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Wednesday,

November 30, 2005

Part II

Department of
Health and Human
Services
42 CFR Parts 70 and 71
Control of Communicable Diseases;
Proposed Rule

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71892 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND Control and Prevention, Division of Recent experiences with emerging
HUMAN SERVICES Global Migration and Quarantine,1600 infectious diseases such as West Nile
Clifton Road, NE., (E03), Atlanta, GA Virus, SARS, and monkeypox have
42 CFR Parts 70 and 71 30333; telephone (404) 498–2395. illustrated the rapidity with which
RIN 0920–AA03 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The disease may spread throughout the
Preamble to this notice of proposed world and the impact communicable
Control of Communicable Diseases rulemaking is organized as follows: diseases, when left unchecked, may
have on the global economy. As noted
AGENCY: Centers for Disease Control and I. Legal Authority
II. Background and Purpose by the Institute of Medicine, National
Prevention (CDC), Department of Health Academy of Sciences in a recent study,
III. Legal Basis of Federal Quarantine
and Human Services (HHS). ‘‘Whether naturally occurring or
Authority
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking. IV. Summary of Proposed Changes to 42 CFR intentionally inflicted, infections can
Part 70 cause illness, disability, and death in
SUMMARY: CDC is committed to
V. Summary of Proposed Changes to 42 CFR persons while disrupting whole
protecting the health and safety of the Part 71 populations, economies, and
American public by preventing the VI. Required Regulatory Analyses Under governments. And because national
introduction of communicable disease Executive Order 12866, the Unfunded
borders offer trivial impediment to such
into the United States. Having updated Mandates Reform Act, and the
Regulatory Flexibility Act threats, especially in the highly
regulations in place is an important
A. Objectives and Basis for the Proposed interconnected and readily traversed
measure to ensure swift response to
Regulation ‘‘global village’’ of our time, one
public health threats. CDC proposes to
B. The Nature of the Impacts nation’s problem soon becomes every
update existing regulations related to
C. Need for the Rule nation’s problem.’’ (Microbial Threats to
preventing the introduction, D. Baseline Health: Emergence, Detection and
transmission, or spread of E. Alternatives Response’’, Institute of Medicine,
communicable diseases from foreign F. Cost Analysis of Proposed Option and March, 2003). As diseases evolve
countries into the U.S. and from one Alternatives
naturally or as a result of human
State or possession into another. G. Impacts on Industry
H. Benefits intervention, it is important to ensure
DATES: Written comments must be
I. Comparison of Costs and Benefits that containment procedures reflect new
received on or before January 30, 2006. threats and uniform ways to respond to
J. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Written comments on the proposed them.
K. References for Part VI
information collection requirements VII. Other Administrative Requirements Stopping an outbreak—whether it is
should also be submitted on or before A. Executive Order 13045: Protection of naturally occurring or intentionally
January 30, 2006. Comments received Children from Environmental Health and caused—requires the use of the most
after January 30, 2006 will be Safety Risks rapid and effective public health tools
considered to the extent practicable. B. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 available. These tools include basic
ADDRESSES: You may submit written C. Environmental Assessment
public health practices such as disease
comments to the following address: D. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal reporting requirements and
Centers for Disease Control and identification and notification of
Governments
Prevention, Division of Global Migration E. Executive Order 12630: Governmental contacts who may have been exposed to
and Quarantine, ATTN: Q Rule Actions and Interference With a communicable disease so that they
Comments, 1600 Clifton Road, NE., Constitutionally Protected Property may receive preventive measures.
(E03), Atlanta, GA 30333. Comments Rights Quarantine is defined as the restriction
will be available for public inspection F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism of the movement of persons exposed to
Monday through Friday, except for legal G. Executive Order 13211: Energy Effects infection to prevent them from infecting
holidays, from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. at H. National Technology Transfer and others, including family members,
1600 Clifton Road, NE., Atlanta, GA Advancement Act
friends, and neighbors. Quarantine of
30333. Please call ahead to 1–866–694– I. Family Policy Analysis
J. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice exposed persons may be the best initial
4867 and ask for a representative in the way to prevent the uncontrolled spread
Reform
Division of Global Migration and K. Plain Language of highly dangerous biologic agents such
Quarantine to schedule your visit. VIII. Solicitation of Comments as smallpox, plague, and Ebola fever—
Comments also may be viewed at http:// especially when combined with other
www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dq. You may I. Legal Authority health strategies such as vaccination,
submit written comments electronically These regulations are proposed under prophylactic drug treatment, patient
via the Internet at http:// the authority of 25 U.S.C. 198, 231, and isolation, and other appropriate
www.regulations.gov or via e-mail to 1661; 42 U.S.C. 243, 248, 249, 264–272, infection control measures. Quarantine
qrulepubliccomments@cdc.gov. To and 2001. may be particularly important if a
download an electronic version of the biologic agent has been rendered
rule, you may access http:// II. Background and Purpose
contagious, drug-resistant, or vaccine-
www.regulations.gov. The primary authorities supporting resistant through bioengineering,
Mail written comments on the this rulemaking are §§ 361–368 of the making other disease control measures
proposed information collection Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. less effective.
requirements to the following address: 264–271). Section 361 authorizes the The Secretary’s authority to
Office of Information and Regulatory Secretary to make and enforce quarantine persons is limited to those
Affairs, OMB, New Executive Office regulations as are necessary to prevent communicable diseases published in an
Building, 725 17th Street, NW., rm. the introduction, transmission or spread Executive Order of the President. This
10235, Washington, DC 20503, Attn: of communicable diseases from foreign list currently includes cholera,
Desk Officer for CDC. countries into the United States and diphtheria, infectious tuberculosis,
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: from one State or possession into plague, smallpox, yellow fever, and
Jennifer Brooks, Centers for Disease another. viral hemorrhagic fevers, such as

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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules 71893

Marburg, Ebola and Congo-Crimean, Subsection (a) authorizes the Secretary 1 In 1893, Congress expanded the role
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, to make and enforce such regulations of the Marine Hospital Service by
and influenza caused by novel or ‘‘as in his judgment are necessary to enacting ‘‘An Act Granting Additional
reemergent influenza viruses that are prevent the introduction, transmission, Quarantine Powers and Imposing
causing or have the potential to cause a and spread of communicable diseases’’ Additional Duties upon the Marine
pandemic (see Executive Order 13295, from foreign countries and from one Hospital Service.’’ See Compagnie
as amended by Executive Order 13375 state or possession into any other state Francaise de Navigation a Vapeur v.
on April 1, 2005). or possession. Subsection (a) also State Board of Health, Louisiana, 186
authorizes a variety of public health U.S. 380, 395–96 (1902). While the 1893
Regulations that implement federal
measures, including destruction of Act did not abrogate the role of the
quarantine authority are currently
articles determined to be sources of states, it nonetheless granted the
promulgated in 42 CFR parts 70 and 71.
communicable disease. Subsection (b) Secretary of the Treasury the authority
Part 71 deals with foreign arrivals and
authorizes the ‘‘apprehension, to enact additional rules and regulations
part 70 deals with interstate matters.
detention, or conditional release’’ of to prevent the introduction of diseases,
The Secretary has delegated to the
individuals to prevent the spread of both foreign and interstate, where state
Director of the Centers for Disease
communicable diseases as specified in and municipal ordinances were deemed
Control and Prevention the authority for
Executive Orders of the President. insufficient. Id. at 396. The Act also
implementing 42 CFR part 71, which authorized direct federal enforcement of
was last substantively updated in 1985. Subsection (c) provides the basis for
foreign quarantine of persons, while communicable disease regulations
On August 16, 2000, the Secretary where state and municipal authorities
transferred the authority for interstate subsection (d) provides the basis for
interstate quarantine of persons. refused to act. Id. Section 361 was
quarantine over persons from FDA to enacted in 1944, and last amended in
CDC, which became 42 CFR part 70. As prescribed in 42 U.S.C. 271 and 18
U.S.C. 3559 and 3571(c), criminal 2002.
FDA retained, pursuant to 21 CFR part Acknowledging the critical
1240, regulatory authority over animals sanctions exist for violating regulations
enacted under section 361. Specifically, importance of protecting the public’s
and other products that may transmit or health, long-standing court decisions
spread communicable diseases. The individuals in violation of such
regulations are subject to a fine of no uphold the ability of Congress and the
Secretary took this action in order to States to enact quarantine and other
consolidate regulations designed to more than $250,000 or one year in jail,
or both. Violations by organizations are public health laws, and to have them
control the spread of communicable executed by public health officials.
diseases, thereby increasing the currently subject to a fine no greater
than $500,000 per event. Federal district United States v. Shinnick, 219
agencies’ efficiency and effectiveness. F.Supp.789 E.D.N.Y. (1963). Kroplin v.
This proposed rule is not intended to courts also have jurisdiction to enjoin
individuals and organizations from Truax, 165 N.E. 498 (1929); Jacobson v.
have any effect upon FDA’s authority in Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905);
21 CFR part 1240. In 2003, in response violating regulations implemented
under section 361. See 28 U.S.C. 1331. North American Cold Storage Co. v. City
to the emergence of Severe Acute of Chicago, 211 U.S. 306 (1908);
Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), Health Furthermore, section 311 (42 U.S.C.
243) of the PHSA, authorizes the Compagnie Francaise de Navigation a
and Human Services (HHS) amended 42 Vapeur v. Board of Health, 186 U.S. 380
CFR 70.6 and 71.3 to incorporate by Secretary to accept state and local
(1902). Whereas the States derive public
reference the Executive Order listing the assistance in the enforcement of
health authorities from the police power
communicable diseases subject to quarantine regulations and to assist
reserved to them by the 10th
quarantine, thereby eliminating the states and their political subdivisions in
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
administrative delay involved in the control of communicable diseases.
the authority of the federal government
separately publishing the list of diseases Prevention of communicable diseases
to enact quarantine rules and
through rulemaking. Also in 2003, CDC has long been the subject of federal
regulations is based on the Commerce
published an interim final rule that regulation. In 1796, Congress enacted
Clause, which grants to Congress the
added § 71.56 African rodents and other the first federal quarantine law in
exclusive authority to regulate foreign
animals that may carry the monkeypox response to a yellow fever epidemic,
and interstate commerce. See U.S.
virus. Finally, on January 25, 2005, the which gave federal officials the Const. Art. I, section 8, cl.3 (granting to
Secretary added section 70.9 to establish authority to assist states in the Congress the power ‘‘to regulate
vaccination clinics and a user fee in enforcement of quarantine laws. In Commerce with foreign Nations, and
connection with administration of 1799, Congress repealed the 1796 Act among the several States, and with the
vaccine services and vaccine. and replaced it with one establishing Indian Tribes.’’).
the first federal inspection system for In addition to Congress’ authority to
The intent of the proposed updates to maritime quarantines. In 1878, Congress
42 CFR parts 70 and 71 is to clarify and regulate foreign commerce, the U.S.
amended the Quarantine Act to assign Supreme Court has identified three
strengthen existing procedures to enable responsibilities to the Marine Hospital
CDC to respond more effectively to broad categories of interstate activity
Service, which had been established in that Congress may regulate under its
current and potential communicable 1798 to provide for the health needs of
disease threats. Commerce Clause authority: (1) The use
merchant seaman. The 1878 Quarantine of the channels of interstate commerce
III. Legal Basis of Federal Quarantine Act, however, was extremely limited (e.g., prohibitions on the shipment in
Authority and provided that federal quarantine interstate commerce of noxious articles
regulations could not conflict with those or kidnapped persons); (2) the
The primary statutory authority to of state or municipal authorities. instrumentalities of interstate
enact regulations for the purpose of commerce, or persons or things in
communicable disease control is found 1 The Office of the Surgeon General was abolished
interstate commerce, even though the
at section 361 (42 U.S.C. 264) of the by section 3 of the 1966 reorganization plan,
effective June 25, 1966, 31 FR 8855. Accordingly,
threat to interstate commerce may come
Public Health Service Act. Section 361 statutory references to the Surgeon General should only from intrastate activities (e.g.,
is divided into four subsections. be understood as referring to the Secretary. regulations on railway rates); and (3)

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activities that substantially affect that both incoming and outgoing border The Director’s delegated authority
interstate commerce (e.g., labor searches have features in common under section 361 is distinct from legal
standards). United States v. Lopez, 514 including the need to protect U.S. authority afforded to other federal
U.S. 549, 558–559 (1995). The proposed citizens, the likelihood of smuggling agencies, such as USDA, which, among
regulation is consistent with the scope contraband, and the fact that other things, includes the legal authority
of the federal government’s commerce individuals are placed on notice that to prohibit or restrict the importation or
power because it seeks to regulate the their privacy may be invaded when they entry of any animal, article, or means of
uses of the channels of foreign and cross the border). conveyance, or the use of any means of
interstate commerce (i.e., by protecting The U.S. Supreme Court has also conveyance or facility, if the USDA
against the introduction, transmission, recognized a reduced expectation of Secretary determines that the
and spread of communicable diseases) privacy concerning commercial prohibition or restriction is necessary to
and the instrumentalities of foreign and industries that are ‘‘closely regulated’’ prevent the introduction into or
interstate commerce (e.g., airlines with and thus searches and seizures of such dissemination within the United States
flights arriving into the U.S. or traveling commercial industries do not require of any pest or disease of livestock. See
from one state or possession into probable cause and a warrant. See New 7 U.S.C. 8303. In implementing
another). York v. Burger, 482 U.S. 691, 702 (1987) measures necessary to prevent the
The proposed regulation also is (noting that the warrant and probable- introduction, transmission, and spread
consistent with the ‘‘search and seizure’’ cause requirements of the Fourth of communicable diseases that affect
Amendment have lessened application both human and livestock health, e.g.,
requirements of the Fourth Amendment.
in this context); Lesser v. Espy, 34 F.3d avian influenza, CDC would work
Authority to ‘‘search and seize’’ in the
1301, 1308 (1994) (upholding collaboratively with USDA.
form of inspections, detentions, and
warrantless inspections of rabbit farms As previously noted, there are
quarantine has long existed under the
by the Animal Plant Health Inspection circumstances where courts have held
Public Health Service Act and the
Program pursuant to the Animal Welfare that the Fourth Amendment does not
current regulations. The Fourth
Act). Specifically, warrantless require probable cause and a warrant,
Amendment to the U.S. constitution
inspections of ‘‘closely regulated’’ including searches conducted upon the
provides that ‘‘[t]he right of the people
businesses are deemed reasonable consent of the individual and those
to be secure in their persons, houses,
provided that (1) there is a substantial necessary to avert an imminent threat to
papers, and effects, shall not be government interest that informs the human health or safety. Inspections
violated, and no warrants shall issue, regulatory scheme pursuant to which conducted by quarantine officers at
but upon probable cause. * * *’’ Courts the inspection is made; (2) the ports of entry and other locations will
have held, however, that not all types of warrantless inspection is necessary to most often fall into one of these two
searches and seizures necessarily further the regulatory scheme; and (3) categories. In addition, under the
require probable cause and a warrant. the inspection program, in terms of the proposed regulations, the Director may
Searches and seizures conducted with certainty and regularity of its compel inspections of carriers and the
the consent of an authorized person and application, provides an adequate application of sanitary measures
those searches and seizures that are substitute for a warrant. Burger, 482 through written order. Furthermore, the
conducted to avert an imminent threat U.S. at 702–703. proposed regulations provide the
to health or safety do not run afoul of Section 361(a) of the PHS Act (42 owners with an opportunity for a
the Fourth Amendment even when U.S.C. 264(a)) provides that regulations written appeal in the event that the
conducted without probable cause and enacted by the Secretary may provide Director orders the detention of a carrier
a warrant. See Lenz v. Winburn, 51 F.3d for inspection, fumigation, disinfection, or the destruction of animals, articles, or
1540, 1548 (11th Cir. 1995) (‘‘Anyone sanitation, pest extermination, things, on board the carrier. Regarding
who possesses common authority over destruction of animals or articles found individuals, the proposed regulation
or other sufficient relationship to the to be so infected or contaminated to be authorizes the provisional quarantine of
premises or effects sought to be sources of dangerous infection to human persons arriving into the United States
inspected may consent to the search of beings, and other measures that in the reasonably believed to be infected with
another’s property.’’) (internal Secretary’s judgment may be necessary or exposed to a quarantinable disease
quotations marks omitted); North to prevent the introduction, and persons who the Director
American Cold Storage, 211 U.S. at 315 transmission, or spread of reasonably believes to be in the
(upholding seizure of food unfit for communicable diseases from foreign qualifying stage of a quarantinable
human consumption). Similarly, countries into the United States or from disease and traveling from one state into
individuals at points of entry and who one state or possession into another. another or who are a probable source of
are in transit have a substantially The statute also authorizes the infection to others who may be traveling
reduced expectation of privacy apprehension, detention, and from one state into another.
concerning their persons and effects and conditional release of persons The routine inspection of persons or
thus courts have not required that reasonably believed to be infected with property for purposes of determining
searches and seizures be conducted specified communicable diseases and the presence of communicable disease is
pursuant to probable cause and a arriving into the United States or authorized by statute and does not run
warrant. See United States v. McDonald, traveling from one state into another. In afoul of the Fourth Amendment because
100 F.3d 1320, 1324–25 (7th Cir. 1996) carrying out this statutory authority, the of the reduced expectation of privacy
(noting that it is generally recognized proposed regulations authorize the inherent in travel and at border
that people who are in transit on Director to detain and inspect carriers crossings. See United States v. Flores-
common thoroughfares, i.e., on a bus, and articles on board carriers for Montano, 541 U.S. 149, 152 (2004)
train, or airplane, have a substantially purposes of determining whether they (noting that the Government’s interest in
reduced expectation of privacy may require the application of sanitary preventing the entry of unwanted
compared to persons in a fixed measures to prevent the introduction, persons and effects is at its zenith at the
dwelling); United States v. Berisha, 925 transmission, or spread of international border and that border
F.2d 791, 795 (5th Cir. 1991) (noting communicable diseases. searches conducted pursuant to the

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longstanding right of the sovereign to concept requiring that the level of assessments generally occur on a
protect itself by stopping and examining process granted be commensurate with voluntary basis with the consent of the
persons and property crossing into this the degree of deprivation and the ill passenger. Where the quarantine
country are reasonable simply by virtue circumstances of the event. See Parham officer reasonably believes that an ill
of the fact that they occur at the border); v. J.R., 442 U.S. 584, 608 (1979) (‘‘What passenger has a quarantinable disease,
McDonald, 100 F.3d at 1324 n.5 (‘‘This process is constitutionally due cannot and the passenger is otherwise non-
diminished interest derives from, among be divorced from the nature of the compliant, the quarantine officer may
other factors, the myriad legitimate ultimate decision that is being made.’’). order the provisional quarantine of the
safety concerns that pertain to those Furthermore, due process does not passenger by serving the passenger with
who travel by common carrier.’’). Air always require judicial-type hearings or a written order, verbally ordering that
travel and shipping are also closely quasi-criminal proceedings before the passenger be provisionally
regulated industries in the United States curtailing an individual’s physical quarantined, or by ordering that actual
because these industries must comply liberty for public health purposes. See restrictions be placed on a non-
with myriad regulatory requirements id. at 609 (‘‘Although we acknowledge compliant passenger. The quarantine
relating to safety, immigration, and the fallibility of medical and psychiatric officer’s reasonable belief would be
homeland security. See United States v. diagnosis, we do not accept the notion informed by objective scientific
Dominguez-Prieto, 923 F.2d 464, 468 that the shortcomings of specialists can evidence such as clinical criteria
(6th Cir. 1991) (holding that common always be avoided by shifting the indicative of one of the specified
carriers in the trucking industry are decision from a trained specialist using quarantinable diseases, e.g., high fever,
pervasively regulated industries for the traditional tools of medical science respiratory distress, and/or chills,
purposes of warrantless inspections to an untrained judge or administrative accompanied by epidemiologic criteria
because of extensive federal and state hearing officer after a judicial-type such as travel to or from an affected area
regulations). Courts have also long hearing.’’) (internal citation omitted); and/or contact with known cases.
recognized a substantial government Addington v. Texas, 441 U.S. 418, 431 Provisionally quarantined individuals
interest in preventing the introduction, (1979) (holding that states need not are provided with a written order in
transmission, and spread of apply the strict criminal standard of support of the agency’s determination at
communicable diseases. See Jacobson, proof beyond a reasonable doubt before the time that provisional quarantine
197 U.S. at 11. Unsanitary carriers, as committing the mentally ill); Morales v. commences or as soon thereafter as the
well as contaminated goods, may pose Turman, 562 F.2d 993, 998 (5th Cir. circumstances reasonably permit. The
a threat to human health or safety, as 1977) (noting in dicta that ‘‘[a] state written provisional quarantine order
well as lead to further contamination of should not be required to provide the provides the individual with notice
other articles, if not immediately procedural safeguards of a criminal trial regarding the legal and scientific basis
inspected and sanitized. The issuance of when imposing a quarantine to protect for their provisional quarantine, the
a written order by the Director, when the public against a highly location of detention, and the suspected
necessary to compel compliance, communicable disease.’’). The basic quarantinable disease. Under the
accompanied by an opportunity for a elements of due process include: proposed regulations, CDC may
written appeal, in the case of carriers Reasonable and adequate notice of the provisionally quarantine an individual
ordered detained or animals, articles, or action that the government is purporting for up to three business days unless the
things ordered destroyed, also provides to take (typically through a written Director determines that the individual
protections analogous to those of a order); an opportunity to be heard in a should be released or served with a
warrant. See Burger, 482 U.S. at 711 reasonable time and manner; access to quarantine order. CDC does not intend
(ruling that the administrative legal counsel; and review of the to provide individuals with
inspection program provided an government’s actions by an impartial administrative hearings during this
adequate substitute for a warrant decision-maker. See Goldberg v. Kelly, initial three-day period of provisional
because it placed appropriate restraints 397 U.S. 254, 267–268 (1970) quarantine, but rather will afford an
on the discretion of the inspecting (discussing due process in the context of opportunity for a full administrative
officers). terminating welfare benefits). Because hearing in the event that the individual
It is well recognized that freedom quarantine implicates an individual’s or group of individuals is served with a
from physical restraint is a ‘‘liberty’’ liberty interest to remain free from quarantine order, which potentially
interest protected by the Due Process physical restraint, CDC in carrying out would involve a longer period of
Clause of the 14th Amendment to the quarantine actions is obliged to act in a detention.
U.S. Constitution. See Kansas v. manner consistent with these basic While there are no federal cases
Hendricks, 521 U.S. 346, 356 (1997) elements of due process. establishing a specific time period for
(noting that while freedom from The proposed regulation establishes holding persons in quarantine-type
physical restraint is at the core of the administrative procedures that afford detentions, there are several analogous
liberty protected by the Due Process individuals with due process federal cases dealing with ‘‘alimentary
Clause, that liberty interest is not commensurate with the degree of canal’’ smugglers, i.e., persons who
absolute). In circumstances where due deprivation and the circumstances of smuggle drugs in their intestines by
process is required, courts determine controlling the spread of communicable swallowing balloons. In United States v.
the process that is due by balancing the disease. CDC quarantine officers are Montoya de Hernandez, 473 U.S. 531
private interest affected by the official typically the first line of defense in (1985), the U.S Supreme Court
action against the government’s asserted preventing the importation of analogized holding a suspected
interest and the burdens that the communicable diseases into the United alimentary canal smuggler to detaining
government would face in providing States. Quarantine officers routinely someone for suspected tuberculosis,
greater process. See Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, conduct rapid assessments of ill noting that ‘‘both are detained until
124 S.Ct. 2633, 2646 (2004) (relying on passengers at airports and other ports of their bodily processes dispel the
Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 entry to assess the presence of suspicion that they will introduce a
(1976)). Due process is a flexible communicable disease. Such harmful agent into this country.’’

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71896 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

Federal courts have upheld detention writ of habeas corpus remains available The following is a section-by-section
periods ranging from 16 hours to 20 to all individuals detained within the analysis:
days based on ‘‘reasonable suspicion’’ United States); United States v.
Section 70.1 Scope and Definitions
for suspected alimentary canal Shinnick, 219 F.Supp.789 (E.D.N.Y.
smugglers. CDC believes that the 1963) (upholding the U.S. Public Health Section 70.1 is renamed scope and
provisional quarantine of individuals Service’s medical isolation of an definitions. Section 70.1 explains that,
for up to three business days without an arriving passenger because she had been except where otherwise stated,
administrative hearing is reasonable in Stockholm, Sweden, a city declared regulations to prevent the spread of
because such a time frame is necessary by the World Health Organization to be disease among possessions or from a
to determine whether the individual has a smallpox infected local area and could possession to a State are contained in 42
one of the specified quarantinable not show proof of vaccination). CFR Part 71.
diseases. A provisional quarantine order A number of terms have been added
In addition to this judicial review
is likely to be premised on the need to or modified to be consistent with
mechanism, as previously mentioned,
investigate based on reasonable modern quarantine concepts and
the proposed regulations establish a
suspicion of exposure or infection, current medical principles and practice.
procedure for individuals under
whereas a quarantine order is more Specifically, definitions for ‘‘aircraft
quarantine to request an administrative
likely to be premised on a medical commander,’’ ‘‘airline,’’ ‘‘airline agent,’’
hearing. The purpose of the
determination that the individual ‘‘business day,’’ ‘‘carrier,’’ ‘‘detention,’’
administrative hearing is not to review
actually has one of the quarantinable ‘‘emergency contact information,’’
any legal or constitutional issues that
diseases. Thus, during this initial three ‘‘flight information,’’ ‘‘hearing officer,’’
may exist, but rather only to review the
business day period, there may be very ‘‘Indian country,’’ ‘‘Indian tribe,’’
factual and scientific evidence ‘‘infectious agent,’’ ‘‘interstate traffic,’’
little for a hearing officer to review in concerning the agency’s decision, e.g., ‘‘medical monitoring,’’ ‘‘military
terms of factual and scientific evidence whether the individual has been service,’’ ‘‘possession,’’ ‘‘provisional
of exposure or infection. Three business exposed to or infected with a quarantine’’, ‘‘public health
days may be necessary to collect quarantinable disease. Such an emergency,’’ ‘‘qualifying stage,’’
medical samples, transport such administrative hearing would comport ‘‘quarantine,’’ ‘‘quarantinable disease,’’
samples to laboratories, and conduct with the basic elements of due process. ‘‘sanitary measure,’’ ‘‘Secretary,’’
diagnostic testing, all of which would Under the proposed regulations, the ‘‘State’’ and ‘‘vector’’ have been added
help inform the Director’s determination Director would notice the hearing and or modified. The definition of an ill
that the individual is infected with a designate a hearing officer to review the person has been modified to include the
quarantinable disease and that further available evidence of exposure or signs or symptoms commonly
quarantine is necessary. In addition, infection and make findings as to associated with diseases for which
because provisional quarantine may last whether the individual should be provisional quarantine or quarantine
no more than three business days, released or remain in quarantine. The may be necessary. This definition is of
allowing for a full hearing, with proposed regulations authorize the particular importance because it
witnesses, almost guarantees that no Director to take such measures as the determines the scope of the reporting
decision on the provisional quarantine Director determines to be reasonably requirement specified in § 70.2. Because
will actually be reached until after the necessary to allow an individual in reporting is dependent on recognition of
provisional period has ended, thus quarantine to communicate with their an ill passenger by non-medical
making such a hearing virtually authorized representative to participate personnel and without the benefit of a
meaningless in terms of granting release in the hearing. medical examination, such as by the
from the provisional quarantine. In the In addition to section 361 of the PHS flight crew, this definition relies on
event that further quarantine or Act (42 U.S.C. 264), HHS also relies on descriptive terms that are overt and
isolation is necessary, the Director the following legal authorities with commonly understood by lay persons.
would issue an additional order based respect to this notice of proposed The definition is broad by design for
on scientific principles such as clinical rulemaking: 25 U.S.C. 198, 231, and two reasons: (1) To ensure that all
manifestations, diagnostic or other 1661; 42 U.S.C. 243, 248, 249, 265–272, situations for which the Director must
medical tests, epidemiologic and 2001. 25 U.S.C. 198, 231, 1661 and take action in order to prevent the
information, laboratory tests, physical 42 U.S.C. 2001 contain legal authorities introduction and spread of
examination, or other available evidence primarily relevant to public health communicable diseases are reported,
of exposure or infection. The length of measures taken with respect to Indian and (2) the reporting of ill passengers
quarantine or isolation would not country. 42 U.S.C. 265–272 contain relies on personnel without medical
exceed the period of incubation and legal authorities primary relevant to training. While a narrower definition
communicability for the communicable HHS operations and activities with might reduce the number of situations
disease as determined by the Director. respect to quarantine and other public reported for which action by the
Under 28 U.S.C. 2241, an opportunity health measures. These authorities are Director is unnecessary, such a
for judicial review of the agency’s discussed in depth in Section IV. definition would necessarily include
decision exists via the filing of a findings or terms that cannot be
IV. Summary of Proposed Changes to
petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This accurately assessed by those without
42 CFR Part 70
judicial review mechanism affords medical training. Moreover, a narrower
individuals under quarantine with the Several new sections have been added definition would likely exclude
full panoply of due process rights to 42 CFR Part 70. Most of these sections situations of public health significance
typical of a court hearing. A petition for are provided to update and streamline thus circumventing the very purpose for
a writ of habeas corpus is the traditional practices to reflect modern quarantine which the reporting requirement is
mechanism by which individuals may practice. Imposition of quarantine needs designed. Therefore, the more prudent
contest their detention by the federal to be based on clear legal authorities course has been chosen, whereby
government. See Hamdi, 124 S.Ct. at and applied safely and effectively while reporting is required for a broad range
2644 (noting that absent suspension, the according respect to the individual. of signs and symptoms, allowing the

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Director to use her professional particular pathway of communication as Section 70.3 Written Plan for
judgment to determine which situations long as a report is made by the Reporting of Deaths or Illness on Board
require additional action. designated airline official within the Flights and Designation of an Airline
specified time frames. Individuals Agent
Section 70.2 Report of Death or Illness
on Board Flights typically involved in the notification In order to ensure that all parties are
process include the crew, including the aware of the appropriate lines of
As noted previously, the Director has
pilot or captain, flight operations on the communication between airlines and
a responsibility to prevent the spread of
ground, air traffic controllers, other CDC for reporting, and that policies and
communicable diseases between states.
The purpose of the disease reporting ground personnel, and other airline procedures are in place to facilitate such
requirement is to ensure that CDC can representatives. communication, this section requires
mobilize appropriate personnel to Paragraph (b) of this section enables airlines engaged in interstate travel to
respond efficiently to the arrival of an the Director to order airlines engaged in develop a written plan sufficient to
ill person with a communicable disease. interstate traffic to distribute to ensure the reporting of ill passengers
This response may require evaluation of passengers and crew, at a time specified and deaths on board flights and submit
the ill passenger by trained medical it to the Director within 90 days of the
by the Director, public health notices
personnel, evaluation of other final publication of this rule. Airlines
and other materials that describe
passengers who may have been exposed that intend to commence operation of
recommended measures for preventing flights in interstate traffic after this
to the disease en route, and secure spread of communicable diseases.
transport of individuals to a designated effective date shall submit a written
During SARS and in the time since the plan to the Director before commencing
isolation facility where they may receive outbreak was controlled, CDC has
appropriate care while minimizing the operations.
distributed Health Alert Notices to The plan may be submitted
risk of transmission to others. Because
advise passengers on international electronically to an e-mail address or
the entire panel of responders may not
be onsite at the airport it is imperative flights who may have been exposed to permanent address that will be provided
that notification be received by CDC as a communicable disease as to how to in the final rule. This plan would
soon as the illness is identified and, monitor their health and how to proceed identify the designated airline ‘‘point of
whenever possible, at least one hour should certain symptoms develop. contact’’ or ‘‘agent’’ for issues related to
prior to arrival. These notices were an important reporting of any deaths or ill passengers.
Under current regulations (§ 70.4), the component of the CDC response to In addition, the plan would identify the
person in charge of any carrier engaged SARS. The effectiveness of this members of the flight team (e.g., cabin
in interstate traffic on which a case or measure, however, was limited by crew, captain, airline flight operations,
suspected case of a communicable CDC’s inability to ensure that all flight controllers, or other airline-
disease develops, as soon as practicable, passengers received the notices, a goal designated agent for reporting) who will
is required to notify the local health that was particularly difficult if be responsible for making the required
authorities at the next port of call, distribution occurred after passengers report to the Director.
station, or stop and take such measures already had entered the terminal and The plan must be implemented
as the local health authority directs. were focused on getting to distant gates within 180 days of the final publication
Paragraph (a) of § 70.2 in the proposed of the rule. CDC believes that a 90-day
or their final destinations. The routine
revision eliminates the requirement that time frame for development of a written
delay in passenger dispersal following
carriers report to local health plan and an additional 90 days for
disembarkation that accompanies
authorities, requiring instead that implementation to be appropriate
international arrivals (i.e., while they because airlines should already have
reports be made to the Director. By
providing a single point of contact for undergo immigration and customs such procedures in place to satisfy the
disease reports, the burden on carriers processing) is absent from interstate existing ill passenger reporting
to identify and maintain points of arrivals, thereby making distribution of requirement currently contained in 42
contact with local health authorities is this information post-disembarkation CFR 70.4. Airlines commencing
significantly reduced. The Director even more challenging. By requiring operations after the rule is in effect must
would assume responsibility for airline staff to distribute these materials implement their written plans by the
notifying local health authorities as prior to disembarkation, for example, later of the following: 180 days after the
indicated. It is common, but not Director can better ensure that final publication of the rule or upon
universal, that FAA officials (e.g., air potentially exposed passengers have commencement of operations. CDC
traffic control) are included among access to information critical to solicits comment on whether these
those notified by the airline of an ill maintaining their own health and to timeframe are appropriate. During the
passenger. Current CDC procedure preventing spread in the community. phase-in period established in this
dictates that FAA personnel and other CDC expects to exercise this section, airlines are still expected to
emergency response personnel are requirement in situations where a comply with the reporting requirements
notified by Quarantine Station staff of significant outbreak of a quarantinable contained in current § 70.4.
the impending arrival of a plane disease is detected abroad and there is Airlines are required to review the
carrying a passenger with other than the potential for exposure among plan one year after implementation and
routine illness. However, this interstate travelers. CDC might also annually thereafter and make revisions
notification is contingent on CDC require airlines to distribute notices in as necessary. Airlines that have not
awareness of the situation prior to flight the period between the outbreak of a reported ill passengers or deaths on
arrival, as this provision requires. board a flight under the requirements in
new communicable disease and the
The regulation was drafted to afford 70.2 in the prior 365 days are required
addition of the disease to the list of
the carrier maximum flexibility in to conduct drills or exercises to test and
establishing a system to ensure that the quarantinable diseases. evaluate the effectiveness of the plan.
advance reporting requirement is met. Any revisions as a result of the annual
We do not intend to mandate a review or the drills or exercises must be

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71898 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

submitted to the Director within 60 care when appropriate. However, if a accompany its request for passenger
days. suspected case of SARS was identified information with a written order
after disembarkation, CDC staff had to explaining CDC’s legal authority for
Section 70.4 Passenger Information
manually gather, compile, and process requesting such information.
Among the fundamental components data from flight manifests, customs In November 2003, the University of
of the public health response to the declarations, and any other available Louisville School of Medicine prepared
report of a person with a communicable sources relevant to the case. a report entitled ‘‘Quarantine and
disease is the identification and Utilizing this manual process, CDC Isolation: Lessons Learned from SARS,’’
evaluation of those who may have been staff encountered the following that recommended:
exposed. Public health authorities may difficulties: In the event that an international traveler
then offer these individuals treatment, • Manifests provided by carriers develops an infectious disease, there is an
vaccination, or other preventive contained only the name and the seat urgent need to be able to locate crew
measures as may be available. These number. members and other passengers from the same
treatments, by preventing the • Custom declarations were flight or ship. Public health officials must
development or progress of the disease, completed by the passenger by hand have immediate access to passenger
serve the dual purpose of providing and were often illegible. manifests or be able to require all arriving
passengers to complete a public health form
direct benefit to those exposed along • Names on the customs declarations
containing, for example, the individual’s
with benefit to the community at large did not necessarily match those on the health status, seat number, countries visited,
by preventing further person-to-person manifests. and contact information. This information
spread. Thus, in order to carry out her • Phone numbers were not included must be in electronic form.
delegated responsibility to control on customs forms, and only one
spread of communicable diseases Collection of this information finds
customs form was filled out per family.
between states, the Director must, for a strong support in public opinion. While
Since the data gathered from
limited time, be able to efficiently a significant number of air passengers
manifests and customs declarations
identify and locate persons who may expressed concerns with increased
were only available in hard copy, it
have been exposed to a communicable reservation or check-in time, a Harvard
often took several days to obtain.
disease during travel. The identification School of Public Health study, Project
Photocopies were sent by express mail
and notification of those exposed is an on the Public and Biological Security,
to CDC where the data were keyed into
essential first step in providing the finds that 94% of air travelers would
a database. Entering the data and
exposed access to potentially life-saving want public health authorities to contact
verifying the addresses usually took
medical follow-up and disease them if they might have been exposed
several more days. The time required to
prevention measures, including to a serious contagious disease on an
track passengers was routinely longer
vaccination. Preventing secondary cases airplane. In addition, 93% of domestic
than the incubation period of the SARS
among contacts, in turn, helps prevent air travelers and 89% of international
virus.
further propagation and spread of While CDC received good cooperation air travelers expressed a willingness to
disease within the community. As such, from the industry, the primary provide some type of contact
travelers and the public at large derive responsibility for locating passengers information.
direct benefit from a system, such as is In its April 2004 report on Emerging
rests with public health authorities as
proposed, that ensures that, if an Diseases, GAO–04–564, the U.S.
recognized by International Air
exposure has occurred, affected Government Accountability Office
Transport Association (IATA)
passengers can be identified, located, concluded:
Recommended Practices 1788, as shown
and notified within the incubation in the following excerpts: The Centers for Disease Control and
period of the disease. If notification Prevention * * * tried to contact passengers
When a Member is advised by a health from flights and ships on which a traveler
does not occur by the conclusion of the authority that it may have transported a
incubation period, the effectiveness of was diagnosed with SARS after arriving in
passenger with an infectious disease, it shall the United States. However, these efforts
medical follow-up and disease co-operate with such health authority, with were hampered by airline concerns and
prevention measures and, therefore, the the understanding that it is not the Member’s procedural issues.
benefit to the public is severely reduced. responsibility to trace and notify other
The worldwide outbreak of SARS, an passengers who may have been exposed to On the basis of that conclusion, the
illness that was originally reported in the infectious disease. GAO recommended that the
Asia in late 2002 and quickly spread to If the health authority requests a list of Secretary of HHS complete steps to ensure
North America and Europe, provided a other passengers who may have been that the agency can obtain passenger contact
clear example of the rapidity with exposed to the infectious disease, the health information in a timely manner, including, if
which an infectious disease may spread authority should be advised to first utilize necessary, the promulgation of specific
immigration records of the arriving regulations.
through air travel, while exposing clear passengers, such as landing cards, in order to
limitations in the current system of determine the names and addresses of such This provision seeks to address this
identifying and notifying those who passengers. If the health authority advises the recommendation by GAO.
may have been exposed during travel. Member that it was unable to determine from As stated previously, under 42 U.S.C.
During this outbreak, CDC attempted to immigration records, the names of other 264, the Secretary of HHS is authorized
gather contact information on persons passengers who may have been exposed to to make and enforce regulations
exposed and received significant the infectious disease, the Member should necessary to prevent the introduction,
cooperation from the airlines. CDC met ask the health authority to make a formal transmission, and spread of
flights containing suspected contagious request for a list of passengers. communicable diseases from foreign
passengers and obtained location and In the aftermath of SARS, CDC has countries into the United States and
contact data from both passengers and continued to enjoy good overall from one state or possession into
crew members before disembarkation. cooperation from airline industry another. The Director has been
Ill passengers on planes from affected partners. However, citing information delegated the responsibility for carrying
areas were met by CDC staff members privacy concerns, some airlines have out these regulations. The Director’s
for evaluation and referred for medical increasingly required that CDC authority to investigate suspected cases

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and potential spread of communicable requested for communicable diseases suffix); current home address (street,
disease among foreign and interstate would be following exposure to an apartment number, city, state/province,
travelers is thus not limited to those individual with suspected measles or postal code); at least one of the
known or suspected of having a bacterial meningitis. When to order following current phone numbers in
quarantinable disease (any of the transmission of data from airlines order of preference: (mobile, home,
communicable diseases listed in an would, by necessity, have to be decided pager, or work ); e-mail address;
Executive Order, as provided under on a case-by-case basis depending on passport or travel document, including
Section 361 of the Public Health Service the facts and circumstances of the the issuing country or organization;
Act (42 U.S.C. 264). Executive Order particular disease occurrence. However, traveling companions or group; flight
13295, of April 4, 2003, as amended by any order to transmit passenger information; returning flight (date,
Executive Order 13375 of April 1, 2005, information to CDC would be done so airline number, and flight number); and
contains the current revised list of when necessary for the protection of the emergency contact information as
quarantinable diseases, and may be vital interests of an individual or other defined in § 70.1. The following table
obtained at http://www.cdc.gov and persons, in regard to significant health summarizes the data elements that
http://www.archives.gov/ risks. would be collected under the proposed
federal_register). Rather, the authority The proposed regulation requires that NPRM, those items currently collected
encompasses all communicable diseases airlines operating interstate flights by airlines and the frequency of
that may necessitate a public health arriving in or departing from any of the collection, and items which the
response. An order for transmission of airports listed in Appendix A to request Department of Homeland Security
passenger information is more likely to certain information from passengers, collects under its Advanced Passenger
follow exposure to a non-quarantinable maintain it in an electronic database for Information System (APIS). Based on
communicable disease than to one listed 60 days from the end of the flight, and CDC’s experience with previous contact
as quarantinable under the current transmit the information to CDC within tracing efforts using passenger data, the
Executive Order as the former occur 12 hours of a request. This information data elements are ordered according to
much more commonly. Examples of includes, as specified in paragraph (e), the relative utility of each piece of data
situations where manifest data may be full name (first, last, middle initial, with respect to contract tracing.

Required by
DHS/APIS for
Data elements required by CDC NPRM Currently collected by airlines international
flights

Name ........................................................................................... Yes ............................................................................................ Yes.


Emergency contact ..................................................................... Intermittent to rarely for domestic flights, more frequently for No.
international flights.
Flight information ........................................................................ Yes ............................................................................................ Yes.
Phone number ............................................................................ Intermittent ................................................................................ No.
Email address ............................................................................. Intermittent—usually only for Internet, phone, or travel agent No.
reservations.
Current home address ................................................................ Intermittent—usually only for Internet or travel agent reserva- No.
tions.
Passport or travel document number and country (for foreign Only for international flights ...................................................... Yes.
nationals for domestic and international flights).
Traveling companions ................................................................. No .............................................................................................. No.
Returning flight information ......................................................... Usually only if booked at same time or with same airline ........ No.

The data are to be collected from each The provision does not require are interested in further strategies that
crewmember and passenger or head of airlines to verify the accuracy of the may increase the likelihood of receiving
household if the passenger is a minor information collected from passengers. accurate information from travelers
and must be maintained by the airline Airlines, however, are expected to • Whether a shorter list of contact
for 60 days from the end of the voyage. accurately transmit information data would improve the willingness to
Upon request of the Director, the data collected from passengers. Based in part provide information or the accuracy of
are to be transmitted to CDC within 12 on data from a public opinion survey, it the information provided.
hours. This time period is considered is believed likely that passengers will • The degree to which airlines and
longer than will actually be necessary voluntarily provide this information so shiplines currently collect each
once the plan for data transmission that CDC could contact the passenger in proposed data element, the feasibility
developed pursuant to § 70.5 has been the case of that passenger’s exposure to and cost of collecting each data element,
implemented. In addition, paragraph (f) a communicable disease. However, and the extent that the additional data
passengers who decline to provide collection would require changes in IT
enables the Director to compel, through
contact information will not be systems or operating procedures.
order, transmittal of additional
prohibited from traveling. • The utility of each proposed data
information in the airline’s possession
CDC invites comments on any and all element for the purposes of contact
that may be necessary to prevent the aspects of this data collection. tracing.
introduction, transmission, or spread of Specifically, CDC solicits comments on Information and records provided to
communicable diseases. For example, the following subjects: CDC will be maintained and stored in
information regarding the airline’s food • Although we assume travelers will accordance with HHS and CDC policies
service provider may be relevant to an be willing to provide accurate and in accordance with Privacy Act (5
investigation of a foodborne outbreak on information in the interest of being U.S.C. 552a) and its implementing
board an airline. contacted for public health reasons, we regulations (45 CFR Part 5b), which

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71900 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

require that the records only be used for rule, including the practicality of Upon implementation of the plan,
authorized purposes by authorized informing passengers of the purposes of airlines are required to conduct drills or
personnel. Paper records will be kept in the information collection and the exercises to test and evaluate the
locked storage containers and access safeguarding of passenger information. effectiveness of the plan. Airlines are
will only be allowed for authorized The airports listed in Appendix A are required to review the plan one year
personnel; electronic records will be derived from a list that the Federal after implementation and annually
inaccessible to all CDC employees Aviation Administration uses to thereafter. The review shall include
except those that are authorized to use apportion its Airport Improvement drills or exercises to test and evaluate
them in accordance with Federal law. Program grants base. As part of this the effectiveness of the written plan
After the legal retention period for these program, FAA assigns the status of unless the airline has transmitted
records has expired, they will be airport hubs based upon that airport’s passenger and crewmember information
destroyed (shredding or maceration for passenger boardings as a percent of total under § 70. 4 in the prior 365 days.
paper files; wiping of electronic files) to U.S. passenger boardings. CDC has Airlines shall make revisions as
ensure that the information is not listed in Appendix A the 67 large and necessary as result of the review and
recoverable and to ensure the privacy medium hubs assigned by FAA in 2004, submit them to the Director within 60
and confidentiality of those involved. which is the latest list published by days.
CDC has a long history of managing FAA. CDC is focusing upon the 67 large
and medium hubs because this captures Section 70.6 Travel Permits
sensitive data in a manner that protects
the confidentiality and privacy of the a majority (approximately 90%) of This provision requires any person
public. This positive track record will annual passenger boardings without who knows that he or she is in the
continue with the management of these burdening airlines that operate only in qualifying stage, as defined in § 70.1, of
records. small hubs where passenger boardings any quarantinable disease to obtain a
The Federal Records Management are considerably lighter. CDC may revise travel permit from the Director if he/she
retention guidelines require that we this list in the future through notice and intends to travel in interstate traffic or
develop a specific approved records comment rulemaking. from one state or possession into any
control schedule through the other state or possession.
Section 70.5 Written Plan for Section 70.6 prohibits interstate
established records disposition process.
Passenger Information and Designation carriers from knowingly transporting or
CDC intends to propose a records
of an Airline Agent accepting for transport any person in the
control schedule for these records that
would establish a legal retention period This provision as outlined in qualifying stage of a quarantinable
of one year. This would allow CDC to paragraph (a) requires airlines engaged disease without a travel permit issued
properly respond to outbreaks, and to in interstate commerce to designate an by the Director. If a person possesses a
ensure the health of airline passengers agent as a CDC single point of contact travel permit, the carrier is required to
and the American public. The review for communications related to passenger take all steps necessary to prevent
process (as defined in 36 CFR part 1228) manifests. In addition, airlines must spread of the disease during transport.
will involve significant internal CDC develop, within six months of the final Persons who know that they are in the
review (including substantive legal publication of this rule, a written plan qualifying stage of a quarantinable
review), a review by HHS and the sufficient to ensure the electronic disease are prohibited from traveling in
National Archives and Records transmission to the Director of data that interstate traffic or from one state or
Administration (NARA), and finally the are collected from passengers and crew possession into another without a
publishing of a proposed retention pursuant to § 70.4. Paragraph (f) permit issued by the Director. The
schedule for these records in the explains that airlines meeting the person issued a permit is required to
Federal Register for public comment. provisions in (a) that intend to maintain possession of the permit at all
CDC anticipates that this process will commence operations after the effective times during travel, and to comply with
take 12–18 months. We are confident date in (a) shall submit a written plan its conditions. Persons whose
that after this process all relevant to the Director prior to commencing application for a travel permit has been
interests and concerns from health, operations. denied may submit a written appeal
privacy and legal perspectives, and The plan may be submitted within two business days in accordance
those representing the interests of electronically to an e-mail address or with 70.31.
passengers, the airline industry, and the permanent address that will be provided An order of the CDC Director is not
general public will be taken into in the final rule. The written plan must necessary for travel permits to be
consideration. Current standard records include policies and procedures for the required under this section, rather these
retention policy requires that we keep transmission of the data in an electronic are ongoing requirements. CDC expects
data for 10 years. Until we can create a format available to both the airline and that the need to issue a travel permit
new records schedule for these data, the Director using industry standards for will arise infrequently. CDC envisions
CDC will follow this policy. data encoding, transmission, and that the circumstances under which the
Airlines are expected to safeguard the security. Airlines are required to submit use of travel permits would be necessary
confidentiality of the information their written plans for transmission of include (1) to prevent spread of
collected. Under the proposed passenger manifest information to the quarantinable disease in interstate
regulation, information collected solely Director and implement the plan within traffic or from one state or possession
in order to comply with this rule may 2 years of the final publication of this into any other state or possession; (2)
only be used for the purposes for which rule. Airlines commencing operations upon request of a health authority; and
it is collected. Airlines shall ensure that after the effective date in (a) are required (3) in the event of inadequate local
passengers are informed of the purposes to implement the plan on the later of control. The requirement of travel
of this information collection at the time these two dates: 2 years after the final permits pertains to individuals who
passengers arrange their travel. CDC publication of this rule or upon know they are in the qualifying stage of
solicits comments on the privacy commencement of operations. CDC is quarantinable disease and thus requires
aspects of collecting information to be soliciting comments specifically in actual knowledge of one’s condition.
used solely in order to comply with this regard to these timeframes. Similarly, section 70.6 provides that a

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carrier may not knowingly transport a § 70.11 (sanitary measures), and § 70.12 Section 70.10 Establishment of
traveler in the qualifying stage of a (detention of carriers affecting interstate Institutions, Hospitals and Stations
quarantinable disease without a permit. commerce). A limited exemption is also This provision authorizes the Director
The Director may additionally apply created with respect to § 70.6(c) (travel to enter into voluntary agreements with
the provisions of this section to persons permit requirements relating to persons public or private institutions for the
and carriers traveling entirely within the who know that they are in the purpose of establishing places for care
boundaries of a state or possession upon qualifying stage of a quarantinable and treatment. This provision is based
the request of a cognizant health disease) and § 70.7 (Responsibility with upon legal authority provided in 42
authority or in the event of inadequate respect to minors, wards, and patients), U.S.C. 267. With the approval of the
local control if the Director determines
provided that the person authorizing the Secretary, the Director may select
that such persons’ travel or the
service member’s travel on a military suitable sites for the establishment of
operations of the carrier have an effect
carrier takes measures consistent with quarantine stations and places for care
on interstate commerce. In such cases,
the Director will issue an order advising those prescribed by the Director to and treatment. Additional legal
persons of the application of this prevent the possible transmission of authorities relevant to the control,
provision to intrastate traffic that affects infection to others during travel. This management, and control of institutions,
interstate commerce. CDC believes that section is largely carried over from hospitals, and stations established by
travel permits may be an important existing § 70.8. Furthermore, while not the Secretary are also contained in 42
public health tool in the event of a specifically exempt, carriers belonging U.S.C. 248.
public health emergency that to the military services are not subject Section 70.11 Sanitary Measures
necessitates the control of intrastate to requirements relating to reporting of
deaths or illness on board flights (§ 70.2 Section 361(a) of the PHS Act (42
movement or the orderly evacuation of
U.S.C. 264(a)) provides that in carrying
infected individuals to other locations & § 70.3) and passenger information
out regulations, the Secretary
within a state or possession. (§ 70.4 & § 70.5) because aircraft
operated by the military services do not may provide for such inspection, fumigation,
Section 70.7 Responsibility With disinfection, sanitation, pest extermination,
Respect to Minors, Wards, and Patients operate ‘‘commercially.’’ These
destruction of animals or articles found to be
exemptions exist because the U.S. so infected or contaminated as to be sources
This section clarifies that parents, military has established mechanisms to
guardians, physicians, nurses, and other of dangerous infection to human beings, and
prevent disease spread on board its other measures, as in his judgment may be
persons may not procure transportation carriers and among its personnel. HHS necessary.
for children, wards, or patients whom also wishes to minimize any potential
they know to be in the qualifying stage Section § 70.11 implements this
disruption of military activities. statutory provision by authorizing the
of a quarantinable disease without
obtaining a travel permit from the Section 70.9 Vaccination Clinics Director, in consultation with other
Director if such a permit is required Federal agencies as appropriate, to
under this part. Because minor children, This provision replaces current § 70.9, inspect and order the application of
wards, and hospitalized persons may recently promulgated as an interim final such sanitary measures (as that term is
not be able to procure transportation on rule. The current section authorizes the defined) to any carrier affecting
their own, the responsibility for Director to establish vaccination clinics interstate commerce or to things on
obtaining the travel permit falls to their and to charge persons not enrolled in board the carrier that the Director
guardians and/or other persons in Medicare Part B a user fee to cover costs reasonably believes to be infected or
whom their care is entrusted. This associated with administration of contaminated by a communicable
provision is a carryover from existing vaccine. The proposed regulation disease.
§ 70.7, with the exception that the contains similar authority, and Paragraph (a) updates, consolidates
provision has been changed to additionally requires vaccination clinics and makes applicable to interstate
specifically reference travel permits. to comply with recordkeeping and other situations the ‘‘disinfection,’’
Persons whose application for a travel instructions issued by the Director to ‘‘disinfestations,’’ ‘‘disinsection,’’ and
permit has been denied may submit a ensure safe administration, handling, other provisions contained in current 42
written appeal within two business days monitoring and storage of vaccines. CFR Part 71. It explains that the
in accordance with 70.31. These requirements include collection Director, in consultation with other
and maintenance of information on federal agencies as appropriate, may
Section 70.8 Military Services inspect and order the carrier, or other
vaccine recipients including age,
Under section 361 of the PHS Act (42 entity specified in the order, as the party
gender, date of vaccination, vaccine lot
U.S.C. 264), the HHS Secretary has responsible for applying such measures
broad authority to enact regulations to number, prior vaccination, concurrent
as the Director deems necessary to
prevent the introduction, transmission, vaccinations, Vaccine Adverse Events prevent the introduction, transmission,
and spread of communicable diseases. Reporting System Report/Adverse Event or spread of communicable diseases.
This is a statute of general applicability Report Number (if applicable), and Paragraph (b) explains that CDC shall
and thus applies to the military and its verification that the vaccination not bear the expense of applying the
service members traveling on military conferred immunity. In addition, the sanitary measure or, expenses related to
carriers. Section 70.8, however, exempts reason for vaccination (e.g. post things on board. While the preceding
the military services and their members exposure, pre-exposure prophylaxis, paragraph states that CDC shall not bear
traveling on military carriers from military, administrative requirement related expenses, paragraph (c) indicates
certain provisions of Part 70. [pre-employment, school entry], that CDC does not intend to prevent an
Specifically, the military services and member of high risk group, pre-travel, entity conducting sanitary measures
their members traveling on military general vaccination, or other reason) required by the Director from seeking
carriers are exempt from the following must be stated. The Director may waive reimbursement ‘‘through contractual
provisions: § 70.6(a) (travel permits or modify these requirements in the arrangements or other available means
requirements relating to carriers), event of a public health emergency. from entities other than the CDC.’’

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A written order to the carrier operator topical pediculocidal agent, and would whether the person may be in the
or owner of the cargo would be one have their clothing washed in hot water qualifying stage of a quarantinable
method that CDC could use for ordering and detergent. The sanitary measures disease. This section is primarily
the application of sanitary measures, but applicable to carriers, animals or things intended to deal with those situations.
would not be the exclusive method. include detention, destruction, seizure, Section 361(b) of the Public Health
Depending on the circumstances of the disinfection, disinfestations, Service Act (42 U.S.C. 264(b))
disease, CDC, for example, could notify disinsection and any other measures authorizes the ‘‘apprehension,
carrier operators through publication in deemed necessary to prevent the detention, or conditional release’’ of
the Federal Register when the introduction, transmission or spread of persons to prevent the introduction,
occurrence of a communicable disease communicable diseases. If the Director transmission, and spread of specified
outbreak in a foreign country increases orders the destruction or export of communicable diseases from foreign
the likelihood of the importation of animals, articles, or things in countries into the United States and
infected persons or goods into the accordance with this section, the owner from one State or possession into
United States, and thus may affect of such animals, articles, or things may another. Section 70.1 3(a) authorizes the
interstate travel. In time-sensitive appeal the measure, within two Director to provisionally quarantine a
situations that present an imminent business days, in accordance with person or group of persons believed to
threat to human health and require the Section 70.31. be in the qualifying stage of a
immediate application of sanitary CDC invites comments on any and all quarantinable disease. Ordinarily,
measures, a CDC quarantine officer aspects of the proposed process for provisional quarantine will be ordered
could also verbally order that such issuing orders to conduct sanitary by the quarantine officer at the port of
measures be carried out. Typically, an measures and the appeals process. entry, but may also be ordered by other
order to carry out sanitary measures authorized agents of the Director. In
Section 70.12 Detention of Carriers accordance with sections 311 and 365 of
would explain the risk to human health Affecting Interstate Commerce
posed by the infected or contaminated the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 243 and 268),
carrier or article and contain In addition to the provisions listed in the Director may seek the assistance of
instructions on which measures should Section 70.11, this provision further state and local authorities and of U.S.
be employed to abate the human health authorizes the Director, in consultation Customs and Coast Guard officials,
risk. Which sanitary measures should be with such other federal agencies as respectively, in the enforcement of
employed in a given circumstance appropriate, to detain a carrier until the quarantine rules and regulations.
would be determined based on scientific necessary measures outlined in Section Under § 70.14, paragraph (b),
and public health principles applicable 70.11 have been completed. The provisional quarantine commences on
expense of applying sanitary measures the occurrence of any one of three
to the threat to human health.
and detention shall not be borne by events: (i) Service of a written
Under paragraph (c), the Director may provisional quarantine order on the
CDC. If the Director orders the detention
apply sanitary measures to persons who person or group of persons; (ii) a verbal
of a carrier in accordance with this
are not in the qualifying stage of a order from an authorized party
section, the carrier owner may appeal
quarantinable disease. Provisions (typically the quarantine officer at the
the detention, within two business days,
specifically dealing with respect to port of entry) that the person or group
in accordance with Section 70.31.
persons who may be in the qualifying CDC invites comments on any and all of persons are being provisionally
stage of a quarantinable disease may be aspects of the proposed process for quarantined; or (iii) placement of actual
found in §§ 70.6, and 70.14 through issuing orders to conduct sanitary movement restrictions on the person or
70.24. When applied to a person or measures and the appeals process. group of persons. ‘‘Actual movement
group of persons, a sanitary measure restrictions’’ occur when, as determined
involves the application or direct Section 70.13 Screenings to Detect Ill by the Director, a person under the same
exposure to such chemical, physical, or Persons circumstances would understand that
other processes that are designed to This section authorizes the Director at he or she is being detained and thus is
destroy the presence of infectious agents airports and other locations to conduct not free to leave. In most circumstances,
that may be outside the body. Under screenings to detect the presence of ill provisional quarantine is a brief
paragraph (c), such procedures may be persons. The definition of ‘‘ill persons’’ detention lasting only as long as
carried out only with the consent of the appears in the definitions section. necessary for the quarantine officer (or
person. Sanitary measures applied to a Methods of screening may include other authorized agent) to ascertain
person or group of persons are intended visual inspection, electronic whether the person or groups of persons
to kill agents (or vectors capable of temperature monitors, and other are a possible carrier of disease. Under
conveying infectious agents) outside the methods determined appropriate by the paragraph (c), however, provisional
body by direct exposure to a chemical, Director to detect the presence of ill quarantine may continue for up to three
physical or other process designed to persons. business days, provided that persons
destroy such infectious agents or subject to provisional quarantine may be
vectors. During an outbreak of avian Section 70.14 Provisional Quarantine released sooner if the Director
influenza, for example, persons exiting Quarantine officers routinely conduct determines that detention is no longer
a farm containing infected birds would short term examinations of ill necessary. In the event it is necessary to
have all visible organic matter removed passengers at airports and other ports of quarantine an individual beyond three
from their shoes with disposable towels. entry to assess the presence of disease. business days, the Director will serve
Those persons would then transit Such examinations generally occur on a the individual with a quarantine order.
through a foot bath containing an voluntary basis with the consent of the A time frame of up to three business
effective virucidal solution. As an ill passenger. In situations where a days for provisional quarantine is
additional example, persons infected passenger withholds his or her consent necessary to confirm whether certain
with body lice during an outbreak of though those situations are few in disease-causing microorganisms are
epidemic typhus would be treated with number, the Director may nevertheless present in samples that may be obtained
appropriate antibiotics and an effective need to detain that person to determine from ill or deceased persons.

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Confirmation generally requires in vitro necessary to prevent the transmission or process is a flexible concept that varies
cultivation of the organism followed by spread of disease. Medical treatment, depending upon the particular
identification, direct visualization of the prophylaxis, or vaccination will circumstances of the event, a key
organism in tissue samples, typically occur in a hospital setting, but element of due process is a written
amplification of organism-specific may occur in other settings as the order that provides sufficient notice to
nucleic acid sequences (e.g. PCR Director deems necessary. Medical the person of the actions that the
confirmation), or detection of organism- treatment, prophylaxis, or vaccination government proposes to take and
specific antibodies generated in shall occur on a voluntary basis, describes how to contest the
response to the infection. Before these provided that persons who refuse government’s decision. In order to
tests can be performed, samples must be remain subject to provisional comply with this fundamental concept
collected and shipped to CDC, a process quarantine. Medical treatment, of due process, paragraph (d) requires
likely to take 24 hours. Once received, prophylaxis, or vaccination may be that the order advise the person or
completion of culture and identification provided in accordance with the group of persons of the following:
of bacteria requires a minimum of 24– provisions set forth in § 70.21. • The Director’s reasonable belief that
48 hours. Direct visualization in tissue Paragraph (f) explains that nothing in the person or group of persons is in the
samples typically requires 12–24 hours. § 70.14 shall be construed to limit the qualifying stage of a quarantinable
Quicker methods (amplification or Director’s ability to detain a person or disease based on information available
antibody detection) may be available for group of persons on a voluntary basis or to the Director at the time, such as travel
some diseases. Even under optimal offer such persons medical treatment, history, clinical manifestations, or any
circumstances, however, the most prophylaxis, or vaccination on a other evidence of infection or exposure;
modern testing methods require a voluntary basis. • The Director’s reasonable belief that
minimum of 12 hours. In addition to the either: (i) the person or group of persons
Section 70.15 Provisional Quarantine
time required for sample collection, is moving or about to move from a State
Orders
shipping and testing, the Director may to another State; or (ii) is a probable
need up to an additional 24 hours to This section explains the content of a source of infection to persons who will
assimilate test results with the findings provisional quarantine order issued in be moving from a State to another State;
of other investigations before arriving at accordance with § 70.11 and the process • The suspected quarantinable
a well-informed determination on the for serving an order on a person or disease;
need for a quarantine order. group of persons. Paragraph (a) explains • That the person or group of persons
A time frame of up to three business that the provisional quarantine order may be provisionally quarantined for
days comports with the requirements of shall be served by the Director at the three business days and that at the end
due process. While there are no federal time that provisional quarantine of such period the person or group shall
cases establishing a bright line for commences or as soon thereafter as the be released or, if determined by the
quarantine-type detentions, there are Director determines that the Director, served with a quarantine order;
several federal cases dealing with circumstances reasonably permit. • That the person or group of persons
‘‘alimentary canal’’ smugglers, i.e., Service will typically occur through may be released earlier if the Director
persons who smuggle drugs in their personal service, for example, by the determines that provisional quarantine
intestines by swallowing balloons. In quarantine officer or another authorized is no longer warranted;
United States v. Montoya de Hernandez, representative serving the person or
group of persons with a copy of the Section 70.16 Quarantine
473 U.S. 531 (1985), the U.S Supreme
Court analogized holding a suspected provisional quarantine order at the port The Director has historically
alimentary canal smuggler to detaining of entry or hospital facility, but may also recommended medical isolation and/or
someone for suspected tuberculosis, occur through other methods of home quarantine of persons with
noting that ‘‘both are detained until personal service. Due process requires suspected quarantinable diseases.
their bodily processes dispel the that the method of serving the order in Isolation and quarantine have generally
suspicion that they will introduce a any case be reasonably designed to been carried out with the consent of
harmful agent into this country.’’ accomplish actual service. Because persons or their authorized
Federal courts have upheld detention personal service may be impracticable representatives. This section is
periods ranging from 16 hours to 20 or undesirable in certain circumstances, primarily intended to deal with the
days based on ‘‘reasonable suspicion’’ for example, when it is necessary to small number of situations where the
for suspected alimentary canal provisionally quarantine a large group person refuses to comply on a voluntary
smugglers. Accordingly, provisionally of persons on a very short time-frame, basis with the Director’s instructions, or
quarantining a person suspected of paragraph (b) authorizes service through in situations where the Director
carrying a specified communicable posting or publishing the order in a otherwise believes that the mandatory
disease and affording that individual an conspicuous location when the Director quarantine is necessary. It describes the
opportunity for an administrative deems it necessary. Under paragraph (c), Director’s authority to quarantine
hearing during that period is consistent in circumstances where the Director persons that the Director believes are in
with due process requirements. Under deems public posting or publishing the qualifying stage of a quarantinable
paragraph (d), in the event that the necessary or desirable, the Director may disease.
Director determines that it is necessary omit the names and/or identities of the The quarantine of persons believed to
to continue to detain such persons persons and take other measures be infected with communicable diseases
beyond three business days, the Director respecting the privacy of persons, for is a prevention measure that has been
may serve the person or group of example, using initials, instead of full used effectively to contain the spread of
persons with a quarantine order in names, or other pseudonyms. disease. Quarantine differs from
accordance with §§ 70.16–70.18. Paragraph (d) describes the provisional quarantine in its potentially
Under paragraph (e), persons subject information contained in the longer duration, generally determined
to provisional quarantine may be offered provisional quarantine order and states by the disease’s periods of incubation
medical treatment, prophylaxis, or that the order shall be in writing and and communicability. Under paragraph
vaccination as the Director deems signed by the Director. While due (a), the Director may issue a quarantine

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order whenever the Director reasonably source of infection to persons who will they may request an administrative
believes that a person or group of be moving from a State to another State. hearing.
persons are in the qualifying stage of a Under paragraphs (b), (c), and (d), as Under paragraph (d), the Director may
quarantinable disease. In general, the with provisional quarantine, the also order quarantine where
Director’s belief that a person is in the Director may offer medical treatment, examination, medical treatment,
qualifying stage of a quarantinable prophylaxis, or vaccination to persons prophylaxis, or vaccination is medically
disease will be based on scientific subject to quarantine as the Director contra-indicated or not reasonably
principles such as clinical deems necessary to prevent the available.
manifestations, diagnostic tests or other transmission or spread of disease. Under paragraph (e), the length of
medical tests, epidemiologic Medical treatment, prophylaxis, or quarantine shall not exceed the period
information, laboratory tests, physical vaccination may occur in a hospital or of incubation and communicability, as
examination, or other available evidence other settings, including homes, as the determined by the Director, for the
Director deems necessary. Medical quarantinable disease. While flexibility
of exposure or infection. For interstate
treatment, prophylaxis, or vaccination regarding the length of quarantine must
quarantine only, the Director will make
will occur on a voluntary basis, be maintained by the Director in order
an additional determination that either provided that persons who refuse to allow for the possibility of new
(i) the person or group of persons are remain subject to quarantine until the variant or bioengineered strains of
moving or about to move from a State period of incubation and specified communicable diseases, in
to another State; or (ii) that the person communicability have passed. In the general the periods of incubation and
or group of persons are a probable event such persons are quarantined, communicability are as follows:

Disease Incubation period following exposure Period of communicability following onset of illness

Cholera ................................. Few hours—5 days ......................................................... 7–14 days.


Diphtheria ............................. 2–5 days .......................................................................... 30 days.
Infectious Tuberculosis ........ Primary: 4–6 weeks; Secondary: variable ...................... 14–60 days.
Influenza ............................... 1–4 days .......................................................................... 5–14 days.
Plague .................................. Pneumonic: 1–7 days (usually 2–4) ............................... 48 hours–14 days.
Yellow Fever ........................ 3–14 days ........................................................................ Viremia documented as long as 14 days into illness.
SARS ................................... 2–10 days ........................................................................ 21 days.
Marburg ................................ 2–16 days ........................................................................ 60–90 days.
Ebola .................................... 2–21 days ........................................................................ 60 days.
Crimean-Congo .................... 2–12 days ........................................................................ 12 days.
Smallpox .............................. 7–17 days ........................................................................ 10 days.

The periods of incubation and disease to others. Isolation, on the other through a petition for writ of habeas
communicability are intended to hand, is the restriction of movement of corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2241.
provide an estimate of the time an persons ill with a communicable disease Habeas corpus is the traditional legal
individual might be placed in in a stage where transmission is mechanism for contesting detention by
quarantine or isolation, respectively. possible. In general, when a person is the government. See Hamdi, 124 S.Ct. at
These time frames are based on exposed to one of the diseases listed in 2644. There is one litigated case
accepted medical facts related to these this table, existing authority allows the involving the exercise of federal
diseases and would be considered part Director to place that person under quarantine authority to quarantine an
of the basic knowledge possessed by quarantine up to the length of time exposed person, United States v.
physicians familiar with the diagnosis listed under the incubation period for Shinnick, 219 F.Supp.789 (E.D.N.Y.
and treatment of these diseases. For each disease. If, during the time of 1963).
many of the diseases, such as quarantine, the person becomes ill, the In Shinnick, the U.S. Public Health
tuberculosis and viral hemorrhagic authorities allow for them to be isolated Service medically isolated an arriving
fever, the range of possible periods of for a period up to that listed under passenger in a hospital for 14 days
incubation and communicability, based period of communicability. because she had been in Stockholm,
on published individual case reports, is For example, a person with a Sweden, a city that the World Health
significantly longer. To provide a more potential exposure to SARS could be Organization had declared to be a
realistic sense of the time during which under quarantine for up to 10 days. smallpox-infected local area. The
isolation or quarantine may be However, if that person became ill, he patient, moreover, could not show proof
necessary, CDC listed ranges that, in the or she would no longer be in quarantine, of vaccination. The district court upheld
opinion of subject matter experts, but would be isolated for the duration the detention, finding that health
encompass the vast majority of cases of of illness or period of communicability authorities had acted in good faith
these diseases. In all cases, the listed (up to 21 days). If the person under because there had been an opportunity
ranges are shorter than the upper limit quarantine for the incubation period did for exposure while the patient had been
of documented periods of incubation or not become ill within 10 days of the in Stockholm. The court further noted
communicability. time the exposure was thought to have that there was no way of determining for
For this purpose, it is important to occurred, he or she would be released. 14 days whether the patient was
distinguish between the two terms: An opportunity to request an actually infected with smallpox and that
Quarantine and isolation. Quarantine administrative hearing for purposes of she was especially susceptible to
refers to the restriction of movement of reviewing the quarantine order is infection because there was a history of
persons who have been exposed to a provided for under these regulations. unsuccessful vaccinations.
communicable disease, but have not yet The person or group may also seek Paragraph (g) explains that nothing in
become ill or able to transmit that judicial review of the quarantine order § 70.16 shall be construed to limit the

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Director’s ability to quarantine a person Section 70.18 Service of Quarantine review by the agency is in addition to
or group of persons on a voluntary basis. Order and apart from any judicial review of
This section explains the process for the Director’s determination that may be
Section 70.17 Content of Quarantine
serving a quarantine order on a person available, for example, through the
Order
or group of persons. Paragraph (a) filing of a petition for a writ of habeas
This section requires that quarantine corpus under 28 U.S.C. 2241. The
explains that a copy of the quarantine
orders issued by CDC be signed by the opportunity to contest the government’s
order shall be served at the time that
Director and describes the content of the actions in a meaningful time, place, and
quarantine commences or as soon
order. A written order that provides manner is a fundamental element of due
thereafter as the Director determines
sufficient notice to the person of the process. An administrative hearing
that the circumstances reasonably
actions that the government proposes to under this section is an informal
permit. Service will typically occur
take and describes how to contest the proceeding conducted by the agency
through personal service, for example,
government’s decision is a key element where the hearing officer reviews the
by an agent authorized to enforce
of due process. In order to comply with determination to quarantine a person or
quarantine serving the person or group
this fundamental concept of due process group of persons. Under paragraph (a),
of persons with a copy of the quarantine a person or group of persons (or an
and the requirements of Section 361 of order at home or at a hospital or other
the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. authorized representative) must
quarantine facility, but may also occur specifically request that the CDC
264), this section requires that the through other methods of service.
quarantine order contain the following Director hold an administrative hearing.
Because personal service may be The CDC Director will then schedule the
information: impracticable in certain circumstances,
• The identity of the person or group administrative hearing to take place
for example, when it is necessary to within one business day of the request
of persons to be quarantined, if known; quarantine a large group of persons, for a hearing. As part of the quarantine
• The location where such person or paragraph (b) also authorizes service order, the CDC Director will provide the
group of persons is to be quarantined; through posting or publishing the order person or group with information
• The date and time at which in a conspicuous location when the concerning how to request an
quarantine commences and ends; Director deems it necessary or desirable. administrative hearing, e.g., contact
• The suspected quarantinable In any case, due process requires that information, telephone numbers as
disease; the method of serving the order be stated in paragraph (c). Typically,
• A statement that the Director reasonably designed to accomplish requests can be made by informing the
reasonably believes that (i) such person actual service. Under paragraph (b), in quarantine officer, either verbally or in
or group of persons is in the qualifying circumstances where the Director deems writing, or by calling a telephone
stage of a quarantinable disease; and public posting or publishing necessary number established by the CDC Director
that either (ii) such person or group of or desirable, the Director may omit the for that purpose. Notice of the
persons will move or is about to move names and/or identities of the persons administrative hearing will be provided
from one State to another State; or (iii) and take other measures respecting the to the person or group of persons under
is a probable source of infection to privacy of persons, for example, using quarantine (or to an authorized
persons who will be moving from a initials, instead of full names, or representative) through any method the
State to another State; pseudonyms. CDC Director determines to be
• A statement regarding the basis for Section 70.19 Medical Examination reasonably designed to provide notice
the Director’s belief that such person or and Monitoring that the administrative hearing has been
group of persons is in the qualifying scheduled. The method may include, for
This provision authorizes the Director example, e-mail, telephone, or written
stage of a quarantinable disease, e.g.,
to order medical examination or notice.
clinical manifestations, physical
monitoring of persons believed to be in Under paragraph (d), the CDC Director
examination, laboratory tests, diagnostic
the qualifying stage of a quarantinable may designate a hearing officer to
tests or other medical tests,
disease. Production of information review the available medical or other
epidemiologic information, or other
concerning familial and social contacts, evidence of exposure or infection
evidence of exposure or infection
travel itinerary, medical history, place available and make findings as to
available to the Director at the time;
of work and vaccination status may also whether the person or group of persons
• A statement that persons shall be ordered by the Director. This are in the qualifying stage of a
comply with conditions of quarantine, information will permit determinations quarantinable disease and
including, but not limited to, to be made concerning the scope of recommendations as to whether the
examination, medical monitoring, potential exposure, the identity of those person or group of persons should be
medical treatment, prophylaxis, or in recent contact with the person, and released or remain in quarantine. Under
vaccination, or other conditions of the potential vulnerability of the person section 369 of the Public Health Service
quarantine deemed by the Director to be to the disease. Persons may refuse Act (42 U.S.C. 272), medical officers of
necessary to prevent the transmission or medical examination and monitoring, the United States, when performing
spread of communicable disease; but remain subject to provisional duties as quarantine officers at any port
• A statement that persons may refuse quarantine or quarantine. In the event or place within the U.S., are authorized
examination, medical monitoring, that persons who refuse medical to take declarations and administer
medical treatment, prophylaxis, or examination or monitoring are served oaths in matters pertaining to the
vaccination, but that if they choose to with a quarantine order, they may administration of quarantine laws and
do so they remain subject to quarantine; request an administrative hearing. regulations.
• A statement that persons under The hearing officer may be someone
quarantine, any time while the Section 70.20 Hearings within the agency, but will not be the
quarantine order is in effect, may This section describes the procedures same person who ordered the
request that the Director hold a hearing for an administrative hearing relating to quarantine. While the hearing officer
to review the quarantine order. a quarantine order. An administrative retains ultimate discretion regarding

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matters to be heard, the hearing will be • The hearing officer will ask the Section 70.21 Care and Treatment of
limited to genuine and substantial parties to present evidence to support Persons
issues of fact, e.g., regarding whether the their positions and desired outcomes of Under section 322(a) of the PHS Act
person or group of persons is in the the hearing. Witnesses may be called (42 U.S.C. 249) persons detained in
qualifying stage of a quarantinable and the parties may ask questions. The accordance with quarantine laws may
disease and whether the person or group hearing officer will swear in any be treated and cared for by HHS. Such
should be released or remain in witnesses offering testimony; persons may receive care and treatment
quarantine. Matters not subject to a • The hearing officer will ask each at the expense of HHS at a public or
hearing may include questions relating party for comments regarding the private medical or hospital facility,
to the legality or constitutionality of evidence or testimony presented by the when authorized by the officer in charge
statutes or regulations and matters that other party and for a short summary of of the quarantine station at which the
are neither genuine nor substantial, e.g., reasons for the desired outcome; application is made. CDC, in its sole
quality of food, availability of • The hearing officer will inform the discretion and subject to available
entertainment. parties that a report and
The administrative hearing will appropriations, is authorized to pay, as
recommendation outlining the hearing a payer of last resort, expenses of care
ordinarily be closed to the public to officer’s findings regarding the evidence
protect the medical privacy of the and treatment for persons detained in
of exposure or infection will be accordance with quarantine laws. For
person or group of persons under presented to the CDC Director for final
quarantine, unless the person or group quarantinable diseases, eligible
agency determination. expenses are limited to those for costs
of persons request that the hearing be Under paragraph (g), the hearing
open. The hearing officer, however, may and items reasonable and necessary for
officer may order a medical examination the care and treatment of the person
record the hearing through of the person or group of persons under
transcription, audio or video tape, from the time the person is referred to
quarantine when a medical examination a hospital or other medical facility for
summary notes of the proceeding, or would assist in reasonably determining
other means. At the discretion of the treatment until the time that quarantine
whether the person or group is in the expires. For other diseases, eligible
hearing officer, the administrative qualifying stage of a quarantinable
hearing may be based on written expenses are limited to those associated
disease. Persons requested to undergo a with services and items relating to care
submission. A hearing involving live
medical examination by the hearing and treatment prior to diagnosis;
testimony should, to the extent
officer may refuse, but remain subject to expenses associated with care and
practicable, provide opportunity for
quarantine. treatment following diagnosis will not
participation via telephone or other
Under paragraph (h), at the be paid by CDC.
remote means. Under paragraph (e), a
conclusion of the administrative
person or group of persons in Section 70.22 Foreign Nationals
quarantine may authorize a hearing, the hearing officer will, based
representative to appear at the hearing. upon his or her review of the evidence This section sets forth procedures for
Under paragraph (f), the CDC Director of exposure or infection made available notifying consular offices of the
shall take such measures as the CDC to the hearing officer, make findings and provisional quarantine or quarantine of
Director determines to be reasonably a written recommendation to the CDC their foreign nationals. These
necessary to allow a person or group of Director whether the person or group of procedures are consistent with
persons under quarantine to persons should be released or remain in requirements found in the Vienna
communicate with their authorized quarantine. The hearing officer will Convention on Consular Relations
representatives. Measures may, for provide the CDC Director with the regarding consular notification. In
example, include establishment of hearing report and recommendation as general, U.S. government requirements
video-conferencing facilities, e-mail soon as possible after the conclusion of regarding the detention of foreign
terminals, telephone or cellular phone the hearing. Under paragraph (h), the nationals may be accessed at: http://
services, and other similar devices or CDC Director, based upon the hearing travel.state.gov/law/consular/
technologies. officer’s findings and written consular_636.html.
During the administrative hearing, the recommendation and the administrative
record, shall within one business day Section 70.23 Administrative Record
person or group of persons subject to
quarantine will be given an opportunity after the conclusion of the hearing, Another key element of due process is
to call witnesses and present testimony. order the release or continued the existence of a record describing the
Within the discretion of the hearing quarantine of the person or group of agency’s actions for a court to review.
officer, administrative hearings may be persons. The CDC Director’s order will This section describes the content of a
consolidated when the number of be carried out without delay. person’s administrative record. An
persons or other factors renders Furthermore, because it is difficult to administrative record will consist of the
individual participation impracticable foresee all of the circumstances under following, where applicable:
or when factual issues affecting the which persons may request to be heard, • Provisional quarantine and/or
group are typical of those affecting the paragraph (h)(2) permits the CDC quarantine order;
individual. The hearing officer retains Director to issue additional instructions • Any medical, laboratory,
ultimate discretion to determine the and guidelines considered necessary to epidemiologic, or other information in
conduct of hearings, but will generally govern the conduct of hearings. support thereof;
follow these procedures: Paragraph (k) states that the • Evidence submitted by the person
• The hearing officer will ask the quarantine order will be deemed final under provisional quarantine and/or
parties if they wish to make a short administrative action either when the quarantine;
statement outlining their concerns and Director has accepted or rejected the • Written findings and
desired outcomes. This is not part of the hearing officer’s written recommendation of the hearing officer;
testimony, but a summary preview of recommendation or three business days and
the testimony and evidence for the after the request for a hearing, • Hearing transcript, if any, or
hearing officer; whichever comes first. summary notes of the hearing.

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Section 70.24 Requests by State or combination of measures the Director interstate commerce. Similarly, with
(including political subdivisions deems necessary with respect to respect to a person or group of persons
thereof), Possession, or Tribal Health facilities owned or operated by the in Indian country, the Director may
Authorities federal government. The federal exercise public health measures
This provision authorizes the Director government has a variety of different appearing in this part provided that
jurisdictional and proprietary such person or group of persons is in
to take whatever steps necessary to
arrangements with State and local the qualifying stage of a quarantinable
prevent the introduction, transmission
governments, as well as with private disease and either (i) moving or about to
or spread of communicable diseases
entities, concerning federal facilities. In move from a State to another State; or
upon the request of a health authority.
some cases, the federal government (ii) a probable source of infection to
Expressly referred to in the provision
maintains exclusively federal campuses, persons who will be moving from a
are requests for issuance of a provisional
while in other cases, jurisdiction with State to a State.
quarantine order or a quarantine order. Under this section, the Director, with
respect to activities occurring on federal
Under section 311 of the PHS Act (42 the concurrence of the IHS Director and
facilities is shared with State and local
U.S.C. 243), the Secretary is authorized after consulting with the affected Tribes
governments. This section simply
to cooperate with and aid states and clarifies that the Director may take or Tribes may enter onto Indian country
local authorities in the enforcement of public health measures with respect to for the purpose of enforcing federal
their quarantine and other health federal facilities. Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. quarantine rules and regulations. This
regulations. Paragraph (c) clarifies that 243, the Director may request the section provides that, in addition to the
nothing in this section is intended to assistance of State and local authorities public health measures outlined in Part
impose a condition or limit the ability in enforcing federal quarantine rules 70, the Director may impose public
of the Director to exercise any of the and regulations. Paragraph (b) clarifies health measures with regard to
public health measures provided for in that this section does not preclude the provisional quarantine under § 70.14
part 70, or in the case of possessions, Director from requesting such assistance and § 70.15, quarantine under § 70.16–
part 71. with respect to facilities owned or § 70.18, § 70.20, and medical
Section 70.25 Measures in the Event of operated by the federal government. examination and monitoring under
Inadequate Local Control § 70.19, in Indian country without
Section 70.27 Indian Country making a finding that such person or
This section is a carryover from This section is intended to implement group of persons is moving or about to
existing § 70.2 which authorizes the provisions appearing in 25 U.S.C. 198 move from a State to another State or is
CDC Director to take measures to and 231; 25 U.S.C. 1661; and 42 U.S.C. a probable source of infection to persons
prevent the spread of communicable 2001. who will be moving from a State to
diseases between States or between Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 198, the another State. In such circumstances, a
States and possessions whenever the Secretary of the Interior may quarantine finding that such persons are in the
Director determines that the measures any Indian found to be afflicted with ‘‘qualifying stage of a quarantinable
taken by any State or possession ‘‘tuberculosis, trachoma, or other disease’’ would be required.
(including political subdivisions) are contagious or infectious disease.’’ The Paragraph (b) provides that any
insufficient. Under Section 361(a) of the Secretary of the Interior, through 25 quarantine authorized by paragraph (a)
PHS Act, the measures that the Director U.S.C. 231, may also permit State agents must take place in a hospital or other
may take include inspection, and employees to enter upon Tribal place for treatment and that any person
fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, pest lands for the purposes of making who is subject to provisional quarantine
extermination, and destruction of inspections of health and educational or quarantine may refuse medical
animals or articles believed to be conditions and enforcing sanitation and examination, monitoring, treatment,
sources of infection, and other quarantine regulations. prophylaxis, or vaccination, but remain
measures. The proposed regulatory 42 U.S.C. 2001 transferred all subject to provisional quarantine or
language is consistent with that functions, responsibilities, authorities, quarantine. Paragraph (c) further
appearing in Section 361(a) of the PHS and duties relating to the conservation explains that any person who is the
Act. The proposed section also makes of the health of Indians, including 25 subject of a provisional quarantine order
clear that the Director may make a U.S.C. 198 and 231, from the Secretary or quarantine order authorized by
determination of inadequate local of the Interior to the Secretary of HHS, paragraph (a) has the same rights as
control with respect to public health which were redelegated to the Director provided for elsewhere in this part.
measures taken by Indian Tribes in of the Indian Health Service (IHS) by 25 Furthermore, under paragraph (d), the
Indian country. While a determination U.S.C. 1661. Any action the Director of Director, with the concurrence of the
of inadequate local control under this CDC takes under these sections must be IHS Director and after consulting with
section does not require the concurrence in concurrence with the Director of IHS the affected Tribes or Tribes, may
of the IHS Director, to the extent after consultation with the affected authorize agents and employees of any
practicable, when taking actions in Tribe or Tribes. State to enter Indian country for the sole
Indian Country the Director will consult The grant of authority in 25 U.S.C. purpose of enforcing federal quarantine
with the IHS Director prior to such 198 and 231 is in addition to the rules and regulations. This authority is
action and once a determination has Director’s authority under 42 U.S.C. subject to any rules or regulations the
been made, the Director will send 264, and this section of the proposed IHS Director may choose to promulgate
notification to both the Director, IHS rule supplements the Director’s under 25 U.S.C. 231.
and to the Tribe or tribes affected. authority to impose public health
measures to prevent interstate disease Section 70.28 Special Powers in Time
Section 70.26 Federal Facilities transmission. In other words, with of War
This section clarifies that, in addition respect to carriers in Indian country, the This section implements statutory
to the public health measures outlined Director may apply any of the public authority contained in section 363 of the
in part 70, the Director may take health measures appearing in this part PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 266). Under this
whatever further public health measures if such carriers have an effect on authority, the Director, in consultation

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with the Secretary of the Department of this part through an order issued and Sections Moved:
Defense or his/her designee and without signed by the Director. In the recent 70.2 Measures in the event of
making a finding of interstate past, the Director has issued a variety of inadequate local control moved to
movement, may, in time of war, orders to deal with urgent public health 70.22
apprehend, detain, or conditionally threats, including: Notice of embargo of Sections Added:
release persons: (1) In the qualifying civets (January 13, 2004); Notice of 70.4 Passenger information
stage of a quarantinable disease; and (2) embargo of birds (Class: Aves) from 70.5 Written plan for passenger
to be a probable source of infection to specified Southeast Asian countries information and designation of an
members of the military services or to (February 4, 2004); Order lifting the ban airline agent
individuals engaged in the production of bird and bird products from specified 70.6 Travel permits
or transportation of arms, munitions, Southeast Asian countries (March 10, 70.9 Vaccination clinics
ships, food, clothing, or other supplies 2004), and Joint Order (issued with the 70.10 Establishment of institutions,
for the military services. Any person FDA) prohibiting transportation or hospitals and stations
who is the subject of a provisional distribution of certain rodents 70.11 Sanitary measures
quarantine order or quarantine order associated with the monkeypox 70.12 Detention of carriers affecting
authorized under this section has the outbreak (June 11, 2003) followed by interstate commerce
same rights as provided for provisional promulgation of an Interim Final Rule 70.13 Screenings to detect ill persons
quarantine or quarantine elsewhere in (November 4, 2003). This section 70.14 Provisional quarantine
this part. codifies the preexisting practice of the 70.15 Provisional quarantine orders
agency with respect to implementation 70.16 Quarantine
Section 70.29 Penalties
through an order. 70.17 Content of quarantine order
This section describes the penalties Section 70.31 Appeals of Actions 70.18 Service of quarantine order
for violating federal quarantine rules Required Pursuant to 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 70.19 Medical examination and
and regulations. Under 42 U.S.C. 271, or 70.12 monitoring
criminal penalties exist for violating 70.20 Hearings
regulations enacted under the authority A new 70.31 would allow a written 70.21 Care and treatment of persons
of Section 361 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C appeal to the Director within two 70.22 Foreign nationals
264). Under the sentencing business days in the event that the 70.23 Administrative record
classification provisions of 18 U.S.C. Director denies an application for a 70.24 Requests by State (including
3559 and 3571, violations of the travel permit pursuant to 70.6 or 70.7, political subdivisions thereof),
quarantine regulations, classified as orders the destruction of animals, possession, or tribal health
Class A misdemeanors, are subject to articles, or things, pursuant to 70.11, or authorities
greater penalties. Violation by an the detention of a carrier pursuant to 70.25 Measures in the event of
individual is punishable by a fine of up 70.12. The Director may nevertheless inadequate local control
to $250,000 or one year in jail, or both. immediately implement the actions 70.26 Federal facilities
Organizations may be fined up to allowed in 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 and 70.12. 70.27 Indian country
$500,000 per violation. Following is a summary of changes to 70.28 Special powers in time of war
the current regulations: 70.29 Penalties
Section 70.30 Implementation
Sections Cancelled: 70.30 Implementation through order
Through Order
70.3 All communicable diseases 70.31 Appeals of actions required
This section explains that the Director 70.6 Apprehension and detention of pursuant to 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 or
may implement any of the provisions of persons with specific diseases 70.12

TABLE IV–1.—SECTIONS UPDATED AND/OR RECODIFIED IN 42 CFR PART 70


Current regulation Proposed regulation

Section Section

70.1 General definitions ......................................................................... 70.1 Scope and definitions.


70.2 Measures in the event of inadequate local control ....................... 70.2 Report of death or illness on board flights.
70.3(new) Written plan for reporting of deaths or illness on board
flights and designations of an airline agent.
70.3 All communicable diseases ........................................................... 70.4(new) Passenger information.
70.5(new) Written plan for passenger information and designation of
an airline agent.
70.4 Report of disease ........................................................................... 70.6(new) Travel permits.
70.5 Certain communicable diseases; special requirements ................ 70.7 Responsibility with respect to minors, wards, and patients.
70.6 Apprehension and detention of persons with specific diseases ... 70.8 Military services.
70.7 Responsiblity with respect to minors, wards, and patients. .......... 70.9(new) Vaccination clinics.
70.8 Members of military and naval forces ........................................... 70.10(new) Establishment of institutions, hospitals and stations.
70.11(new) Sanitary measures.
70.12(new) Detention of carriers affecting interstate commerce.
70.13(new) Screenings to detect ill persons.
70.14(new) Provisional quarantine.
70.15(new) Provisional quarantine orders.
70.16(new) Quarantine.
70.17(new) Content of quarantine order.
70.18(new) Service of quarantine order.
70.19(new) Medical examination and monitoring.
70.20(new) Hearings.

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TABLE IV–1.—SECTIONS UPDATED AND/OR RECODIFIED IN 42 CFR PART 70—Continued


Current regulation Proposed regulation

Section Section

70.21(new) Care and treatment of persons.


70.22(new) Foreign nationals.
70.23(new) Administrative record.
70.24(new) Requests by State (including political subdivisions there-
of), possession or tribal health authorities.
70.25 Measures in the event of inadequate local control.
70.26 Federal facilities.
70.27 Indian country.
70.28 Special powers in time of war.
70.29 Penalties.
70.30(new) Implementation through order.
70.31 Appeals of actions required pursuant to 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 or
70.12.

V. Summary of Proposed Changes to 42 Health Regulations,’’ ‘‘medical Upon certification, the SHD sends a
CFR Part 71 monitoring,’’ ‘‘military services,’’ notice of the new certification to the
The foreign quarantine regulations are ‘‘possession,’’ ‘‘provisional quarantine,’’ vaccine manufacturer and to CDC. Upon
used to control and prevent the ‘‘quarantine,’’ ‘‘quarantinable disease,’’ receipt, CDC sends a letter to the new
introduction, transmission, or spread of ‘‘sanitary measures,’’ ‘‘State,’’ ‘‘ship,’’ center, confirming contact information
communicable diseases from foreign ‘‘shipline,’’ ‘‘shipline’s agent,’’ and and offering inclusion on CDC’s secure
countries into the United States. ‘‘United States.’’ Web-based registry of certified
Sections of this regulation are used in The definition of an ill person as it vaccination centers. The Web site is
the day-to-day activities of quarantine applies to this part was modified to be maintained by CDC and SHDs, and is
officers. The proposed rule reduces the consistent to that which applies to Part updated upon notice of certification
number of subparts from six to two. 70. termination or changes in contact
Many of the new sections further clarify In contrast with the requirement in information. Several SHDs now file
current activities. Proposed subpart B, Section 361(d)(1) (42 U.S.C. 264(d)(1)) duplicated listings via the website.
Importations, contains the restrictions of the PHS Act that the Director make
on importation of nonhuman primates, findings under Part 70 that a person is Section 71.3 Vaccination Clinics
certain kinds of animals, etiological (1) in a qualifying stage of a
quarantinable disease and (2) is moving This section contains provisions
agents, hosts, and vectors, and dead
or about to move from a State to another comparable to those contained in § 70.9.
bodies. CDC proposes to change only
§ 71.55 in subpart B. State or who is a probable source of Section 71.4 Bills of Health
The following is a section-by-section infection to persons so moving or about
analysis: to move, there are no such requirements Section 366 of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C.
when a person is entering the United 269) provides that, except as otherwise
Subpart A—Definitions and General States from a foreign country or a prescribed in regulations, any vessel at
Provisions possession of the United States. any foreign port or place clearing or
Section 71.1 Scope and Definitions Section 71.2 Designation of Yellow departing for any port or place in a State
Fever Vaccination Centers; Yellow Fever or possession shall be required to obtain
This section explains that 42 CFR Part from the consular officer of the United
71 contains regulations to prevent the or Other Validation Stamps
States, Public Health Service officer, or
introduction, transmission, and spread This section contains provisions other medical officer of the U.S., a bill
of communicable diseases from foreign comparable to those contained in of health setting forth the sanitary
countries into the United States. This current § 71.3.
history of the vessel. Under existing
part also contains the regulations to According to Annex 7 of the WHO
§ 71.11, carriers at any foreign port
prevent the spread of disease among International Health Regulations,
possessions of the United States and member states must designate yellow clearing or departing for any U.S. port
from a possession into a State. The fever vaccination centers authorized to are not required to obtain or deliver a
definitions contained in this part are administer yellow fever vaccine. bill of health. Under proposed § 71.4,
comparable to those appearing in Part Licensed medical providers become the Director, to the extent permitted by
70. The following definitions have been certified as centers through issuance of law and in consultation with such other
added or modified to be consistent with a Uniform Stamp Number by a federal agencies as the Director may
modern quarantine concepts and designated health authority. CDC, deem necessary, may require a carrier at
current medical principles and practice: pursuant to current § 71.3, delegated any foreign port clearing or departing
‘‘airline,’’ ‘‘airline agent,’’ ‘‘business this authority to state and territorial for any U.S. port to obtain a bill of
day,’’ ‘‘bill of health,’’ ‘‘commander,’’ health departments (SHDs). SHDs file health. While the Director does not
‘‘deratting certificate,’’ ‘‘deratting duplicate listings of all certified intend to require a bill of health for
exemption certificate,’’ ‘‘detention,’’ vaccination centers with CDC. The carriers engaged in routine traffic,
‘‘Director,’’ ‘‘emergency contact authorization requirements and concern over bioterrorism and rapidly
information’’, ‘‘flight information,’’ certification processes are determined emerging infectious diseases makes
‘‘hearing officer,’’ ‘‘ill person,’’ by each SHD, and are not the same in inclusion of this important public
‘‘infectious agent,’’ ‘‘International every State. health tool imperative.

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Section 71.5 Suspension of Entries and from a U.S. port (whichever period of Section 71.11 Written Plan for
Imports from Designated Places time is shorter). Cases or suspected Passenger Information and Designation
This section implements statutory cases of communicable disease during of an Airline or Shipline Agent
authority contained in section 362 of the an international voyage from one U.S. This section contains provisions
PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 265). Under this port to another are required to be comparable to those contained in § 70.5,
authority, the Director, to the extent reported to the quarantine station, and except that this section is also
permitted by law and in consultation the ship must take measures to prevent applicable to shiplines operating ships
with such other federal agencies as the spread of the disease as directed by the on an international voyage destined for
Director may deem necessary, may Director. Any death or ill person during a U.S. port. Ships operating between
prohibit, in whole or in part, the a stay in port must be reported. The Canadian ports and ports on the Puget
introduction of persons and property number of cases (including zero) of Sound or on the Great Lakes and
from foreign countries or places diarrhea, febrile respiratory disease, connected waterways are not covered by
whenever the Director determines that febrile rash illness, or febrile neurologic this section.
the risk of introduction of a disease into illness during an international voyage
the United States is increased by the must be reported through a method Section 71.12 Inspections
introduction of persons or property from designated in the shipline’s written plan This section consolidates provisions
such foreign countries or places. In under § 71.9. contained in current 42 CFR Part 71.
carrying out this section, the Director, Paragraph (f) enables the Director to
through order, would designate the order shiplines with ships on an Section 71.13 Sanitary Measures
persons and property from the foreign international voyage destined for a U.S. This section contains provisions
countries or places subject to the port to disseminate to passengers and comparable to those contained in
prohibition on introduction, as well as crew public health notices and other § 70.11.
the period of time that such prohibition information deemed necessary to
would remain in effect. Section 71.14 Detention of Carriers
prevent the introduction, transmission,
or spread of communicable diseases. This section contains provisions
Section 71.6 Report of Death or Illness
This provision is comparable to that comparable to those contained in
on Board Flights
described for airlines on in international § 70.12 and current § 71.31(b).
This section contains provisions voyage in § 71.6.
applicable to airlines operating flights Section 71.15 Carriers of U.S. Military
on an international voyage, destined for Section 71.9 Written Plan for Services
a U.S. port, comparable to those Reporting of Deaths or Illness on Board This section carries over provisions
established for airlines engaged in Ships and Designation of a Shipline’s contained in current § 71.34.
interstate traffic under § 70.2. Agent
Section 71.16 Screenings to Detect Ill
Section 71.7 Written Plan for This provision creates a requirement Persons
Reporting of Deaths or Illness on Board for shiplines with ships on an
international voyage destined for a U.S. This section contains procedures
Flights and Designation of an Airline
port comparable to that created for comparable to those contained in
Agent
airlines on an international voyage in § 70.13 at U.S. ports.
This section contains provisions
applicable to airlines operating flights § 71.7. Ships operating between Section 71.17 Provisional Quarantine
on an international voyage, destined for Canadian ports and ports on the Puget of Arriving Persons
a U.S. port, comparable to those Sound or on the Great Lakes and
connected waterways are not covered by This section contains procedures
established for airlines engaged in comparable to those contained in
interstate traffic under § 70.3 this section. CDC believes that a 90-day
time frame for development of a written § 70.14.
Section 71.8 Report of Death or Illness plan and an additional 90 days for Section 71.18 Provisional Quarantine
on Board Ships implementation after the final Orders
Paragraph (a) of this section publication of this rule to be appropriate This section contains procedures
establishes requirements applicable to a because ships should already have such comparable to those in § 70.15.
shipline operating ships on an procedures in place. CDC is soliciting
international voyage comparable to the comment on whether this timeframe is Section 71.19 Quarantine
requirements applicable to airlines in appropriate. During the phase-in period This section contains procedures
section 71.6. Ships operating between established by new § 71.7, ships are still comparable to those in § 70.16.
Canadian ports and ports on the Puget expected to comply with the reporting
Sound or on the Great Lakes and requirements contained in current Section 71.20 Content of Quarantine
connected waterways are not covered by 71.21(a) and (c) (Radio report of death Order
this section. or illness) and 71.35 (Report of death or This section contains procedures
Paragraphs (b)–(e) of this section illness on carrier during stay in port). comparable to those in § 70.17.
require any shipline operating ships on
Section 71.10 Passenger Information Section 71.21 Service of Quarantine
an international voyage destined for a
U.S. port to report to the quarantine This section contains provisions Order
station nearest the port of arrival any comparable to those contained in § 70.4, This section contains procedures
death or ill person as soon as made except that this section is also comparable to those in § 70.18.
known to the ship’s commander and, applicable to ships on an international
where possible, at least 24 hours before voyage. Ships operating between § 71.22 Medical Examination and
arrival. The shipline shall also report Canadian ports and ports on the Puget Monitoring
any deaths or ill persons onboard ships Sound or on the Great Lakes and This section contains provisions
during the 15-day period prior to connected waterways are not covered by comparable to those contained in
expected arrival, or since departure this section. § 70.19.

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Section 71.23 Hearings Section 71.31 Penalties 71.27 Issuance of Deratting Certificates
The penalties listed in this section are and Deratting Exemption
This section contains procedures
the same as those listed in § 70.29. Certificates
comparable to those in § 70.20.
71.33 Persons: isolation and
Section 71.24 Care and Treatment of Section 71.32 Implementation surveillance
Arriving Persons Through Order 71.35 Report of death or illness on
This section contains measures carrier during stay in port
This section contains provisions 71.41 General provisions
comparable to those contained in comparable to those in § 70.30.
71.42 Disinsection of imports
§ 70.21. Section 71.33 Appeals of Actions 71.43 Exemption for mails
Section 71.25 Arriving Foreign Required Pursuant to 71.13 or 71.14 71.44 Disinsection of aircraft
Nationals A new 71.33 would allow a written 71.48 Carriers in intercoastal and
appeal to the Director within 2 business interstate traffic
This section contains provisions Sections modified:
comparable to those contained in days in the event that the Director
71.1 Scope and definitions
§ 70.22. In general, U.S. government orders the export or destruction of
71.4 Bills of health
requirements regarding the detention of animals, articles, or things, pursuant to 71.29 Special provisions relating to
foreign nationals may be accessed at: 71.13 or the detention of a carrier airports: Office, examination, and
http://travel.state.gov/law/consular/ pursuant to 71.14. The Director may quarantine facilities
consular_636.html. nevertheless immediately implement 71.31 Penalties
the actions provided in 71.13 and 71.14. 71.55 Dead bodies
Section 71.26 Administrative Record
Sections redesignated:
Subpart B—Importations
This section contains procedures 71.14 Carriers of U.S. military services
comparable to those in § 70.23. Section 71.51 Dogs and Cats 71.26 Food, potable water, and waste:
U.S. seaports and airports
Section 71.27 Food, Potable Water, This section remains unchanged. The Sections added:
and Waste: U.S. Seaports and Airports text has been set out for the convenience 71.2 Designation of yellow fever
of the reader, however, CDC does not vaccination centers; Yellow fever or
This section carries over provisions
invite comments on this section. other validation stamps
contained in current § 71.45.
Section 71.52 Turtles, Tortoises, and 71.3 Vaccination clinics
Section 71.28 Health Documents in 71.5 Suspension of entries and imports
Terrapins
International Traffic from designated places
This section remains unchanged. The 71.6 Report of death or illness on
This section carries over provisions text has been set out for the convenience
contained in current § 71.46. board flights
of the reader, however, CDC does not 71.7 Written plan for reporting of
Section 71.29 Special Provisions invite comments on this section. deaths or illness on board flights
Relating to Airports: Office, Section 71.53 Nonhuman Primates and designation of an airline agent
Examination, and Quarantine Facilities 71.8 Report of death or illness on
This section remains unchanged. The
Under 8 CFR 234.4, in order to be board ships
text has been set out for the convenience 71.9 Written plan for reporting of
designated an ‘‘international airport,’’ of the reader, however, CDC does not
an airport must fulfill requirements deaths or illness on board ships and
invite comments on this section. designation of a shipline agent
established by the Secretaries of
Commerce, Transportation, Health and Section 71.54 Etiological Agents, 71.10 Passenger information
Human Services, and Homeland Hosts, and Vectors 71.11 Written plan for passenger
Security. The list of airports designated information and designation of an
This section remains unchanged. The
as ‘‘international airports’’ may be found airline or shipline agent
text has been set out for the convenience
at 19 CFR 122.13. The proposed section 71.12 Inspections
of the reader, however, CDC does not 71.13 Sanitary measures
carries over existing authority requiring invite comments on this section.
each U.S. airport which receives 71.14 Detention of carriers
Section 71.55 Dead Bodies 71.16 Screenings to detect ill persons
international traffic to provide, without
71.17 Provisional quarantine of
cost to the Government, suitable office, Embalming is no longer an option for arriving persons
isolation, and other exclusive space for avoiding a permit when importing dead 71.18 Provisional quarantine orders
carrying out the federal responsibilities bodies. Additionally, the Director can 71.19 Quarantine
under this part. The proposed section impose additional conditions. 71.20 Content of quarantine order
also adds a new provision requiring U.S. 71.21 Service of quarantine order
Section 71.56 African Rodents and
airports receiving international traffic to 71.22 Medical examination and
Other Animals that May Carry the
provide suitable quarantine space. The monitoring
Monkeypox Virus
specifications for space requirements to 71.23 Hearings
carry out quarantine activities are This section remains unchanged. The 71.24 Care and treatment of arriving
incorporated into the Federal Inspection text has been set out for the convenience persons
Service manual. In carrying out this of the reader, however, CDC does not 71.25 Arriving foreign nationals
provision, CDC intends to collaborate invite comments on this section. 71.26 Administrative record
closely with the U.S. Department of Following is a summary of changes to 71.28 Health documents in
Homeland Security. the current regulations: international traffic
Sections cancelled: 71.30 Establishment of institutions,
Section 71.30 Establishment of
71.3 Designation of yellow fever hospitals and stations
Institutions, Hospitals and Stations
vaccination centers: Validation 71.32 Implementation through order
This section contains provisions stamps 71.33 Appeals of actions required
comparable to those in § 70.10. 71.21 Radio report of death or illness pursuant to 71.13 or 71.14

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TABLE V–1.—SECTIONS UPDATED AND/OR RECODIFIED IN 42 CFR PART 71


Current regulation Proposed regulation

Subpart A—Definitions and General Provisions Proposed Regulation A. Subpart A—General Provisions
71.1 Scope and definitions .................................................................... 71.1 Scope and definitions.
71.2 Penalties ........................................................................................ 71.2 (modified) Designation of yellow fever vaccination centers; yel-
low fever or other validation stamps.
71.3 Designation of yellow fever vaccination centers; Validation 71.3 (new) Vaccination clinics.
stamps.
71.4 Bills of health.
71.5 (new) Suspension of entries and imports from designated
places.
71.6 (new) Report of death or illness on board flights.
71.7 (new) Written plan for reporting of deaths or illness on board
flights and designation of an airline agent.
Subpart B—Measures at Foreign Ports
71.11 Bills of Health ............................................................................... 71.8 (new) Report of death or illness on board ships.
71.9 (new) Written plan for reporting of deaths or illness on board
ships and designation of a shipline’s agent.
Subpart C—Notice of Communicable Disease Prior to Arrival
71.21 Radio report of death or illness ................................................... 71.10 (new) Passenger information.
71.11 (new) Written plan for passenger information and designation
of an airline or shipline agent.
Subpart D—Health Measures at U.S. Ports: Communicable Diseases
71.12 (new) Inspections.
71.31 General provisions ....................................................................... 71.13 (new) Sanitary measures.
71.32 Persons, carriers, and things ....................................................... 71.14 (new) Detention of carriers.
71.33 Persons: isolation and surveillance ............................................. 71.15 (modified) Carriers of U.S. military services.
71.34 Carriers of U.S. military services ................................................. 71.16 (new) Screenings to detect ill persons.
71.35 Report of death or illness on carrier during stay in port ............. 71.17 (new) Provisional quarantine of arriving persons.
71.18 (new) Provisional quarantine orders.
Subpart E—Requirements Upon Arrival at U.S. Ports: Sanitary
Inspections
71.19 (new) Quarantine.
71.20 (new) Content of quarantine order.
71.21 (new) Service of quarantine order.
71.22 (new) Medical examination and monitoring.
71.23 (new) Hearings.
71.41 General provisions ....................................................................... 71.24 (new) Care and treatment of arriving persons.
71.25 (new) Arriving foreign nationals.
71.42 Disinsection of imports ................................................................. 71.26 (new) Administrative record.
71.43 Exemption for mails ..................................................................... 71.27 Food, potable water, and waste: U.S. seaports and airports.
71.44 Disinsection of aircraft ................................................................. 71.28 (new) Health documents in international traffic.
71.45 Food, potable water, and waste: U.S. seaports and airports ...... 71.29 (modified) Special provisions relating to airports: Office, exam-
ination, and quarantine facilities.
71.30 (new) Establishment of institutions, hospitals and stations.
71.46 Issuance of deratting certificates and deratting exemption cer- 71.31 (new) Penalties.
tificates.
71.47 Special provisions relating to airports: Office and isolation facili- 71.32 (new) Implementation through order.
ties.
71.48 Carriers in intercoastal and interstate traffic ................................ 71.33 (new) Appeals of actions required pursuant to 71.13 or 71.14.
Subpart F—Importations Subpart B—Importations
71.51 Dogs and cats ............................................................................... 71.51 Dogs and cats.
71.52 Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins ................................................... 71.52 Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins.
71.53 Nonhuman primates ..................................................................... 71.53 Nonhuman primates.
71.54 Etiological agents, hosts, and vectors ......................................... 71.54 Etiological agents, hosts, and vectors.
71.55 Dead bodies ................................................................................. 71.55 (modified) Dead bodies.
71.56 African rodents and other animals that may carry monkey pox 71.56 African rodents and other animals that may carry monkey pox
virus. virus.

VI. Required Regulatory Analyses Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612), and the net benefits (including potential
Under Executive Order 12866, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act economic, environmental, public health
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, and (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.). and safety, and other advantages,
the Regulatory Flexibility Act Executive Order 12866 directs agencies distributive impacts, and equity). Unless
to assess all costs and benefits of we certify that the rule is not expected
We have examined the impacts of the available regulatory alternatives and, to have a significant economic impact
proposed regulation under Executive when regulation is necessary, to select on a substantial number of small
Order 12866, the Regulatory Flexibility regulatory approaches that maximize entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act,

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as amended by the Small Business be found in the Rulemaking Record disease spread through travel poses
Regulatory Flexibility Act (SBREFA), (CDC, 2005) (hereinafter referred to as substantial adverse economic
requires agencies to analyze regulatory the RIA). consequences. Reliable estimates are
options that would minimize any that the SARS’ economic impacts in
A. Objectives and Basis for the Proposed
significant economic impact of a rule on Asia in 2003 might have totaled as
Regulation
small entities. Section 202 of UMRA much as U.S. $28.4 billion, as discussed
requires that agencies prepare a written The rule is necessary to minimize the in Fan (2003). In Toronto, after SARS
statement of anticipated costs and risk of introduction, transmission, and was detected, hotel occupancy rates
benefits before proposing any rule that spread of infectious disease via travel. were cut in half, and conventions were
may result in an expenditure by State, In a recent study, the Institute of cancelled. CBS News Online (2003)
local, and tribal governments in the Medicine, National Academy of reported that the Canadian Government
aggregate, or by the private sector, of Sciences, found: spent $40M (CAN) to counteract both
$100 million in any one year (adjusted Whether naturally occurring or the medical impacts (surgical backlogs)
annually for inflation). We have intentionally inflicted, infections can cause of SARS quarantines and the public
conducted analyses of the proposed illness, disability, and death in persons while concern about safe travel into Ontario.
rule, and have determined that the rule disrupting whole populations, economies, To the extent that economic activity
is consistent with the principles set and governments. And because national shifts from on region to another,
forth in the Executive Order and in borders offer trivial impediment to such estimates of regional impacts overstate
these statutes. threats, especially in the highly national or international impacts.
We believe that the proposed interconnected and readily traversed ‘‘global Nevertheless, the SARS experience
village’’ of our time, one nation’s problem
regulation is a significant regulatory soon becomes every nation’s problem
proves that fear of contagion and the
action under the Executive Order. We (Institute of Medicine, 2003). reaction to that fear can have severe
also believe that it is a major rule under economic impacts on nations where
the Congressional Review Act. At this Stopping an outbreak—whether it is such contagions are detected.
time we are not certifying that the naturally occurring or caused Airlines were severely affected by
proposed rule would not have a intentionally—requires the use of the SARS, with the St. Louis Business
significant impact on a substantial most rapid and effective public health Journal (2003) stating ‘‘the outbreak of
number of small entities under the tools available. One of those tools is SARS has had a greater impact on the
Regulatory Flexibility Act and have quarantine—restricting the movement of global airline industry than the war in
prepared an Initial Regulatory persons exposed to infection to prevent Iraq, according to a study by OAG, a
Flexibility Analysis, as required. them from infecting others, including firm that provides flight schedule
A ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ is family members, friends, and neighbors. information.’’
defined in the Executive Order in the Quarantine of exposed persons may be Since the mere threat of an outbreak
relevant part as: the best initial way to prevent the can affect the public health system and
uncontrolled spread of highly dangerous damage the economies of affected
Any regulatory action that is likely to
result in a rule that may have an annual
biologic agents such as smallpox, nations and the travel industry, it must
effect on the economy of $100 million or plague, and Ebola fever—especially be contained promptly to mitigate
more or adversely affect in a material way the when combined with other health public reaction. Automated tools to
economy, a sector of the economy, strategies such as vaccination, acquire passenger information would
productivity, competition, jobs, the prophylactic drug treatment, patient enable CDC to more effectively employ
environment, public health or safety, or isolation, and other appropriate its staff in tracing and identifying
State, local, or tribal governments or infection control measures. travelers.
communities. The major impacts of this rule will
The Regulatory Flexibility Act and the B. The Nature of the Impacts fall on the airlines and the global
Congressional Review Act (Subtitle E of We commissioned the Volpe National distribution systems (GDSs), travel
SBREFA) similarly define ‘‘significant Transportation Systems Center (2005) to agencies, and other reservation booking
impact’’ and ‘‘major rule,’’ respectively. undertake a study concerning the need operations to gather the data from
Finally, our Unfunded Mandates for access to data enabling us to rapidly passengers and submit the proposed
Reform Act analysis concludes that the identify and locate at-risk persons to required crew manifest and passenger
proposed rule will not have any control the spread of infectious diseases. data, as needed. It will also fall on the
significant economic impact on State, In the course of the study, airlines passengers themselves, who must take
local, or Tribal governments. However, expressed concern over business and time to supply the information (see
the proposed rule would have a cost considerations associated with Sections F and G below for more detail).
significant impact on the private sector, future data sharing. We would pursue Our current belief is that any data
particularly air carriers. This impact is collection of this vital data with a collection-related costs borne by these
more than offset by the benefits of the commitment to minimize the effect on entities will be substantially outweighed
proposed rule, which is designed to airline operations. Full advantage would by avoidance of public health and
enhance our ability to effectively be taken of the trend toward online economic costs associated with
counter the threat of introduction, booking and passenger information infectious disease outbreaks spread via
transmission, and spread of infectious input. Every effort would be made to travel.
disease via travel. The benefits accruing merge our data collection efforts with The other requirements of the
to public health and safety will also those already undertaken by the airlines proposed rule are primarily
extend to the airline industry and the for national security and other purposes. clarifications or cover tasks that are
economy generally. During the course of rule development, currently being performed by agencies
The analyses undertaken to meet the we will seek comment from the airlines at the state and local levels. In
above requirements are presented in and their passengers concerning the particular, for sanitary measures, the
detail in the report titled Regulatory most efficient means of data collection. proposed regulation duplicates CDC
Impact Analysis of Proposed 42 CFR Failure to efficiently address the regulatory language from 42 CFR part
part 70 and 42 CFR part 71, which can health-related effects of infectious 71, related to international commerce in

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part 70, which relates to interstate ill traveler imposes uncompensated • Clarify administrative procedures to
commerce. Although this may appear to costs on the fellow travelers, travel ensure due process rights to quarantined
be an expansion of authority, we argue providers, and the individuals that they, individuals.
that there is no economic impact from in turn, might expose. Due to the • Mandate that carriers maintain and
this change in language for two reasons. national and international nature of provide to CDC passenger information
First, the regulation will not change travel and the transmission of in electronic formats.
historical practice during an outbreak. communicable diseases, regulation at • Clarify requirements for reporting
In lieu of CDC action, State and local the Federal level is the most appropriate sick passengers.
public health authorities have the power mechanism for protecting public health. • Clarify sanitary measures taken
to order sanitary measures or with respect to interstate commerce.
destruction of cargo to prevent the D. Baseline • Clarify coordination with state and
spread of illness. For example, during A first step in economic analysis of a tribal authorities.
the 2003 monkeypox event, the state of regulatory action is the identification of CDC performed a section-by-section
Wisconsin banned the sale, importation, a baseline, a depiction of the world in comparison of the current and proposed
and display of prairie dogs to stop the the absence of any action, from which rule. Many provisions of the proposed
spread of the disease. Thus, the rule codify practices that have evolved
to calculate the effects of the regulation.
additional language will change the over the years. As these practices are
In the absence of the changes proposed
authority under which sanitary part of current practice at CDC and in
in this regulation, we would continue to
measures are taken from State to Federal the industry, their codification does not
use the approaches taken during the
jurisdictions, but the measures would be impose new costs upon society.
SARS outbreak. We would meet flights The major cost component of the
taken in any event, so there is no containing suspected contagious
economic effect. proposed regulation is creation and
passengers and attempt to obtain maintenance of a passenger information
Second, the economic impact of a location and contact data from both
sanitation order may differ significantly database including home address,
passengers and crew members before emergency contact, and itinerary
depending on the circumstances. disembarkation. Ill passengers on planes
Experience shows that, in some cases, information. Under current regulations,
from affected areas would be evaluated the airlines do not typically collect this
public health officials’ sanitation orders and referred for medical care when
do not generate costs over and above the information in an easily accessible
appropriate. format, nor do they maintain it for the
costs that the outbreak itself creates. As with SARS, data concerning cases
Affected markets often respond proposed 60-day period. Airlines,
identified after disembarkation would Global Distribution Systems (GDSs), and
immediately to health risk information. have to be manually gathered, compiled,
For example, demand for pet prairie travel agencies may already collect some
and processed from flight manifests, of it, however. If the information can be
dogs collapsed virtually overnight when customs declarations, and any other
they were identified as potential carriers shared, then this data collection may be
available sources relevant to the case. relatively invisible to the traveler and
of monkeypox. Thus, the value of the This manual process has the following
pet prairie dog inventory was destroyed primarily a programming problem for
shortcomings: the airlines, although passengers will
by the loss of a market even before
• Manifests contain only the incur some opportunity costs of their
health authorities sequestered them. In
passenger name and seat number. time to provide information and travel
other cases, such as a sanitation order
affecting a standard commodity such as • Custom declarations are completed agencies and similar entities will incur
chicken or beef, whose price would by the passenger by hand and are often some costs to collect the data. This
likely not collapse in the presence of an illegible. scenario is CDC’s ‘‘Point of Sale’’ (POS)
outbreak, the order itself may be the • Names on the customs declarations scenario. However, CDC also examined
vehicle that destroys at least part of the do not necessarily match those on the the situation where a wholly separate
value of the shipment. Because a manifests. Phone numbers are not information collection must be
sanitation order restricts the supply of a included on customs forms, and only undertaken at departure; this process
product, in yet other cases it may even one customs form is filled out per could add to check-in times and entail
cause prices to rise. Regardless, family. gathering information that is already
government intervention ensures that Hard copy data gathered from gathered by many travel agencies,
those with less information are not manifests and customs declarations generating additional real and
made vulnerable to the disease and can frequently takes several days to obtain. opportunity costs for carriers and
reestablish safe conditions and public Data must then be keyed into a database. passengers. This is the ‘‘Point of
trust in the product. Entering the data and verifying Departure’’ (POD) scenario.
We invite comment concerning the addresses may take several more days. The proposed rule defines a basic set
economic impact of this proposed The time to do manual tracking of of information to be collected from all
regulation. passengers could frequently be expected passengers. The information includes
to take longer than the incubation permanent address, e-mail address,
C. Need for the Rule period of many infectious diseases. passport information, traveling
As discussed in more detail above, we companions or group, emergency
E. Alternatives
believe that the rule is necessary to contact information (including at least
minimize the risk of introduction, Economic analysis of a regulation is name of an alternate person or business
transmission, and spread of infectious based on the concept of incremental and a phone number), phone number(s)
disease via travel. The need for the change: What would happen without a for the passenger, itinerary, and other
regulation is driven by a demonstrated rule versus what would happen with it. flight information. This set of data is
market failure. An externality exists The current regulatory environment greater than the set of information
when one person’s or party’s actions provides a base case against which the currently collected by the airlines,
impose uncompensated costs to other changes in behavior precipitated by the GDSs, or travel agencies. The
parties. By exposing fellow travelers to new rule are compared. incremental costs of collecting, storing,
potential illness and possible death, an Overall, the proposed rule seeks to: and producing this information on

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demand in contrast with the no-action F. Cost Analysis of Proposed Option and major, national, and regional according
base case represent the compliance costs Alternatives to annual revenues. Carriers operating
of the proposed rule. aircraft with 60 seats or fewer may be
F.1 Profile of Airline and Cruise Ship
CDC looked at three options for the Industries classified as small certificated carriers
proposed rule. The first option (Option and commuter airlines. Some
Under the proposed rule, costs to commercial air carriers operate under
1—International Only) would cover industry will be incurred primarily by code-sharing partnerships with other,
international flight arrivals and trips on the airline and cruise ship industries. typically major, airlines. Generally,
vessels arriving from non-U.S. locations Additional sectors would also incur reservations are made with, and flight
only. The second option would cover some costs to collect additional manifests are generated by, the parent
these international flights and vessel passenger information. (See the RIA airline, not the codeshare airline (Franz,
trips and would add domestic flights [CDC, 2005] for profile information on 2005). We estimate that 23 codeshare
landing in or taking off from large and these other sectors, which include travel airlines fly exclusively under other
medium size U.S. airports specified by agencies and GDSs.) Compliance costs airlines’ codes (RAA, 2005).
CDC (Option 2—International plus can be broadly categorized into one-time
Large and Medium Hubs) (see Appendix costs, such as computer reprogramming Table VI.F–1 presents flight operation
A for this list). The third option would for each airline or cruise line, and and passenger information for air
recurring costs that will be incurred for carriers likely to be affected by the
also cover international flights and
each passenger traveling with that proposed rule (BTS 2005a, 2005b,
vessel trips and would add all domestic
carrier. Foreign carriers incur costs 2005c) under Option 3; that is,
flights (Option 3—International plus All passenger-carrying arrivals from foreign
Domestic). CDC proposes Option 2 for under all three options and are included
for projecting the total cost of the countries, as well as interstate and
this rulemaking. intrastate flights within the U.S. This
proposed rule. However, the financial
CDC compared the estimated costs impact to carriers is projected only for option covers 217 airlines, carrying 696
and monetized benefits associated with U.S.-owned companies. million passengers on 10.4 million
the proposed rule (Section I). CDC also flights. Option 1 (International Only)
examined whether any costs should be Airline Industry covers 184 airlines, 10 percent of Option
considered regarding sanitary measures Commercial air carriers are classified 3 passengers, and 6 percent of the
taken with interstate commerce (Section according to the size of the aircraft and Option 3 flights, while Option 2
B). type of service provided. Airlines (International Only plus Large and
operating aircraft with more than 60 Medium Hubs) covers 217 airlines, 90
seats are classified as large certificated percent of the Option 3 passengers, and
carriers, and further distinguished as 77 percent of the Option 3 flights.
TABLE VI.F–1.—FLIGHTS AND PASSENGERS CARRIED BY AIRLINES ON ROUTES AFFECTED BY RULE, REVENUE AND NET
INCOME JULY 1, 2003—JUNE 30, 2004
[All potentially affected international and domestic flights]

Passengers Flights Rev- Net in-


(millions) (thousands)
Airline type Number enue ($ come ($
millions) millions)
Total Average Total Average

Major .................................................................................................. 13 522.8 40.21 5,898 454 $6,857 $(357)


National .............................................................................................. 24 113.9 4.75 2,535 106 $512 $19
Large regional .................................................................................... 12 5.1 0.43 60 5 $87 $(0.4)
Medium regional ................................................................................ 8 2.5 0.31 71 9 $30 $(0.4)
Small/commuter ................................................................................. 47 18.9 0.40 1,579 34 $53 NA
Foreign flag ........................................................................................ 113 32.9 0.29 239 2 NA NA

Total ............................................................................................ 217 696.1 NA 10,382 NA NA NA


Source: BTS 2005a, 2005b, 2005c. Revenue for 31 small certificated carriers and commuters taken from Dun & Bradstreet or estimated from
similar airlines based on average revenue per passenger. Carriers and commuters taken from Dun & Bradstreet or estimated from similar airlines
based on average revenue per passenger.

Cruise Ship Industry from outside the U.S. in regions such as the likeliest indicator of whether they
the Great Lakes and the Pacific would be affected by the proposed
The cruise ship industry provides
Northwest, or from Canada and the regulation in the near future. Affected
international water transportation to
Caribbean. Finally, there are also lines cruise lines were identified on the basis
passengers. The well-known portion of
that own and operate ferries that carry that: (1) They serve U.S. ports, and (2)
this industry comprises large-to-very
passengers between, for example, they have itineraries with at least one
large firms, best typified by the ‘‘big
three’’ of the global industry: Carnival, Seattle, WA, and Vancouver, B.C., international destination.
Royal Caribbean, and Star Cruises. A Canada, or between Ohio and Ontario, Most of the largest cruise lines are
second tier includes smaller cruise lines Canada. members of the International Council of
that serve similar markets and niche In theory, any vessel could be affected Cruise Lines (ICCL); of the 16 cruise
markets. A third, much smaller segment by the rule because ships are inherently lines in this category, two are U.S.-
comprises small operations that provide mobile. Nevertheless, the general owned. The second tier consists of 16
shorter-distance international water itineraries of the lines as currently cruise or ferry lines that are not
transportation to passengers traveling posted on Web sites were considered members of ICCL, but are considered

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large operations under the terms of the cruise lines and international ferry lines relevant data for the cruise line industry
small business analysis. One cruise line number 25; all of these appear to be and presents limited financial data for
in this group is U.S.-owned. Small U.S.-owned. Table VI.F–2 summarizes U.S.-owned cruise and ferry lines.

TABLE VI.F–2.—AVAILABLE DATA FOR U.S. CRUISE LINES


Total Average
Number of Foreign or domestic Revenues
cruise lines Revenues Ships per Berths per
Ships Passengers per line ($
($ millions) line ship millions)

Large Cruise Lines, ICCL Members

14 ............. Foreign ....................................................... 112 65,997,060 NA 8 1,733 NA


2 ............... USA ........................................................... 8 2,520,760 $869 4 927 $434.5

Large Cruise Lines, Non-ICCL Members

15 ............. Foreign ....................................................... 42 3,630,700 NA 2.8 257 NA


1 ............... USA ........................................................... 3 465,120 $49 3 456 $49

Small Cruise and Ferry Lines*

0 ............... Foreign ....................................................... 0 0 NA 0 0 NA


25 ............. USA ........................................................... 48 1,852,090 $138 3.6 76 $19.7
*Complete data were unavailable for small cruise lines; therefore, revenue data and averages shown are based on 7 of the 25 small lines.

F.2 Incremental Costs to Industry of Section 231 of the Enhanced Border needed to avoid excessive queuing time
Data Collection Security and Visa Reform Act of 2002, for passengers.
Data Collection Costs and direct industry discussions (FR, The incremental costs for gathering
2003; IATA, 2003; Qantas, 2003; Volpe, information by travel agencies are
Under the POS scenario, CDC 2004). Providing an address, for estimated to be $5.2 million to $53.7
assumed that legal and logistical example, is expected to add 45 seconds million yearly, depending on option
barriers to carriers accessing DHS and to information collection time, under the POS scenario. Under the POD
GDS databases were removed, and according to industry estimates. To scenario, these costs will fall on the
therefore they could access information estimate the cost of data collection by airlines and cruise lines and will total
that passengers input directly into a travel agents under the POS scenario, $65.1 to $316.3 million annually,
database when they make their CDC assumed that approximately 30 depending on the option.
reservations. These databases might percent of passengers will book through
belong to DHS, the airline or a GDS. Reprogramming Costs
travel agents, and travel agents need an
Travel agents, however, would need to additional 45 seconds to gather Each of the regulatory options also
collect additional information to information from passengers to cover involves potentially substantial
complete the purchase of tickets. Thus, the new data needs. Travel agencies reprogramming by carriers so that a
the only data collection costs to already collect much of the information variety of information from several
industry under this scenario would be required, but a few pieces of different databases can be linked to
borne by travel agencies. There are, information might not be universally information compiled prior to or at
however, opportunity costs to collected. These might include e-mail departure and saved electronically with
passengers, since passengers must address, passport information, and the manifest data currently collected by
devote time to providing additional emergency contact information. This the airlines. Discussions with industry
information when they make information was considered equivalent indicate that this reprogramming might
reservations (discussed later in this to the amount of information that would cost from $5 million to $15 million per
section). need to be gathered for an address. Thus major airline. These reprogramming
Under the POD scenario, CDC 45 seconds was considered a reasonable costs are primarily a function of the
assumed that airlines would incur the estimate under the POS scenario. need to add data fields and integrate
data gathering costs and that the amount Under the POD scenario, CDC data systems, but are relatively invariant
of incremental data to be gathered is assumed that somewhat longer times, with respect to the number of fields
greater than the amount of incremental such as 1.5 minutes per non-frequent added. Smaller airlines appear to have
data to be gathered under the POS flier passenger, are needed to compile IT systems that are less complex and
scenario. Unless a passenger is a the additional information and to obtain more flexible than those of major
frequent flier customer, much of the or verify emergency contact airlines, so reprogramming costs should
information that travel agencies information. Additionally, airlines are be substantially lower (Airline Web
routinely gather, such as home or forecast to hire additional personnel to Sites, 2005; Delta, 2005; FR, 2003; Pace,
business address and telephone number facilitate information gathering at the 2005; Sun Country, 2005).
and/or e-mail address, is not collected time of airport check-in. Such workers CDC assumed major and foreign
by the airlines routinely. would be provided with portable airlines will each incur reprogramming
CDC based its assumptions for workstations so that information could costs of $10 million. These costs are
incremental data collection time on be gathered while passengers are assumed to decrease with airline size;
industry estimates for and comments on waiting in line or at the departure gates. small certificated/commuter airlines are
DHS’ proposed implementation of These additional workers would be projected to incur costs of $10,000 each.

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Although CDC spoke to airlines about massive storage requirements (United, minute to provide additional
what their anticipated reprogramming 2005; Volpe, 2004). Incremental costs information. (This figure has not been
costs might be, CDC is requesting will be incurred for archiving manifest discounted to account for families and
additional information and comment and passenger information in electronic groups that may be able to provide the
from airlines or others who might have format up to 60 days, as well as data more efficiently.) Under the POD
information that would assist CDC in administrative costs for submitting data scenario, CDC assumed it takes an
further estimating reprogramming costs, each time CDC requests data and for average of 1.5 minutes for passengers to
particularly costs for smaller airlines documenting how they will collect data provide the required additional
and cruise lines. Codeshare airlines will and submit it to CDC. This includes information to airlines/cruise lines.
incur zero reprogramming costs because time to provide passenger lists and data
The opportunity cost of passenger
they do not have their own reservation for the 10–12 times per month CDC
time is set at the value of passenger time
systems. Large cruise lines are assigned expects to routinely request this
on air carriers recommended by FAA
a cost of $125,000, based on DHS’ information. It is assumed that, with the
proposed implementation of the software modifications in place, such (FAA–APO, 2003) of $28.60 per hour.
Enhanced Border Security and Visa routine requests will require only a This same value is used for cruise line
Reform Act (FR, 2003). Costs of $10,000 small amount of time to process and passengers. CDC estimates that the
are assigned to small cruise lines and submit data. CDC assumed major, opportunity costs to passengers of
ferries. national, and foreign airlines would providing additional data total $67.6 to
In addition to air carriers and cruise require 5 percent of a full-time- $367.3 million annually under the POS
lines, under the POS scenario (but not equivalent airline database manager to scenario and $90.5 million to $439.9
the POD scenario), GDS operators and handle these tasks, declining to 1 million annually under the POD
travel agents will also incur percent for small certificated/commuter scenario, depending on option. The
reprogramming costs. Companies that airlines. For cruise lines, ICCL members opportunity cost to passengers is a non-
own and operate GDSs will need to are assigned 5 percent, other large lines industry social cost of the rule.
modify databases to accept additional are assigned 3 percent, and small lines F.3 Projected National Costs of the
fields from Web-based systems and and ferries are assigned 1 percent. The Proposed Rule
travel agencies. CDC estimated that four average wage for this occupation is
major GDS systems dominate the U.S. taken to be $44.00 per hour fully loaded CDC discounted future costs to their
market, and these companies will incur (BLS, 2005). CDC assumed archiving present value using the 7 percent
reprogramming costs on the order of $5 will occur on 50-gigabyte tapes, and discount rate recommended by OMB
million each. Travel agencies and other airlines will need a maximum of 12 over 10 years. Costs are annualized so
tour-booking companies are assumed to tapes over a 3-month period. Because that options with costs occurring in
incur reprogramming costs of $1,000 per these tapes can be recycled and reused different years can be compared. Tables
establishment to update their Web links for a number of years, annualized costs VI.F–3a and VI.F–3b show the
with the GDS. CDC estimates that about of tapes are assumed minimal. Storage annualized national costs of the three
18,000 establishments will incur these space requirements are also considered options under the POS and POD
costs. negligible. CDC estimated annual scenarios, respectively. The biggest
Reprogramming costs are annualized archiving and administrative tasks difference in costs among the three
at 7 percent over 10 years. CDC (under either scenario) would cost options within each scenario is the
estimates that reprogramming will cost $676,000 to $710,000 for airlines, opportunity cost to passengers. Costs to
the airlines $105.9 million to $107.5 depending on option, and $140,000 for industry rise only about 42 percent from
million on an annualized basis under cruise lines across all options, for a total Option 1 to Option 3 and only 38
either scenario. For cruise lines, the of $816,000 to $855,000 depending on percent from Option 1 to Option 2
estimated costs of reprogramming total option. GDSs and travel agencies would under the POS scenario. Under the POD
$0.6 million (annualized) over all not have an equivalent responsibility to scenario, costs to industry more than
options and scenarios. For travel provide data to CDC, so no archiving or double from Option 1 to Option 2, and
agencies, GDSs, and similar entities, administrative costs are assumed for increase slightly more for Option 3.
CDC estimates that reprogramming will these entities. Additionally, costs to the industries
cost $5.4 million on an annualized basis
Opportunity Costs to Passengers directly affected by the rulemaking (the
over all options, which is added to the
Passengers incur an opportunity cost rule does not directly affect GDSs or
totals for reprogramming for airlines and
for the time they use in providing travel agencies) rise negligibly from one
cruise lines under the POS scenario.
additional information to the carriers or option to the next, with Option 1
Total costs for reprogramming under the
others. Under the POS scenario, costing about $107 million and the other
POS scenario range from $111.9 million
passenger time providing information at two costing about $109 million annually
to $113.5 million per year, depending
a minimum equals the time travel under the POS scenario. Under the POD
on option. Under the POD scenario,
agencies require to collect that scenario, airlines and cruise ship
because the burden of data collection
information (45 seconds). An additional industries incur all compliance costs as
shifts to airlines, these costs are slightly
amount of time (15 seconds) is assumed, they are collecting and compiling all
less—$106.5 million to $108.1 million
on average, to allow time for those required passenger information.
per year.
passengers using the Internet to input Under the alternative scenario (Point
Archiving and Other Administrative additional information into Web pages of Departure Scenario) Option 3 would
Costs or for any passengers who must locate be associated with costs totaling $425.3
Major airlines tend to keep flight certain information, such as emergency million to industry. Adding the $439.9
manifests in electronic format for only contact telephone number or passport million opportunity costs to passengers
a few days because their intensive flight number. Thus, on average, all to the industry costs yields a total for
operations would otherwise result in passengers are assumed to need one this scenario of $865.2 million per year.

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TABLE VI.F–3A.—ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED NATIONAL COSTS FOR THE POINT OF SALE SCENARIO
[$ millions, 2004]

Option 2: Option 3:
Option 1: International International
Affected entity International plus large and plus all do-
only medium hubs mestic

Airlines ......................................................................................................................................... $106.6 $108.2 $108.2


Cruise lines .................................................................................................................................. 0.8 0.8 0.8
Travel agencies ........................................................................................................................... 7.6 50.5 56.1
GDSs ........................................................................................................................................... 3.0 3.0 3.0

Total Industry Cost ............................................................................................................... $117.9 $162.4 $168.0


Opportunity cost to passengers ................................................................................................... 67.6 332.6 367.3

Total with Opportunity Cost .................................................................................................. $185.5 $495.0 $535.3

TABLE VI.F–3B.—ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED NATIONAL COSTS FOR THE POINT OF DEPARTURE SCENARIO
[$ millions, 2004]

Option 2: Option 3:
Option 1: International International
Affected entity International
plus large and plus all do-
only medium hubs mestic

Airlines ......................................................................................................................................... $133.4 $356.4 $386.3


Cruise lines .................................................................................................................................. 39.0 39.0 39.0
Travel agencies ........................................................................................................................... 0 0 0
GDSs ........................................................................................................................................... 0 0 0

Total Industry Cost ............................................................................................................... $172.4 $395.4 $425.3


Opportunity cost to passengers ................................................................................................... 90.5 398.4 439.9

Total with Opportunity Cost .................................................................................................. $262.9 $793.8 $865.2

G. Impacts on Industry exceed the 1 percent level under Option outbreaks because they generally do not
2. Four airlines are expected to incur take into account the redirection of
Impacts on industry, including
costs exceeding 1 percent of revenues investment, travel, and purchasing from
airlines, cruise lines, travel agencies,
under Option 3. Furthermore, one affected areas to unaffected areas. The
and GDSs, were measured using a
airline would incur annualized global impact would be the net loss of
comparison of annualized costs per firm
compliance costs exceeding its baseline consumer and producer surpluses (e.g.,
to each firm’s revenues, if available.
net income under all three options. how much travelers might have
Impacts were identified where the
There is no change to the impact results preferred to travel to China instead of
annualized costs exceeded 1 percent of among the other affected entities. other destinations) due to the outbreak-
revenues and/or where the annualized caused adjustments in economic
costs exceeded the net income of a firm H. Benefits
activity. Nevertheless, the affected
(airlines only). For airlines, we used a As discussed above, the benefits of nation does experience a loss. For
second test, comparing annualized costs the proposed regulation are associated example, if an outbreak of disease in the
to net income (similar baseline net with the faster suppression of infectious U.S. similar to the SARS outbreak in
income figures are not available for the disease outbreaks spread via travel. Toronto occurred, it could have a large
other entities). Impacts were identified More efficient traceback of infectious negative effect on the U.S. economy
where annualized compliance costs individuals can lead to more complete through impacts such as those on the
exceeded net income, where net income and effective prophylaxis and travel and tourism industries, even
was currently positive. quarantine. The reduction of the though the net impact, measured
Under the Point of Sale scenario, CDC frequency and scale of outbreaks should globally, might not be significant.
determined that no airlines, cruise lines, result in a commensurate reduction in Because forecasting such impacts for the
GDSs, or travel agencies, would the opportunity costs of outbreak- U.S. economy is so speculative and
experience annualized costs in excess of related public health efforts to Federal, unique to specific outbreaks, these types
1 percent of revenues under any of the State, and local governments. of benefits from net reductions in
options analyzed. For those airlines for In addition to the avoided illnesses economic impacts are not estimated.
which net income is available and and deaths from the proposed rule, Other potentially sizeable benefits
positive, CDC estimates one airline more effective control of an outbreak that could not be quantified include
would incur compliance costs will reduce the economic impact of reductions in stress on health care
exceeding net income. infectious disease outbreaks. The SARS systems due to disease outbreaks,
Under the Point of Departure outbreak is estimated to have reduced reductions in cases of common
scenario, CDC estimates that one airline incomes in East and Southeast Asia by illnesses, such as measles, through an
would incur annualized compliance $12.3 billion to 28.4 billion (Fan, 2003). ability to rapidly contact passengers
costs greater than 1 percent of revenues Such regional impact measurements who might have been exposed, and
under Option 1, and two airlines would overstate the global impact of disease reductions in anxiety among those who

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do not become ill that are associated Exposed-Infectious-Recovered (SEIR) 2004 with CPI). In addition, the WTP for
with fears of contracting an illness epidemiological model that includes the workdays lost to illness and recovery is
during an outbreak. effects of vaccination, quarantine, measured as wages lost. CDC valued
The most direct effect of the CDC rule isolation, and asymptomatic carriers. these losses using the median usual
changes is improved contact tracing The model forecasts the number of weekly earnings of full-time wage and
leading to better health outcomes when deaths, illness days, isolation days, and salary workers, $128 per day (BLS,
an outbreak threatens. In quarantine days given parameters that 2005). Lost earnings are an element of
epidemiological models, the speed of characterize the illness and the public WTP that was not captured by Johnson
response is often more important than health intervention. Each outcome et al. (1997) so it is appropriate to add
the specific action taken (Barrett et al., measure is monetized by the public’s
the two components together.
2005; Lipsitch, 2003). Whether the willingness to pay (WTP) to avoid death
chosen action is vaccination, and illness. The parameters of the model were
quarantine, and/or isolation, early The risks of illness and death from an selected to simulate the first 200 days of
implementation lowers the illness and infectious disease are similar to risks a SARS-like disease spreading in a large
death toll. Thus one way to quantify from some environmental hazards in city. In the base case intended to
benefits is to compare a base case in that they are involuntary, pervasive, and represent current practice, intervention
which intervention proceeds using random. Thus, we updated values from began in the sixth week after
existing tools with alternatives in which the Environmental Protection Agency’s introduction, isolated 40 percent of
intervention can proceed more rapidly. evaluation of the benefits of the Clean infectious patients, and quarantined 30
(The more rapid intervention is made Air Act (Kochi, et al., 2003) to 2004 percent of contacts. To model the three
possible because passenger information dollars as a measure of WTP for changes options, ERG assumes interventions
that includes contact information is in the risk of death or value of a begin in the fifth week, 70 percent of
readily available.) The benefits of the statistical life (VSL). We applied this infectious patients are isolated, and 60
alternative are measured in terms of the $6.9 million to the number of deaths the
percent of contacts are quarantined.
number of prevented deaths and SEIR model forecast would be avoided
Table VI.H–1 shows the improvement in
illnesses. by faster government action. Johnson et
To estimate the effect of faster contact al. (1997) found a WTP to avoid a day outcomes with earlier public health
tracing, CDC applied a Susceptible- of severe cough was $56 (updated to intervention.

TABLE VI.H–1.—OUTCOMES IN BASE CASE AND EARLY INTERVENTION


Earlier inter-
Outcome Base case Difference
vention

Deaths .......................................................................................................................................... 900 37 863


Illness days .................................................................................................................................. 18,075 670 17,405
Isolation days ............................................................................................................................... 23,753 1,000 22,753
Recovery days ............................................................................................................................. 14,460 536 13,924
Quarantine days .......................................................................................................................... 127,967 5,013 122,954

Table VI.H–2 shows the WTP values situations. In order to show the long run years over the 10-year planning horizon.
for the deaths and days of incapacity benefits of the rule, it is necessary to Table VI.H–2 shows the WTP in current
avoided in a single outbreak by forecast the frequency and scale of dollars as well as the 10-year annualized
implementing each option. However, epidemic events. CDC assumed that discounted values at three and seven
the rule will presumably be in place for epidemics on the scale of the modeled percent.
many years and be effective in many outbreak would occur once every 5

TABLE VI.H–2.—ESTIMATED WILLINGNESS TO PAY FOR CHANGE IN OUTCOMES


[Million, 2004 dollars]

Option 2: Option 3:
Option 1: International International
Outcome International plus medium plus all
only and large hubs domestic

Deaths Avoided ........................................................................................................................... $4,999.7 $5,901.9 $5,956.1


Other Outcomes Avoided:
Illness days .................................................................................................................................. 2.7 3.2 3.2
Isolation days ............................................................................................................................... 3.5 4.2 4.2
Recovery days ............................................................................................................................. 1.4 1.7 1.7
Quarantine days .......................................................................................................................... 13.2 15.6 15.7

Total ...................................................................................................................................... $5,020.6 $5,926.5 $5,980.9

Annualized Benefits

7 percent discount rate ................................................................................................................ $1,069.5 $1,262.5 $1,274.1


3 percent discount rate ................................................................................................................ $1,033.3 $1,219.8 $1,231.0

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The effect of the earlier intervention I. Comparison of Costs and Benefits 2005). Potential costs savings may result
reducing the number of deaths from 900 should CDC gain access to APIS data.
to 37 is remarkable but not The primary cost impact of the However, it is not possible to estimate
inconceivable; compare the 43 SARS proposed rule is the collection and those savings at this time due to
deaths in Canada where preparations maintenance of crew and passenger multiple uncertainties. These
were made and there were effective data. The economic analysis focused uncertainties include the extent to
public health measures with the 299 primarily on air and water carriers, and which CDC would have access to such
secondarily, under the POS scenario, on data and the list of data elements that
SARS deaths in Hong Kong. A Monte
GDSs and travel agencies, all of which is consistently collected under APIS.
Carlo simulation demonstrated that the
are likely to modify computer systems Tables VI.I–1a and VI.I–1b summarize
set of parameters used in the analysis
and collect passenger information in the estimated annualized costs and
yielded a benefit estimate at the 42nd
order to come into compliance or meet benefits associated with the proposed
percentile of a range of possible airline/cruise line requirements. Some rule under the POS and POD scenarios,
parameter choices. While some data sought by CDC is already or soon respectively. Table VI.I–1c presents
alternative assumptions could result in may be collected by other government these same results assuming the actual
considerably smaller benefits estimates, agencies (e.g., the Transportation costs are at the midpoint between the
many other alternative assumptions Security Administration’s Advanced two bounding scenarios. The benefits of
could result in much larger estimates. Passenger Information System or APIS). the rule are measured in terms of the
Although we cannot know the For the purposes of the analysis, it is number of deaths and illnesses
appropriate assumptions to model the assumed CDC will not gain access to prevented by rapid intervention. The
epidemics that will be encountered in this data and will have to collect the costs and benefits of the rule are
the future, it is not difficult to imagine data itself, either directly at departure considered over a 10-year period. As the
outbreaks whose control would exceed (POD scenario) or indirectly, through table shows, under all options, the
this level of benefits. We invite cooperation with travel agencies and benefits substantially outweigh the costs
comments on the benefits model, which GDSs (POS scenario). For more under either scenario and assuming
is described in detail in the RIA (CDC, discussion of the potential for data actual costs are the midpoint of costs
2005). collection overlap, see the RIA (CDC, under the two scenarios.
TABLE VI.I–1A.—ANNUALIZED DISCOUNTED VALUE OF COSTS AND BENEFITS OF THE POS SCENARIO OVER A 10-YEAR
PLANNING PERIOD
Option 2: International plus Option 3: International
Option 1: International only medium and large hubs plus all domestic
Parameter
Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental
and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit

At 7 percent discount rate:


Costs ......................................................................... $185.5 .................... $495.0 .................... $535.3 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,070 .................... 1,263 .................... 1,274 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 884.5 .................... 768.0 ($116.5) 738.7 ($29.3)
At 3 percent discount rate:
Costs ......................................................................... $165.7 .................... $475.0 .................... $515.3 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,033 .................... 1,220 .................... 1,231 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 867.3 .................... 745.0 ($122.3) 715.7 ($29.3)

TABLE VI.I–1B.—ANNUALIZED DISCOUNTED VALUE OF COSTS AND BENEFITS OF THE POD SCENARIO OVER A 10-YEAR
PLANNING PERIOD
Option 2: International plus Option 3: International
Option 1: International only medium and large hubs plus all domestic
Parameter
Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental
and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit

At 7 percent discount rate:


Costs ......................................................................... $262.9 .................... $793.8 .................... $865.2 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,070 .................... 1,263 .................... 1,274 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 807.1 .................... 469.2 ($337.9) 408.8 ($60.4)
At 3 percent discount rate:
Costs ......................................................................... $244.1 .................... $774.7 .................... 846.1 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,033 .................... 1,220 .................... 1,231 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 788.9 .................... 445.3 ($343.6) 384.9 ($60.4)

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TABLE VI.I–1C.—ANNUALIZED DISCOUNTED VALUE OF COSTS AND BENEFITS OF THE MIDPOINT BETWEEN THE POS AND
POD SCENARIO OVER A 10-YEAR PLANNING PERIOD
Option 2: International plus Option 3: International
Option 1: International only medium and large hubs plus all domestic
Parameter
Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental Total cost Incremental
and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit and benefit net benefit

At 7 percent discount rate:


Costs ......................................................................... $224.2 .................... $644.4 .................... $700.3 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,070 .................... 1,263 .................... 1,274 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 845.8 .................... 618.6 ($227.2) 573.7 ($44.9)
At 3 percent discount rate:
Costs ......................................................................... 204.9 .................... $624.9 .................... $680.7 ....................
Benefits ..................................................................... 1,033 .................... 1,220 .................... 1,231 ....................
Net Benefit ................................................................ 828.1 .................... 595.1 ($233.0) 550.3 ($44.8)

As a second analysis, the cost Costs per QALY for Options 1 and 2 are QALYs. This method is also used for
effectiveness of the options was less than $300,000 under the higher-cost Option 1, which is incremental to the
considered. In order to include both POD scenario. no-action alternative (not explicitly
mortality and morbidity effects in a In the cost-effectiveness analysis, the shown). The no-action alternative has
single metric for cost effectiveness options are ranked in order of ascending zero cost and zero QALYs.
analysis, these measures were converted numbers of QALYs. The average cost As Tables VI.I–2a and VI.I–2b show,
to Quality Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs). effectiveness of the options is calculated after Option 1 (international flights and
(See the RIA for more information on as the cost of each option divided by the cruise lines only) under either scenario,
how QALYs are calculated.) number of QALYs associated with each costs rise quickly. Option 2
The QALY losses avoided by option ($/QALY). To calculate the (international plus large and medium
implementation of the proposed rule incremental cost-effectiveness of each hubs) is associated with a slightly lower
annualized at 7 percent are presented in option, each option’s costs and QALYs average cost effectiveness value
Tables VI.I–2a (POS scenario),VI.I–2b are first calculated as the incremental compared to Option 3 (international
(POD scenario), and VI.I–2c (midpoint). cost and incremental number of QALYs plus all domestic), but a significantly
As with the dollar denominated benefit going from that option to the next higher lower incremental cost effectiveness
estimates, the number of deaths avoided option. The incremental cost is then value compared to Option 3 under
is the largest component of benefits. divided by the incremental number of either scenario.

TABLE VI.I–2A.—AVERAGE AND INCREMENTAL COST EFFECTIVENESS OF THE OPTIONS UNDER THE POS SCENARIO
[Ranked by number of QALYs]
[7 percent discount rate]

Average Incremental
Annualized Incremental Incremental cost effec- cost effec-
Option cost QALYs cost QALYs tiveness tiveness
($ millions) ($ millions) ($/QALY) ($/QALY)

Option 1 ........................................................................... $185.5 2,257 $185.5 2,257 $82,189 $82,189


Option 2 ........................................................................... 495.0 2,665 309.5 408 185,752 758,652
Option 3 ........................................................................... 535.3 2,689 40.3 24 199,074 1,678,333

TABLE VI.I–2B.—AVERAGE AND INCREMENTAL COST EFFECTIVENESS OF THE OPTIONS UNDER THE POD SCENARIO
[Ranked by number of QALYs]
[7 percent discount rate]

Average Incremental
Annualized Incremental Incremental cost effec- cost effec-
Option cost QALYs cost QALYs tiveness tiveness
($ millions) ($ millions) ($/QALY) ($/QALY)

Option 1 ........................................................................... $262.9 2,257 $262.9 2,257 $116,478 $116,478


Option 2 ........................................................................... 793.8 2,665 530.9 408 297,865 1,301,275
Option 3 ........................................................................... 865.2 2,689 71.4 24 321,752 2,974,167

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TABLE VI.I–2B.—AVERAGE AND INCREMENTAL COST EFFECTIVENESS OF THE OPTIONS AT THE MIDPOINT OF COSTS
BETWEEN THE POS AND POD SCENARIO
[Ranked by number of QALYs]
[7 percent discount rate]

Average Incremental
Annualized Incremental Incremental cost effec- cost effec-
Option cost QALYs cost QALYs tiveness tiveness
($ millions) ($ millions) ($/QALY) ($/QALY)

Option 1 ........................................................................... $224.2 2,257 $224.2 2,257 $99,333 $99,333


Option 2 ........................................................................... 644.4 2,665 420.2 408 241,809 1,029,963
Option 3 ........................................................................... 700.3 2,689 55.8 24 260,413 2,326,250

In a third analysis of costs and indicates the number of outbreaks that Table VI.I–3 shows these results for
benefits, a breakeven analysis was would need to occur during the the three options considered under the
performed. In a breakeven analysis, the planning period for benefits to equal POS and POD scenarios, as well as
number of years between outbreaks that costs. Dividing the planning period, 10 under a midpoint cost assumption.
would need to occur for benefits to years, by this number shows the Whether or not one believes that there
equal costs is calculated. The benefits of expected period of time between will be two outbreaks of this magnitude
one outbreak were discounted as if the outbreaks. If this period is longer than in the next 10 years, it may be
outbreak would occur five years in the the expected recurrence of serious reasonable to expect that there may be
future and annualized to be comparable outbreaks, then the expected benefits one such outbreak in 9 to 27 years, as
to annualized costs. Dividing outweigh the expected costs. represented for the midpoint cost
annualized costs by annualized benefits assumption.
TABLE VI.I–3.—COSTS IN TERMS OF THE NUMBER AND FREQUENCY OF OUTBREAKS
Number of Frequency
Annualized outbreaks in of outbreaks
costs 10 years for to equal
($ millions, benefits to costs
2004) equal costs (years)

POS Scenario:
Option 1 ............................................................................................................................................ $185.5 0.31 32.7
Option 2 ............................................................................................................................................ 495.0 0.82 12.3
Option 3 ............................................................................................................................................ 535.3 0.88 11.3
Mid-Point:
Option 1 ............................................................................................................................................ 224.2 0.37 27.1
Option 2 ............................................................................................................................................ 644.4 1.06 9.4
Option 3 ............................................................................................................................................ 700.3 1.15 8.7
POD Scenario:
Option 1 ............................................................................................................................................ 262.9 0.43 23.1
Option 2 ............................................................................................................................................ 793.8 1.35 7.7
Option 3 ............................................................................................................................................ 865.2 1.43 7.1

J. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis CDC is asking for comment on the costs that all 32 with no employment data are
and impacts of the rule on small small, there are 75 small airlines that
CDC considered the proposed entities. As required by the RFA, in the might be affected by the proposed rule.
regulation’s effects on small entities, as final rule, CDC will provide the public International ownership links
required by the Regulatory Flexibility comments it received in response to the complicate estimation of the number of
Act (RFA; 5 U.S.C. et seq.; Pub. L. 96– proposal, prepare a Final Regulatory small cruise lines (NAICS 438112).
354) as amended by the Small Business Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) and make a When ferry and charter boat companies
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of determination whether a certification of operating in the Great Lakes, Gulf of
1996 (SBREFA; Pub. L. 104–121). The no significant impact on a substantial Mexico, Pacific Northwest, or Florida
RFA establishes, as a principle of number of small entities is appropriate. with foreign port itineraries are
regulation, that agencies should tailor The Small Business Administration considered, we estimate that there are
regulatory and informational defines small airlines as those with approximately 20 small firms in the
requirements to the size of entities, fewer than 1,500 employees and small cruise industry subject to the regulation.
consistent with the objectives of a water carriers as those with fewer than GDSs and travel agencies might also
particular regulation and applicable 500 employees. Department of be affected by the proposed regulation
statutes. The agency has prepared an Transportation (DOT) data indicates that under the POS scenario. Census Bureau
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis there are 43 airlines (NAICS 481111) data indicate there are 21,679 small
(IRFA). This analysis suggests that this with fewer than 1,500 employees (BTS, travel agency (NAICS 561510)
rule will not have a significant effect on 2005a and 2005b). Employment is not establishments in the U.S. (Census,
a substantial number of small reported for an additional 32 airlines 2004). Larger travel companies own
businesses, small organizations, or small and another 19 airlines have no 4,559 of these establishments, so we
governmental jurisdictions. However, financial data whatsoever. We assume estimate that the remaining 17,120 are

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small firms. Using similar reasoning, we CDC applied a revenue test to assess FAA–APO. 2003. ‘‘Treatment of Passenger
estimate there are 703 small other the impact of added costs on small Time in Economic Analysis.’’ APO
reservation booking firms (not listed as businesses. Under the POS scenario, Bulletin (APO–03–01). March.
travel agencies) in the U.S. All GDSs are Fan, E.X. 2003. SARS: Economic impacts and
costs are less than 1 percent of revenues
implications. Asian Development Bank,
considered large. for all affected airlines and cruise lines Economics and Research Department,
CDC, as discussed earlier, considered under Option 2. Even among the small ERD Policy Brief No. 15. May.
three options under two scenarios. The travel agencies, costs are less than one- FR (Federal Register). 2003. Manifest
first option requires information to be half of one percent of small travel requirements under Section 231 of the
collected from passengers only for those agencies’ average revenues. These small Act. Proposed rule. Immigration and
arriving on international flights and businesses are estimated to incur costs Naturalization Service, Department of
cruise lines with international to of less than $700 per year per firm Justice. Fed. Reg. 68(2). January 3.
domestic itineraries. Option 2 adds Franz. 2005. Personal communications
under Option 3.
domestic flights from medium and large between Calvin Franz, ERG, and
Under the Point of Departure representatives of the following regional
airports to Option 1, and Option 3 adds
scenario, Option 2, CDC estimates that airlines: Air Wisconsin, Chautauqua,
all domestic flights to Option 1. The two Comair, ExpressJet, and SkyWest. March
two small airlines out of 91 small
scenarios are the Point of Sale scenario, 15, 2005.
airlines and cruise lines analyzed might
under which CDC assumes that the IATA (International Air Transport
airlines will be able to gain access to incur annualized compliance costs in
Association). 2003. Comments of the
data collected by travel agencies and excess of one percent of revenues, International Air Transport Association
GDSs and will not have to collect data should the carriers themselves need to in respect of: U.S. Immigration and
from passengers at the point of collect all of the passenger information Naturalization Service notice of
departure. In the second scenario, CDC required prior to passenger boarding. proposed rulemaking on manifest
requirements under Section 231 of the
assumes that the logistical and legal K. References for Part VI Act. Public Docket. February 3, 2003.
barriers to this information sharing are Institute of Medicine. 2003. Microbial
Barrett, C.L., S.G. Eubank, and J.P. Smith.
such that all information would need to Threats to Health: Emergence, Detection
2005. If smallpox strikes Portland.
be collected by the airlines at the point Scientific American 292(3):55–61. and Response. March
of departure (the Point of Departure BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics). 2005. Wages Johnson, F.R., E.E. Fries, and H.S. Banzhaf.
scenario). by area and occupation. http:// 1997. Valuing morbidity: An integration
CDC did consider Option 1, which www.bls.gov/bls/blswage.htm. Accessed of the willingness to pay and health
represents an option for minimizing the March 7–17, 2005. status index literatures. Journal of Health
number of affected small firms and their BTS (Bureau of Transportation Statistics). Economics 16:641–665.
associated costs (since it covers fewer 1998. Office of Airline Information. Air Kochi, I., B. Hubbell, and R. Kramer. 2003.
flights and passengers). Small firms are carrier financial statistics: Quarterly An empirical Bayes approach to
combining and comparing estimates of
less likely to provide international (Yellow Book). Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Transportation. June. the value of a statistical life for
flights than large firms. CDC did not environmental policy analysis.
select this option because CDC believes BTS (Bureau of Transportation Statistics).
Appendix H. Prepared for meeting of the
that Option 2 provides better protection 2005a. Air carrier financial reports (Form
EPA Science Advisory Board. May 12.
of human health with only slightly 41 financial data) Schedule P–11
Lipsitch, M., T. Cohen, B. Cooper, J.M.
database. http://www.transtats.bts.gov/.
greater potential impacts (and only Robins, S. Ma, L. James, G.
Accessed March 14, 2005.
under the POD scenario). Although CDC BTS (Bureau of Transportation Statistics).
Gopalakrishna, S.K. Chew, C.C. Tan,
could have considered an option in M.H. Samore, D. Fisman, and M. Murray.
2005b. Air carrier financial reports (Form 2003. Transmission dynamics and
which some or all airlines and cruise 41 financial data) Schedule P–12
lines considered small by Small control of severe acute respiratory
database. http://www.transtats.bts.gov/. syndrome. Sciencexpress (May 23):1.
Business Administration Standards Accessed March 14, 2005. Pace. 2005. Telephone conversation between
were exempted from providing data, BTS (Bureau of Transportation Statistics). Harlan Cobert, Pace Airlines, and Calvin
CDC did not believe that this approach 2005b. Air carrier statistics (Form 41 Franz, ERG. March 16, 2005.
would adequately protect human health. traffic) T–100 segment database. http:// RAA (Regional Airline Association). 2005.
Although the airlines defined as small www.transtats.bts.gov/. Accessed March Regional Airline Code Sharing
carry only 5–10 percent of passengers 14, 2005. CBS News Online. 2003. ‘‘The Partnerships as of April 2004. http://
(depending on option), this represents Economic Impact of SARS.’’ April 28. www.raa.org. Accessed March 10, 2005.
as many as 35 million passengers CDC. 2005. Regulatory Impact Analysis Sun Country. 2005. Telephone conversation
of Proposed 42 CFR Part 70 and 42 CFR between Tony Loeks, Sun Country
annually and as many as 22 percent of
Part 71. Airlines, and Calvin Franz, ERG. March
flights. Furthermore, the nature of the Cruise Industry News. 2004. Market brand 15, 2005.
airline industry is such that some of the and growth. http:// St. Louis Business Journal. 2003. June 12.
smaller airlines, which comprise a www.cruiseindustrynews.com/ Qantas. 2003. Department of Justice
major portion of the codeshare airlines, index.php?option=com_ Immigration and Naturalization Service
would avoid some of the major costs of content&task=view&id=18&Itemid=42. 8 CFR Part 217, 231, 251 manifest
the proposed rule. The codeshare Spring. Accessed March 2005. requirements under Section 231 of the
airlines do not have their own Delta. 2005. Telephone conversations Act proposed rule, comments by Qantas
reservation systems. These are managed between Spark Nowak and Dennis Airways. Public Docket. January 30,
by their larger airline partners. A Stamm, Delta Airlines, and John Eyraud 2003.
significant cost of the proposed rule and Calvin Franz, ERG. March 7 and United Airlines. 2005. Telephone
March 9, 2005. conversations between Gary Kohn,
entails the reprogramming of the
DOT (Department of Transportation). 2005. United Airlines, and Calvin Franz, ERG.
reservation system software. CDC does Telephone conversation between Bernie March 14, 2005.
not believe any codeshare airline will Stankus, Office of Airline Information, USB Warburg. 2003. Your ship has come in.
share in any of these costs, since the and Calvin Franz, ERG. March 16, 2005. Global Equity Research. May 14.
larger airlines are very dependent on the Deutsche Bank. 2004. Cruise industry Volpe. 2005. Real-time data for CDC location
codeshare airlines to fill the gaps in review: The dynamic duopoly. Global of at-risk passengers. Cambridge, MA:
their itinerary offerings. Equity Research. September 27, 2004. Intermodal Logistics Planning and

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71924 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

Integration Division, Volpe National collected; and (d) ways to minimize the Additionally, CDC proposes to add new
Transportation Systems Center, U.S. burden of the collection of information sections containing reporting and
Department of Transportation. June 29. on respondents, including through the recordkeeping requirements for
WHO (World Health Organization). 2004.
use of automated collection techniques interstate and foreign quarantine to the
Summary of probable SARS cases with
onset of illness from 1 November 2002 to or other forms of information existing 0920–0488 and 0920–0134,
31 July 2003. http://www.who.int/csr/ technology. Written comments should respectively.
sars/country/table2004_04_21/en/ be received within 60 days of the
print.html. Accessed August 8, 2005. publication of this notice. Please send Interstate Quarantine
Airline Web Sites Accessed: written comments to Seleda Perryman, Under OMB control number 0920–
Casino Express. http:// CDC Assistant Reports Clearance 0488, the following section will be
www.redlioncasino.com/CasinoExpress/. Officer, 1600 Clifton Road, MS D–74, modified: 70.6 Travel permits. CDC
Accessed March 16, 2005.
Atlanta, GA 30333. proposes to add the following sections:
Miami International. http://
www.miamiair.com/. Accessed March
Proposed Project: Control of 70.2 Report of death or illness on board
16, 2005. Communicable Diseases; Interstate and flights; 70.3 Written plan for reporting
North American. http:// Foreign Quarantine—Revision— of deaths or illness on board flights and
www.northamericanair.com/. Accessed Division of Global Migration and designation of an airline agent; 70.4
March 16, 2005. Quarantine (DGMQ), National Center for Passenger information; 70.5 Written
Sky King. http://www.flyskyking.net/. Infectious Diseases (NCID), Centers for plan for passenger information and
Accessed March 16, 2005. Disease Control and Prevention. designation of an airline agent; and,
Trans Meridian. http://www.tmair.com/. Description: Section 361 of the Public
Accessed March 16, 2005. 70.19 Medical examination and
Health Service (PHS) Act (42 U.S.C. monitoring.
USA3000. http://www.usa3000airlines.com/.
Accessed March 16, 2005.
264) authorizes the Secretary of Health Control of disease transmission
and Human Services to make and within the United States is largely
VII. Other Administrative enforce regulations necessary to prevent considered to be the province of state
Requirements the introduction, transmission, or and local health authorities, with
spread of communicable diseases from federal assistance being sought by those
A. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
foreign countries into the United States authorities on a cooperative basis,
Children From Environmental Health
or from one State or possession into without application of federal
Risks and Safety Risks
another. Legislation and existing regulations. Interstate quarantine
Executive Order 13045 requires HHS regulations governing interstate and
to determine whether the proposed rule regulations administered by CDC were
foreign quarantine activities (42 CFR developed to facilitate federal action in
is economically significant. The Parts 70 and 71) authorize quarantine
Executive Order further requires HHS to the event of large outbreaks requiring a
officers and other personnel to inspect
determine whether the proposed rule coordinated effort involving several
and undertake necessary control
would create an environmental health states, or in the event of inadequate
measures in order to protect the public
or safety risk disproportionately local control. While it is not known
health. Currently, with the exception of
affecting children. HHS has determined whether, or to what extent, situations
rodent inspections and the cruise ship
that this proposed rule of general may arise in which these regulations
sanitation program, inspections are
applicability is consistent with the would be invoked, contingency
performed only on those vessels and
principles set forth in the Executive planning for domestic emergency
aircraft which report illness prior to
Order. preparedness is not uncommon. Should
arrival or when illness is discovered
a domestic emergency occur, the
B. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 upon arrival. Other inspection agencies
assist quarantine officers in public reporting and record keeping
The Centers for Disease Control and health screening of persons, pets, and requirements contained in the
Prevention has determined that this other importations of public health regulations will be used by CDC to carry
notice of proposed rulemaking contains importance and make referrals to PHS out quarantine responsibilities as
information collections that are subject when indicated. These practices and required by law, specifically, to prevent
to review by the Office of Management procedures ensure protection against the the spread of communicable diseases
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork introduction and spread of from one state or possession into any
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. communicable diseases into the United other state or possession. The
3501–3520). A description of these States with a minimum of information would only be collected
provisions is given below with an recordkeeping and reporting as well as when it is required, and is the minimum
estimate of the annual reporting burden. a minimum of interference with trade necessary to meet statutory obligations.
Included in the estimate is the time for and travel. The information collection CDC uses one form to collect essential
reviewing instructions, searching burden is associated with these information in the following sections:
existing data sources, gathering and recordkeeping and reporting 42 CFR 70.3: All communicable
maintaining the data needed, and requirements. diseases.
completing and reviewing each At present, CDC maintains clearance 42 CFR 70.4: Report of disease.
collection of information. Comments are to collect certain information and 42 CFR 70.5: Certain communicable
invited on (a) Whether the proposed impose recordkeeping requirements diseases; special requirements.
collection of information is necessary related to quarantine responsibilities CDC’s proposed rule cancels § 70.3
for the proper performance of the under two separate OMB control and modifies 70.4 and 70.5 into a new
functions of the agency, including numbers: 0920–0488 for 42 CFR Part 70 section 70.6. The current permit form
whether the information shall have Interstate quarantine and 0920–0134 will be modified to reflect that the
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Foreign Quarantine. CDC proposes to application is now made only to the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the revise reporting and recordkeeping Director as set forth in 70.6(c)(2).
proposed collection of information; (c) requirements under the current OMB In addition to 70.6, CDC proposes
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and control numbers for sections in the rule adding reporting requirements at the
clarity of the information to be that have been modified or retained. following sections:

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70.2 Report of death or illness on revisions as necessary. Airlines are also 42 CFR 71.53(d) and (e) Requirements
board flights. This requirement, required to conduct drills or exercises to for registered importers of nonhuman
currently only in the foreign quarantine annually test and evaluate the primates.
regulations, now extends to airlines effectiveness of the plan. Any revisions The proposed rule modifies these
operating flights in interstate traffic in as a result of the annual review or the recordkeeping and reporting
this proposed rule. drills or exercises must be submitted to requirements as follows:
70.3 Written plan for reporting of the Director. 71.6 Reports of death or illness on
deaths or illness on board flights and 70.19(b) Medical examination and board flights and 71.8 Report of death or
designation of an airline agent. The first monitoring. Persons believed to be in illness on board ships. These
year in which the plan is required after the qualifying stage of a quarantinable requirements clarify the current section
the final rule takes effect imposes the disease may be asked to provide the 71.21 Radio report of death and illness.
largest burden. However, the time to Director with information related to 71.7 Written plan for reporting of
assemble the initial plan is expected to familial and social contacts, travel deaths or illness on board flights and
be minimal as airlines are already itinerary, medical history, place of designation of an airline agent and 71.9
required to have these procedures in work, and vaccination status. Written plan for reporting of deaths or
place under the current regulation. In
Foreign Quarantine illness on board ships and designation
subsequent years, airlines are required
Under OMB control number 0920– of a shipline’s agent. These
to annually review the plan and make
0134, the following sections will be requirements are comparable to
revisions as necessary. Airlines are also
modified: 71.6 and 71.8. These reporting requirements in Sections 70.3.
required to conduct drills or exercises to
annually test and evaluate the requirements currently fall under 71.21. 71.10 Passenger information. This
effectiveness of the plan. Any revisions New reporting and recordkeeping requirement applies to any airline
as a result of the annual review or the requirements proposed to be added to operating flights or shipline operating
drills or exercises must be submitted to 0920–0134 include: 71.7 Written plan ships on an international voyage
the Director. for reporting of deaths or illness on destined for a U.S. port and contains
70.4 Passenger information. This is a board ships and designation of an reporting requirements comparable to
new requirement for any airline airline agent; 71.9 Written plan for 70.4.
operating flights in interstate traffic to reporting of deaths or illness on board 71.11 Written plan for passenger
collect certain information, including ships and designation of a shipline information and designation of an
name and best contact information, from agent; 71.10 Passenger information; airline or shipline agent. This
passengers arriving in or departing from 71.11 Written plan for passenger requirement is comparable to
any of the airports listed in Appendix A. information and designation of an requirements found in 70.5.
This information will be used to notify airline or shipline agent; and, 71.22 71.22 Medical examination and
passengers in case of exposure to a Medical examination and monitoring. monitoring. This section contains
communicable disease. CDC recognizes Currently, 42 CFR Part 71 comprises reporting requirements comparable to
that other federal agencies—in the following citations that require 70.19.
particular the Department of Homeland reporting or recordkeeping: The reporting and recordkeeping
Security—currently collects some of the 42 CFR 71.21 Radio report of death requirements in § 71.51, 71.52, and
information that CDC is requesting in and illness. 71.53 do not change in this proposed
the proposed rule. To that end, CDC and 42 CFR 71.33(c) Report of persons rule.
DHS are exploring options to reduce the held in isolation or surveillance. Description of Respondents:
potential burden of dual reporting. 42 CFR 71.35 Report of death or Respondents may include airplane
70.5 Written plan for passenger illness on carrier during stay in port. pilots, ships’ captains, travelers, state
information and designation of an 42 CFR 71.51(b)(3) and (d) health departments, territorial health
airline agent. The burden for this Requirements for admission of dogs and departments, and airline industry
section is greatest in the first year. In cats. personnel. The nature of the quarantine
subsequent years, airlines are required 42 CFR 71.52(d) Application for response would dictate which forms are
to annually review the plan and make permits to import turtles. completed by whom.

TABLE VII. B.1.—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN


Annual Hours per
Number of Total number
CFR Section frequency per response Total hours
respondents of responses
response (in minutes)

42 CFR 70.2 ........................................................................ 1,549 1 1,549 2/60 52


42 CFR 70.3 and 42 CFR 71.7 (first year) .......................... 217 1 217 60/60 217
42 CFR 70.3 and 42 CFR 71.7 (subsequent years) ........... 217 1 217 10/60 36
42 CFR 70.4 ........................................................................ 278,400,000 1 278,400,000 1/60 5,568,000
42 CFR 70.5 and 42 CFR 71.11 ......................................... 274 1 274 600/60 2,740
42 CFR 70.6 ........................................................................ 2,000 1 2,000 15/60 500
42 CFR 70.19 ...................................................................... 18 1 18 30/60 9
42 CFR 71.6 ........................................................................ 1,549 1 1,549 2/60 52
42 CFR 71.8 ........................................................................ 57 54 3,135 5/60 261
42 CFR 71.9 ........................................................................ 57 1 57 180/60 171
42 CFR 71.10 ...................................................................... 142,213,640 1 142,213,640 1/60 2,844,273
42 CFR 71.22 ...................................................................... 18 1 18 30/60 9

Total .............................................................................. ........................ ........................ ........................ ........................ 8,416,320

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Our estimates are based on experience This proposed rule will have a of infection to persons who will be
to date with current recordkeeping and substantial direct effect as defined by moving from a State to another State.
reporting requirements of 42 CFR Parts the Executive Order requiring Furthermore, under Section 70.27,
70 and 71. In addition, the estimate for consultation with Tribal representatives subsection (d), the Director, with the
proposed new reporting requirements at and an analysis of Tribal impacts. concurrence of the Director of the
70.4 Passenger Information is based on Current federal law (42 U.S.C. 243, Indian Health Service and after
statistics from the Bureau of 264) gives the Secretary of Health and consulting with the affected Tribe or
Transportation Statistics showing Human Services (HHS) the authority to Tribes may authorize agents and
passengers carried by airlines affected implement disease control measures in employees of any State government to
by the rule for the period July 1, 2003– situations that could impact interstate enter Indian country for the sole
June 30, 2004. The number of commerce, including quarantine of purpose of enforcing federal quarantine
passengers on domestic flights for this persons suspected of carrying certain rules and regulations. This authority is
period was estimated to be 556.8 communicable diseases who are (1) subject to any rules or regulations the
million; this number was reduced by traveling from one state to another or (2) Director of the Indian Health Service
50% based on quarterly calculations likely to infect others traveling from one may choose to promulgate under 25
from mid 2003 to mid 2004, which state to another. The Secretary has U.S.C. 231. This section is intended to
consistently showed that about 54% of delegated this statutory authority to the implement provisions appearing in 25
domestic flights contained trip segments Director. Under current law (25 U.S.C. U.S.C. 198 and 231, 25 U.S.C. 1661, and
of 1.85 on average (i.e., an adjustment 198, 231, 2001), the Secretary, acting 42 U.S.C. 2001.
was made for the fact that about half of through the IHS Director, also has the Pursuant to 25 U.S.C. 198, the
all domestic travel includes one or more authority to implement disease control Secretary of the Interior may quarantine
connecting flights). Estimates for measures, such as quarantine, in Indian Native Americans on Tribal lands for
reporting requirements at 71.10 country, if necessary. There are ‘‘tuberculosis, trachoma, or other
Passenger information were also currently no federal regulations that contagious or infectious disease.’’ Under
obtained from the Bureau of implement the IHS Director’s statutory 25 U.S.C. 231, the Secretary of the
Transportation Statistics (for authority to quarantine persons with Interior may also permit State agents
international airline passengers) and communicable diseases. and employees to enter upon Tribal
from available data for U.S. cruise lines. The federal regulations that lands for purposes of making inspection
An estimated 142,213,640 passengers on implement CDC’s statutory authorities of health and educational conditions
airlines and shiplines will report for communicable disease control are in and enforcing sanitation and quarantine
information under 71.10. the Code of Federal Regulations, 42 CFR regulations. All Indian health programs
A detailed analysis of the costs to the Parts 70 and 71. These regulations and functions were transferred from the
airline and shipline industries for the implement CDC’s existing statutory Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary
reporting and recordkeeping authority to detain and/or quarantine of HHS by 42 U.S.C. 2001, and
requirements of this propose rule, persons suspected of carrying certain delegated to the Director of IHS by 25
including the opportunity costs to communicable diseases that pose a U.S.C. 1661. The authority found in 25
passengers providing this information, threat to the public’s health. CDC’s U.S.C. 198 and 231 supplements the
can be found under Part VI of this authority to quarantine persons extends Director’s authority under section 361 of
NPRM. only to the communicable diseases the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 264). Any action
listed in an Executive Order of the the Director takes under these sections
C. Environmental Assessment President, including cholera, diphtheria, must be in concurrence with the
The Director has determined that tuberculosis, plague, smallpox, yellow Director of the Indian Health Service
provisions amending 42 CFR Parts 70 fever, viral hemorrhagic fevers, SARS, after consultation with the affected
and 71 will not have a significant and influenza caused by novel or Tribe or Tribes. CDC’s Division of
impact on the human environment. reemergent influenza viruses that are Global Migration and Quarantine has
causing, or have the potential to cause, technical expertise in quarantine. Such
D. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
a pandemic. cooperation between the Indian Health
and Coordination With Indian Tribal Under proposed section 70.24, Tribal Service and the CDC would potentially
Governments health authorities will be able to ask the streamline operations and clarify
Executive Order 13175, entitled Director for assistance to prevent the procedures regarding quarantine on
‘‘Consultation and Coordination with spread of communicable diseases from Tribal lands.
Indian Tribal Governments’’ (published State to State. Under proposed section Furthermore Indian Tribes, like
at 65 FR 67249 on November 9, 2000), 70.25, the Director may determine that States, are sovereign entities with police
requires agencies to develop an the measures taken by a Tribe are power authority to enact their own
accountable process to ensure inadequate to prevent the spread of quarantine rules and regulations. Thus,
‘‘meaningful and timely input by tribal communicable diseases. Under the Tribal governments are able to enforce
officials in the development of proposed section 70.27, the Director, any Tribal quarantine law to the extent
regulatory policies that have tribal with the concurrence of the of the IHS that such laws exist. The proposed rule
implications.’’ The phrase ‘‘policies that Director and after consulting with the would not preempt the enactment of
have tribal implications’’ is defined in affected Tribe, may impose provisional Tribal quarantine rules and regulations,
the Executive Order to include quarantine under 70.14–70.15, to the extent that such Tribal laws do
regulations and other policy statements quarantine under 70.16–70.18, 70.20 not conflict with the exercise of federal
or actions that have ‘‘substantial direct and medical examination and quarantine law under the proposed rule.
effects on one or more Indian tribes, on monitoring under 70.19 in Indian Tribal participation in and support of
the relationship between the Federal country. The Director may act under planned revisions of regulations
government and Indian tribes, or on the this section without making a finding governing the control of communicable
distribution of power and that the person or group of persons is diseases is critical. HHS Tribal
responsibilities between the Federal moving or about to move from a State Consultation Policy calls for a tribal
government and Indian tribes.’’ to another State or is a probable source impact statement and appropriate

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consultation with tribal representatives prohibition effectively barred the navigation was not a compensable
prior to promulgation of a regulation. property owner from further operation taking). Alternatively, the presence of
This consultation process began during of a sand and gravel business that had carriers and things on board carriers in
the FY 2005 HHS Regional Tribal been in existence for over 30 years. interstate and foreign traffic reasonably
Consultation Sessions and the HHS Because the restriction served a believed by the Director to be sources of
National Tribal Budget Consultations, substantial public purpose, the court communicable disease qualify as
prior to the publication of this NPRM. held that no taking had occurred. See nuisances because they directly threaten
In order to ensure that all Tribes are also, North American Cold Storage Co. human health and safety. Accordingly,
provided every opportunity to v. City of Chicago, 211 U.S. 306 (1908) the proposed regulations do not
participate in and comment on planned holding that a statute authorizing constitute a taking, and compensation is
revisions of current quarantine seizure and destruction of food unfit for not required under the Fifth
regulations, CDC is also soliciting human consumption was constitutional Amendment.
written comments in the form of a Dear despite the lack of notice and The Director’s use of these regulations
Tribal Leader letter being sent to all opportunity to be heard). must, of course, be reasonable and based
Tribal leaders. The preamble for the Section 361(a) of the PHS Act (42 on the judgment that such steps are
final regulation resulting from this U.S.C. 264(a)) provides that in carrying necessary to prevent the introduction,
rulemaking process will contain the out regulations the Secretary ‘‘may transmission or spread of communicable
tribal summary impact statement provide for such inspection, fumigation, diseases. On the facts of a particular
required by the Executive Order. disinfection, sanitation, pest case, a court could ultimately find that
extermination, destruction of animals or the Director’s belief was unreasonable,
E. Executive Order 12630: Governmental articles found to be so infected or
Actions and Interference With the steps taken were unnecessary, a
contaminated as to be sources of nuisance did not exist, and a taking
Constitutionally Protected Property dangerous infection to human beings,
Rights therefore occurred. Proper use, however,
and other measures, as in his judgment of the ‘‘reasonable belief’’ and
Under Executive Order 12630, if the may be necessary.’’ This authority was ‘‘necessity’’ provisions contained in the
contemplated rule would require a carried out in the preexisting rule in proposed regulation would result in a
Federal taking of private property, then § 71.32(b), which authorized the finding of ‘‘no taking’’ under the
a takings analysis is required. The Director to require the application of a requisite analysis.
agency must address the merits of the variety of measures (detention,
rule and the implications for disinfection, disinfestations, fumigation, F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
constitutionally protected property and other related measures) whenever Under Executive Order 13132, if the
rights. the Director had reason to believe that
The Fifth Amendment to the United contemplated rule would limit or
an arriving carrier or any article or thing preempt State authorities, then a
States Constitution prohibits the taking on board the carrier may be infected or
of private property for public use Federalism analysis is required. The
contaminated with a communicable
without just compensation. Though agency must consult with State and
disease. Furthermore, under preexisting
courts may find that a per se taking has local officials to determine whether the
§ 71.31(b), the Director could require the
occurred due to government action rule would have a substantial direct
detention of the carrier until the
requiring a property owner to sacrifice effect on State or local governments, as
completion of such measures. This
‘‘all economically beneficial use’’ of the well as whether it would either preempt
authority is carried forward in the
property see Lucas v. South Carolina State law or impose a substantial direct
proposed rule in § 71.13 (Sanitary
Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003 (1992), cost of compliance on them.
measures) and 71.14 (detention of
the takings analysis generally used by carriers). The proposed rule also makes Section 361(e) of the PHS Act (42
courts is set forth in Penn Central these requirements applicable to carriers U.S.C. 264(e)) provides that ‘‘[n]othing
Transportation Co. v. New York City, affecting interstate commerce or things in this section or Section 266 of this title
438 U.S. 104 (1978). The Penn Central on board such carriers in § 70.11 [relating to special quarantine powers in
analysis focuses on the character of the (Sanitary measures). These sections time of war], or the regulations
government action and the economic clarify that the expense of applying promulgated under such sections, may
impact on the property owner, sanitary measures are borne by the be construed as superseding any
particularly regarding the extent to affected carrier or, in the case of things provision under State law (including
which the regulatory action at issue on board the carrier, expenses are borne regulations and including provisions
interferes with the owner’s distinct by the owners. established by political subdivisions of
investment-backed expectations. Also, Thus, the character of regulatory States), except to the extent that such a
though the Lucas per se approach is not actions that would be taken under the provision conflicts with an exercise of
generally used by courts in analyzing proposed regulation is most accurately Federal authority under this section or
takings cases, it is important to note that characterized as protection of the public Section 266 of this title.’’ The proposed
the decision in that case also stands for health in the form of avoidance of the rule is consistent with this statutory
the proposition that a taking will be introduction, transmission or spread of provision.
held not to have occurred if the affected infectious disease. Owners of property Through numerous forums such as
property constitutes a nuisance. posing a threat of introduction, conferences, tabletop exercises,
Goldblatt v. Hempstead, 369 U.S. 590 transmission or spread of infectious response efforts, and meetings, CDC has
(1962) was cited by the Penn Central disease cannot have a reasonable consulted with state and local public
court as illustrative of the burdens that investment-backed expectation that health officials and health-care
may be imposed upon a property owner their property should move freely while providers about the appropriate role of
in the face of regulatory action designed posing such a threat. See B&F Trawlers, the federal government in exercising
to serve a substantial public purpose. Inc. v. the United States, 27 Fed. Cl. public health powers such as those
That case involved a city safety 299, 306 (Ct. Fed. Cl. 1992) (holding that described in the proposed rule. CDC
ordinance enacted to prohibit U.S. Coast Guard’s lawful destruction of seeks to continue this consultation
excavation below the water table. That a burning vessel as a danger to through solicitation of comments from

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71928 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

state and local public health officials on K. Plain Language adequate due process to individuals and
all aspects of the rule. Executive Order 12866 requires each entities that may be affected by them.
G. Executive Order 13211: Energy agency to write all rules in plain List of Subjects
Effects language. We try to write clearly. If you
can suggest how to improve the clarity 42 CFR Part 70
HHS is required by Executive Order of these regulations, call or write Communicable diseases, Public
13211 to produce a statement of energy Jennifer Brooks at the address listed health, Quarantine, Reporting and
effects if the proposed rule is significant above. recordkeeping requirements, Travel
or economically significant and likely to restrictions.
VIII. Solicitation of Comments
have a significant adverse effect on the
CDC solicits comments on various 42 CFR Part 71
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
HHS has determined that the proposed issues specifically identified in the Airports, Animals, Communicable
rule does not have that effect and that preamble as well as any other issues diseases, Harbors, Imports, Pesticides
a statement of energy is therefore not that are relevant to the proposed and pests, Public health, Quarantine,
required. regulation. Specifically, CDC solicits Reporting and recordkeeping
information, data, and comment on the requirements.
H. National Technology Transfer and following topics: For the reasons stated in the
Advancement Act • Whether the time frames to develop preamble, we propose to amend 42 CFR
and submit the plans described in Parts 70 and 71 to read as follows:
This Act, 15 U.S.C. 272, requires
following sections are sufficient. and, if
adoption of technical standards CHAPTER I—PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE,
it is not, what are the difficulties in
developed or adopted by voluntary DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN
meeting each of these schedules: SERVICES
consensus standard bodies in rules
promulgated by HHS. No voluntary —§ 70.3 Reporting of death or illness, 1. Part 70 is revised to read as follows:
consensus standards are applicable and plan and implementation.
feasible with regard to the proposed —§ 70.5 Passenger and crew PART 70—INTERSTATE QUARANTINE
rule. information, plan and
implementation. Sec.
I. Family Policy Analysis —§ 71.7 Reporting of death or illness 70.1 Scope and definitions.
70.2 Report of death or illness on board
on board flights, plan and flights.
Title 5 U.S.C. 601 requires agencies to implementation. 70.3 Written plan for reporting of deaths or
determine whether a proposed rule —§ 71.9 Reporting of death or illness illness on board flights and designation
would affect family well-being. Section on board ship, plan and of an airline agent.
70.7 of the proposed regulation makes implementation. 70.4 Passenger information.
parents or guardians responsible for —§ 71.11 Passenger and crew 70.5 Written plan for passenger information
obtaining travel permits prior to information, plan and and designation of an airline agent.
procuring transportation for children or implementation. 70.6 Travel permits.
wards known by the parents or 70.7 Responsibility with respect to minors,
guardians to be in the qualifying stage • In addition to soliciting comment wards, and patients.
of a communicable disease. While the on relative merits of the fully analyzed 70.8 Military services.
alternative options presented in Section 70.9 Vaccination clinics.
proposed provision undoubtedly places 70.10 Establishment of institutions,
responsibility on parents and guardians, VI, CDC also solicits comment on
regulatory options that may fall outside hospitals and stations.
it would be unreasonable to conclude 70.11 Sanitary measures.
that this responsibility adversely affects the scope of the options analyzed in the
70.12 Detention of carriers affecting
family well-being, particularly in view regulatory impact analysis, including interstate commerce.
of the beneficial effects on families and but not limited to the scope of the 70.13 Screenings to detect ill persons.
the population as a whole associated passenger information collected and the 70.14 Provisional quarantine.
with preventing the spread of infectious extent of the coverage of interstate 70.15 Provisional quarantine orders.
disease. travel. 70.16 Quarantine.
• The most efficient means of 70.17 Content of quarantine order.
J. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice collecting accurate passenger contact 70.18 Service of quarantine order.
Reform information, particularly from airlines 70.19 Medical examination and monitoring.
and passengers: 70.20 Hearings.
HHS has completed the required Æ § 70.4 Passenger information 70.21 Care and treatment of persons.
reviews and has determined that the 70.22 Foreign nationals.
Æ § 71.10 Passenger information 70.23 Administrative record.
proposed rule meets the standards in • The economic analysis in this 70.24 Requests by State (including political
Executive Order 12988. The preemptive proposal, including the estimated costs. subdivisions thereof), possession, or
effect of the rule is explained in section • The paperwork reduction analysis, tribal health authorities.
VII.F., Federalism, above. The rule has including the accuracy of the burden 70.25 Measures in the event of inadequate
no retroactive effect. With respect to estimates and the practical utility of the local control.
administrative hearings, the rule allows data. 70.26 Federal facilities.
persons or groups of persons made • The estimated costs based on the 70.27 Indian country.
subject to a quarantine order to request assumption that data collection efforts 70.28 Special powers in time of war.
a hearing to dispute the genuine and could be coordinated with 70.29 Penalties.
substantial issues of fact. The rule 70.30 Implementation through order.
contemporary rulemaking efforts by
70.31 Appeals of actions required pursuant
clearly states that the quarantine order other Federal agencies. to §§ 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 or 70.12
is not final until the Director approves • Whether the rule, particularly those Appendix A to Part 70—Calendar Year 2004
or rejects the hearing officer’s sections pertaining to quarantine, Enplanement Data as Published by the
recommendation, or 3 business days hearings, and appeals (§§ 70.14–70.20; Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) for Large
after the request for hearing is made. 70.31; 71.17–71.23; 71.33), provide and Medium U.S. Airports

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Authority: 25 U.S.C. 198, 231, and 1661; 42 person or on the surface of a thing by Government, notwithstanding the
U.S.C. 243, 248, 249, 264–272, and 2001. direct exposure to chemical or physical issuance of any patent, and, including
§ 70.1 Scope and definitions.
agents. rights-of-way running through the
Disinfestation means any chemical or reservation;
(a) The purpose of this part is to physical process serving to destroy or (ii) All dependent Indian
prevent the introduction, transmission, remove undesired small animal forms, communities within the borders of the
and spread of communicable diseases particularly arthropods or rodents. United States whether within the
from one State into any other State. Disinsection means the operation in original or subsequently acquired
Regulations to prevent the spread of which measures are taken to kill the territory thereof, and whether within or
disease from foreign countries into the insect vectors of human disease. without the limits of a state; and
States are contained in 42 CFR Part 71. Emergency contact information means (iii) All Indian allotments, the Indian
Except where otherwise indicated, the following information pertaining to titles to which have not been
regulations to prevent the spread of a person (other than the passenger or extinguished, including rights-of-way
disease among possessions of the United crewmember) or an entity (such as a running through the same.
States or from a possession into a State business) that has the ability to contact Indian tribe means any Indian tribe,
are contained in 42 CFR Part 71. the passenger or crewmember on an band, nation or other organized group or
(b) As used in this part, the terms emergency basis: community, including any Alaska
listed below in alphabetical order shall (i) The full name (first, last, middle Native village or regional or village
have the following meanings: initial, suffix) of the person or business
Aircraft commander means any corporation as defined in or established
name of the entity; pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims
person serving on an aircraft with (ii) The permanent address; and
responsibility for its operation and Settlement Act which is recognized as
(iii) A phone number (either home, eligible for the special programs and
navigation. work, or mobile).
Airline means any air carrier, foreign services provided by the United States
Flight information means for each to Indians because of their status as
or domestic, operating commercial airline operating a flight in interstate
passenger flights under regular Indians.
traffic (including any intermediate stops Infectious agent means an organism
schedules within the United States. between the flight’s origin and final
Airline agent means any person who (e.g., bacteria, fungus, helminth, prion,
destination) the airline name, flight protozoan, rickettsia, virus, or
is authorized to act for or in place of the number, city of arrival, date of arrival,
owner or operator of an airline for the bioengineered variant thereof) that is
date of departure, seat number for any capable of producing infection or
purposes of carrying out the airline’s passenger or crewmember, arrival gate,
responsibilities described in this part. infectious disease.
and arrival terminal. Interstate traffic, except as otherwise
Business day means any full business Hearing officer means a person
day during which the Centers for provided in paragraph (ii) of this
designated by the Director or the
Disease Control and Prevention is open definition, means:
Secretary to conduct administrative
for regular business (excluding (i) The movement of any carrier or the
hearings under this part or another
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) transportation of persons or property,
authorized representative as approved
from 9 a.m. in the morning to 5 p.m. in including any portion of such
by the Director or the Secretary.
the evening, Eastern Standard Time. Ill person means a person who: movement or transportation that is
Carrier means, except where (i) Has a temperature of 100.4° F (or entirely within a State—
otherwise specified, a ship, shipline, 38° C) or greater accompanied by one or (A) From a point of origin in any State
vessel, airline, aircraft, train, road more of the following: Rash, swelling of to a point of destination in any other
vehicle, or other means of transport, the lymph nodes or glands, headache State; or
including military carriers. with neck stiffness, or changes in level (B) Between a point of origin and a
Communicable disease means an of consciousness or cognitive function; point of destination in the same State
illness due to an infectious agent or its or but through any contiguous State or
toxic products which arises through (ii) Has a temperature of 100.4° F (or foreign country.
transmission of that agent or its 38° C) or greater that has persisted for (ii) Interstate traffic does not include
products from an infected person or more than 48 hours; or the following:
animal or a reservoir to a susceptible (iii) Has diarrhea, defined as the (A) The movement of any carrier or
host, either directly or indirectly occurrence in a 24-hour period of three the transportation of persons or property
through an intermediate animal host, or more loose stools or of stools in an on an international voyage as defined in
vector, or the inanimate environment. amount greater than normal (for the 42 CFR Part 71; or
Detention, when applied to carriers, person); or (B) The movement of any carrier
animals, articles, or things means the (iv) Has one or more of the following: which is solely for the purpose of its
temporary holding on a voluntary or Severe bleeding, jaundice, or severe, repair, reconstruction, rehabilitation, or
involuntary basis of such carriers, persistent cough accompanied by storage.
animals, articles, or things, until the bloody sputum, respiratory distress, or a Medical monitoring means close
completion of such sanitary measures as temperature of 100.4° F (or 38° C) or medical or other supervision of a person
may be required under this part. greater; or or group of persons on a voluntary or
Director means the Director, Centers (v) Displays other symptoms or factors involuntary basis to permit prompt
for Disease Control and Prevention, that are suggestive of communicable recognition of infection or illness.
Department of Health and Human disease, which the Director may Military service means the U.S. Air
Services, or another authorized describe in an order as the Director Force, U.S. Army, the U.S. Coast Guard,
representative as approved by the CDC determines necessary. the U.S. Marine Corps, the U.S. Navy,
Director or the Secretary. Indian country means: and any National Defense Reserve Fleet
Disinfection means the killing of (i) All land within the limits of any vessels engaged in military operations at
infectious agents or inactivation of their Indian reservation under the the direction of the U.S. Department of
toxic products outside the body of a jurisdiction of the United States Defense.

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Possession means, in addition to transmission, or spread of written plan shall be submitted to the
Puerto Rico, any other possession of the communicable diseases; or Director.
United States. (ii) When applied to a person or group (e) Airlines shall implement the
Provisional quarantine means the of persons, the killing of infectious written plan within 180 days of the final
detention on an involuntary basis of a agents (or vectors capable of conveying publication of this rule.
person or group of persons reasonably infectious agents) outside the body by (f) Airlines shall review the written
believed to be in the qualifying stage of direct exposure to any chemical, plan one year after implementation and
a quarantinable disease until a physical, or other process designed to annually thereafter. The review shall
quarantine order has been issued or destroy such infectious agents. include drills or exercises to test and
until the Director determines that Secretary means the Secretary of the evaluate the effectiveness of the written
provisional quarantine is no longer Department of Health and Human plan unless the airline has reported ill
warranted. Services. passengers or deaths on board a flight
Public health emergency, as used in State means in addition to the several under § 70.2 in the prior 365 days.
this part, means: States, only the District of Columbia. Airlines shall revise the plan as
(i) Any disease event as determined United States means the States and necessary after any review. Any
by the Director with either documented possessions of the United States. revisions of the written plan shall be
or significant potential for regional, Vector means an animal (including submitted to the Director within 60
national, or international disease spread insects) or thing which conveys or is days.
or with actual or potential interference capable of conveying infectious agents (g) Airlines that intend to commence
with the free movement of people or from a person or animal to another operation of flights in interstate traffic
goods between States and possessions person or animal. after the effective date in paragraph (a)
within the United States or other of this section shall submit a written
countries or sovereignties; or § 70.2 Report of death or illness on board plan meeting the requirements of this
(ii) Any disease event designated as a flights. section to the Director before
public health emergency by the (a) Any airline operating flights in commencing operations. The airline
Secretary pursuant to section 319(a) of interstate traffic shall, pursuant to the shall implement the written plan by the
the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. written plan required under § 70.3, later of the two following dates: Either
247d(a)). report any deaths or ill persons that 180 days after the final publication of
Qualifying stage means: occur on board to the Director as soon this rule, or upon commencement of
(i) A communicable stage of the as such occurrences are made known to operations.
disease; or the aircraft commander and, where
(ii) A precommunicable stage, if the possible, at least one hour before arrival. § 70.4 Passenger information.
disease would be likely to cause a (b) The Director, whenever necessary (a) Any airline operating flights in
public health emergency if transmitted for purposes of preventing the interstate traffic shall, pursuant to the
to other persons. introduction, transmission or spread of written plan required under § 70.5,
Quarantine means the holding on a communicable diseases, may order solicit from each passenger (or head of
voluntary or involuntary basis, airlines operating a flight in interstate household if the passenger is a minor)
including the isolation, of a person or traffic to disseminate to passengers and and crewmember traveling on those
group of persons in such place and for crew public health notices, flights in interstate traffic arriving in or
such period of time as the Director recommended public health measures, departing from any of the airports listed
deems necessary or desirable to prevent and other public health information. in Appendix A the information
the spread of infection or illness. Such information shall be disseminated contained in the data fields specified in
Quarantinable disease means any of at the time and in a manner specified in paragraph (e) of this section.
the communicable diseases listed in an the Director’s order. (b) Any information obtained by the
Executive Order, as provided under airline pursuant to paragraph (a) in this
section 361 of the Public Health Service § 70.3 Written plan for reporting of deaths section shall be maintained by the
Act. Executive Order 13295, of April 4, or illness on board flights and designation airline in an electronic database for 60
2003, as amended by Executive Order of an airline agent.
days from the end of the flight.
13375 of April 1, 2005, contains the (a) Within 90 days of the final (c) For each passenger (or head of
current revised list of quarantinable publication of this rule, any airline household if the passenger is a minor)
diseases, and may be obtained at http:// operating flights in interstate traffic and crewmember traveling on an
www.cdc.gov and http:// shall develop a written plan sufficient to interstate flight, the airline may solicit
www.archives.gov/federal_register. If ensure reporting of deaths or illness on the information in paragraph (e) of this
this Order is amended, HHS will board flights as required by § 70.2. section from such person’s authorized
enforce that amended order (b) The written plan shall include the agent.
immediately and update that Web site. full name (i.e., first, last, middle initial, (d) Within 12 hours of a request by
Sanitary measures means: suffix), official title, business telephone the Director to the airline’s agent, the
(i) When applied to carriers, animals, number, and e-mail address (if airline, pursuant to the written plan
articles, or things: Detention; available), of an airline agent who shall under § 70.5, shall transmit to the
destruction of animals, articles, or serve as a point of contact between the Director in an electronic format the data
things that the Director deems to be Director and the airline concerning fields specified in paragraph (e) of this
sources of dangerous infection to human reports of deaths or ill persons. section.
beings; disinfection; disinfestations; (c) The written plan shall include (e) The data fields as applicable to the
disinsection; fumigation; pest policies and procedures necessary to individual passenger (or head of
extermination; seizure; or any other facilitate communication between the household if the passenger is a minor)
measure or combination of measures, Director and the airline agent on a 24- or crewmember, shall include the
whether voluntary or involuntary, that hour basis, 7 days a week. following:
the Director deems necessary or (d) Within 90 days of the final (1) Full name (first, last, middle
desirable to prevent the introduction, publication of this rule, a copy of the initial, suffix);

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(2) Emergency contact information; Director and the airline’s agent on a 24- (1) Accept for transportation any
(3) E-mail address; hour basis, 7 days a week; person whom the operator knows to be
(4) Current home address (street, (5) Policies and procedures for in the qualifying stage of a
apartment #, city, state/province, postal soliciting the information contained in quarantinable disease, unless such
code); the data fields required by § 70.4(e) from person presents a permit issued by the
(5) Passport number or travel the passenger (or head of household if Director authorizing such travel; or
document number, including the the passenger is a minor), crewmember, (2) Transport any person whom the
issuing country or organization (in the or such persons’ authorized agent; and operator knows to be in the qualifying
case of foreign nationals only); (6) Policies and procedures for stage of a quarantinable disease in
(6) Names of traveling companions or maintaining responsive information violation of any of the terms or
group; obtained by the airline in an electronic conditions prescribed in the travel
(7) Flight information; database for 60 days from the end of the
(8) Returning flight (date, airline permit issued by the Director.
flight as required by § 70.4(b). (b) Whenever a carrier operating in
number, and flight number); (c) Within six months of the final
(9) At least one of the following interstate traffic or moving from one
publication of this rule, a copy of the state or possession into another
current phone numbers (in order of written plan shall be submitted to the
preference): mobile, home, pager, or transports a person who is in the
Director. qualifying stage of a quarantinable
work. (d) Airlines shall implement the
(f) In addition to data fields specified disease bearing a travel permit issued by
written plan within 2 years of the final the Director, the operator of the carrier
in paragraph (e) of this section, when publication date of this rule. Within 60
necessary to prevent the introduction, shall take such measures to prevent the
days of implementation, airlines shall spread of the disease, including
transmission, or spread of conduct drills or exercises to test and
communicable diseases, the Director submission of the carrier to inspection,
evaluate the effectiveness of the written sanitary measures and the like, as the
through order may also require that plan and revise the plan as necessary
airlines transmit additional information Director deems necessary.
after any drill or exercise. Any revisions (c) Requirements relating to travelers
in the airline’s possession. of the written plan shall be submitted to
(g) Information collected solely in who know that they are in the
the Director within 60 days. qualifying stage of a quarantinable
order to comply with this regulation (e) Airlines shall review the written
may only be used for the purposes for disease:
plan one year after implementation and
which it is collected. (1) No such person shall travel in
annually thereafter. The review shall
(h) Airlines shall ensure that interstate traffic or from one state or
include drills or exercises to test and
passengers are informed of the purposes possession to another without a written
evaluate the effectiveness of the written
of this information collection at the time permit of the Director.
plan unless the airline has transmitted
passengers arrange their travel. (2) Application for a permit
passenger and crewmember information
authorizing travel may be made directly
§ 70.5 Written plan for passenger under § 70.4 in the prior 365 days.
to the Director.
information and designation of an airline Airlines shall revise the plan as
agent. (3) Upon receipt of an application, the
necessary after any review. Any
Director, taking into consideration the
(a) Within six months of the final revisions of the written plan shall be
risk of introduction, transmission, or
publication of this rule, any airline submitted to the Director within 60
spread of the disease in interstate traffic
operating flights in interstate traffic days.
(f) Airlines that intend to commence or from one state or possession into
shall develop a written plan sufficient to
operation of flights in interstate traffic another, shall reject it or issue a permit
ensure transmission of passenger and
arriving in or departing from any of the that may be conditioned upon
crew information for those flights in
airports listed in appendix A to part 70 compliance with such precautionary
interstate traffic arriving in or departing
after the effective date in paragraph (a) measures as the Director shall prescribe.
from any of the airports listed in
appendix A to part 70 as required by of this section shall submit a written (4) A person to whom a permit has
§ 70.4. plan meeting the requirements of this been issued shall retain it in his/her
(b) The written plan shall include: section to the Director before possession throughout the course of his/
(1) Policies and procedures for the commencing operations. The airline her authorized travel and comply with
transmission of data in an electronic shall implement the written plan by the all conditions prescribed therein,
format available to both the airline and later of the two following dates: either including presentation of the permit to
the Director using industry standards for 2 years after the final publication of this the operators of carriers, as required by
data encoding, transmission, and rule, or upon commencement of its terms.
security; operations. (5) A person who has had his/her
(2) Policies and procedures for the (g) Pending the development or request for a permit denied may submit
transmission of the data within 12 hours implementation of the written plan as a written appeal in accordance with
of a request by the Director to the required by this section, the Director, § 70.31.
airline’s agent; through order, may require that airlines (d) The Director may additionally
(3) The full name (i.e., first, last, transmit to the Director, in a format apply the provisions in paragraphs (a)
middle initial, suffix), official title, available to both the airline and the through (c) of this section to persons
business telephone number, and e-mail Director, any of the information and carriers traveling entirely within a
address (if available), of an airline agent required by § 70.4 that may be in the state or possession whenever the
who shall serve as a point of contact airline’s possession. Director determines that such person’s
between the Director and the airline travel or the carrier’s operations will
concerning requests for and § 70.6 Travel permits. have an effect on interstate commerce
transmission of passenger and crew (a) The operator of any carrier upon the request of a health authority in
information data; operating in interstate traffic or moving accordance with § 70.24 or whenever
(4) Policies and procedures necessary from one state or possession into the Director, with the concurrence of the
to facilitate communication between the another shall not: Secretary, makes a determination of

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inadequate local control in accordance (7) Concurrent vaccinations; transmission, or spread of


with § 70.25. (8) Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting communicable diseases.
System Report/Adverse Event Report (b) CDC shall not bear the expense of
§ 70.7 Responsibility with respect to any sanitary measures required or
Number; and
minors, wards, and patients.
(9) Verification that the vaccine ordered by the Director. The carrier or
(a) A parent, guardian, physician, conferred immunity (if applicable). other entity specified in the order issued
nurse, or other such person shall not (c) In addition to the requirements in pursuant to 70.11(a) shall bear the
transport, nor procure or furnish paragraph (b) of this section, a responsibility for the application of
transportation for any minor child or vaccination clinic established by the such measures.
ward, patient or other such person Director shall comply with such (c) Sections 70.11(a) and 70.11(b)
whom they know to be in the qualifying additional recordkeeping requirements shall not preclude any entity ordered to
stage of a quarantinable disease, without and other instructions that the Director conduct sanitary measures pursuant to
a travel permit issued by the Director if may issue for the safe administration, § 70.11(a) from arranging to have such
such a permit is required under this handling, monitoring, and storage of measures conducted by other entities
part. vaccines. through contractual or other
(b) A parent, guardian, physician, arrangements, or from seeking
(d) In the event of a public health
nurse, or other such person who has had reimbursement for any costs associated
emergency, the Director may waive or
his/her request for a permit denied may with sanitary measures through
modify any of the requirements in
submit a written appeal in accordance contractual or other arrangements.
paragraph (b) of this section.
with § 70.31. (d) The Director may apply such
(e) A vaccination fee may be charged
§ 70.8 Military services. for individuals not enrolled in Medicare sanitary measures to persons who are
(a) The Director may exempt carriers Part B to cover costs associated with not in the qualifying stage of a
belonging to the military services from administration of the vaccine and/or quarantinable disease, with their
§ 70.6(a) and §§ 70.11 and 70.12, other prophylaxis. Such fee is to be consent, as may be required to destroy
provided that such carriers take collected at the time that the vaccine is the presence of infectious agents or
adequate sanitary measures to prevent administered. The vaccination fee, if vectors.
the introduction, transmission, and imposed, is shown in the following
§ 70.12 Detention of carriers affecting
spread of communicable diseases. table: interstate commerce.
(b) The requirements of §§ 70.6(c) and
Effective (a) The Director whenever necessary
70.7 shall not apply to members of the Vaccine Amount
dates to prevent the introduction,
military service or Public Health
transmission, or spread of
Service, or to the medical care or Fluarix ........... 1 1/25/05 2 $25.00
communicable diseases and in
hospital beneficiaries of the military
1 Continuing for one year. consultation with such other federal
service, Department of Veterans Affairs, 2 $7.00 for the vaccine and $18.00 for agencies as the Director deems
or Public Health Service, provided that: administration. necessary may require the detention of
(1) Such persons are traveling on
any carrier affecting interstate
military carriers under competent § 70.10 Establishment of institutions,
commerce and all animals, articles, or
orders; and hospitals and stations.
(2) The person authorizing the travel things onboard the carrier until the
(a) The Director, with the approval of completion of the measures outlined in
on a military carrier has taken public the Secretary, may, from time to time,
health measures consistent with those this part.
select sites suitable for, and establish (b) CDC shall not bear any expenses
prescribed by the Director to prevent the such institutions, hospitals, and stations
introduction, transmission, or spread of relating to the detention of the carrier;
in the States and possessions of the or any associated expenses related to
quarantinable diseases during the travel United States as the Director, with the
period. animals, articles, or things on board the
approval of the Secretary, deems carrier.
§ 70.9 Vaccination clinics. necessary or desirable for carrying out (c) Section 70.12(b) shall not preclude
(a) The Director may establish the functions in this part. any entity from seeking reimbursement
vaccination clinics, through contract or (b) The Director may enter into for any costs associated with detention
otherwise, authorized to issue voluntary agreements with public or of a carrier pursuant to section 70.12(a)
certificates of vaccination and private institutions as the Director through contractual arrangements or
administer vaccines and/or other deems necessary or desirable for other available means from entities
prophylaxis. When authorized by the carrying out the functions in this part. other than the CDC.
Director, certificates of vaccination may § 70.11 Sanitary measures. § 70.13 Screenings to detect ill persons.
be issued and authenticated by (a) Whenever the Director reasonably
electronic means. The Director may, at airports or other
believes that any carrier affecting locations, conduct screenings of persons
(b) A vaccination clinic established by
interstate commerce, or animal, article, or groups of persons to detect the
the Director shall collect and maintain,
or thing on board such carrier is or may presence of ill persons. Such screenings
for such time as determined by the
be infected or contaminated with a may be conducted through visual
Director, the following information from
communicable disease, the Director, inspection, electronic temperature
vaccine recipients:
(1) Gender; may, in consultation with other federal monitors, or other means determined
(2) Age; agencies as appropriate: appropriate by the Director to detect the
(3) Vaccination date; (1) Inspect the carrier, animal, article, presence of ill persons.
(4) Vaccine lot number; or thing on board the carrier, and/or
(5) Prior vaccinations; (2) Order the carrier, or other entity § 70.14 Provisional quarantine.
(6) Reason for vaccination (e.g., post- specified in the order, to apply such (a) The Director may provisionally
exposure, pre-exposure, member of high sanitary measures as the Director deems quarantine a person or group of persons
risk group, general vaccination); necessary to prevent the introduction, who the Director reasonably believes to

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be in the qualifying stage of a Director, and include the following examination, medical treatment,
quarantinable disease and: information: prophylaxis, or vaccination, or for
(1) Moving or about to move from one (1) A statement regarding the basis for whom the Director determines that such
State to another State; or the Director’s reasonable belief that the examination, medical treatment,
(2) A probable source of infection to person or group of persons is in the prophylaxis, or vaccination is medically
persons who will be moving from a qualifying stage of a quarantinable contra-indicated or not reasonably
State to another State. disease based on information available available.
(b) Provisional quarantine shall to the Director at the time, such as travel (e) The length of quarantine shall not
commence upon: history, clinical manifestations, or any exceed the period of incubation and
(1) The service of a written other evidence of infection or exposure; communicability, as determined by the
provisional quarantine order; (2) A statement setting forth the Director, for the quarantinable disease.
(2) A verbal provisional quarantine Director’s reasonable belief that either: (f) Nothing in this section shall be
order; or (i) The person or group of persons is construed to limit the Director’s ability
(3) Actual movement restrictions moving or about to move from a State to quarantine a person or group of
placed on the person or group of to another State; or persons on a voluntary basis.
persons. (ii) A probable source of infection to
(c) Provisional quarantine shall end § 70.17 Content of quarantine order.
persons who will be moving from a
three business days after provisional (a) Quarantine orders shall be in
State to another State;
quarantine commences, except that the writing, signed by the Director, and
(3) The suspected quarantinable
person or group of persons shall be contain the following:
disease;
released earlier if the Director (4) A statement advising the person or (1) The identity of the person or group
determines that provisional quarantine of persons to be quarantined, if known;
group or persons that they may be under
is no longer warranted. (2) The location where such person or
provisional quarantine for three
(d) In the event that the Director group of persons will be quarantined;
determines that it is necessary to business days and that at the end of (3) The date and time at which
provisionally quarantine a person or such period they shall be released or, if quarantine commences and ends;
group of persons beyond three business determined by the Director, served with (4) The suspected quarantinable
days, then the Director shall serve the a quarantine order; disease;
person or group of persons with a (5) A statement advising the person or (5) A statement that the Director
written quarantine order in accordance group of persons that they may be reasonably believes that:
with this part. released earlier if the Director (i) The person or group of persons are
(e) A person or group of persons determines that provisional quarantine in the qualifying stage of a
subject to provisional quarantine may be is no longer warranted; quarantinable disease; and that either
offered medical treatment, prophylaxis, (6) The location of provisional (ii) The person or group of persons
or vaccination, as the Director deems quarantine; will move or are about to move from one
necessary to prevent the introduction, (e) When authorized by the Director, State to another State; or
transmission or spread of the disease; provisional quarantine orders may be (iii) The person or group of persons
such persons may refuse such medical issued and signed by electronic means. are a probable source of infection to
treatment, prophylaxis, or vaccination, persons who will be moving from a
§ 70.16 Quarantine. State to another State;
but remain subject to provisional (a) The Director may issue a
quarantine. (6) A statement regarding the basis for
quarantine order whenever the Director the Director’s reasonable belief that such
(f) Nothing in this section shall be
reasonably believes that: person or group of persons are in the
construed to limit the Director’s ability
(1) A person or group of persons are qualifying stage of a quarantinable
to detain a person or group of persons
in the qualifying stage of a disease, e.g., clinical manifestations,
on a voluntary basis or to offer such
quarantinable disease based on, but not physical examination, laboratory tests,
persons medical treatment, prophylaxis,
limited to, any of the following: clinical diagnostic tests or other medical tests,
or vaccination on a voluntary basis.
manifestations, diagnostic tests or other epidemiologic information, or other
§ 70.15 Provisional quarantine orders. medical tests, epidemiologic evidence of exposure or infection
(a) Provisional quarantine orders shall information, laboratory tests, physical available to the Director at the time;
be served by the Director: examination, or other evidence of (7) A statement that such persons
(1) At the time that provisional exposure or infection available to the shall comply with conditions of
quarantine commences; or Director at the time; and either quarantine, including, but not limited
(2) As soon thereafter as the Director (2) Moving or about to move from a to, examination, medical monitoring,
determines that the circumstances State to another State; or medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
reasonably permit. (3) A probable source of infection to vaccination, or other conditions of
(b) Provisional quarantine orders shall persons who will be moving from a quarantine deemed by the Director to be
be served either through personal State to another State. necessary to prevent the introduction,
service or, in circumstances where the (b) In accordance with the Director’s transmission or spread of communicable
Director deems it necessary by posting quarantine order, the Director may offer disease;
or publishing the order in a conspicuous medical treatment, prophylaxis, or (8) A statement that such persons may
location. vaccination, as the Director deems refuse examination, medical monitoring,
(c) In circumstances where the necessary to prevent the introduction, medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
Director deems public posting or transmission, or spread of the disease. vaccination, but remain subject to
publishing necessary, the Director may (c) Persons offered medical treatment, quarantine; and
omit the names and/or identities of prophylaxis, or vaccination may refuse, (9) A statement that persons under
persons and take other measures but remain subject to quarantine. quarantine, any time while the
respecting the privacy of persons. (d) The Director’s quarantine order quarantine order is in effect, may
(d) The provisional quarantine order may include the quarantine of a person request that the Director hold a hearing
shall be in writing, signed by the or group of persons who refuse to review the quarantine order.

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(b) When authorized by the Director, shall be limited to genuine and officer’s written recommendation or
quarantine orders may be issued and substantial issues of fact in dispute. three business days after the request for
signed by electronic means. (c) The Director shall provide notice a hearing, whichever comes first.
of the hearing to the person or group of
§ 70.18 Service of quarantine order. persons under quarantine through any § 70.21 Care and treatment of persons.
(a) A copy of the quarantine order method that the Director determines to (a) Persons subject to medical
shall be personally served on the person be reasonably designed to notify the examination and monitoring,
or group of persons at the time that person or group of persons that such a provisional quarantine, or quarantine in
quarantine commences or as soon hearing has been scheduled. accordance with this part may receive
thereafter as the Director determines (d) The Director shall designate a care and treatment at the expense of the
that the circumstances reasonably hearing officer to review the medical or Director subject to paragraphs (b)
permit. other evidence of exposure or infection through (f) of this section.
(b) In circumstances where the available to the Director and make (b) Payment for such expenses shall
Director deems it necessary, the findings as to which person or group of be in Director’s sole discretion and
quarantine order may be posted or persons are in the qualifying stage of a subject to the availability of
published in a conspicuous location, quarantinable disease and appropriations.
except that the Director may omit the recommendations concerning which (c) Any payment of expenses shall be
names and/or identities of persons and person or group of persons should be secondary to the obligation of the
take other measures respecting the released or remain in quarantine. United States or any third-party
privacy of persons. (e) A person or group of persons in (including any State or local
§ 70.19 Medical examination and quarantine may authorize a governmental entity, private insurance
monitoring. representative to submit evidence carrier, or employer), under any other
(a) The Director may order medical concerning whether the person or group law or contractual agreement, to pay for
examination or monitoring of a person is in the qualifying stage of a such care and treatment, and shall only
or group of persons that the Director quarantinable disease; be paid by the Director after all third-
(f) The Director shall take such party payers have made payment in
reasonably believes to be in the
measures that the Director determines to satisfaction of their obligations.
qualifying stage of a quarantinable
be reasonably necessary to allow a (d) Payment shall be limited to those
disease and:
(1) Moving or about to move from one person or group of persons in amounts the hospital or medical facility
State to another State; or quarantine to communicate with their would customarily bill the Medicare
(2) A probable source of infection to authorized representatives. Such system using the International
persons who will be moving from a measures, for example, may include the Classification of Diseases, Clinical
State to another State. establishment of video-conferencing Modification (ICD–CM), and relevant
(b) Persons subject to medical facilities, e-mail terminals, telephone or federal regulations promulgated by the
examination or monitoring shall provide cellular phone services, and other Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
the Director with such information as similar devices or technologies. Services in existence at the time of
the Director may order, including, but (g) The hearing officer may order a billing.
not limited to, familial and social medical examination of the person or (e) For quarantinable diseases,
contacts, travel itinerary, medical group of persons in quarantine when, in payment shall be limited to costs for
history, place of work, and vaccination the hearing officer’s judgment, such a services and items reasonable and
status. medical examination would aid in the necessary for the care and treatment of
(c) Persons subject to medical determination of whether the person or the person for the time period that
monitoring shall report for such further group of persons are in the qualifying begins when the Director refers the
medical examinations and comply with stage of a quarantinable disease, person to the hospital or medical facility
other conditions of monitoring as the provided that such persons may refuse for treatment and ends when, as
Director orders. such examination. determined by the Director, the period
(d) Persons may refuse medical (h) The hearing officer shall, based of provisional quarantine or quarantine
examination or monitoring, but remain upon his or her review of the evidence expires.
subject to provisional quarantine or of exposure or infection made available (f) For diseases other than those
quarantine, provided that if quarantined to the hearing officer, make findings and described in paragraph (e) of this
such persons may request a hearing in a written recommendation to the section, such payment shall be limited
accordance with § 70.20. Director as to which, if any, person or to costs for services and items
(e) Nothing in this section shall be group of persons should be released or reasonable and necessary for care and
construed to limit the Director’s ability remain in quarantine. treatment of the person for the time
to conduct medical examinations or (i) The Director, based upon the period that begins when the Director
place persons under medical monitoring hearing officer’s findings and written refers the person to the hospital or
on a voluntary basis or from engaging in recommendation and the administrative medical facility and ends when the
other methods of voluntary disease record shall within one business day person’s condition is diagnosed, as
surveillance. after the conclusion of the hearing order determined by the Director, with a non-
the release or continued quarantine of quarantinable disease.
§ 70.20 Hearings. the person or group of persons in
(a) Upon the request of a person or quarantine. § 70.22 Foreign nationals.
group of persons under quarantine, at (j) The Director may issue additional (a) The Director, in consultation with
any time while the quarantine order is instructions and guidelines as the the U.S. Department of State as may be
in effect, the Director shall hold a Director deems necessary governing the necessary, shall advise a foreign
hearing to review the quarantine order conduct of hearings. national under provisional quarantine
within one business day of the request. (k) The quarantine order shall be or quarantine of such person’s right to
(b) Requests for a hearing by a person deemed final either when the Director have the Director notify the consular
or group of persons under quarantine has accepted or rejected the hearing post of the foreign state of such person’s

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provisional quarantine or quarantine (1) Moving or about to move from a implementing the regulations appearing
and to have any communications State to another State; or in this part or in implementing other
forwarded to the consular post without (2) A probable source of infection to public health measures or combination
delay. In circumstances where required persons who will be moving from a of measures.
by international legal obligation, the State to another State.
Director shall, in consultation with the (c) Nothing in this part shall be § 70.27 Indian country.
U.S. Department of State as may be construed to limit the ability of the (a) In addition to the public health
necessary, directly notify the consular Director to cooperate with or aid States measures specified elsewhere in this
post of the foreign state of its foreign and their political subdivisions or part, with the concurrence of the
national’s provisional quarantine or Indian Tribes in the enforcement of Director of the Indian Health Service
quarantine. their quarantine rules and regulations or and after consulting with the affected
(b) When requested by the consular other health rules and regulations. Tribe or Tribes, the Director may impose
officer of the foreign state and in a (d) The health authorities of a the following public health measures
manner that the Director determines to possession may request that the Director with respect to persons in Indian
be practicable, the Director, in take whatever public health measures country without making a finding that
consultation with the U.S. Department are applicable under this part or 42 CFR such person or group of persons are
of State as may be necessary, shall allow part 71 (including provisional moving or about to move from a State
the consular officer to have access to the quarantine or quarantine) and whatever to another State or are a probable source
foreign national under provisional further public health measures that the of infection to persons who will be
quarantine or quarantine for purposes of Director, in consultation with the health moving from a State to another State:
authority, deems necessary to prevent (1) Provisional quarantine pursuant to
conversing and corresponding with the
the introduction, transmission, or §§ 70.14 and 70.15;
foreign national and arranging for the
spread of communicable diseases. (2) Quarantine pursuant to §§ 70.16
foreign national’s legal representation.
(e) A request by a health authority through 70.18, 70.20; and
(c) Any foreign national subject to (3) Medical examination and
under this section shall not be deemed
provisional quarantine or quarantine monitoring pursuant to § 70.19.
a condition for implementation by the
shall have the same rights as provided (b) Any provisional quarantine,
Director of any of the public health
for other persons subject to provisional quarantine, or medical examination and
measures in this part, or in the case of
quarantine or quarantine elsewhere in monitoring authorized by paragraph (a)
possessions, 42 CFR part 71.
this part. of this section must take place in a
(f) The decision to undertake any of
§ 70.23 Administrative record. the activities requested in accordance hospital or other place for treatment, but
with this section is within the sole any person who is subject to such
A person’s administrative record provisional quarantine or quarantine
discretion of the Director.
shall, where applicable, consist of the may refuse examination, medical
provisional quarantine and/or § 70.25 Measures in the event of monitoring, medical treatment,
quarantine order, and any medical, inadequate local control. prophylaxis, or vaccination, but remains
laboratory, epidemiologic, or other In addition to the public health subject to provisional quarantine and
information in support thereof, evidence measures in this part, whenever the quarantine.
submitted by the person under Director, with the concurrence of the (c) Any person who is the subject of
provisional quarantine and/or Secretary, determines that the measures a provisional quarantine order or
quarantine, written findings and taken by the health authorities of any quarantine order authorized by
recommendation of the hearing officer, State (including political subdivisions paragraph (a) of this section has the
and the hearing transcript, if any, or thereof), possession, or Indian Tribe are same rights as provided for provisional
summary notes of the hearing. insufficient to prevent the spread of any quarantine or quarantine elsewhere in
§ 70.24 Requests by State (including
communicable diseases from one State this part.
political subdivisions thereof), possession, or possession into another, the Director (d) After consulting with the affected
or Tribal health authorities. may take such measures to prevent such Tribe or Tribes, the Director may
spread of disease as the Director deems authorize the agents and employees of
(a) The health authority of a State necessary including inspection, any State to enter Indian country for the
(including political subdivisions fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, pest sole purpose of enforcing federal
thereof) or Indian tribe may request that extermination, destruction of animals or quarantine rules and regulations if the
the Director take public health measures articles found to be so infected or Director of the Indian Health Service
in accordance with this part and contaminated as to be sources of concurs (such concurrence being subject
whatever further public health measures dangerous infection to human beings, to any rules and regulations that the
that the Director, in consultation with and other measures. Director of the Indian Health Service
the health authority, deems necessary to may prescribe).
prevent the introduction, transmission, § 70.26 Federal facilities.
or spread of communicable diseases. (a) In addition to the public health § 70.28 Special powers in time of war.
(b) The health authority of a State measures in this part, the Director, in (a) In addition to the public health
(including political subdivisions consultation with the affected federal measures in this part, the Director, in
thereof) or Indian tribe may request that agencies, may take whatever further consultation with the Secretary of the
the Director issue a provisional public health measures or combination U.S. Department of Defense or his or her
quarantine order or a quarantine order. of measures the Director deems designee, may, in time of war and to
Such requests shall set forth the health necessary with respect to facilities protect the military and naval forces and
authority’s reasonable belief that the owned or operated by the federal war workers of the United States,
person or group of persons to be government in the United States. impose the following public health
quarantined or placed under provisional (b) This section does not preclude the measures with respect to persons under
quarantine are in the qualifying stage of Director from requesting the assistance paragraph (b) of this section without
a quarantinable disease, and either: of State or local authorities in making a finding that such person or

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group of persons are in the qualifying of fact in dispute. The Director will Ontario Intl Ontario (ONT)
stage of a quarantinable disease; and issue a written response to the appeal, Palm Beach Intl West Palm Beach (PBI)
moving or about to move from a State which shall constitute final agency General Mitchell Intl Milwaukee (MKE)
Southwest Florida Intl Fort Myers (RSW)
to another State or are a probable source action. This opportunity for an appeal Albuquerque Intl Sunport Albuquerque
of infection to persons who will be shall not preclude the Director from (ABQ)
moving from a State to another State: acting immediately to exercise actions Port Columbus Intl Columbus (CMH)
(1) Provisional quarantine pursuant to authorized under §§ 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 or Dallas Love Field Dallas (DAL)
§§ 70.14 and 70.15; 70.12. Theodore Francis Green State Warwick (PVD)
(2) Quarantine pursuant to § 70.16 Kahului Kahului (OGG)
Appendix A to Part 70—Calendar Year Jacksonville Intl Jacksonville (JAX)
through 70.18, 70.20; and
2004 Enplanement Data as Published by Reno/Tahoe Intl Reno (RNO)
(3) Medical examination and
the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) for Bob Hope Burbank (BUR)
monitoring pursuant to § 70.19. Ted Stevens Anchorage Intl Anchorage
Large and Medium U.S. Airports 1
(b) The persons subject to paragraph (ANC)
(a) of this section include any person Large Hubs Buffalo Niagara Intl Buffalo (BUF)
that the Director reasonably believes to Hartsfield—Jackson Atlanta Intl Atlanta Manchester Manchester (MHT)
be: (ATL) Eppley Airfield Omaha (OMA)
(1) Infected with or exposed to a Chicago O’Hare Intl Chicago (ORD) Norfolk Intl Norfolk (ORF)
quarantinable disease; and Los Angeles Intl Los Angeles (LAX) Tucson Intl Tucson (TUS)
Dallas/Fort Worth Intl Fort Worth (DFW) 1 (See § 70.4).
(2) A probable source of infection to
Denver Intl Denver (DEN) 2. Part 71 is revised to read as follows:
members of the military services or to
McCarran Intl Las Vegas (LAS)
individuals engaged in the production Phoenix Sky Harbor Intl Phoenix (PHX)
or transportation of arms, munitions, PART 71—FOREIGN AND
John F Kennedy Intl New York (JFK)
ships, food, clothing, or other supplies Minneapolis—St Paul Intl Wold— POSSESSIONS QUARANTINE
for the military services. Chamberlain Minneapolis (MSP) Subpart A—General Provisions
(c) Any person who is the subject of George Bush Intercontinental Houston (IAH)
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Detroit Sec.
a provisional quarantine order or 71.1 Scope and definitions.
quarantine order authorized by (DTW)
Newark Liberty Intl Newark (EWR) 71.2 Designation of yellow fever
subsection (a) has the same rights as vaccination centers: Yellow fever or
San Francisco Intl San Francisco (SFO)
provided for provisional quarantine or Orlando Intl Orlando (MCO) other validation stamps.
quarantine elsewhere in this part. Miami Intl Miami (MIA) 71.3 Vaccination clinics.
Seattle–Tacoma Intl Seattle (SEA) 71.4 Bills of health.
§ 70.29 Penalties. 71.5 Suspension of entries and imports
Philadelphia Intl Philadelphia (PHL)
Persons in violation of this part are General Edward Lawrence Logan Intl Boston from designated places.
subject to a fine of no more than (BOS) 71.6 Report of death or illness on board
$250,000 or one year in jail, or both, or Charlotte/Douglas Intl Charlotte (CLT) flights.
La Guardia New York (LGA) 71.7 Written plan for reporting of deaths or
as otherwise provided by law. illness on board flights and designation
Violations by organizations are subject Washington Dulles Intl Chantilly (IAD)
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Intl Covington of an airline agent.
to a fine of no more than $500,000 per 71.8 Report of death or illness on board
(CVG)
event or as otherwise provided by law. Baltimore–Washington Intl Glen Burnie ships.
(BWI) 71.9 Written plan for reporting of deaths or
§ 70.30 Implementation through order. illness on board ships and designation of
Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood Intl Fort
The Director may implement any of Lauderdale (FLL) a shipline’s agent.
the provisions in this part through order Honolulu Intl Honolulu (HNL) 71.10 Passenger information.
issued and signed by the Director. Chicago Midway Intl Chicago (MDW) 71.11 Written plan for passenger
Salt Lake City Intl Salt Lake City (SLC) information and designation of an airline
§ 70.31 Appeals of actions required Tampa Intl Tampa (TPA) or shipline agent.
pursuant to §§ 70.6, 70.7, 70.11 or 70.12 San Diego Intl San Diego (SAN) 71.12 Inspections.
(a) The following persons may submit Ronald Reagan Washington National 71.13 Sanitary measures.
Arlington (DCA) 71.14 Detention of carriers.
a written appeal in accordance with 71.15 Carriers of U.S. military services.
paragraph (b) of this section: Medium Hubs 71.16 Screenings to detect ill persons.
(1) A person whose application for a Metropolitan Oakland Intl Oakland (OAK) 71.17 Provisional quarantine of arriving
travel permit has been denied pursuant Pittsburgh Intl Pittsburgh (PIT) persons.
to § 70.6; Portland Intl Portland (PDX) 71.18 Provisional quarantine orders.
(2) A parent, guardian, physician, Lambert–St Louis Intl St Louis (STL) 71.19 Quarantine.
nurse, or other such person whose Cleveland–Hopkins Intl Cleveland (CLE) 71.20 Content of quarantine order.
application for a travel permit has been Norman Y Mineta San Jose Intl San Jose (SJC) 71.21 Service of quarantine order.
Memphis Intl Memphis (MEM) 71.22 Medical examination and monitoring.
denied pursuant to § 70.7; Luis Munoz Marin Intl San Juan (SJU) 71.23 Hearings.
(2) The owner of animals, articles, or Kansas City Intl Kansas City (MCI) 71.24 Care and treatment of arriving
things to be destroyed, if the Director Louis Armstrong New Orleans Intl Metairie persons.
determines that destruction is a (MSY) 71.25 Arriving foreign nationals.
necessary sanitary measure pursuant to Sacramento Intl Sacramento (SMF) 71.26 Administrative record.
§ 70.11; John Wayne Airport—Orange County Santa 71.27 Food, potable water, and waste: U.S.
(3) The owner of a carrier to be Ana (SNA) seaports and airports.
detained pursuant to § 70.12. Raleigh–Durham Intl Raleigh (RDU) 71.28 Health documents in international
Nashville Intl Nashville (BNA) traffic.
(b) The appeal must be in writing and Indianapolis Intl Indianapolis (IND) 71.29 Special provisions relating to
be submitted to the Director within 2 William P Hobby Houston (HOU) airports: Office, examination, and
business days. The appeal must state the Austin–Bergstrom Intl Austin (AUS) quarantine facilities.
reasons for the appeal and show that San Antonio Intl San Antonio (SAT) 71.30 Establishment of institutions,
there is a genuine and substantial issue Bradley Intl Windsor Locks (BDL) hospitals and stations.

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71.31 Penalties. through transmission of that agent or its destination) the airline name, flight
71.32 Implementation through order. products from an infected person or number, city of arrival, date of arrival,
71.33 Appeals of actions required pursuant animal or a reservoir to a susceptible date of departure, seat number for any
to 71.13 or 71.14. host, either directly or indirectly passenger or crewmember, arrival gate,
Subpart B—Importations through an intermediate animal host, and arrival terminal.
71.51 Dogs and cats. vector, or the inanimate environment. Hearing officer means a person
71.52 Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins. Controlled free pratique means designated by the Director or the
71.53 Nonhuman primates. permission for a carrier to enter a U.S. Secretary to conduct administrative
71.54 Etiological agents, hosts, and vectors. port, disembark, and begin operation hearings under this part or another
71.55 Dead bodies. under certain stipulated conditions. authorized representative as approved
71.56 African rodents and other animals Detention when applied to carriers, by the Director or the Secretary.
that may carry the monkeypox virus. animals, articles, or things means the Ill person means a person who:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 243, 248, 249, and temporary holding on a voluntary or (i) Has a temperature of 100.4 °F (or
264–272. involuntary basis of such carriers, 38 °C) or greater accompanied by one or
animals, articles, or things, until the more of the following: rash, swelling of
Subpart A—General Provisions completion of such sanitary measures as the lymph nodes or glands, headache
§ 71.1 Scope and definitions. may be required under this part. with neck stiffness, or changes in level
Director means the Director, Centers of consciousness or cognitive function;
(a) The purpose of this part is to for Disease Control and Prevention, or
prevent the introduction, transmission, Department of Health and Human (ii) Has a temperature of 100.4 °F (or
and spread of communicable disease Services or another authorized 38 °C) or greater that has persisted for
from foreign countries into the United representative as approved by the more than 48 hours; or
States. This part also contains the Director or the Secretary. (iii) Has diarrhea, defined as the
regulations to prevent the spread of Disinfection means the killing of occurrence in a 24-hour period of three
communicable disease among infectious agents or inactivation of their or more loose stools or of stools in an
possessions of the United States or from toxic products outside the body of a amount greater than normal (for the
a possession into a State. Regulations to person or on the surface of a thing by person); or
prevent the interstate spread of direct exposure to chemical or physical (iv) Has one or more of the following:
communicable diseases are contained in agents. severe bleeding, jaundice, or severe,
42 CFR part 70. Disinfestation means any chemical or persistent cough accompanied by
(b) As used in this part, the terms physical process serving to destroy or bloody sputum, respiratory distress; or a
listed below in alphabetical order shall remove undesired small animal forms, temperature of 100.4 °F (or 38 °C) or
have the following meanings: particularly arthropods or rodents. greater; or
Airline means any air carrier, foreign Disinsection means the operation in (v) Displays other symptoms or factors
or domestic, operating commercial which measures are taken to kill the that are suggestive of communicable
passenger flights under regular insect vectors of human disease. disease, which the Director may
schedules arriving in or departing from Educational purpose means use in the describe in an order as the Director
the United States. teaching of a defined educational determines necessary.
Airline agent means any person who program at the university level or Infectious agent means an organism
is authorized to act for or in place of the equivalent. (e.g., bacteria, fungus, helminth, prion,
owner or operator of an airline for Exhibition purpose means use as a protozoan, rickettsia, virus, or
purposes of carrying out the airline’s part of a display in a facility comparable bioengineered variant thereof) that is
responsibilities described in this part. to a zoological park or in a trained capable of producing infection or
Business day means any full business animal act. The animal display must be infectious disease.
day during which the Centers for open to the general public at routinely International health regulations
Disease Control and Prevention is open scheduled hours on 5 or more days of means the International Health
for regular business (excluding each week. The trained animal act must Regulations of the World Health
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) be routinely scheduled for multiple Organization, adopted by the Fifty-
from 9 a.m. in the morning to 5 p.m. in performances each week and open to Eighth World Health Assembly in 2005,
the evening, Eastern Standard Time. the general public except for reasonable and as may be further amended and
Bill of Health means a document, in vacation and retraining periods. ratified by the United States.
a form prescribed by the Director, Emergency contact information means International voyage means:
setting forth the sanitary history and the following information pertaining to (i) In the case of a carrier, a voyage
condition of a carrier or the port from a person (other than the passenger or between ports or airports of more than
which the carrier departs and stating crewmember) or an entity (such as a one country, or a voyage between ports
that the carrier has in all respects business) that has the ability to contact or airports of the same country if the
complied with the regulations the passenger or crewmember on an ship or aircraft stopped in any other
prescribed in this part. emergency basis: country on its voyage; or
Carrier means a ship, shipline, vessel, (i) The full name (first, last, middle (ii) In the case of a person, a voyage
aircraft, airline, train, road vehicle, or initial, suffix) of the person or business involving entry into a country other
other means of transport, including name of the entity; than the country in which such person
military carriers. (ii) The permanent address; and begins his/her voyage.
Commander means any person (iii) A phone number (either home, Medical monitoring means close
serving on an aircraft or ship with work, or mobile). medical or other supervision of a person
responsibility for its operation and Flight information means for each or group of persons on a voluntary or
navigation. airline operating a flight on an involuntary basis to permit prompt
Communicable disease means an international voyage destined for a U.S. recognition of infection or illness.
illness due to a specific infectious agent port (including any intermediate stops Military services means the U.S. Air
or its toxic products which arises between the flight’s origin and final Force, U.S. Army, the U.S. Coast Guard,

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the U.S. Marine Corps, the U.S. Navy, (ii) When applied to a person or group from a person or animal to another
and any National Defense Reserve Fleet of persons, the killing of infectious person or animal.
vessels engaged in military operations at agents (or vectors capable of conveying
the direction of the Department of infectious agents) outside the body by § 71.2 Designation of yellow fever
vaccination centers; Yellow fever or other
Defense. direct exposure to any chemical, validation stamps.
Possession means, in addition to physical, or other process designed to
Puerto Rico, any other possession of the destroy such infectious agents. (a) Designation of yellow fever
United States. Scientific purpose means use for vaccination centers. (1) The Director is
Provisional quarantine means the scientific research following a defined responsible for the designation of
detention on an involuntary basis of an protocol and other standards for yellow fever vaccination centers
arriving person or group of arriving research projects as normally conducted authorized to issue certificates of
persons reasonably believed to be at the university level. The term also vaccination. This responsibility may be
infected with or exposed to a includes the use for safety testing, delegated by the Director to the health
quarantinable disease until a quarantine potency testing, and other activities department of a State or possession,
order has been issued or until the related to the production of medical with their consent, with respect to
Director determines that provisional products. yellow fever vaccination activities of
quarantine is no longer warranted. Ship means any ship commercially non-Federal medical, public health
Public health emergency, as used in operated by a shipline, regardless of an facilities, and licensed physicians
this part, means individual ship’s flag or registry or the functioning within the respective
(i) Any disease event as determined shipline’s principal place of business, jurisdictions of a health department of
by the Director with either documented that carries passengers or cargo under a State or possession. Designation may
or significant potential for regional, regular schedules arriving in or be made upon application and
national, or international disease spread departing from the United States, but presentation of evidence satisfactory to
or with actual or potential interference does not include ships that operate a health department of a State or
with the free movement of people or between Canadian ports and ports on possession to whom such responsibility
goods between States and possessions Puget Sound or on the Great Lakes and has been delegated by the Director that
within the United States or other connected waterways. the applicant has adequate facilities and
countries or sovereignties; or Ship Sanitation Control Certificate professionally trained personnel for the
(ii) Any disease event designated as a means a certificate issued under the handling, storage, and administration of
public health emergency by the instructions of the Director, in the form a safe, potent, and pure yellow fever
Secretary pursuant to section 319(a) of prescribed by the International Health vaccine. Medical facilities of Federal
the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. Regulations, unless the Director agencies are authorized to obtain yellow
247d(a)). determines otherwise, recording the fever vaccine without being designated
Quarantine means the holding on a evidence of a public health risk found as a yellow fever vaccination center by
voluntary or involuntary basis, on board during an inspection and the the Director, but shall comply with
including the isolation, of a person or successful completion of any sanitary instructions issued by the Director for
group of persons in such place and for measures taken. the administration, handling,
such period of time as the Director Ship Sanitation Control Exemption monitoring, recordkeeping, and storage
deems necessary to prevent the spread Certificate means a certificate issued of yellow fever vaccine.
of infection or illness. under the instructions of the Director, in (2) A designated yellow fever
Quarantinable disease means any of the form prescribed by the International vaccination center shall comply with
the communicable diseases listed in an Health Regulations, unless the Director instructions issued by the Director or by
Executive Order, as provided under determines otherwise, recording that the an officer or employee of a health
section 361 of the Public Health Service ship had been inspected and found to be department of a State or possession to
Act. Executive Order 13295, of April 4, free of infection and contamination, whom such responsibility has been
2003, as amended by Executive Order including vectors and reservoirs. delegated by the Director for the
13375 of April 1, 2005, contains the Shipline means any shipline administration, handling, monitoring,
current revised list of quarantinable operating ships commercially, recordkeeping, and storage of yellow
diseases, and may be obtained at regardless of an individual ship’s flag or fever vaccine. If a designated center fails
http://www.cdc.gov and http:// registry or the shipline’s principal place to comply with such instruction, after
www.archives.gov/federal_register. If of business, carrying passengers or cargo notice to such center, the Director or, for
this Order is amended, HHS will under regular schedules arriving in or non-Federal centers, a health
enforce that amended order departing from the United States. department of a State or possession may
immediately and update that Web site. Shipline’s agent means any person revoke designation.
Sanitary measures means: who is authorized to act for or in place (b) Validation stamps. International
(i) When applied to carriers, animals, of the owner or operator of a ship for the Certificates of Vaccination against
articles, or things: Detention; purposes of carrying out the shipline’s yellow fever issued for vaccinations
destruction of animals, articles, or responsibilities described in this part. performed in the United States and
things that the Director deems to be State means, in addition to the several other validation stamps as required by
sources of dangerous infection to human States, only the District of Columbia. the Director shall be validated by:
beings; disinfection; disinfestations; U.S. port means any seaport, airport, (1) The Seal of the Public Health
disinsection; export; fumigation; pest or border crossing point under the Service;
extermination; seizure; or any other control of the United States. (2) The Seal of the Department of
measure or combination of measures United States means the States and State;
whether voluntary or involuntary that possessions of the United States. (3) The stamp of the Department of
the Director deems necessary to prevent Vector means an animal (including Defense;
the introduction, transmission, or insects) or thing which conveys or is (4) The stamp issued to the National
spread of communicable diseases; or capable of conveying infectious agents Aeronautics and Space Administration;

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(5) The stamp issued by the health § 71.5 Suspension of entries and imports available), of an airline agent who shall
department of a State or possession to from designated places. serve as a point of contact between the
whom such responsibility has been Whenever the Director determines Director and the airline concerning
delegated by the Director; or that by reason of the existence of any reports of deaths or ill persons on board
(6) An official stamp of a design and communicable disease in a foreign flights.
size approved by the Director for such country there is serious danger of the (c) The written plan shall include
purpose. introduction of such disease in the policies and procedures necessary to
(c) When authorized by the Director, United States, and that this danger is so facilitate communication between the
certificates of vaccination and increased by the introduction of persons Director and the airline agent on a 24-
validation stamps may be issued and or property from such country that a hour basis, 7 days a week.
suspension of the right to introduce (d) Within 90 days of final publication
authenticated by electronic means.
such persons or property is required in of this rule, copy of the written plan
§ 71.3 Vaccination clinics. the interest of the public health, the shall be submitted to the Director.
Director, to the extent permitted by law (e) Airlines shall implement the
(a) The Director may establish
and in consultation with such other written plan within 180 days of the final
vaccination clinics, through contract or
federal agencies as the Director may publication of this rule.
otherwise, authorized to issue
deem necessary, may prohibit, in whole (f) Airlines shall review the written
certificates of vaccination and
or in part, the introduction of persons plan one year after implementation and
administer vaccines and/or other
and property from such countries or annually thereafter. The review shall
prophylaxis.
places for such period of time as the include drills or exercises to test and
(b) A vaccination clinic established by evaluate the effectiveness of the written
Director may designate through order.
the Director shall collect and maintain, plan unless the airline has reported any
for such time as determined by the § 71.6 Report of death or illness on board deaths or ill persons on board under
Director, the following information from flights. § 71.6 in the prior 365 days. Airlines
vaccine recipients: (a) Any airline operating flights on an shall revise the plan as necessary after
(1) Gender; international voyage destined for a U.S. any review. Any revisions of the written
(2) Age; port shall, pursuant to the written plan plan shall be submitted to the Director
(3) Vaccination date; required under § 71.7, report any deaths within 60 days.
(4) Vaccine lot number; or ill persons that occur on board to the (g) Airlines that intend to commence
Director as soon as such occurrences are operations after the effective date in
(5) Prior vaccinations;
made known to the aircraft commander paragraph (a) shall submit a written
(6) Reason for vaccination (e.g., post- and, where possible, at least one hour plan meeting the requirements of this
exposure, pre-exposure, member of high before arrival. section to the Director before
risk group, general vaccination); (b) The Director may order airlines commencing operations. The airline
(7) Concurrent vaccinations; operating flights on an international shall implement the written plan by the
(8) Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting voyage destined for a U.S. port to later of the following dates: either 180
System Report/Adverse Event Report disseminate to passengers and crew days after the publication of the final
Number; and public health notices, recommended rule, or upon commencement of
(9) Verification that the vaccine public health measures, and other operations.
conferred immunity (if applicable). information that the Director deems (h) The provisions of paragraphs (a)
(c) In addition to the requirements in necessary for the purposes of preventing through (g) of this section shall also
paragraph (b) of this section, a the introduction, transmission, or apply to airlines operating flights on an
vaccination clinic established by the spread of communicable diseases. Such international voyage between airports of
Director shall comply with such information shall be disseminated at the a possession and a State of the United
additional recordkeeping requirements time and in a manner specified in the States or among possessions of the
and other instructions that the Director Director’s order. United States.
may issue for the safe administration, (c) The provisions of paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section shall also apply § 71.8 Report of death or illness on board
handling, monitoring, and storage of ships.
vaccines. to airlines operating flights on an
international voyage between airports of (a) Any shipline operating ships on an
(d) In the event of a public health international voyage destined for a U.S.
a possession and a State of the United
emergency, the Director may waive or port shall report to the quarantine
States or among possessions of the
modify any of the requirements in station or to another authorized
United States.
paragraph (b) of this section. representative of the Director, at or
(e) When authorized by the Director, § 71.7 Written plan for reporting of deaths nearest the port at which the ship will
certificates of vaccination and or illness on board flights and designation arrive, the occurrence, on board, of any
validation stamps may be issued and of an airline agent. death or any ill person among
authenticated by electronic means. (a) Within 90 days of the final passengers or crew as soon as such
publication of this rule, any airline occurrences are made known to the
§ 71.4 Bills of health. operating flights on an international ship’s commander and, where possible,
The Director, to the extent permitted voyage destined for a U.S. port shall at least 24 hours before arrival.
by law and in consultation with such develop a written plan sufficient to (b) In addition to paragraph (a) of this
other federal agencies as the Director ensure the reporting of any deaths or ill section, the shipline, shall also report
may deem necessary, may require a persons on board flights as required by any death or any ill person among
carrier at any foreign port clearing or § 71.6. passengers or crew (including those
departing for any U.S port to obtain or (b) The written plan shall include the who have disembarked or have been
deliver a bill of health from a United full name (i.e., first, last, middle initial, removed) on board ships during the 15-
States consular or medical officer suffix), official title, business telephone day period preceding the date of
designated for such purpose. number, and e-mail address (if expected arrival at a U.S. port or during

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the period since departure from a U.S. available), of a shipline’s agent who the information in paragraph (e) of this
port (whichever period of time is shall serve as a point of contact between section from such person’s authorized
shorter). the Director and the shipline concerning agent.
(c) Any shipline operating ships reports of deaths or ill persons on board (d) Within 12 hours of a request by
traveling from one U.S. port to another ships. the Director to the airline’s or shipline’s
while on an international voyage shall (c) The written plan shall include agent, the airline or shipline, pursuant
report immediately to the quarantine policies and procedures necessary to to the written plan approved under
station or other authorized facilitate communication between the § 71.11, shall transmit to the Director in
representative at the next port of call, Director and the shipline’s agent on a an electronic format the data fields
station, or stop, the occurrence of any 24-hour basis, 7 days a week. specified in paragraph (e) of this
case or suspected case of a (d) A copy of the written plan shall be section.
communicable disease and shall take submitted to the Director. (e) The data fields, as applicable to
such measures to prevent the spread of (e) Within 90 days of the final the individual passenger (or head of
disease as the Director directs. publication of this rule, shiplines shall household if traveling with a minor) or
(d) Any shipline with ships at a U.S. implement the written plan. crew member, shall include the
port shall report immediately to the (f) Shiplines shall review the written following:
quarantine station or other authorized plan one year after implementation and (1) Full name (first, last, middle
representative at or nearest the port the annually thereafter. The review shall initial, suffix);
occurrence, on board, of any death or include drills or exercises to test and (2) Emergency contact information;
any ill person among passengers or crew evaluate the effectiveness of the written (3) E-mail address;
plan unless the shipline has reported (4) Current home address (street,
during stays in port.
(e) In addition to paragraphs (a) any deaths or ill passengers under § 71.8 apartment #, city, state/province, postal
through (d) of this section, the shipline in the prior 365 days. Shiplines shall code);
revise the plan as necessary after any (5) Passport number or travel
must report to the quarantine station or
review. Any revisions of the written document number, including the
other authorized representative 24 hours
plan shall be submitted to the Director issuing country or organization;
before a ship’s arrival the number of (6) Name of traveling companions or
cases (including zero) of diarrhea, within 60 days.
(g) Shiplines that intend to commence group;
febrile respiratory disease, febrile rash (7) Flight information or ports of call;
illness, or febrile neurologic illness in operations after the effective date in (8) Returning flight (date, airline
passengers and crew recorded in the paragraph (a) of this section shall number, and flight number) or returning
ship’s medical log during the current submit a written plan meeting the ports of call; and
cruise. All cases of diarrhea that occur requirements of this section to the (9) At least one of the following
after the 24-hour report must also be Director before commencing operations. current phone numbers in order of
reported at least 4 hours before arrival. The shipline shall implement a written preference: mobile, home, pager, or
(f) The Director for purposes of plan by the later of the following dates: work.
preventing the introduction, either 180 days after final publication of (f) In addition to data fields specified
transmission, or spread of this rule, or upon commencement of in paragraph (e) of this section, when
communicable diseases may order operations. necessary to prevent the introduction,
shiplines operating ships on an (h) The provisions of paragraphs (a) transmission, or spread of
international voyage destined for a U.S. through (g) of this section shall also communicable diseases, the Director
port to disseminate to passengers and apply to shiplines operating ships on an through order may also require that
crew public health notices, international voyage between ports of a airlines or shiplines transmit additional
recommended public health measures, possession of the United States or information in the airline’s or shipline’s
and other public health information. between ports of a possession and a possession.
Such information shall be disseminated State of the United States. (g) The provisions of paragraphs (a)
at the time and in a manner specified in § 71.10 Passenger information. through (f) of this section shall also
the Director’s order. apply to airlines operating flights and
(g) The provisions of paragraphs (a) (a) Any airline operating flights or
shiplines operating ships on an
through (f) of this section shall shipline operating ships on an
international voyage between ports of a
additionally apply to shiplines international voyage destined for a U.S.
possession of the United States or
operating ships traveling between a port shall, pursuant to the written plan
between ports of a possession and a
possession and a State of the United approved under § 71.11, solicit from
State of the United States.
States or among possessions of the each passenger (or head of household if
(h) Information collected solely in
United States. traveling with a minor) and
order to comply with this regulation
crewmember traveling on an
may only be used for the purposes for
§ 71.9 Written plan for reporting of deaths international voyage destined for a U.S.
or illness on board ships and designation
which it is collected.
port the information contained in the (i) Airlines operating flights and
of a shipline’s agent. data fields specified in paragraph (e) of shiplines operating ships on an
(a) Within 90 days of the final this section. international voyage destined for a U.S.
publication of this rule, any shipline (b) Any information obtained by the port shall ensure that passengers are
operating ships on an international airline or shipline pursuant to informed of the purposes of this
voyage destined for a U.S. port shall paragraph (a) of this section shall be information collection at the time
develop a written plan sufficient to maintained by the airline or shipline for passengers arrange their travel.
ensure the reporting of any deaths or ill 60 days from the end of the voyage.
persons as required by § 71.8. (c) For each passenger (or head of § 71.11 Written plan for passenger
(b) The written plan shall include the household if traveling with a minor) and information and designation of an airline or
full name (i.e., first, last, middle initial, crewmember traveling on an shipline agent.
suffix), official title, business telephone international voyage destined for a U.S. (a) Within six months of the final
number, and e-mail address (if port, the airline or shipline may solicit publication of this rule, any airline

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operating flights or shipline operating (f) Airlines and shiplines that intend U.S. port from a foreign country or on
ships on an international voyage to commence operations after the an international voyage in traffic
destined for a U.S. port shall develop a effective date in paragraph (a) of this between U.S. ports or animal, article, or
written plan sufficient to ensure section shall submit a written plan thing on board the carrier is or may be
electronic transmission of passenger and meeting the requirements of this section infected or contaminated with a
crew information as required by § 71.10. to the Director before commencing communicable disease, the Director
(b) The written plan shall include: operations. The airline or shipline shall may, in consultation with such other
(1) Policies and procedures for the implement the written plan by the later federal agencies as appropriate:
transmission of data in an electronic of the following dates: either 2 years (1) Inspect the carrier, animal, article,
format available to the airline or after the final publication of this rule, or or thing on board the carrier, and/or
shipline and CDC using industry upon commencement of operations.
(g) Pending the development or (2) Order the carrier, or other entity
standards for data encoding,
implementation of the written plan as specified in the order, to apply such
transmission, and security, within 12
required by this section, the Director, sanitary measures as the Director deems
hours of a request by the Director to the
through order, may require that airlines necessary to prevent the introduction,
airline’s or shipline’s agent;
and shiplines transmit to the Director, transmission, or spread of
(2) The full name (i.e., first, last,
in a format available to both the airline communicable diseases.
middle initial, suffix), official title,
business telephone number, and e-mail or shipline and the Director, any of the (b) CDC shall not bear the expense of
address (if available), of an airline agent information required by § 71.10 that any sanitary measures required or
or shipline agent who shall serve as a may be in the airline’s or shipline’s ordered by the Director. The carrier or
point of contact between the Director possession. other entity specified in the order issued
and the airline or shipline concerning (h) The provisions of paragraphs (a) pursuant to 71.13(a) shall bear the
requests for and transmission of through (g) of this section shall also responsibility for the application of
passenger and crew manifest data; apply to airlines operating flights and such measures.
(3) Policies and procedures necessary shiplines operating ships on an (c) Sections 71.13(a) and 71.13(b)
to facilitate communication between the international voyage between ports of a shall not preclude any entity ordered to
Director and the airline’s or shipline’s possession of the United States or conduct sanitary measures pursuant to
agent on a 24-hour basis, 7 days a week; between ports of a possession and a § 71.13(b) from arranging to have such
(4) Policies and procedures for State of the United States. measures conducted by other entities
soliciting the information contained in § 71.12 Inspections. through contractual or other
the data fields required by § 71.10 from arrangements, or from seeking
(a) Carriers arriving at a U.S. port from
the passenger (or head of household if reimbursement for any costs associated
a foreign country or on an international
traveling with a minor), crewmember, or with sanitary measures through
voyage in traffic between U.S. ports are
such persons’ authorized agent; and contractual or other arrangements.
subject to detention and inspection to
(5) Policies and procedures for (d) The Director may apply such
determine the existence of any rodent,
maintaining responsive information sanitary measures to persons who have
insect, or other vermin infestation,
obtained by the airline or shipline in an not been infected with or exposed to a
contaminated food or water, or other
electronic database for 60 days from the quarantinable disease, upon their
unsanitary conditions, that may require
end of the voyage as required by § 71.10. consent, as may be required to destroy
sanitary measures for the prevention of
(c) Within 180 days of final the presence of infectious agents or
the introduction, transmission, or
publication of this rule, a copy of the vectors.
spread of communicable disease.
written plan shall be submitted to the (b) The Director may detain and
Director. inspect a carrier arriving at a U.S. port
§ 71.14 Detention of carriers.
(d) Airlines and shiplines shall from a foreign country when the (a) The Director, in consultation with
implement the written plan within 2 Director determines that a threat of such other federal agencies as the
years of the final publication of this introduction, transmission, or spread of Director deems necessary, may require
rule. Within 60 days of submission, communicable disease into the United detention of a carrier and all things
airlines and shiplines shall conduct States exists, as may occur, for instance, onboard the carrier until the completion
drills or exercises to test and evaluate when the carrier has on board ill of the measures outlined in this part
the effectiveness of the written plan and persons. that the Director determines to be
revise the plan as necessary after any (c) Carriers on an international voyage necessary to prevent the introduction,
drill or exercise. Any revisions to the that are in traffic between U.S. ports transmission, or spread of
written plan shall be submitted to the shall be subject to detention and communicable diseases.
Director within 60 days. inspection when there occurs on board,
(e) Airlines and shiplines shall review (b) The owner of the carrier shall bear
among passengers or crew, any death, or any expenses relating to the detention of
the written plan one year after when there is any ill person, or when
implementation and annually thereafter. the carrier; or, in the case of animals,
the Director reasonably believes that articles, or things on board the carrier,
The review shall include drills or illness may be caused by unsanitary
exercises to test and evaluate the such expense shall be borne by the
conditions. owners thereof.
effectiveness of the written plan unless (d) The provisions of paragraphs (a)
the airline or shipline has transmitted through (c) of this section shall (c) Director may issue a controlled
passenger and crewmember information additionally apply to carriers traveling free pratique to the carrier stipulating
under § 71.10 in the prior 365 days. between a possession and State or what sanitary measures are to be met,
Airlines shall revise the plan as among possessions of the United States. but such issuance does not prevent the
necessary after any review. Any periodic boarding of a carrier and the
revisions of the written plan shall be § 71.13 Sanitary measures. inspection of persons and records to
submitted to the Director within 60 (a) Whenever the Director reasonably verify that the conditions have been met
days. believes that any carrier arriving at a for granting the pratique.

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§ 71.15 Carriers of U.S. military services. refuse such medical treatment, information, laboratory tests, physical
(a) Carriers belonging to or operated prophylaxis, or vaccination, but remain examination, or other evidence of
by the military services of the United subject to provisional quarantine. exposure or infection;
States may be exempted from detention (f) Nothing in this section shall be (b) In accordance with the Director’s
and inspection if the Director is satisfied construed to limit the Director’s ability quarantine order, the Director may offer
that they have complied with to detain a person or group of persons medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
regulations of the military services on a voluntary basis or offer such vaccination, as the Director deems
which also meet the requirements of the persons medical treatment, prophylaxis, necessary to prevent the transmission or
regulations in this part. (For applicable or vaccination on a voluntary basis. spread of the disease.
regulations of the military services, see (c) Persons offered treatment,
§ 71.18 Provisional quarantine orders. prophylaxis, or vaccination may refuse,
Army Regulation No. 40–12, Air Force
Regulation No. 161–4, Secretary of the (a) Provisional quarantine orders shall but remain subject to quarantine.
Navy Instruction 6210.2, and Coast be served by the Director at the time that (d) The Director’s quarantine order
Guard Commandant Instruction 6210.2). provisional quarantine commences or as may include the quarantine of an
(b) Notwithstanding exemption from soon thereafter as the circumstances arriving person or group of arriving
detention and inspection of carriers reasonably permit either through persons who refuse examination,
under this section, animals, articles, or personal service or, in circumstances medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
things on board shall be required to where the Director deems it necessary or vaccination, or for whom the Director
comply with the applicable desirable, by posting or publishing the determines that such examination,
requirements of subpart B of this part. order in a conspicuous location. medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
(b) In circumstances where the vaccination is medically contra-
§ 71.16 Screenings to detect ill persons. Director deems public posting or indicated or not reasonably available.
The Director may at U.S. ports or publishing necessary, the Director may (e) The length of quarantine shall not
other locations, conduct screenings of omit the names and/or identities of exceed the period of incubation and
persons or group of persons to detect the persons and take other measures communicability, as determined by the
presence of ill persons. Such screenings respecting the privacy of persons. Director, for the quarantinable disease.
may be conducted through visual (c) The provisional quarantine order (f) Nothing in this section shall be
inspection, electronic temperature shall be in writing, signed by the construed to limit the Director’s ability
monitors, or other means determined Director, and include the following to quarantine a person or group of
appropriate by the Director to detect the information: persons on a voluntary basis.
presence of ill persons. (1) A statement setting forth the § 71.20 Content of quarantine order.
Director’s reasonable belief that the
§ 71.17 Provisional quarantine of arriving (a) Quarantine orders shall be in
arriving person or group of arriving
persons. writing, signed by the Director, and
persons is infected with or exposed to contain the following:
(a) The Director may provisionally a quarantinable disease based on (1) The identity of the arriving person
quarantine an arriving person or group information available to the Director at or group of arriving persons to be
of arriving persons who the Director the time, such as travel history, clinical quarantined;
reasonably believes to be infected with manifestations, and any other evidence (2) The location where the arriving
or exposed to a quarantinable disease. of infection or exposure; person or group of arriving persons will
(b) Provisional quarantine shall (2) The suspected quarantinable be quarantined;
commence upon: disease; (3) The date and time at which
(1) The service of a written (3) A statement advising the arriving quarantine commences and ends;
provisional quarantine order; person or group of arriving persons that (4) The suspected quarantinable
(2) A verbal provisional quarantine they may be placed under provisional disease;
order; or quarantine for three business days and (5) A statement that the Director
(3) Actual movement restrictions that at the end of such period they shall reasonably believes that the arriving
placed on the person or group of be released or, if determined by the person or group of arriving persons are
persons. Director, served with a quarantine order; infected with or exposed to a
(c) Provisional quarantine shall end (4) A statement advising the person or quarantinable disease;
three business days after provisional group of persons that they shall be (6) A statement regarding the basis for
quarantine commences, except that the released earlier if the Director the Director’s reasonable belief that the
person or group of persons shall be determines that provisional quarantine arriving person or group of arriving
released earlier if the Director is no longer warranted; persons are infected with or exposed to
determines that provisional quarantine (5) The location of provisional a quarantinable disease, e.g., clinical
is no longer warranted. quarantine; manifestations, physical examination,
(d) In the event that the Director (d) When authorized by the Director, laboratory tests, diagnostic tests or other
determines that it is necessary to provisional quarantine orders may be medical tests, epidemiologic
provisionally quarantine a person or issued and signed by electronic means. information, or other evidence of
group of persons beyond three business exposure or infection;
days, then the Director shall serve the § 71.19 Quarantine. (7) A statement that the arriving
person or group of persons with a (a) The Director may issue a person or group of arriving persons shall
written quarantine order in accordance quarantine order whenever the Director comply with conditions of quarantine,
with this part. reasonably believes that an arriving including, but not limited to
(e) A person or group of persons person or group of arriving persons is examination, medical monitoring,
subject to provisional quarantine may be infected with or exposed to a medical treatment, prophylaxis, or
offered medical treatment, prophylaxis, quarantinable disease based on, but not vaccination, or other conditions of
or vaccination, as the Director deems limited to, any of the following: clinical quarantine deemed by the Director to be
necessary to prevent the transmission or manifestations, diagnostic tests or other necessary to prevent the transmission or
spread of the disease; such persons may medical tests, epidemiologic spread of communicable disease;

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(8) A statement that persons may under quarantine, at any time while the recommendation the administrative
refuse examination, medical monitoring, quarantine order is in effect, the record shall within one business day
medical treatment, prophylaxis, or Director shall hold a hearing to review after the conclusion of the hearing order
vaccination, but that such persons the quarantine order within one the release or continued quarantine of
remain subject to quarantine; and business day of the request. the arriving person or group of arriving
(9) A statement that persons under (b) Requests for a hearing by the persons in quarantine.
quarantine, any time while the person or groups of persons under (j) The Director may issue additional
quarantine order is in effect, may quarantine shall be limited to genuine instructions and guidelines as the
request that the Director hold a hearing and substantial issues of fact in dispute. Director deems necessary governing the
to review the quarantine order. (c) The Director shall provide notice conduct of hearings.
(b) When authorized by the Director, of the hearing to the arriving person or (k) The quarantine order shall be
quarantine orders may be issued and group of arriving persons under deemed final either when the Director
signed by electronic means. quarantine through any method that the has accepted or rejected the hearing
Director determines to be reasonably officer’s written recommendation or
§ 71.21 Service of quarantine order. designed to notify the person or group three business days after the request for
(a) A copy of the quarantine order of persons that such a hearing has been a hearing, whichever comes first.
shall be personally served on the person scheduled.
or group of persons at the time that (d) The Director shall designate a § 71.24 Care and treatment of arriving
hearing officer to review the medical or persons.
quarantine commences or as soon
thereafter as the Director determines other evidence of exposure or infection (a) Arriving persons subject to
that the circumstances reasonably available to the Director and make medical examination and monitoring,
permit. findings as to which arriving person or provisional quarantine, or quarantine in
(b) In circumstances where the group of arriving persons are infected accordance with this part may receive
Director deems it necessary or desirable, with or exposed to a quarantinable care and treatment at the expense of the
the quarantine order may be posted or disease and recommendations Director subject to paragraphs (b)
published in a conspicuous location, concerning which arriving person or through (f) of this section.
except that the Director may omit the group of arriving persons should be (b) Payment for such expenses shall
names and/or identities of persons and released or remain in quarantine. be in the Director’s sole discretion and
take other measures respecting the (e) An arriving person or group of subject to the availability of
privacy of persons. arriving persons in quarantine may appropriations.
authorize a representative to submit (c) Any payment of expenses shall be
§ 71.22 Medical examination and evidence concerning whether the person secondary to the obligation of the
monitoring. or group is infected with or exposed to United States or any third-party
(a) The Director may order medical a quarantinable disease; (including any State or local
examination or monitoring of an (f) The Director shall take such governmental entity, private insurance
arriving person or group of arriving measures that the Director determines to carrier, or employer), under any other
persons that the Director reasonably be reasonably necessary to allow an law or contractual agreement, to pay for
believes to be infected with or exposed arriving person or group of arriving such care and treatment, and shall only
to a quarantinable disease. persons in quarantine to communicate be paid by the Director after all third-
(b) Arriving persons subject to with their authorized representatives. party payers have made payment in
medical examination or monitoring Such measures, for example, may satisfaction of their obligations.
shall provide the Director with such include the establishment of video- (d) Payment shall be limited to those
information as the Director may order, conferencing facilities, e-mail terminals, amounts the hospital or medical facility
including, but not limited to, familial telephone or cellular phone services, would customarily bill the Medicare
and social contacts, travel itinerary, and other similar devices or system using the International
medical history, place of work, and technologies. Classification of Diseases, Clinical
vaccination status. (g) The hearing officer may order a Modification (ICD–CM), and relevant
(c) Arriving persons subject to medical examination of the arriving federal regulations promulgated by the
medical monitoring shall report for such person or group of arriving persons in Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
further medical examinations and quarantine when, in the hearing officer’s Services in existence at the time of
comply with other conditions of judgment, such a medical examination billing.
monitoring as the Director orders. would be necessary or desirable for a (e) For quarantinable diseases,
(d) Arriving persons may refuse determination of whether the arriving payment shall be limited to costs for
medical examination or monitoring, but person or group of arriving persons are services and items reasonable and
remain subject to provisional quarantine infected with or exposed to a necessary for the care and treatment of
or quarantine provided that if quarantinable disease, provided that the person for the time period that
quarantined such persons may request a such arriving persons may refuse such begins when the Director refers the
hearing in accordance with § 71.23. examination. person to the hospital or medical facility
(e) Nothing in this section shall be (h) The hearing officer shall, based and ends when, as determined by the
construed to limit the Director’s ability upon his or her review of the evidence Director, the period of provisional
to conduct medical examinations or of exposure or infection made available quarantine or quarantine expires.
place arriving persons under medical to the hearing officer, make findings and (f) For diseases other than those
monitoring on a voluntary basis or from a written recommendation to the described in paragraph (e) of this
engaging in other methods of voluntary Director as to which, if any, arriving section, such payment shall be limited
disease surveillance. person or group of arriving persons to costs for services and items
should be released or remain in reasonable and necessary for care and
§ 71.23 Hearings. quarantine. treatment of the person for the time
(a) Upon the request of an arriving (i) The Director, based upon the period that begins when the Director
person or group of arriving persons hearing officer’s findings and written refers the person to the hospital or

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medical facility and ends when the or airport intended for human in the States and possessions of the
person’s condition is diagnosed, as consumption thereon shall be obtained United States as the Director, with the
determined by the Director, with a non- from sources approved in accordance approval of the Secretary, deems
quarantinable disease. with regulations cited in paragraph (a) necessary or desirable for carrying out
of this section. the functions in this part.
§ 71.25 Arriving foreign nationals. (c) Aircraft inbound or outbound on (b) The Director may enter into
(a) The Director, in consultation with an international voyage shall not voluntary agreements with public or
the U.S. Department of State as may be discharge over the United States any private institutions as the Director
necessary, shall advise an arriving excrement, waste water or other deems necessary or desirable for
foreign national under provisional polluting materials. Arriving aircraft carrying out the functions in this part.
quarantine or quarantine of such shall discharge such matter only at
person’s right to have the Director notify servicing areas approved under § 71.31 Penalties.
the consular post of the foreign state of regulations cited in paragraph (a) of this Persons in violation of this part are
such person’s provisional quarantine or section. subject to a fine of no more than
quarantine and to have any $250,000 or one year in jail, or both, or
communications forwarded to the § 71.28 Health documents in international as otherwise provided by law.
traffic. Violations by organizations are subject
consular post without delay. In
circumstances where required by (a) The Director may perform rodent to a fine of no more than $500,000 per
international legal obligation, the infestation inspections, when requested event or as otherwise provided by law.
Director shall, in consultation with the by a shipline and at the shipline’s own
expense, and issue certificates, in a form § 71.32 Implementation through order.
U.S. Department of State as may be
necessary, directly notify the consular prescribed by the Director, concerning The Director may implement any of
post of the foreign state of its arriving the absence of rodents and other vermin the provisions of this part through order
foreign nationals’ provisional on board ships. issued and signed by the Director.
(b) Unless otherwise determined by
quarantine or quarantine. § 71.33 Appeals of actions required
the Director, and in accordance with
(b) When requested by the consular pursuant to §§ 71.13 or 71.14.
Articles 37 and 38 of the International
officer of the foreign state and in a If the Director requires export or
Health Regulations, as may be further
manner that the Director determines to destruction of animals, articles, or
amended and ratified by the United
be practicable, the Director, in things pursuant to § 71.13 or detention
States, the Maritime Declaration of
consultation with the U.S. Department of a carrier pursuant to § 71.14, the
Health and the Health Part of the
of State as may be necessary, shall allow owner of the animals, articles, or things
Aircraft General Declaration, shall not
the consular officer to have access to the thereof, or, the carrier owner may
be required as a condition of arrival at
foreign national under provisional appeal. The appeal must be in writing
a U.S. port.
quarantine or quarantine for purposes of (c) The Director, upon the request of and be submitted to the Director within
conversing and corresponding with the a shipline, may issue a Ship Sanitation 2 business days. The appeal must state
foreign national and arranging for the Control Exemption Certificate or a Ship the reasons for the appeal and show that
foreign national’s legal representation. Sanitation Control Certificate, in there is a genuine and substantial issue
(c) Any foreign national subject to accordance with Article 39 of the of fact in dispute. The Director will
provisional quarantine or quarantine International Health Regulations, as may issue a written response to the appeal,
shall have the same rights as provided be further amended and ratified by the which shall constitute final agency
for other arriving persons subject to United States, or in another format action. This opportunity for an appeal
provisional quarantine or quarantine prescribed by the Director. shall not preclude the Director from
elsewhere in this part. acting immediately to exercise actions
§ 71.29 Special provisions relating to authorized under §§ 71.13 or 71.14.
§ 71.26 Administrative record. airports: Office, examination, and
A person’s administrative record quarantine facilities. Subpart B—Importations
shall, where applicable, consist of the (a) Each U.S. airport which receives
provisional quarantine and/or international traffic shall provide § 71.51 Dogs and cats.
quarantine order, and any medical, without cost to the Government suitable (a) Definitions. As used in this section
laboratory, epidemiologic, or other office, examination, quarantine and the term:
information in support thereof, evidence other exclusive space for carrying out Cat means all domestic cats.
submitted by the person under the Federal responsibilities under this Confinement means restriction of a
provisional quarantine and/or part. dog or cat to a building or other
quarantine, written findings and (b) Each U.S. airport which receives enclosure at a U.S. port, en route to
recommendation of the hearing officer, international traffic shall identify to the destination and at destination, in
and hearing transcript, if any, or nearest quarantine station or other isolation from other animals and from
summary notes of the proceeding. authorized representative on a yearly persons except for contact necessary for
basis, or at other intervals as determined its care or, if the dog or cat is allowed
§ 71.27 Food, potable water, and waste: out of the enclosure, muzzling and
U.S. seaports and airports.
by the Director, space which is suitable
for the quarantine of an arriving person keeping it on a leash.
(a) Every seaport and airport shall or group of persons under guidelines or Dog means all domestic dogs.
have a supply of potable water from a instructions issued by the Director. Owner means owner or agent.
watering point approved by the Valid rabies vaccination certificate
Commissioner of Food and Drugs, FDA, § 71.30 Establishment of institutions, means a certificate which was issued for
in accordance with standards hospitals and stations. a dog not less than 3 months of age at
established in 21 CFR parts 1240 and (a) The Director, with the approval of the time of vaccination and which:
1250. the Secretary, may, from time to time, (1) Identifies a dog on the basis of
(b) All food and potable water taken select sites suitable for, and establish breed, sex, age, color, markings, and
on board a ship or aircraft at any seaport such institutions, hospitals, and stations other identifying information.

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(2) Specifies a date of rabies communicable disease, the exposed dog address of the specified place of
vaccination at least 30 days before the or cat shall be admitted only if confinement and other pertinent
date of arrival of the dog at a U.S. port. examination or tests made on arrival information to facilitate surveillance
(3) Specifies a date of expiration reveal no evidence that the animal may and other appropriate action.
which is after the date of arrival of the be infected with a communicable (d) Certification requirements. The
dog at a U.S. port. If no date of disease. The provisions of paragraph owner shall submit such certification
expiration is specified, then the date of (b)(2) of this section shall be applicable regarding confinement and vaccination
vaccination shall be no more than 12 to the examination or tests. prescribed under this section as may be
months before the date of arrival at a (4) Sanitation. When the Director required by the Director.
U.S. port. finds that the cages or other containers (e) Additional requirements for the
(4) Bears the signature of a licensed of dogs or cats arriving in the United importation of dogs and cats. Dogs and
veterinarian. States are in an insanitary or other cats shall be subject to such additional
(b) General requirements for condition that may constitute a requirements as may be deemed
admission of dogs and cats—(1) communicable disease hazard, the dogs necessary by the Director or to exclusion
Inspection by Director. The Director or cats shall not be admitted in such if coming from areas which the Director
shall inspect all dogs and cats which containers unless the owner has the has determined to have high rates of
arrive at a U.S. port, and admit only containers cleaned and disinfected. rabies.
those dogs and cats which show no (c) Rabies vaccination requirements (f) Requirements for dogs and cats in
signs of communicable disease as for dogs. (1) A valid rabies vaccination transit. The provisions of this section
defined in § 71.1. certificate is required at a U.S. port for shall apply to dogs and cats transported
(2) Examination by veterinarian and admission of a dog unless the owner through the United States from one
confinement of dogs and cats. When, submits evidence satisfactory to the foreign country to another, except as
upon inspection, a dog or cat does not Director that: provided below:
appear to be in good health on arrival (i) If a dog is less than 6 months of (1) Dogs and cats that appear healthy,
(e.g., it has symptoms such as age, it has been only in a country but have been exposed to a sick or dead
emaciation, lesions of the skin, nervous determined by the Director to be rabies- animal suspected of having a
system disturbances, jaundice, or free (a current list of rabies-free communicable disease, need not
diarrhea), the Director may require countries may be obtained from the undergo examination or tests as
prompt confinement and give the owner Division of Quarantine, Center for provided in paragraph (b)(3) of this
an opportunity to arrange for a licensed Prevention Services, Centers for Disease section if the Director determines that
veterinarian to examine the animal and Control, Atlanta, GA 30333); or the conditions under which they are
give or arrange for any tests or treatment (ii) If a dog is 6 months of age or being transported will afford adequate
indicated. The Director will consider older, for the 6 months before arrival, it protection against introduction of
the findings of the examination and has been only in a country determined communicable disease.
tests in determining whether or not the by the Director to be rabies-free; or (2) Rabies vaccination is not required
dog or cat may have a communicable (iii) The dog is to be taken to a for dogs that are transported by aircraft
disease. The owner shall bear the research facility to be used for research or ship and retained in custody of the
expense of the examination, tests, and purposes and vaccination would carrier under conditions that would
treatment. When it is necessary to interfere with its use for such purposes. prevent transmission of rabies.
detain a dog or cat pending (2) Regardless of the provisions of (g) Disposal of excluded dogs and
determination of its admissibility, the paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the cats. A dog or cat excluded from the
owner shall provide confinement Director may authorize admission as United States under the regulations in
facilities which in the judgment of the follows: this part shall be exported or destroyed.
Director will afford protection against (i) If the date of vaccination shown on Pending exportation, it shall be detained
any communicable disease. The owner the vaccination certificate is less than 30 at the owner’s expense in the custody of
shall bear the expense of confinement. days before the date of arrival, the dog the U.S. Customs Service at the U.S.
Confinement shall be subject to may be admitted, but must be confined port.
conditions specified by the Director to until at least 30 days have elapsed since
protect the public health. the date of vaccination; § 71.52 Turtles, tortoises, and terrapins.
(3) Record of sickness or death of dogs (ii) If the dog is less than 3 months of (a) Definitions. As used in this section
and cats and requirements for exposed age, it may be admitted, but must be the term:
animals. (i) The carrier responsible for confined until vaccinated against rabies Turtles includes all animals
the care of dogs and cats shall maintain at 3 months of age and for at least 30 commonly known as turtles, tortoises,
a record of sickness or death of animals days after the date of vaccination; terrapins, and all other animals of the
en route to the United States and shall (iii) If the dog is 3 months of age or order Testudinata, class Reptilia, except
submit the record to the quarantine older, it may be admitted, but must be marine species (Families Dermochelidae
station at the U.S. port upon arrival. confined until it is vaccinated against and Cheloniidae).
Dogs or cats which have become sick rabies. The dog must be vaccinated (b) Importation; general prohibition.
while en route or are dead on arrival within 4 days after arrival at destination Except as otherwise provided in this
shall be separated from other animals as but no more than 10 days after arrival section, live turtles with a carapace
soon as the sickness or death is at a U.S. port. It must be kept in length of less than 4 inches and viable
discovered, and shall be held in confinement for at least 30 days after the turtle eggs may not be imported into the
confinement pending any necessary date of vaccination. United States.
examination as determined by the (3) When a dog is admitted under (c) Exceptions. (1) Live turtles with a
Director. paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the carapace length of less than 4 inches
(ii) When, upon inspection, a dog or Director shall notify the health and viable turtle eggs may be imported
cat appears healthy but, during department or other appropriate agency into the United States, provided that
shipment, has been exposed to a sick or having jurisdiction at the point of such importation is not in connection
dead animal suspected of having a destination and shall provide the with a business, and the importation is

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limited to lots of fewer than seven live at another location. The term importer distributed within 90 days after receipt,
turtles or fewer than seven viable turtle includes the original importer and any the record shall include the number of
eggs, or any combinations of such other person or organization receiving primates in each shipment or sale, the
turtles and turtle eggs totaling fewer imported primates within the 31-day dates of each shipment or sale, and the
than seven, for any entry. period. identity of the recipients. In addition,
(2) Seven or more live turtles with a Nonhuman primates means all the record shall contain copies of
carapace length of less than 4 inches, or nonhuman members of the Order documents that were presented to the
seven or more viable turtle eggs or any Primates, including, but not limited to, importer to establish that the recipient
combination of turtles and turtle eggs animals commonly known as monkeys, would use the primates solely for the
totaling seven or more, may be imported chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas, permitted purposes. The records shall
into the United States for bona fide gibbons, apes, baboons, marmosets, be maintained in an organized manner
scientific or educational purposes or for tamarin, lemurs, and lorises. in a central location at or in close
exhibition when accompanied by a (b) General prohibition. No person or proximity to the importer’s primate
permit issued by the Director. organization may import live nonhuman holding facility. The records shall be
(3) The requirements in paragraphs primates into the United States unless maintained for a period of 3 years and
(c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section shall not registered as an importer in accordance shall be available for inspection by the
apply to the eggs of marine turtles with applicable provisions of this Director at any time.
excluded from these regulations under section. (2) Importers shall report to the
§ 71.52(a). (c) Uses for which nonhuman Director by telephone within 24 hours
(d) Application for permits. primates may be imported and the occurrence of any illness in
Applications for permits to import distributed. Live nonhuman primates nonhuman primates that is suspected of
turtles, as set forth in paragraph (c)(2) of may be imported into the United States being yellow fever, monkeypox, or
this section, shall be made by letter to and sold, resold, or otherwise Marburg/Ebola disease.
the Director, and shall contain, identify, distributed only for bona fide scientific, (3) Importers also shall report to the
or describe, the name and address of the educational, or exhibition purposes. The Director by telephone within 24 hours
applicant, the number of specimens, importation of nonhuman primates for the occurrence of illness in any member
and the common and scientific names of use in breeding colonies is also of their staff suspected of having an
each species to be imported, the holding permitted provided that all offspring infectious disease acquired from
facilities, the intended use of the turtles will be used only for scientific, nonhuman primates.
following their importation, the educational, or exhibition purposes. The (f) Disease control measures. Upon
precautions to be undertaken to prevent maintenance of nonhuman primates as receipt of evidence of exposure of
infection of members of the public with pets, hobby, or an avocation with nonhuman primates to a communicable
Salmonella and Arizona bacteria, and occasional display to the general public disease that may constitute a threat to
any other information and assurances is not a permissible use. public health, the Director may provide
the Director may require. (d) Registration of importers. (1) for or require examination, treatment,
(e) Criteria for issuance of permits. A Importers of nonhuman primates shall detention, isolation, seizure, or
permit may be issued upon a register with the Director in a manner destruction of exposed animals. Any
determination that the holder of the prescribed by the Director. measures required shall be at the
permit will isolate or otherwise confine (2) Documentary evidence that an owner’s expense.
the turtles and will take such other importer will use all nonhuman (g) Disposal of excluded nonhuman
precautions as may be determined by primates solely for the permitted primates. Nonhuman primate(s)
the Director to be necessary to prevent purposes is required. excluded from the United States by
infection of members of the public with (3) Registration shall include provisions of this section shall, at the
Salmonella and Arizona bacteria and on certification that the nonhuman owner’s option and expense, be
condition that the holder of the permit primates will not be shipped, sold, or exported, destroyed, or given to a
will provide such reports as the Director otherwise transferred to other persons or scientific, educational, or exhibition
may require. organizations without adequate proof facility under arrangements approved by
(f) Interstate regulations. Upon that the primates will be used only for the Director. If the owner fails to
admission at a U.S. Port, turtles and the permitted purposes. dispose of the nonhuman primate by
viable turtle eggs become subject to (4) Registration shall be for 2 years, one of the approved options or fails to
Food and Drug Administration effective the date the application for select a method of disposal within 7
Regulations (21 CFR 1240.62) regarding registration is approved by the Director. days, the Director will select the method
general prohibition. (5) Registration may be renewed by of disposal. Pending disposal, the
(g) Other permits. Permits to import filing a registration application form nonhuman primate(s) shall be detained
certain species of turtles may be with the Director not less than 30 days at the owner’s expense in custody of the
required under other Federal regulations nor more than 60 days before expiration U.S. Customs Service at the U.S. port.
(50 CFR parts 17 and 23) protecting of the current registration. (h) Revocation of an importer’s
such species. (e) Recordkeeping and reporting registration. (1) An importer’s
requirement for registered importers. (1) registration may be revoked by the
§ 71.53 Nonhuman primates. Importers shall maintain records on Director, upon notice to the importer
(a) Definitions. As used in this section each shipment of imported nonhuman holding such registration, if the Director
the term: primates received. The record on each determines that the importer has failed
Importer means any person or shipment shall include the number of to comply with any applicable
corporation, partnership, or other primates received, species, country of provisions of this section. The notice
organization, receiving live nonhuman origin, date of importation, the number shall contain a statement of the grounds
primates from a foreign country within of primates in the shipment that die upon which the revocation is based.
a period of 31 days, beginning with the within 90 days after receipt, and (2) The importer may file an answer
importation date, whether or not the cause(s) of deaths. If any primates in the within 20 days after receipt of the
primates were held for part of the period shipment are sold or otherwise notice. Answers shall admit or deny

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specifically, and in detail, each (1) Placed in a hermetically sealed animals’ movement, and explain why an
allegation in the notice. Allegations in casket; exemption will not result in the spread
the notice not denied by answer shall be (2) Cremated; or of monkeypox within the United States.
deemed admitted. Matters alleged as (3) Accompanied by a permit issued Your request must be limited to
affirmative defenses shall be separately by the Director. scientific, exhibition, or educational
stated and numbered. Failure of the (b) The Director may inspect human purposes.
importer to file an answer within 20 remains brought into a U.S. port and (iii) We will respond in writing to all
days after receipt of the notice may be condition their further importation requests, and we also may impose
deemed an admission of all allegations upon such requirements that the conditions in granting an exemption. If
of fact recited in the notice. Director may deem necessary through we deny your request, you may appeal
(3) The importer shall be entitled to order to prevent the introduction, that denial. Your appeal must be in
a hearing with respect to the revocation transmission, and spread of writing and be submitted to the CDC
upon filing a written request, either in communicable diseases. official whose office denied your
the answer or in a separate document, request, and you must submit the appeal
§ 71.56 African rodents and other animals
with the Director within 20 days after within two business days after you
that may carry the monkeypox virus.
the effective date of revocation. Failure receive the denial. Your appeal must
(a) What actions are prohibited? What state the reasons for the appeal and
to request a hearing shall be deemed a animals are affected? (1) Except as
waiver of hearing and as consent to the show that there is a genuine and
provided in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) substantial issue of fact in dispute. We
submission of the case to the Director of this section,
for decision based on the written record. will issue a written response to the
(i) You must not import or attempt to appeal, which shall constitute final
The failure both to file an answer and import any rodents, whether dead or
to request a hearing shall be deemed to agency action.
alive, that were obtained, directly or (3) The prohibitions in paragraph (a)
constitute consent to the making of a indirectly, from Africa, or whose native
decision on the basis of available of this section do not apply to products
habitat is Africa, any products derived derived from rodents that were
information. from such rodents, any other animal,
(4) As soon as practicable after the obtained, directly or indirectly, from
whether dead or alive, whose Africa, or whose native habitat is Africa,
completion of any hearing conducted importation the Director has prohibited
pursuant to the provisions of this or products derived from any other
by order, or any products derived from animal whose importation the Director
section, the Director shall render a final such animals; and
decision. A copy of such decision shall has prohibited by order if such products
(ii) You must not prevent or attempt have been properly processed to render
be served on the importer. to prevent the Centers for Disease them noninfectious so that they pose no
(5) An importer’s registration which Control and Prevention (CDC) from risk of transmitting or carrying the
has been revoked may be reinstated by causing an animal to be quarantined, re- monkeypox virus. Such products
the Director upon inspection, exported, or destroyed under a written include, but are not limited to, fully
examination of records, conference with order. taxidermied animals and completely
the importer, and receipt of information (2) The prohibitions in paragraph
finished trophies; and they may be
and assurances of compliance with the (a)(1) of this section do not apply if you
imported without written permission
requirements of this section. have written permission from CDC to
from CDC.
(i) Other permits. In addition to the import a rodent that was obtained, (b) What actions can CDC take? (1) To
requirements under this section, permits directly or indirectly, from Africa, or prevent the monkeypox virus from
to import certain species of nonhuman whose native habitat is Africa, or an spreading and becoming established in
primates may also be required under animal whose importation the Director the United States, we may, in addition
other Federal regulations (50 CFR parts has prohibited by order. to any other authorities under this part:
17 and 23) protecting such species. (i) To obtain such written permission (i) Issue an order causing an animal to
from CDC, you must send a written be placed in quarantine,
§ 71.54 Etiological agents, hosts, and request to Division of Global Migration
vectors. (ii) Issue an order causing an animal
and Quarantine, National Center for to be re-exported,
(a) A person may not import into the Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease (iii) Issue an order causing an animal
United States, nor distribute after Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton to be destroyed, or
importation, any etiological agent or any Rd., Atlanta, GA 30333. You may also (iv) Take any other action necessary to
arthropod or other animal host or vector fax your request to the Division of prevent the spread of the monkeypox
of human disease, or any exotic living Global Migration and Quarantine (using virus.
arthropod or other animal capable of the same address in the previous (2) Any order causing an animal to be
being a host or vector of human disease sentence) at 404–498–1633. quarantined, re-exported, or destroyed
unless accompanied by a permit issued (ii) Your request must state the will be in writing.
by the Director. reasons why you need an exemption, (c) How do I appeal an order? If you
(b) Any import coming within the describe the animals involved, describe received a written order to quarantine or
provisions of this section will not be the number of animals involved, re-export an animal or to cause an
released from custody prior to receipt by describe how the animals will be animal to be destroyed, you may appeal
the District Director of the U.S. Customs transported (including carrying that order. Your appeal must be in
Service of a permit issued by the containers or cages, precautions for writing and be submitted to the CDC
Director. handlers, types of vehicles used, and official whose office issued the order,
other procedures to minimize exposure and you must submit the appeal within
§ 71.55 Dead bodies. of animals and precautions to prevent 2 business days after you receive the
(a) The remains of a person who died animals from escaping into the order. Your appeal must state the
of a communicable disease may not be environment), describe any holding reasons for the appeal and show that
brought into a U.S. port unless it has facilities, quarantine procedures, and/or there is a genuine and substantial issue
been: veterinarian evaluation involved in the of fact in dispute. We will issue a

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71948 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Proposed Rules

written response to the appeal, which Dated: November 21, 2005.


shall constitute final agency action. Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–23312 Filed 11–22–05; 11:43
am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–U

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