pose a barrier to access. DEA
encourages commenters to provide information on this issue.
While existing registrants are required by the CMEA to self-certify
with DEA if selling scheduled listed chemical products, the self-
certification fee will be waived upon submission of an active DEA
registration number because these registrants already pay an annual fee
(or annual fee equivalent) to support the operations of the Diversion
Control Program. DEA requests comments on this aspect of this
rulemaking.
Regulatory Certifications
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rulemaking has been drafted in accordance with the provisions
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612). The Administrator
of DEA hereby certifies that this regulation will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The proposed rule will affect a substantial number of small
entities, but will not have a significant economic effect. The fee is
minimal--$16 a year. In its Interim Final Rule implementing the retail
provisions of the CMEA (71 FR 56008, September 26, 2006; corrected at
71 FR 60609, October 13, 2006), DEA estimated that the other
implementation costs associated with the retail sale of scheduled
listed chemical products were also low. DEA estimated that the time
required for training sales personnel and filing the self-certification
is less than three hours a year. Many of the smallest firms, which are
likely to be convenience stores, may limit their sales to single
packages of pseudoephedrine where the package contains not more than 60
milligrams. Such sales are exempt from the recordkeeping requirements
of the CMEA, which would eliminate the need for logbooks and checking
of identification. There will be some cost to move the product behind
the counter, but these moves will make open display areas available for
other products; the shelf-space costs will, therefore, be offset to
some degree. For firms that conduct sales transactions subject to all
of the CMEA requirements, most of the cost will derive from the cost of
checking identification and completing the logbook entries. That cost
will depend on the number of sales. DEA has determined that the
smallest stores sold between $20 and $40 a month in these products.
This level of sales is the equivalent of five to ten sales per month of
packages covered by the logbook requirement or, at the upper limit,
about an additional $3.50 per month in transaction costs for the time
required to check the identification. For the smallest firms, the
annual cost of the rule, with the fee, is likely to be less than $100.
The smallest firms potentially covered are general merchandise
stores where the average sales of the smallest firms are $60,000 a year
according to the 2002 Retail Trade-Subject Series of the Economic
Census. The smallest firms in the other sectors, except for discount
department stores and superstores, have annual sales of between
$120,000 and $150,000. There are no discount department stores or
superstores with annual sales of less than $1 million and $5 million,
respectively. The annual fee, therefore, would represent less than 0.03
percent of sales for the smallest store and generally about 0.01
percent of sales. The total cost of the rules for retail sales for the
smallest firms is less than 0.2 percent of sales.
Executive Order 12866
The Deputy Administrator further certifies that this rulemaking has
been drafted in accordance with the principles in Executive Order 12866
Section 1(b). It has been determined that this is a significant
regulatory action. Therefore, this action has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget.
Regulated Sellers. As of April 10, 2007, 72,258 retailers had self-
certified with DEA. Table 3 presents the number of retailers by sector
and indicates whether they have indicated that they are DEA
registrants.
Table 3.--Sectors Selling Scheduled Listed Chemical Products
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registrants Non-registrants
NAICS certified certified
------------------------------------------------------------------------
44511 Grocery stores............ 5,628 913
44611 Pharmacy and drug stores.. 42,769 1,513
[[Page 55717]]
452112 Discount Department 2,854 46
Stores.........................
45291 Warehouse Clubs and 2,948 3
Superstores....................
---------------------------------------
Subtotal.................... 54,199 2,475
44512 Convenience stores........ 12 6,166
44711 Gas Stations with 38 8,377
convenience stores.............
45299 All other general 19 672
merchandise stores.............
Other........................... 173 127
---------------------------------------
Total....................... 54,441 17,817
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs/Benefits. As discussed in the previous sections, DEA has
estimated costs of $2,248,000 for Fiscal Years 2006 through 2008 for
DEA to establish and support the regulated seller self-certification
program, which CMEA mandates. As required by law, this cost would be
recovered from regulated sellers through a self-certification fee. As
noted in the previous section, the proposed fee imposes a minimal
burden on regulated sellers. CMEA requires self-certification as a
condition of selling these products. The fee will allow DEA to operate
a program needed to permit regulated sellers to continue offering
scheduled listed chemical products to their customers.
Executive Order 12988
This regulation meets the applicable standards set forth in
Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 Civil Justice
Reform.
Executive Order 13132
This rulemaking does not preempt or modify any provision of state
law; nor does it impose enforcement responsibilities on any state; nor
does it diminish the power of any state to enforce its own laws.
Accordingly, this rulemaking does not have federalism implications
warranting the application of Executive Order 13132.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
This rule will not result in the expenditure by State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$120,000,000 or more (adjusted for inflation) in any one year, and will
not significantly or uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no
actions were deemed necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
Congressional Review Act
This rule is not a major rule as defined by Section 804 of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (Congressional
Review Act). This rule will not result in an annual effect on the
economy of $100,000,000 or more; a major increase in costs or prices;
or significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based
companies to compete with foreign-based companies in domestic and
export markets.
List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 1314
Drug traffic control, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set out above, 21 CFR part 1314 is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 1314--RETAIL SALE OF SCHEDULED LISTED CHEMICAL PRODUCTS
1. The authority citation for part 1314 is proposed to be revised
to read as follows:
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 802, 830, 842, 871(b), 875, 877, 886a.
2. Section 1314.42 is proposed to be added to read as follows:
Sec. 1314.42 Self-certification fee; time and method of fee payment.
(a) A regulated seller shall pay a fee for each self-certification.
For each initial application to self-certify, and for the renewal of
each existing self-certification, a regulated seller shall pay a fee of
$16.
(b) The fee for self-certification shall be waived for any person
holding a current, valid DEA registration as a pharmacy to dispense
controlled substances.
(c) A regulated seller shall pay the fee at the time of self-
certification.
(d) Payment shall be made by credit card.
(e) The self-certification fee is not refundable.
Dated: September 19, 2007.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E7-19215 Filed 9-28-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-09-P