[Federal Register: December 29, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 249)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 79318-79324]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr29de08-10]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
21 CFR Part 1314
[Docket No. DEA-298F]
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: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: To comply with the requirement of the Controlled Substances
Act that fees be set at a level to ensure the recovery of the full
costs of operating the various aspects of the Diversion Control
Program, this Final Rule establishes an annual self-certification fee
for certain ``regulated sellers,'' that is, persons and entities
selling scheduled listed chemical products at retail locations who are
required to self-certify with DEA relative to compliance with certain
requirements of the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic Act of 2005 (CMEA).
This Final Rule establishes the annual self-certification fee for
regulated sellers who are not DEA pharmacy registrants.
DATES: Effective Date: February 1, 2009. The new fee will be in effect
for all new applications electronically sent on or after the effective
date and for all renewal applications electronically sent on or after
the effective date.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark W. Caverly, Chief, Liaison and
Policy Section, Office of Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration, 8701 Morrissette Drive, Springfield, VA 22152;
Telephone (202) 307-7297.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 79319]]
I. Background and Statutory Authority
The Drug Enforcement Administration (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 Final 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
Final Rule, DEA extensively discussed its intent to issue a rulemaking
to establish the certification fee for regulated sellers of scheduled
listed chemical products and the methodology for calculating fees (see
specifically 71 FR 56013-56015, September 26, 2006; corrected at 71 FR
60609, October 13, 2006). To this end, DEA published a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking proposing self-certification fees for regulated
sellers selling scheduled listed chemical products at retail on October
1, 2007 (72 FR 55712). This rulemaking finalizes that Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking.
Section 886a of the 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.''
CMEA 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 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 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.
Without regard to the number of transactions, a regulated
seller may not in a single calendar day sell any purchaser more than
3.6 grams of ephedrine base, 3.6 grams of pseudoephedrine base, or 3.6
grams of phenylpropanolamine base in scheduled listed chemical
products. (A mobile retail vendor may not in any 30-day period sell an
individual purchaser more than 7.5 grams ephedrine base, 7.5 grams
pseudoephedrine base, or 7.5 grams phenylpropanolamine base.)
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 scheduled listed chemical 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 regulated 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.
On October 1, 2007, DEA published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
outlining the calculations for the proposed fee and compliance
requirements for the self-certification fee (72 FR 55712).
II. Comments Received
Following publication of the October 1, 2007, Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, DEA received seven comments. Comments generally supported
DEA's proposed certification fee approach and methodology and DEA's
exemption of regulated sellers of scheduled listed chemical products
who already maintain an active DEA registration as a pharmacy to
dispense controlled substances. Five of the comments were from
pharmaceutical associations; one comment was from a large chain
pharmacy, and one comment was from an individual.
Fee and fee structure: Commenters generally supported DEA's
proposed fee of $16 to self-certify and supported DEA's calculation of
this fee based on the overall program costs. One commenter noted that
this methodology
[[Page 79320]]
distributes the program costs to all sellers. Several commenters noted
that the fee did not represent a burdensome amount. DEA agrees that the
$16 proposed fee, finalized at $21, will not constitute a financial
burden on regulated sellers and adds that businesses for which the
self-certification fee would have been a barrier have stopped carrying
the products due to other compliance costs associated with CMEA.
Several commenters specifically noted their opposition to calculating
the self-certification fee based on business size or overall volume of
sales. Commenters questioned whether DEA had the statutory authority to
collect such information, and noted that such collection would be
administratively intensive, thereby further increasing fees charged.
DEA also notes that it does not have the statutory authority or
resources to be investigating these business details of regulated
sellers. One commenter, who noted that it did not believe that DEA has
this statutory authority to collect such information, also added that
even if DEA had the statutory authority to collect the type of
information necessary to enable this type of fee structure, it believed
that the administrative burden of collecting this information would
force an increase in self-certification fees to cover such
administrative costs. The commenter therefore opposed this methodology
on both grounds.
Fee exemption for registrants registered to dispense controlled
substances: All seven commenters supported the fee exemption for
regulated sellers who already maintain an annual registration to
dispense controlled substances, i.e., a pharmacy registration. In the
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, DEA described the fee exemption for this
group of registrants who already pay an annual fee or annual fee
equivalent to support the operations of the Diversion Control Program.
Harmonization of registration and self-certification: Related to
these comments, five commenters requested that DEA harmonize the self-
certification and annual registration/reregistration process. Currently
the majority of DEA registrants--practitioners (which includes
pharmacies)--renew their registration with DEA every three years and
pay a three-year fee to support the operations of the Diversion Control
Program. DEA periodically recalculates the fee schedule for all
registrants to ensure compliance with the statutory requirement that
the full costs of operating the various aspects of the Diversion
Control Program are supported through registration fees. Because self-
certification occurs annually and registration of practitioners,
including pharmacies, occurs every three years, there is no way to
combine these two processes. That is, because the time frames are not
concurrent, DEA cannot harmonize the renewal of self-certification and
registration/reregistration for pharmacies at this time. DEA has made
every effort to provide as much harmonization as possible by permitting
those pharmacies who register with DEA through the chain registration
process to also self-certify using that process. Furthermore, when
requested by individual registrants, DEA has endeavored to allow the
self-certification to expire in the same month, but not necessarily the
same year, as the DEA registration.
DEA is considering whether to revise the time period for
registration of practitioners (for example, requiring registration on
an annual basis). If DEA pursues this course of action, it will publish
a separate rulemaking requesting public comment on such a change.
Reminder of self-certification requirement: One commenter suggested
that DEA develop an annual outreach program to remind regulated sellers
of their annual self-certification requirement. Because self-
certification is a certification by the regulated seller of compliance
with the requirements of CMEA, DEA believes that it is the
responsibility of the regulated seller to obtain and maintain their
self-certification in good standing. Congress indicated in CMEA that
self-certification is the responsibility of the regulated seller and
strictly limited DEA involvement in the self-certification process (21
U.S.C. 830(e)(1)(B)(iii)).
Signature of self-certification: In the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking DEA noted that it had previously requested comments
regarding 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. Two
commenters responded to the request. Both commenters suggested that the
manager of the regulated seller be authorized to sign the self-
certification for the regulated seller. DEA appreciates these responses
and will address this specific issue in a separate rulemaking, as this
Final Rule is intended only to address the self-certification fee and
not other aspects of the self-certification process.
Waiver of self-certification fee for distributors of List I
chemicals: One commenter requested that DEA consider waiving the self-
certification fee for entities that own both distributors of List I
chemicals and retailers of controlled substances (e.g., non-pharmacy
retailers). DEA proposed the waiver of the self-certification fee for
retail pharmacies who already maintain a registration with DEA because
the retail sale of scheduled listed chemical products is essentially
the same activity as dispensing (that is, sale at retail) of controlled
substances. Thus it makes sense to exempt this category of registered
regulated sellers because the activities are in fact similar. However,
the distribution of List I chemicals at the non-retail level is not a
similar activity to retail dispensing or sales to individual
purchasers. DEA also notes that self-certification is only required for
retail (not wholesale) distributors of scheduled listed chemical
products. If, as the commenter claimed, there are entities that
distribute List I chemical products and sell such products at the
retail level, then even prior to enactment of CMEA such entities would
have been required to maintain two separate registrations--one as a
retail distributor and one as a non-retail distributor. Accordingly,
the self-certification fee is not waived for non-retail distributors of
List I chemicals.
Enforcement costs: Finally, one commenter observed that the
calculation of the self-certification fee in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking did not include any enforcement costs, adding that this
omission was ``astonishingly optimistic'' and suggesting that DEA
include a small amount of anticipated enforcement costs to the overall
fee calculation, and that doing so ``still would not make it
burdensome.'' As DEA noted in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the
self-certification fee included in this Final Rule does not include DEA
activities associated with 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.
Following such an order, the affected regulated seller is entitled to
an administrative hearing (if requested in a timely manner). While the
costs of these enforcement activities and the subsequent proceedings
must be supported through fees pursuant to the statutory requirements
previously described above, because DEA is uncertain of the resources
required and the likely costs of these activities, these costs are not
reflected in the self-certification fee contained in this Final Rule.
Once DEA is able to determine the
[[Page 79321]]
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.
III. Self-Certification Fee
DEA considers the self-certification requirements of the CMEA to
fall within the legal definition of controlled substance and chemical
diversion control activities 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, by this Final Rule DEA will charge a
fee for each self-certification to comply with these statutory
requirements and ensure that the full costs of operating the Diversion
Control Program are covered by fees as required by law.
The fee for certification will be applied to 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 program to
train its employees to provide information regarding, and accept,
certifications and must establish the infrastructure necessary for the
program. Required systems include creation of history, renewal cycles,
investigative tools, business validation rules, and development and
maintenance of the self-certification Web site.
As discussed previously, 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 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 certification. DEA calculated this fee based on estimated set-up
costs in Fiscal Year 2006 ($93,369) and Fiscal Years 2007 and 2008
operating and maintenance costs ($1,338,484 and $808,643, respectively)
totaling $2,240,496, as shown in Table 1 below. The initial systems
development and set-up costs will not be repeated in subsequent years.
Thus, the total amount to be recovered for Fiscal Years 2006 through
2008 is $2,240,496. 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 55,000. As of October 27, 2008, 53,989 retailers had self-
certified that they were in compliance with the rule. In making the
final fee calculation, DEA doubled the number of self-certified sellers
from 55,000 to 110,000 to reflect one self-certification and one
renewal by each person during Fiscal Years 2006-2008, the time period
for which fees were calculated. DEA notes that it has adjusted the
population of regulated sellers to accurately characterize the current
number of persons self-certified with DEA. This adjustment has resulted
in a higher cost per self-certified location than DEA proposed in the
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. 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 $21.00.
Table 1--Self-Certification Costs and Fee Calculation
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Project detail 2006 * 2007 2008 Total cost
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Planning (1).................................... $3,029 $36,343 $37,002 $76,373
Design, Development, Deployment (2)............. $43,512 $703,863 $71,662 $819,037
Call Center, Finance, Mail Room, Printing (3)... $35,423 $425,075 $432,777 $893,275
Maintenance (4)................................. $11,405 $173,203 $176,341 $360,949
Enhancements (5)................................ .............. .............. $90,861 $90,861
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... $93,369 $1,338,484 $808,643 $2,240,496
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Population...................................... .............. 55,000 55,000 ..............
Cost per certification (= total cost/population) .............. $26.04 $14.71 $20.38
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 2006 is only one month of operations.
Planning *
Design, Development, Deployment.
Creation of self-certification system **
Operation support includes:
5 FTE, 3% of their time; 1 D/I 5% of their time.
10% allocation of effort, 2 months planning; 6 months development; 2 months testing, Q/A, CM, C&A, deployment.
Call center, finance, distribution and printing operations.
** Self-certification system includes creation of history, renewal cycles, investigative tools, business
validation rules.
[[Page 79322]]
Table 2--Calculation of Fee
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Self-
Cost for FY2006-2008 No. estimated certification Fee for self-
to self-certify and one renewal certification
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$2,241,000.................................. /(55,000 * 2) = $20.38 = $21.00
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All regulated sellers will pay the $21 fee upon annual self-
certification to the DEA with the exception of those regulated sellers
who already maintain an active registration with DEA to dispense
controlled substances, i.e., pharmacy registrants. In making this
exception, as described in further detail in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (72 FR 55712), DEA notes that many of the regulated sellers
affected by the self-certification requirement already are 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 DEA to dispense 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.
While these 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
pharmacy registration number in good standing because these registrants
already pay an annual fee (or annual fee equivalent) to support the
operations of the Diversion Control Program.
DEA remains uncertain of the anticipated costs associated with
enforcement activities related to self-certification. Investigative and
other activities designed to ascertain and ensure compliance with CMEA
will require funding in excess of one-time set-up and maintenance
expenses. DEA anticipates publishing a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to
revise the fee for self-certification in the near future. That rule
will address costs related to enforcement activities, as well as other
expenses related to self-certification of regulated sellers of
scheduled listed chemical products. As with all fees collected by DEA,
fees collected beyond Fiscal Year 2008, the projected end of the three-
year cycle discussed above, will ensure recovery of the full costs of
the various aspects of the Diversion Control Program as mandated by
statute (21 U.S.C. 886a). Those various aspects of the Diversion
Control Program could include, among other things, costs of enforcement
activities associated with self-certification.
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 separate location at which
scheduled listed chemical products are sold. Each location must self-
certify for itself, although DEA has established a process for the
self-certification of pharmacies participating in DEA's chain pharmacy
renewal program.
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, for example adjusting self-certification fees according
to sales volume or size of establishment. DEA notes, as discussed
above, that all commenters supported this position.
Finally, as referenced earlier in this rulemaking, CMEA requires
that all persons selling scheduled listed chemical products at retail
self-certify to DEA, regardless of whether those persons are already
registered with DEA to handle controlled substances or List I
chemicals.
In its Interim Final Rule establishing self-certification and other
requirements (71 FR 56008, September 26, 2006; corrected at 71 FR
60609, October 13, 2006), 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 regulated
seller'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. Payment of the
self-certification fee will be completed at the same time as self-
certification.
Regulatory Certifications
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Acting Administrator hereby certifies that this rulemaking has
been drafted in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601-612), has reviewed this regulation, and by approving it
certifies that this regulation will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. As discussed
previously, DEA has adjusted the population of regulated sellers to
accurately characterize the current number of persons self-certified
with DEA. This adjustment has resulted in a higher cost per self-
certified location ($21) than DEA proposed in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking ($16).
The Final Rule will affect a substantial number of small entities,
but
[[Page 79323]]
will not have a significant economic impact. The fee is minimal--$21 a
year. The smallest firms potentially covered are general merchandise
stores (NAICS 45299) 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 (NAICS 44511
(grocery stores), 44512 (convenience stores), 44611 (drug stores),
44711 (gas stations with convenience stores)), except for discount
department stores (NAICS 452112) and superstores (NAICS 45291), 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 0.05 percent of sales for the smallest store and
generally about 0.01 percent of sales, which does not impose a
significant economic impact.
Executive Order 12866
The Acting 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 October 27, 2008, 53,989 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
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-
NAICS Registrants registrants
certified certified
------------------------------------------------------------------------
44511 Grocery stores.................... 3,781 850
44611 Pharmacy and drug stores.......... 27,678 500
452112 Discount Department Stores....... 1,777 25
45291 Warehouse Clubs and Superstores... 4,373 6
-------------------------------
Subtotal............................ 37,609 1,381
------------------------------------------------------------------------
44512 Convenience stores................ 3 5,499
44711 Gas Stations with convenience 0 9,020
stores.................................
45299 All other general merchandise 9 214
stores.................................
Other................................... 42 212
-------------------------------
Total........................... 37,663 16,326
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs/Benefits. As discussed in the previous sections, DEA has
estimated costs of $2,240,496 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 will be
recovered from regulated sellers through a self-certification fee. As
noted in the previous section, the 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
million 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.
0
For the reasons set out above, 21 CFR Part 1314 is amended as follows:
PART 1314--RETAIL SALE OF SCHEDULED LISTED CHEMICAL PRODUCTS
0
1. The authority citation for Part 1314 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 802, 830, 842, 871(b), 875, 877, 886a.
0
2. Section 1314.42 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1314.42 Self-certification fee; time and method of fee payment.
(a) A regulated seller must 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
$21.
(b) The fee for self-certification shall be waived for any person
holding a current, DEA registration in good standing 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.
[[Page 79324]]
December 18, 2008.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8-30800 Filed 12-24-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-09-P