Federal Register: March 21, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 54)
DOCID: fr21mr07-84 FR Doc E7-5121
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Labor Statistics Bureau
NOTICE: NOTICES
DOCID: fr21mr07-84
DOCUMENT ACTION: Notice.
SUBJECT CATEGORY:
Proposed Collection; Comment Request
DATES: Written comments must be submitted to the office listed in the ADDRESSES section below on or before May 21, 2007.
DOCUMENT SUMMARY:
The Department of Labor, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent burden, conducts a preclearance consultation program to provide the general public and Federal agencies with an opportunity to comment on proposed and/or continuing collections of information in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA95) [44 U.S.C. 3506(c) (2)(A)]. This program helps to ensure that requested data can be provided in the desired format, reporting burden (time and financial resources) is minimized, collection instruments are clearly understood, and the impact of collection requirements on respondents can be properly assessed. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is soliciting comments concerning the proposed reinstatement of the ``National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979.'' A copy of the proposed information collection request (ICR) can be obtained by contacting the individual listed in the Addresses section of this notice.
SUMMARY:
Agency information collection activities; proposals, submissions, and approvals,
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION
I. Background
The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (NLSY79) is a representative national sample of persons who were born in the years 1957 to 1964 and lived in the U.S. in 1978. These respondents were ages 1422 when the first round of interviews began in 1979; they will be ages 43 to 50 when the planned twentythird round of interviews is conducted from January 2008 to January 2009. The NLSY79 was conducted annually from 1979 to 1994 and has been conducted biennially since 1994. The longitudinal focus of this survey requires information to be collected from the same individuals over many years in order to trace their education, training, work experience, fertility, income, and program participation.
In addition to the main NLSY79, the biological children of female NLSY79 respondents have been surveyed since 1986, when the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development began providing funding to the BLS to gather a large amount of information about the lives of these children. A battery of child cognitive, socioemotional, and physiological assessments has been administered biennially since 1986 to NLSY79 mothers and their children. Starting in 1994, children who had reached age 15 by December 31 of the survey year (the Young Adults) were interviewed about their work experiences, training, schooling, health, fertility, and selfesteem, as well as sensitive topics addressed in a supplemental, selfadministered questionnaire.
The BLS contracts with the Center for Human Resource Research
(CHRR) of the Ohio State University to implement the NLSY79, Child, and
Young Adult surveys. Interviewing of respondents is conducted by the
National Opinion Research Center (NORC) of the University of Chicago.
Among the objectives of the Department of Labor (DOL) are to promote
the development of the U.S. labor force and the efficiency of the U.S.
labor market. The BLS contributes to these objectives by gathering information about the labor
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force and labor market and disseminating it to policy makers and the
public so that participants in those markets can make more informed
and, thus, more efficient, choices. Research based on the NLSY79
contributes to the formation of national policy in the areas of
education, training, employment programs, and schooltowork
transitions. In addition to the reports that the BLS produces based on
data from the NLSY79, members of the academic community publish
articles and reports based on NLSY79 data for the DOL and other funding
agencies. The survey design provides data gathered from the same
respondents over time to form the only data set that contains this type
of intergenerational information for these important population groups.
Without the collection of these data, an accurate longitudinal data set
could not be provided to researchers and policy makers, and the DOL
would not have the data for use in performing its policy and report making activities.
II. Current Action
The BLS seeks approval to conduct the round 23 interviews of the NLSY79 and the associated surveys of biological children of female NLSY79 respondents. The NLSY79 Child Survey involves three components:
In addition to the main NLSY79 and Child Survey, the Young Adult Survey will be administered to approximately 2,165 youths ages 15 to 20 who are the biological children of female NLSY79 respondents. These youths will be contacted for an interview regardless of whether they reside with their mothers.
During the field period, about 200 main NLSY79 interviews are validated to ascertain whether the interview took place as the interviewer reported and whether the interview was done in a polite and professional manner.
BLS has undertaken a continuing redesign effort to examine the current content of the NLSY79 and provide direction for changes that may be appropriate as the respondents enter middle age. Based on the 1998 redesign conference and subsequent discussions, as well as experiences in 20002006, the 2008 instrument reflects a number of content changes recommended by experts in various social science fields and by an internal review of the survey's content. A full list of the proposed changes to the questionnaire are available upon request. Additions to the questionnaire have been balanced by deletions of previous questions so that the overall time required to complete the survey should remain about the same.
III. Desired Focus of Comments
The BLS is particularly interested in comments that:
Type of Review: Reinstatement, with change, of a previously approved collection for which approval has expired.
Agency: Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Title: National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979.
OMB Number: 12200109.
Affected Public: Individuals or households.
Average time Estimated
Form Total Frequency Total per response total burden
respondents responses (minutes) (hours)
NLSY79 Round 21 Pretest........................ 100 Biennially............................. 100 60 100
Main NLSY79 Survey............................. 7,550 Biennially............................. 7,550 60 7,550
Main NLSY79 Validation Reinterview............. 200 Biennially............................. 200 6 20
Mother Supplement.............................. \1\ 1,300 Biennially............................. 1,650 20 550
Child Supplement............................... 1,450 Biennially............................. 1,450 31 750
Child SelfAdministered Questionnaire.......... 900 Biennially............................. 900 30 450
Young Adult Survey............................. 2,165 Biennially............................. 2,165 45 1,624
Total \2\.................................. 11,265 ....................................... 14,015 .............. 11,044
\1\ The number of respondents for the Mother Supplement (1,300) is less than the number of responses (1,650) because mothers are asked to provide
separate responses for each of the biological children with whom they reside. Since the Mother Supplement is given to children ages 014, the number
of responses is greater than the Children's Supplement, which is only given to children ages 414 years.
\2\ The total number of 11,265 respondents across all the survey instruments is a mutually exclusive count that does not include: (1) the 200
reinterview respondents, who were previously counted among the 7,550 main survey respondents, (2) the 1,300 Mother Supplement respondents, who were
previously counted among the main youth, and (3) the 900 Child SAQ respondents, who were previously counted among the 1,450 Child Supplement respondents.
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Total Burden Cost (capital/startup): $0.
Total Burden Cost (operating/maintenance): $0.
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized and/or included in the request for Office of Management and Budget approval of the information collection request; they also will become a matter of public record.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 15th day of March 2007. Cathy Kazanowski,
Chief, Division of Management Systems, Bureau of Labor Statistics. [FR Doc. E75121 Filed 32007; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 451024P
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Amy A. Hobby, BLS Clearance Officer, 2026917628. (See ADDRESSES section.)