Today CISA’s Office For Bombing Prevention (OBP) published a 60-day information collection request (ICR) reinstatement with change notice in the Federal Register (90 FR 2012-2013) for “Technical Resource for Incident Prevention (TRIPwire) User Registration”. The latest ICR approval for this program expired on August 31st, 2023.
The table below shows the previously approved burden estimate along with the burden estimate provided in today’s ICR notice.
Request for Comments
CISA is soliciting comments on this ICR. Comments may be submitted via the Federal eRulemaking Portal (www.Regulations.gov; Docket #CISA-2024-0038). Comments should be submitted by March 11th, 2025.
Commentary
The notice reports that this is a “reinstatement with changes”. There is nothing in this notice that describes what changes are being proposed in the program. The burden estimate is essentially the same (the minor difference in the burden hours appears to be a difference in rounding rules used) for this and the previously approved version of the ICR.
It is disappointing to see the OBP continue to use the same
numbers for the estimated number of new program registrations that they have
been using since the original ICR was submitted. The program has been operating
for a number of years and OBP certainly has data on the recent history of new
registrations that could be used to update that number to reflect the current
state of the program.
For more information on this ICR notice, including details
about the components that go into this collection, see my article at CFSN
Detailed Analysis - https://patrickcoyle.substack.com/p/cisa-publishes-obp-tripwire-60-day
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