Prioritization and Allocation of Certain Scarce and Critical Health and Medical Resources for Domestic Use; Additional Exemptions

Published date14 June 2021
Citation86 FR 31448
Record Number2021-12484
SectionRules and Regulations
CourtFederal Emergency Management Agency
Federal Register, Volume 86 Issue 112 (Monday, June 14, 2021)
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 112 (Monday, June 14, 2021)]
                [Rules and Regulations]
                [Pages 31448-31450]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2021-12484]
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                DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
                Federal Emergency Management Agency
                44 CFR Part 328
                [Docket ID FEMA-2020-0018]
                Prioritization and Allocation of Certain Scarce and Critical
                Health and Medical Resources for Domestic Use; Additional Exemptions
                AGENCY: Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland
                Security (DHS).
                ACTION: Notification of additional exemptions.
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                SUMMARY: The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) announces
                additional exemptions from a temporary final rule that FEMA published
                in the Federal Register on December 31, 2020.
                DATES: Applicability date: This notification applies beginning on June
                11, 2021.
                ADDRESSES: You may review the docket by searching for Docket ID FEMA-
                2020-0018, via the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel McMasters, Program Analyst,
                Office of Policy and Program Analysis, 202-212-2900, [email protected].
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                Background
                 On April 10, 2020, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
                published a temporary final rule (the ``rule'') to allocate certain
                health and medical resources for domestic use, so that these resources
                may not be exported from the United States without explicit approval by
                FEMA.\1\ The rule aids the response of the United States to the spread
                of COVID-19 by ensuring that certain health and medical resources are
                appropriately allocated for domestic use. The rule was modified and
                extended on August 10, 2020 and December 31, 2020, respectively.\2\
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                 \1\ 85 FR 20195 (Apr. 10, 2020) (codified at 44 CFR part 328).
                See also 85 FR 22622 (Apr. 23, 2020) (correcting the date filed from
                ``4-8-20'' to'' 4-7-20'').
                 \2\ 85 FR 48113 (Aug. 10, 2020) and 85 FR 86835 (Dec. 31, 2020)
                (codified at 44 CFR part 328).
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                 FEMA issued the rule under the authority of the Defense Production
                Act of 1950, as amended (DPA),\3\ and related Executive orders and
                delegations.\4\ Most prominently, on April 3, 2020, the President
                signed a Memorandum on Allocating Certain Scarce or Threatened Health
                and Medical Resources to
                [[Page 31449]]
                Domestic Use (Memorandum).\5\ In the Memorandum, the President directed
                the Secretary of Homeland Security, through the FEMA Administrator, and
                in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS),
                to use any and all authority available under section 101 of the DPA to
                allocate to domestic use, as appropriate, the five types of personal
                protective equipment (PPE) materials identified in the Memorandum. FEMA
                executed this direction by publishing an allocation order on April 10,
                2020, as a temporary final rule pursuant to the Memorandum. On April
                21, 2020, FEMA published notification of 10 exemptions in addition to
                the exemption listed in the original temporary final rule.\6\ The
                temporary final rule was modified and extended on August 10, 2020, and
                again on December 31, 2020, to ensure certain health and medical
                resources were appropriately allocated for domestic use.\7\
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                 \3\ 50 U.S.C. 4501 et seq.
                 \4\ See 85 FR 20195 at 20196-20197.
                 \5\ See Memorandum on Allocating Certain Scarce or Threatened
                Health and Medical Resources to Domestic Use for the Secretary of
                Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and
                the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Apr.
                3, 2020), https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/presidential-actions/memorandum-allocating-certain-scarce-threatened-health-medical-resources-domestic-use/ (last accessed May 12, 2021).
                 \6\ 85 FR 22021 (Apr. 21, 2020).
                 \7\ See 85 FR 48113 (Aug. 10, 2020); 85 FR 86835 (Dec. 31,
                2020).
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                 Consistent with the Memorandum, the December 31, 2020 rule provides
                that until June 30, 2021, and subject to certain exemptions, no
                shipments of covered materials may leave the United States without
                explicit approval by FEMA.\8\ The rule requires U.S. Customs and Border
                Protection (CBP), in coordination with such other officials as may be
                appropriate, to notify FEMA of an intended export of covered
                materials.\9\ CBP must temporarily detain any shipment of such covered
                materials pending the Administrator's determination whether to return
                for domestic use, issue a rated order for, or allow the export of part
                or all of the shipment.\10\ In making such determination, the
                Administrator may consult other agencies and will consider the totality
                of the circumstances, including: (1) The need to ensure that scarce or
                critical items are appropriately allocated for domestic use; (2)
                minimization of disruption to the supply chain, both domestically and
                abroad; (3) the circumstances surrounding the distribution of the
                materials and potential hoarding or price-gouging concerns; (4) the
                quantity and quality of the materials; (5) humanitarian considerations;
                and (6) international relations and diplomatic considerations.\11\
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                 \8\ 44 CFR 328.102(a).
                 \9\ 44 CFR 328.102(b).
                 \10\ Id.
                 \11\ 44 CFR 328.102(c).
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                 In addition to providing for the determination described above, the
                rule includes eleven exemptions to the requirement that covered
                materials not leave the United States without explicit approval by
                FEMA. In the interest of promoting the national defense, the
                Administrator determined that FEMA will not purchase covered materials
                from shipments made by or on behalf of U.S. manufacturers with
                continuous export agreements with customers in other countries since at
                least January 1, 2020, so long as at least 80 percent of such
                manufacturer's domestic production of such covered materials, on a per
                item basis, was distributed in the United States in the preceding 12
                months.\12\ If FEMA determines that a shipment of covered materials
                falls within this exemption, such materials may be exported without
                further review by FEMA, provided that the Administrator may waive this
                exemption and fully review shipments of covered materials, if the
                Administrator determines that doing so is necessary or appropriate to
                promote the national defense.\13\ Additionally, the Administrator
                determined that it is necessary and appropriate to promote the national
                defense to continue the 10 additional exemptions to the original
                temporary final rule that were published on April 21, 2020.\14\
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                 \12\ 44 CFR 328.102(d)(1).
                 \13\ Id.
                 \14\ See 85 FR 86835, 86838 (Dec. 31, 2020).
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                 Pertinent to this notification, the rule also provides that the
                Administrator may establish, in his or her discretion, additional
                exemptions that he or she determines necessary or appropriate to
                promote the national defense and will announce any such exemptions by
                notice in the Federal Register. This notification announces additional
                exemptions.
                Notice of Additional Exemptions
                 Pursuant to 44 CFR 328.102(d)(2), section 101 of the DPA, and
                related authorities, the Administrator has determined that it is
                necessary and appropriate in order to promote the national defense to
                exempt certain categories of covered materials from the requirements of
                44 CFR 328.102(a) and (b). The Administrator may waive any of these
                exemptions at any time and fully review shipments of covered materials
                under 44 CFR 328.102(b) if the Administrator determines that doing so
                is necessary or appropriate to promote the national defense. In
                addition, if CBP believes that any manufacturer, broker, distributor,
                exporter, or shipper of any covered materials is intentionally
                modifying its shipments in a way to take advantage of one or more of
                these exemptions, diverting materials from the United States market, or
                otherwise trying to circumvent the FEMA review requirements in 44 CFR
                328.102(b) through application of any of the exemptions, CBP may detain
                a shipment and forward information about that shipment (including the
                basis for CBP's belief) to FEMA for determination.
                 The additional exemptions are as follows:
                 (1) Exports of Industrial N95 Respirators. The Administrator issues
                this exemption to narrow the scope of the allocation order to exempt
                shipments of industrial N-95 respirators from the allocation order. The
                Administrator believes that this exemption is necessary to narrow the
                scope of the allocation order to be limited to surgical N95 filtering
                facepiece respirators that are single-use, disposable respiratory
                protective devices used in a healthcare setting that are worn by
                healthcare personnel during procedures to protect both the patient and
                healthcare personnel from the transfer of microorganisms, body fluids,
                and particulate material at an N95 filtration efficiency level per 42
                CFR 84.171. A surgical N95 respirator is a class II device, regulated
                by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under 21 CFR 878.4040.
                Narrowing the scope of the covered materials ensures that only those
                items that are scarce or critical items in the domestic supply chain
                are affected by the allocation order. The Administrator believes that
                industrial N95 respirators are in sufficient domestic supply \15\ and
                that worldwide demand for these items remains high. As such, it is
                necessary and appropriate to promote the national defense and
                consistent with the purposes of the Presidential Memorandum and the
                subsequent allocation order to exempt these items from the list of
                covered materials.
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                 \15\ FEMA fills requests from state, local, tribal, and
                territorial partners for respirators through the standard Resource
                Request Form process. The agency does not have any open requests for
                industrial N95 respirators and is equipped to fill requests as they
                are received.
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                 (2) Exports of PPE Surgical Masks. The Administrator believes it is
                necessary and appropriate to promote the national defense to exempt
                these items from the list of covered materials to support the efforts
                of domestic
                [[Page 31450]]
                manufacturing to combat COVID-19 around the world and consistent with
                the position of the United States as a world leader. A key element of
                national defense is the ability of the United States to convey
                international leadership during times of crisis, including the COVID-19
                pandemic. This includes our ability to assist in meeting the global
                demand for items where domestic supply needs have been met, help those
                in need, and to remain stalwarts of the international community. The
                Administrator also recognizes the international nature of many U.S.
                companies, and believes that allowing these companies to continue to
                produce at a high level is crucial to promoting the U.S. economy. One
                of the factors specifically identified in the allocation order that the
                Administrator considers in determining whether to return for domestic
                use, issue rated order for, or allow the export of a shipment is
                minimization of disruption of the supply chain, both domestically and
                abroad. The Administrator believes that this exemption would not
                disrupt the domestic supply chain,\16\ nor cause a detrimental shortage
                of covered materials to Americans.
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                 \16\ FEMA fills requests from state, local, tribal, and
                territorial partners for respirators through the standard Resource
                Request Form process. The agency does not have any open requests for
                PPE surgical masks.
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                 (3) Exports of Specific Syringes and Needles. The Administrator
                believes it is necessary and appropriate to promote the national
                defense to exempt the specific syringes and needles covered under the
                current rule given the worldwide efforts to provide COVID-19
                vaccinations. Similar to PPE surgical masks above, the Administrator
                believes these items should be exempted from the list of covered
                materials to support the efforts to combat COVID-19 around the world
                and consistent with the position of the United States as a world
                leader. A key element of national defense is the ability of the United
                States to convey international leadership during times of crisis,
                including the COVID-19 pandemic. This includes our ability to assist in
                meeting the global demand for items where domestic supply needs have
                been met, help those in need, and to remain stalwarts of the
                international community. The Administrator also recognizes the
                international nature of many U.S. companies, and believes that allowing
                these companies to continue to produce at a high level is crucial to
                promoting the U.S. economy. One of the factors specifically identified
                in the allocation order that the Administrator considers in determining
                whether to return for domestic use, issue rated order for, or allow the
                export of a shipment is minimization of disruption of the supply chain,
                both domestically and abroad. The Administrator believes that this
                exemption would not disrupt the domestic supply chain, nor cause a
                detrimental shortage to Americans given the current state of
                vaccination rates in the United States.\17\
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                 \17\ As of May 11, 2021, approximately 35.1 percent of the U.S.
                population has been fully vaccinated, while 46.2 percent of the U.S.
                population has received at least one dose of a vaccine. Over 71
                percent of the U.S. population 65 years of age or older (one of the
                highest at-risk segments of the U.S. population) have now been fully
                vaccinated. See www.COVID.cdc.gov/COVID-data-tracker/#vaccinations
                (last accessed May 12, 2021 at 1:30 p.m.).
                Deanne Criswell,
                Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
                [FR Doc. 2021-12484 Filed 6-11-21; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 9111-19-P
                

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