An Information Collection Request (ICR) is a federal agency's request for approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to collect information from the public.
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), agencies must justify why the information is needed and how it will be used.
Federal agencies are required to submit an ICR whenever they create, renew, modify, or discontinue an information collection. Each ICR includes a description of the collection,
supporting materials and documentation (such as forms, surveys, or scripts), and proof that the agency has met the requirements of the PRA.
The ICR is submitted to the The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) within OMB for review and approval. OIRA grants approval for a maximum of three years, after
which the collection must be renewed through a new ICR submission.
ICRs are publicly available on RegInfo.gov, and additional guidance can be found in the FAQs.
Note: Presidential Action influences are notated for ICRs received between January 20, 2025 and July 19, 2025.
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| 202508-0906-002 | 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program Application, Implementation, and Evaluation | HHS/HRSA | 2025-08-21 | 2026-02-28 | New collection (Request for a new OMB Control Number)
340B Rebate Model Pilot Program Application, Implementation, and Evaluation
Key Information
Abstract
HRSA’s Office of Pharmacy Affairs (OPA) is introducing this 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program to test the rebate model on selected drugs with an agreed-upon Maximum Fair Price (MFP) for price applicability year 2026 starting on January 1, 2026. This approach will test the rebate model in a methodical and thoughtful manner. This information collection request includes the collection of 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program plans, the collection of periodic sales data from drug manufacturers for OPA’s evaluation of the pilot program and for overall 340B Program surveillance, and the collection of data submitted by covered entities to manufacturers to request a rebate.Emergency Justfication:HRSA is seeking emergency clearance because HRSA will need to begin the information collection by October 2025. If HRSA does not receive emergency approval, then manufacturers may argue that they do not have the tools they need to effectuate nonduplication of the MFP and the 340B discount. HRSA has taken all practicable steps to consult with the public to minimize burden (including a 30-day comment period on the “340B Program Notice: Application Process for the 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program” (90 FR 36163). HRSA is submitting this ICR to the Office of Management and Budget for a 5-month emergency approval. Once this clearance is granted, HRSA will create a regular ICR for this collection. |
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| 202305-7100-002 | Annual Daylight Overdraft Capital Report for U.S. Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks | FRS | 2023-05-23 | 2026-02-28 | Extension without change of a currently approved collection
Annual Daylight Overdraft Capital Report for U.S. Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks
Key Information
Authorizing Statutes
12 USC 347d (View Law) 12 USC 248(i) (View Law) 12 USC 248-1 (View Law) 12 USC 464 (View Law) 12 USC 3105(a) (View Law) Abstract
The FR 2225 is required for foreign banking organizations (FBOs) that wish to, and are eligible to, establish a non-zero net debit cap for their U.S. branches and agencies under the Federal Reserve Policy on Payment System Risk (PSR policy). |
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| 202205-0578-002 | Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities | USDA/NRCS | 2022-08-22 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities
Key Information
Abstract
The purpose of the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities is to support the production and marketing of climate-smart commodities through a set of pilot projects that provide voluntary incentives through partners to producers and landowners, including early adopters, to implement climate-smart conservation practices, activities, and systems on working lands; measure and quantify, monitor and verify the carbon and greenhouse gas (GHG) benefits associated with those practices; and develop markets and promote the resulting climate-smart commodities. |
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| 202111-2900-007 | Intent to File a Claim for Compensation and/or Pension, or Survivors Pension and/or DIC (VA Form 21-0966) | VA | 2023-01-17 | 2026-02-28 | Reinstatement with change of a previously approved collection
Intent to File a Claim for Compensation and/or Pension, or Survivors Pension and/or DIC (VA Form 21-0966)
Key Information
Abstract
VA Form 21-0966 is used by claimants and/or their authorized representatives to indicate intent to file a claim for disability benefits to establish an effective date for an award granted in association with a complete claim filed within one year of such form. VA uses this form to identify claimants in its internal business operational systems to record the date of receipt of this document for the purposes of establishing a date of claim for a complete claim that is filed within one year. VA also uses the information to furnish the claimant with the appropriate VA form or application for VA benefits. |
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| 202204-3064-002 | Interagency Guidance on Leveraged Lending | FDIC | 2022-11-29 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Interagency Guidance on Leveraged Lending
Key Information
Abstract
This guidance outlines for agency-supervised institutions high-level principles related to safe-and-sound leveraged lending activities, including underwriting considerations, assessing and documenting enterprise value, risk management expectations for credits awaiting distribution, stress-testing expectations, pipeline portfolio management, and risk management expectations for exposures held by the institution. This guidance applies to all financial institutions supervised by the OCC, Board, and FDIC that engage in leveraged lending activities. The number of community banks with substantial involvement in leveraged lending is small; therefore, the agencies generally expect community banks to be largely unaffected by this guidance. |
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| 202503-2127-008 | Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) | DOT/NHTSA | 2025-03-27 | 2026-02-28 | No material or nonsubstantive change to a currently approved collection
Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS)
Key Information
Abstract
The FARS is a voluntary information collection of fatal motor vehicle traffic crashes. The FARS is in its forty-sixth year of operation and is a census of all defined crashes involving fatalities in the country. The FARS collects data from all 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico under cooperative agreements. State employees extract and transcribe information from existing State files including police crash reports as well as driver license, vehicle registration, highway department, and vital statistics files. NHTSA aggregates the data for research and analysis in support of motor vehicle regulations and highway safety programs. This supports NHTSA’s mission to save lives, prevent injuries, and reduce economic losses resulting from motor vehicle crashes by providing the agency vital information about fatal crashes. The aggregated data comprises a national database that is NHTSA’s and many States’ principal means of tracking trends in fatalities and quantifying problems or potential problems in highway safety. The FARS data are used extensively by all the NHTSA program and research offices, other DOT modes, States, and local jurisdictions. The highway research community uses the FARS data for trend analysis, problem identification, and program evaluation. Congress uses the FARS data for making decisions concerning safety programs. The FARS data are also available upon request to anyone interested in highway safety. The annual burden has been adjusted from 106,244 to 107,209 hours (an increase of 965 hours) costs have decreased from $100,000 to $0 (a decrease of $100,000). The adjustment in burden hours is due to the increase in the complexity of coding the FARS cases and an increase in the number of fatal crashes across most States. The increase also accounts for the time to process the non-traffic fatalities for NTS. Furthermore, while time for manually inputting data has decreased with States implementing systems to electronically transfer police report data that prepopulate NHTSA’s data systems, including FARS, the overall burden increased because, over the past two years, there has been an increase in staff turnover at the State level, adding an increase in administrative hours, training, and coding assistance to continue operations. The decrease in costs is a result of removing labor costs associated with labor hours that were incorrectly included in our last ICR. |
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| 202503-2900-010 | Clearance for A-11 Section 280 Improving Customer Experience Information Collection | VA | 2025-03-19 | 2026-02-28 | No material or nonsubstantive change to a currently approved collection
Clearance for A-11 Section 280 Improving Customer Experience Information Collection
Key Information
Abstract
Whether seeking a loan, Social Security benefits, veterans benefits, or other services provided by the Federal Government, individuals and businesses expect Government customer services to be efficient and intuitive, just like services from leading private-sector organizations. Yet the 2016 American Consumer Satisfaction Index and the 2017 Forrester Federal Customer Experience Index show that, on average, Government services lag nine percentage points behind the private sector. A modern, streamlined and responsive customer experience means: raising government-wide customer experience to the average of the private sector service industry; developing indicators for high-impact Federal programs to monitor progress towards excellent customer experience and mature digital services; and providing the structure (including increasing transparency) and resources to ensure customer experience is a focal point for agency leadership. To support this, OMB Circular A-11 Section 280 established government-wide standards for mature customer experience organizations in government and measurement. To enable Federal programs to deliver the experience taxpayers deserve, they must undertake three general categories of activities: conduct ongoing customer research, gather and share customer feedback, and test services and digital products. These data collection efforts may be either qualitative or quantitative in nature or may consist of mixed methods. Additionally, data may be collected via a variety of means, including but not limited to electronic or social media, direct or indirect observation (i.e., in person, video and audio collections), interviews, questionnaires, surveys, and focus groups. Veterans Experience Office will limit its inquiries to data collections that solicit strictly voluntary opinions or responses. Steps will be taken to ensure anonymity of respondents in each activity covered by this request. The results of the data collected will be used to improve the delivery of Federal services and programs. It will include the creation of personas, customer journey maps, and reports and summaries of customer feedback data and user insights. |
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| 202504-0920-025 | [PHIC] Data Collection for CDC Fellowship Programs | HHS/CDC | 2025-05-01 | 2026-02-28 | No material or nonsubstantive change to a currently approved collection
[PHIC] Data Collection for CDC Fellowship Programs
Key Information
Abstract
The intended use of data collected is to inform the planning, implementation, and continuous quality improvement of CDC Fellowship Programs. Data collection methods include focus groups, interviews, and surveys, using both purposive and probabilistic samples. Respondent populations include potential applicants, fellows, alumni, supervisors, mentors, and employers of alumni. Data will be analyzed relative to the data collection methods and purpose. The Change Request contains minor changes and adheres to recent executive orders. |
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| 202504-1212-002 | Annual Financial and Actuarial Information Reporting (29 CFR Part 4010) | PBGC | 2025-04-09 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Annual Financial and Actuarial Information Reporting (29 CFR Part 4010)
Key Information
Abstract
ERISA section 4010 requires the annual reporting of actuarial and financial information by controlled groups that sponsor pension plans that have significant underfunding. PBGC uses this information to detect and monitor financial problems with the controlled groups and to respond quickly when it learns that a controlled group intends to engage in a transaction that may reduce the assets available to pay plan liabilities. |
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| 202505-1894-001 | GEPA Section 427 Guidance for All Grant Applications | ED/OS | 2025-05-02 | 2026-02-28 | No material or nonsubstantive change to a currently approved collection
GEPA Section 427 Guidance for All Grant Applications
Key Information
Abstract
On October 20, 1994, the Improving America's Schools Act, Public Law 103-382(The Act), became law. The Act added a provision to the General Education Provisions Act (GEPA). Section 427 of GEPA requires an applicant for assistance under Department programs to develop and describe in the grant application the steps it proposes to take to ensure equitable access to, and equitable participation in, its proposed project for students, teachers, and other program beneficiaries. Applicants have responded to the GEPA 427 requirements for approximately the last 27 years, and the current form expires in June 2023. In response to the Agency's Equity Plan resulting from the President's Executive Order 13985, we now propose to update that form by expanding the number of questions from one to four. These four questions are intended to help applicants for Department grant funds to be more intentional and specific as to identifying barriers to equitable access and how they will address those barriers consistent with the requirements of section 427 of GEPA. As with the existing form, applicants retain the flexibility to determine and define for themselves the barriers to “equitable access” and “equitable participation” based on the design of their proposed grant projects and the participants and community the project proposes to serve. |
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| 202204-1625-012 | Enhanced Maritime Domain Awareness via Electronic Transmission of Vessel Transit Data | DHS/USCG | 2022-09-01 | 2026-02-28 | Extension without change of a currently approved collection
Enhanced Maritime Domain Awareness via Electronic Transmission of Vessel Transit Data
Key Information
Authorizing Statutes
Abstract
The Coast Guard collects, stores, and analyzes vessel data transmitted electronically to enhance maritime domain awareness (MDA). Awareness and threat knowledge are critical for securing the maritime domain and the key to preventing adverse events. Data is also used for marine safety and environmental protection purposes. The statutory authority is 46 U.S.C. 70114 and 70115. |
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| 201905-0960-004 | Report to U.S. SSA by Person Receiving Benefits for a Child or Adult Unable to Handle Funds/Report to U.S. SSA | SSA | 2019-09-12 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Report to U.S. SSA by Person Receiving Benefits for a Child or Adult Unable to Handle Funds/Report to U.S. SSA
Key Information
Abstract
SSA uses Forms SSA-7161-OCR-SM and SSA 7162-OCR-SM to: (1) determine continuing entitlement to Social Security benefits; (2) correct benefit amounts for beneficiaries outside the United States; and (3) monitor the performance of representative payees outside the United States. This collection is mandatory as an annual (or every other year, depending on the country of residence) review for fraud prevention. In addition, the results can affect benefits by increasing or decreasing payment amount or by causing SSA to suspend or terminate benefits. SSA employees collect this information via paper form. The respondents are individuals living outside the United States who are receiving benefits on their own (or on behalf of someone else) under Title II of the Act. |
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| 201912-1625-001 | Intermodal Container Inspection Program. | DHS/USCG | 2020-05-08 | 2026-02-28 | New collection (Request for a new OMB Control Number)
Intermodal Container Inspection Program.
Key Information
Abstract
The Coast Guard inspects containers and cargo within containers to ensure compliance with domestic and international standards. Coast Guard-issued forms provide stakeholders with the results of container examinations. Respondents are operators of container facilities. |
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| 202209-3064-002 | Stress Testing Recordkeeping and Reporting | FDIC | 2022-11-29 | 2026-02-28 | Extension without change of a currently approved collection
Stress Testing Recordkeeping and Reporting
Key Information
Authorizing Statutes
132 Stat. 1296 Abstract
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has issued a rule that revises the FDIC’s requirements for stress testing by FDIC-supervised institutions, consistent with changes made by Section 401 of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA). Specifically, the rule amends the FDIC’s existing stress testing regulations at 12 CFR Part 325 to change the minimum threshold for applicability from $10 billion to $250 billion, revises the frequency of required stress tests by FDIC-supervised institutions, and reduces the number of required stress testing scenarios from three to two. The rule also makes certain conforming and technical changes that were previously included in an April 2019 notice of proposed rulemaking that was superseded, in part, by the enactment of EGRRCPA. On May 17, 2012, the OCC, along with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve (FRB), published guidance on the use of stress testing as a means to better understand the range of a banking organization’s potential risk exposures. The guidance provides an overview of how a banking organization should structure its stress testing activities to ensure they fit into the banking organization’s overall risk management program. The purpose of the guidance is to outline broad principles for a satisfactory stress testing framework and describe the manner in which stress testing should be used, that is as an integral component of risk management applicable at various levels of aggregation within a banking organization as well as a tool for capital and liquidity planning. While the guidance is not intended to provide detailed instructions for conducting stress testing for any particular risk or business area, it does include descriptions of several types of stress testing activities and how they may be most appropriately used by banking organizations. The guidance also does not explicitly address the stress testing requirements imposed upon certain companies by section 165(i) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act). |
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| 202109-1076-002 | Federal Acknowledgment as an Indian Tribe, 25 CFR 83 | DOI/BIA | 2021-10-07 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Federal Acknowledgment as an Indian Tribe, 25 CFR 83
Key Information
Abstract
Submission of this information allows the Office of Federal Acknowledgment (OFA), within the Office of the Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs, to review groups’ documented petitions for the Federal acknowledgment as an Indian tribe. The acknowledgment regulations at 25 CFR 83 contain seven criteria that unrecognized groups seeking Federal acknowledgment as Indian tribes must demonstrate that they meet. Information collected from petitioning groups under these regulations provide anthropological, genealogical, and historical data used by the AS-IA to establish whether a petitioning group has the characteristics necessary to be acknowledged as a continuously existing Indian tribe. Federal acknowledgment establishes a government-to-government relationship with the United States. Respondents are not required to retain copies of the information submitted to OFA but will probably maintain copies for their own use; therefore, there is no recordkeeping requirement included in this information collection. |
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| 202111-2900-009 | Examination for Housebound Status or Permanent Need for Regular Aid and Attendance (VA Form 21-2680) | VA | 2023-01-18 | 2026-02-28 | Reinstatement with change of a previously approved collection
Examination for Housebound Status or Permanent Need for Regular Aid and Attendance (VA Form 21-2680)
Key Information
Authorizing Statutes
38 USC 1115(1)(e) (View Law) 38 USC 1311(d) (View Law) 38 USC 1541(d) (View Law) 38 USC 1541(e) (View Law) 38 USC 1521(d) (View Law) 38 USC 1521(e) (View Law) 38 USC 1114 (View Law) Abstract
VA Form 21-2680 is used to determine eligibility for the aid and attendance and/or housebound benefit. The purpose of this examination is to record manifestations and findings pertinent to the question of whether the claimant is housebound (confined to the home or immediate premises) or in need of the regular aid and attendance of another person. The report should be in sufficient detail for the VA decision makers to determine the extent that disease or injury produces physical or mental impairment, that loss of coordination or enfeeblement affects the ability: to dress and undress; to feed themselves; to attend to the wants of nature; or keep themselves ordinarily clean and presentable. Findings should be recorded to show whether the claimant is blind or bedridden. Whether the claimant seeks housebound or aid and attendance benefits, the report should reflect how well they ambulate, where they go, and what they are able to do during a typical day. |
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| 202302-0572-033CF | SF-424 Application for Federal Assistance | USDA/RUS | 2023-02-23 | 2026-02-28 | RCF Recertification
SF-424 Application for Federal Assistance
Key Information
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| 202202-1651-009 | Visa Waiver Program Carrier Agreement | DHS/USCBP | 2022-04-18 | 2026-02-28 | Revision of a currently approved collection
Visa Waiver Program Carrier Agreement
Key Information
Abstract
This Agreement between a transportation company and the United States is needed to assure the United States that the transportation company will remain responsible for the aliens it transports to the United States under the Visa Waiver Program (8 U.S.C. 1187(e)). |
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| 202508-7100-001 | Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Disclosure Requirements Associated with Regulation NN | FRS | 2025-08-20 | 2026-02-28 | No material or nonsubstantive change to a currently approved collection
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Disclosure Requirements Associated with Regulation NN
Key Information
Authorizing Statutes
12 USC 1467a(g) (View Law) 12 USC 625 (View Law) 12 USC 601-604a (View Law) 7 USC 2(c)(2)(E) (View Law) 12 USC 248 (View Law) 12 USC 3106a (View Law) 12 USC 3108 (View Law) 12 USC 1844(b) (View Law) 12 USC 1844(c) (View Law) 12 USC 1467a(b) (View Law) Abstract
The Board’s Regulation NN - Retail Foreign Exchange Transactions (12 CFR Part 240) establishes rules appliable to retail foreign currency transactions engaged in by state member banks, uninsured state-licensed branches of foreign banks, financial holding companies, bank holding companies, savings and loan holding companies, agreement corporations, and Edge corporations (collectively, banking institutions). Regulation NN includes certain reporting, recordkeeping, and disclosure requirements for banking institutions that elect to provide foreign currency exchange services to retail consumers. |
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| 202203-3147-001 | Request for a Medical Exception to the COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement | NTSB | 2022-03-22 | 2026-02-28 | Extension without change of a currently approved collection
Request for a Medical Exception to the COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement
Key Information
Abstract
The NTSB created the following form: Request for a Medical Exception to the COVID-19 Vaccination Requirement. The agency will use this form to determine whether the employee provided sufficient information to justify the request. Because the OMB number assigned to this form was obtained through emergency clearance, the OMB number is only valid for six months and will expire on May 31, 2022. In anticipation of future requests from its employees, the NTSB is specifically seeking an extension of this currently-approved collection. |
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