0701-afsa_ssa_7.9.2020

0701-AFSA_SSA_7.9.2020.docx

Air Force Safety Automated System (AFSAS) Preliminary Mishap/Incident Reporting

OMB: 0701-0164

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT - PART A

Air Force Safety Automated System (AFSAS) Preliminary Mishap/Incident Reporting; AF Form 978; OMB Control Number 0701-AFSA


1. Need for the Information Collection


The Department of the Air Force, Headquarters Air Force Safety Center (AFSEC) has responsibility for the prevention of mishaps Air Force-wide and for saving lives and preserving assets. Inherent in this responsibility is the requirement to ensure that personnel are well trained in all aspects of safety and that organizations are equipped with tools to monitor and identify high risk behavior. This action requires tracking of safety training required for military, and civilian, contractor and foreign national professionals of the Department of the Air Force, provide course throughput, and specify those organizations responsible for mitigating safety recommendations. It also identifies the organizations and training resources needed to enhance operational readiness by enabling Air Force personnel, aviation and ground, to establish and maintain a safe and healthful workplace and to provide leadership, guidance, technical direction, and resources to protect people, prevent mishaps, achieve regulatory compliance, and control hazards including hazardous occupational exposures, and costs. Information is required to track and coordinate individual training for mishap analysis in both safety and medical databases.


Authority for the development and maintenance of the system and collection of information related to mishaps and objects and persons involved in or witness to those mishaps: Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s reporting requirements in accordance with Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s reporting requirements in accordance with Executive Order 12196, Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s reporting requirements, Occupational safety and health programs for Federal employees and 29 CFR 1960, Basic Program Elements for Federal Employee Occupational Safety and Health Programs and Related Matters; 10 U.S.C. 9013 (Secretary of the Air Force, powers and duties); Department of Defense Instruction 6055.07, Mishap Notification, Investigation, Reporting, and Record Keeping; Department of Defense Directive 5134.01, Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics (USD(AT&L); Air Force Instruction 91-207, USAF Traffic Safety Program; Air Force Instruction 91-204, Safety Investigation and Reports; Air Force Policy Directive 91-2, Safety Programs.


2. Use of the Information


The Air Force, in accordance with stated policy above, collects mishap and safety-related information via AF Form 978, Supervisor Mishap/Incident Report. Information will be collected in the AFSAS from individuals (respondents) who were injured or directly involved in the Mishap, or were an eye witness to the Mishap. On the top of each collection instrument, the OMB control number and expiration date, as well as our privacy act statement are documented for review by respondents.


Information collected in the AFSAS is utilized directly by assigned Safety Managers and Investigators, to evaluate mishap events for prevention analysis. Each organization staff will compare the information against DoD standards to determine if safety is enforced and to evaluate the safety profile of their organization. Included will be specific recommendations for risk mitigation/reduction in order to preserve assets and save lives. The Air Force Safety Program addresses the maintenance of safe and healthful conditions in the workplace or the occupational environment. It is applicable to all Air Force civilian and military personnel and operations, aviation or occupational functions.


3. Use of Information Technology


In the process of conducting an official mishap investigation, AFI 91-204, mandates that 100% of information captured to explain the mishap event, identify persons involved in a mishap and to track individual safety training requirements, will be entered into the AFSAS. AFSAS uses this information to compare safety reports with safety training records, track a person’s compliance with safety standards and regulations. 90% of the forms are submitted electronically by respondents.

4. Non-duplication


The information obtained through this collection is unique and is not already available for use or adaptation from another cleared source.


The Air Force Safety Center and its counterpart service staffs are the primary organizations having responsibility for collecting and managing safety information used for mishap prevention. Information required to meet DoD safety reporting requirements is sufficiently unique to preclude duplication of this collection of information elsewhere in the Department.


5. Burden on Small Businesses

This information collection does not impose a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small businesses or entities.


6. Less Frequent Collection


Air Force will be unable to conduct its safety reduction program if it cannot collect information necessary to evaluate the propriety of mishap events within an organization and track effectiveness of individual compliance with technical orders and training requirements. Collection cannot be conducted less frequently because each request is, in and of itself, unique and must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.


7. Paperwork Reduction Act Guidelines

This collection of information does not require collection to be conducted in a manner inconsistent with the guidelines delineated in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2).

8. Consultation and Public Comments

Part A: PUBLIC NOTICE

The 60-day Federal Register Notice for the collection was published on Thursday, March 21, 2019. The 60-Day FRN citation is 84 FR 10480. No comments were received.

The 30-Day FRN for the collection was published on Tuesday, June 30, 2020. The 30-Day FRN citation is 85 FR 39169.

Part B: CONSULTATION

No additional consultation apart from soliciting public comments through the Federal Register was conducted for this submission.

9. Gifts or Payment


No payments or gifts are being offered to respondents as an incentive to participate in the collection.


10. Confidentiality


All data will be handled on a ‘For Official Use Only’ basis. A draft copy of the SORN (Air Force Safety Automated System (AFSAS), F091 AFSEC C) and Privacy Impact Assessment have been provided with this package for OMB’s review.


RETENTION AND DISPOSAL: Destroy after 2 years, or on inactivation of the activity, whichever is sooner;


11. Sensitive Questions


No questions considered sensitive are being asked in this collection.


12. Respondent Burden and its Labor Costs

Part A: ESTIMATION OF RESPONDENT BURDEN


  1. Collection Instrument(s)

[AF Form 978]

  1. Number of Respondents: 200

  2. Number of Responses Per Respondent: 1

  3. Number of Total Annual Responses: 200

  4. Response Time: 1 hour

  5. Respondent Burden Hours: 200 hours


  1. Total Submission Burden

    1. Total Number of Respondents: 200

    2. Total Number of Annual Responses: 200

    3. Total Respondent Burden Hours: 200 hours


Part B: LABOR COST OF RESPONDENT BURDEN


  1. Collection Instrument(s)

[AF Form 978]

  1. Number of Total Annual Responses: 200

  2. Response Time: 1 hour

  3. Respondent Hourly Wage: $7.25

  4. Labor Burden per Response: $7.25

  5. Total Labor Burden: $1,450


  1. Overall Labor Burden

    1. Total Number of Annual Responses: 200

    2. Total Labor Burden: $1,450


The respondent hourly wage was determined from the Federal Minimum wage of $7.25 per hour.


13. Respondent Costs Other Than Burden Hour Costs


There are no annualized costs to respondents other than the labor burden costs addressed in Section 12 of this document to complete this collection.


14. Cost to the Federal Government


Part A: LABOR COST TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.


  1. Collection Instrument(s)

[AF Form 978]

  1. Number of Total Annual Responses: 200

  2. Processing Time per Response: 1 hour

  3. Hourly Wage of Worker(s) Processing Responses : $7.25

  4. Cost to Process Each Response: $26.54

  5. Total Cost to Process Responses: $5,308


  1. Overall Labor Burden to the Federal Government

    1. Total Number of Annual Responses: 200

    2. Total Labor Burden: $5,308

The Respondent hourly wage was determined by using the Federal Government Jobs Website (http://www.federaljobs.net/salarybase.htm). GS-11, Step 1, of $55,204 per year, was used for calculations.


Part B: OPERATIONAL AND MAINTENANCE COSTS


  1. Cost Categories

    1. Equipment: $600,000

    2. Printing: $0

    3. Postage: $0

    4. Software Purchases: $240,000

    5. Licensing Costs: $0

    6. Other: $2,000,000


  1. Total Operational and Maintenance Cost: $2,840,000


Part C: TOTAL COST TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT


  1. Total Labor Cost to the Federal Government: $5,308


  1. Total Operational and Maintenance Costs: $2,840,000


  1. Total Cost to the Federal Government: $2,845,308


15. Reasons for Change in Burden


This is a new collection with a new associated burden.


16. Publication of Results


The results of this information collection will not be published.


17. Non-Display of OMB Expiration Date


We are not seeking approval to omit the display of the expiration date of the OMB approval on the collection instrument.


18. Exceptions to “Certification for Paperwork Reduction Submissions”


We are not requesting any exemptions to the provisions stated in 5 CFR 1320.9.

File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorKaitlin Chiarelli
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-01-13

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