[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 83 (Tuesday, May 1, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 23761-23765]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-8235]



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  Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 83 / Tuesday, May 1, 2007 / Rules and 
Regulations  

[[Page 23761]]



DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Agricultural Marketing Service

7 CFR Part 982

[Docket No. AMS-FV-06-0175; FV07-982-1 FIR]


Hazelnuts Grown in Oregon and Washington; Establishment of Final 
Free and Restricted Percentages for the 2006-2007 Marketing Year

AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.

ACTION: Final rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: The Department of Agriculture (USDA) is adopting, as a final 
rule, an interim final rule establishing final free and restricted 
percentages for domestic inshell hazelnuts for the 2006-2007 marketing 
year under the Federal marketing order for hazelnuts grown in Oregon 
and Washington. This rule continues in effect the final free and 
restricted percentages of 8.2840 percent and 91.7160 percent, 
respectively. The percentages allocate the quantity of domestically 
produced hazelnuts which may be marketed in the domestic inshell market 
(free) and the quantity of domestically produced hazelnuts that must be 
disposed of in outlets approved by the Board (restricted). Volume 
regulation is intended to stabilize the supply of domestic inshell 
hazelnuts to meet the limited domestic demand for such hazelnuts with 
the goal of providing producers with reasonable returns. This rule was 
recommended unanimously by the Hazelnut Marketing Board (Board), which 
is the agency responsible for local administration of the marketing 
order.

DATES: Effective: May 31, 2007 the regulation published January 22, 
2007 (72 FR 2599, Jan. 22, 2007) is confirmed as final. This rule 
applies to all 2006-2007 marketing year restricted hazelnuts until they 
are properly disposed of in accordance with marketing order 
requirements.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barry Broadbent or Gary Olson, 
Northwest Marketing Field Office, Marketing Order Administration 
Branch, Fruit and Vegetable Programs, AMS, USDA, 1220 SW Third Avenue, 
Suite 385, Portland, OR 97204; Telephone: (503) 326-2724, Fax: (503) 
326-7440, or e-mail: [email protected] or [email protected].
    Small businesses may request information on complying with this 
regulation by contacting Jay Guerber, Marketing Order Administration 
Branch, Fruit and Vegetable Programs, AMS, USDA, 1400 Independence 
Avenue, SW., STOP 0237, Washington, DC 20250-0237; Telephone: (202) 
720-2491, Fax: (202) 720-8938, or e-mail: [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This rule is issued under Marketing 
Agreement No. 115 and Marketing Order No. 982, both as amended (7 CFR 
part 982), regulating the handling of hazelnuts grown in Oregon and 
Washington, hereinafter referred to as the ``order.'' The order is 
effective under the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, as 
amended (7 U.S.C. 601-674), hereinafter referred to as the ``Act.''
    USDA is issuing this rule in conformance with Executive Order 
12866.
    This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil 
Justice Reform. It is intended that this action apply to all 
merchantable hazelnuts handled during the 2006-2007 marketing year 
beginning July 1, 2006. This action applies to all 2006-2007 marketing 
year restricted hazelnuts until they are properly disposed of in 
accordance with marketing order requirements. This rule will not 
preempt any State or local laws, regulations, or policies, unless they 
present an irreconcilable conflict with this rule.
    The Act provides that administrative proceedings must be exhausted 
before parties may file suit in court. Under section 608c(15)(A) of the 
Act, any handler subject to an order may file with USDA a petition 
stating that the order, any provision of the order, or any obligation 
imposed in connection with the order is not in accordance with law and 
request a modification of the order or to be exempted therefrom. A 
handler is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on the petition. 
After the hearing, USDA would rule on the petition. The Act provides 
that the district court of the United States in any district in which 
the handler is an inhabitant, or has his or her principal place of 
business, has jurisdiction to review USDA's ruling on the petition, 
provided an action is filed not later than 20 days after the date of 
the entry of the ruling.
    This rule continues in effect free and restricted percentages which 
allocate the quantity of domestically produced hazelnuts which may be 
marketed in domestic inshell markets (free) and hazelnuts which must be 
exported, shelled, or otherwise disposed of by handlers (restricted). 
The Board met and, after determining that volume regulation would tend 
to effectuate the declared policy of the Act, developed a marketing 
policy to be employed for the duration of the 2006-2007 marketing year. 
Volume regulation is intended to stabilize the supply of domestic 
inshell hazelnuts to meet the limited domestic demand for such 
hazelnuts with the goal of providing producers with reasonable returns. 
Based on an estimate of the domestic inshell trade demand and total 
supply of domestically produced hazelnuts available for the 2006-2007 
marketing year, the Board voted unanimously at their November 15, 2006, 
meeting to recommend to USDA that the final free and restricted 
percentages for the 2006-2007 marketing year be established at 8.2840 
percent and 91.7160 percent, respectively.
    The Board's authority to recommend volume regulation and use 
computations to determine the allocation of hazelnuts to individual 
markets is specified in Sec.  982.40 of the order. Under the order's 
provisions, free and restricted market allocations of hazelnuts are 
expressed as percentages of the total hazelnut supply subject to 
regulation. The percentages are derived by dividing the estimated 
domestic inshell trade demand (computed by formula) by the Board's 
estimate of the total domestically produced supply of hazelnuts that 
are expected to be available over the course of the marketing year.
    Inshell trade demand, the key component of the marketing policy, is

[[Page 23762]]

the estimated quantity of inshell hazelnuts necessary to adequately 
supply the domestic inshell hazelnut market for the duration of the 
marketing year. The Board determines the domestic inshell trade demand 
for each year and uses that estimate as the basis for setting the 
percentage of the available supply of domestically produced hazelnuts 
that handlers may ship to the domestic inshell market throughout the 
marketing season. The order specifies that inshell trade demand be 
computed by averaging the preceding three years' trade acquisitions of 
inshell hazelnuts, allowing adjustments for abnormal crop or marketing 
conditions. In addition, the Board may increase the computed inshell 
trade demand by up to 25 percent, if market conditions warrant an 
increase.
    As required by the order, prior to September 20 of each marketing 
year, the Board meets to establish its marketing policy for that year. 
If the Board determines that volume control would tend to effectuate 
the declared policy of the Act, the Board then follows a procedure, 
specified by the order, to compute and announce preliminary free and 
restricted percentages. The preliminary free percentage releases 80 
percent of the adjusted inshell trade demand that handlers may ship to 
the domestic market. The purpose of releasing only 80 percent of the 
inshell trade demand under the preliminary stage of regulation is to 
guard against any potential underestimate of crop size. The preliminary 
free percentage is expressed as a percentage of the total hazelnut 
supply subject to regulation, where total supply is the sum of the 
estimated crop production less the three-year average disappearance 
plus the undeclared carry-in from the previous marketing year.
    On August 22, 2006, the National Agricultural Statistics Service 
(NASS) released an estimate of 2006 hazelnut production for the Oregon 
and Washington area at 41,000 dry orchard-run tons. NASS uses an 
objective yield survey method to estimate hazelnut production which has 
historically been very accurate.
    On August 24, 2006, the Board met for the purpose of (1) 
Determining if volume control regulation would tend to effectuate the 
declared policy of the Act; (2) estimating the total available supply 
and the domestic inshell trade demand for hazelnuts; (3) establishing 
preliminary free and restricted marketing percentages for the 2006-2007 
marketing year; and (4) authorizing market outlets for restricted 
hazelnuts.
    After discussion, the Board unanimously determined that volume 
regulation is necessary to effectively market the industry's 2006 crop 
and would tend to effectuate the declared policy of the Act. The 
determination was based on (1) The large size of the 2006 hazelnut 
crop; (2) the inability of the domestic inshell market to absorb such a 
large crop; (3) the projected record-setting world hazelnut crop and 
the probability of an oversupplied world market; and (4) the average 
price paid to Oregon-Washington growers has not exceeded the parity 
price in any one of the past 18 years.
    The Board then estimated the total available supply for the 2006 
crop year to be 39,234 tons. The Board arrived at that quantity by 
using the crop estimate compiled by NASS (41,000 tons) and then 
adjusting that estimate to account for disappearance and carry-in. The 
order requires the Board to reduce the crop estimate by the average 
disappearance over the preceding three years (1,792 tons) and to 
increase it by the amount of undeclared carry-in from previous years' 
production (26 tons).
    In the calculation, disappearance is defined as the difference 
between the estimated orchard-run production and the actual supply of 
merchantable product available for sale by handlers. Disappearance can 
consist of (1) Unharvested hazelnuts; (2) culled product (nuts that are 
delivered to handlers but later discarded); (3) product used on the 
farm, sold locally, or otherwise disposed of by producers; and (4) 
statistical error in the orchard-run production estimate.
    Undeclared carry-in is defined as hazelnuts that were produced in a 
previous marketing year but were not subject to regulation because they 
were not shipped during that marketing year. Undeclared carry-in is 
subject to regulation during the current marketing year and is 
accounted for as such by the Board.
    Additionally, the Board estimated domestic inshell trade demand for 
the 2006-2007 marketing year to be 3,067 tons. The Board arrived at 
this estimate by taking the average of the domestic inshell trade 
acquisitions for the 2002-2005 marketing years (2,775 tons) and then 
reducing that quantity by the declared carry-in from last year's crop 
(124 tons). The trade acquisition data for the 2005-2006 marketing year 
was omitted from the Board's calculations, as allowed by the order, 
after it was determined to be abnormal due to crop and marketing 
conditions.
    The declared carry-in represents product regulated under the order 
during a preceding marketing year but not shipped during that year. 
This inventory must be accounted for when estimating the quantity of 
product to make available to adequately supply the market.
    After establishing estimates for total available hazelnut supply 
and domestic inshell trade demand, the Board used those estimates to 
compute and announce preliminary free and restricted percentages of 
5.4055 percent and 94.5945 percent, respectively. The Board computed 
the preliminary free percentage by multiplying the adjusted inshell 
trade demand by 80 percent and dividing the result by the estimate of 
the total available supply subject to regulation (2,651 tons x 80 
percent/39,234 tons = 5.4055 percent). The preliminary free percentage 
initially released 2,121 tons of hazelnuts from the 2006-2007 supply 
for domestic inshell use. The Board authorized the preliminary 
restricted percentage (37,113 tons) to be exported or shelled for the 
domestic kernel markets.
    Under the order, the Board must meet again on or before November 15 
to review and revise the preliminary estimate of the total available 
supply of hazelnuts and to recommend interim final and final free and 
restricted percentages. Initially, when establishing preliminary free 
and restricted percentages, the Board utilizes a pre-harvest objective 
yield survey, compiled by NASS on behalf of the Board, to estimate the 
upcoming crop size. After the hazelnut harvest has concluded, usually 
sometime in October, information is available directly from handlers to 
more accurately estimate crop size. The Board may use this information 
to amend their preliminary estimate of total available supply before 
calculating the interim final and final percentages.
    Interim final percentages are calculated in the same way as the 
preliminary percentages but release 100 percent of the inshell trade 
demand, effectively releasing the additional 20 percent held back at 
the preliminary stage. Final free and restricted percentages may 
release up to an additional 15 percent of the average trade 
acquisitions of inshell hazelnuts for desirable carryout, to provide an 
adequate carryover of product into the following season. The order 
requires that final free and restricted percentages be effective 30 
days prior to the end of the marketing year, or earlier, if recommended 
by the Board and approved by USDA. The Board is allowed to combine the 
interim final and the final stages of the marketing policy, if 
marketing conditions so warrant, by recommending final

[[Page 23763]]

percentages which immediately release 100 percent of the inshell trade 
demand (the preliminary percentage plus the additional 20 held back) 
plus any percentage increase the Board determines for desirable 
carryout. Revisions in the marketing policy can be made until February 
15 of each marketing year, but the inshell trade demand can only be 
revised upward, consistent with Sec.  982.40(e).
    The Board met on November 15, 2006, and reviewed and approved an 
amended marketing policy and recommended the establishment of final 
free and restricted percentages. During the meeting, the Board revised 
the crop estimate in the marketing policy to 38,688 tons (from 41,000 
tons), which reflects the results of post-harvest handler survey 
information compiled by the Board. In addition, the Board decided that 
market conditions were such that the immediate release of an additional 
15 percent of the three-year average trade acquisitions to allow for 
desirable carryout will not adversely affect the 2006-2007 domestic 
inshell market. Final percentages were recommended at 8.2840 percent 
free and 91.1760 percent restricted. The final free percentage releases 
3,067 tons of inshell hazelnuts from the 2006-2007 supply for domestic 
use, which includes 416 tons for desirable carryout. Accordingly, since 
the final percentages were recommended for immediate release, no 
recommendations for interim final free and restricted percentages were 
necessary.
    The final marketing percentages are based on the Board's final 
production estimate and the following supply and demand information for 
the 2006-2007 marketing year:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               Tons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total available supply:
    (1) Production forecast (11/15/06 crop estimate)....          38,688
    (2) Minus: Disappearance (three year average--4.37            -1,691
     percent of Item 1).................................
                                                         ---------------
    (3) Merchantable production (Item 1 minus Item 2)...          36,997
    (4) Plus: Undeclared carry-in as of July 1, 2006                 +26
     (subject to 2006-2007 regulation)..................
                                                         ---------------
    (5) Available supply subject to regulation (Item 3            37,023
     plus Item 4).......................................
Inshell Trade Demand:
    (6) Average trade acquisitions of inshell hazelnuts            2,775
     (three prior years domestic sales).................
    (7) Plus: Increase to encourage increased sales (15%            +416
     of average trade acquisitions).....................
    (8) Minus: Declared carry-in as of July 1, 2006 (not            -124
     subject to 2006-2007 regulation)...................
                                                         ---------------
    (9) Adjusted inshell trade demand (Item 6 plus Item            3,067
     7 minus Item 8)....................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------


 
               Percentages                     Free         Restricted
------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (10) Final percentages (Item 9                8.2840         91.7160
     divided by Item 5) x 100...........
    (11) Final free tonnage (Item 9)....           3,067  ..............
    (12) Final restricted tonnage (Item   ..............          33,956
     5 minus Item 11)...................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition to complying with the provisions of the order, the 
Board also considered USDA's 1982 ``Guidelines for Fruit, Vegetable, 
and Specialty Crop Marketing Orders'' (Guidelines) when making its 
computations in the marketing policy. This volume control regulation 
provides a method to collectively limit the supply of inshell hazelnuts 
available for sale in domestic markets. The Guidelines provide that the 
domestic inshell market has available a quantity equal to 110 percent 
of prior years' shipments before allocating supplies for the export 
inshell, export kernel, and domestic kernel markets. This provides for 
a plentiful supply of inshell hazelnuts for consumers and for market 
expansion, while retaining the mechanism for dealing with oversupply 
situations. The established final percentages make available 
approximately 416 additional tons to encourage increased sales. The 
total free supply for the 2006-2007 marketing year is estimated to be 
3,067 tons of hazelnuts, which is 127 percent of the average of the 
last three prior years' sales and exceeds the goal of the Guidelines.

Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    Pursuant to requirements set forth in the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (RFA), the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) has considered the 
economic impact of this action on small entities. Accordingly, AMS has 
prepared this final regulatory flexibility analysis.
    The purpose of the RFA is to fit regulatory actions to the scale of 
business subject to such actions in order that small businesses will 
not be unduly or disproportionately burdened. Marketing orders issued 
pursuant to the Act, and the rules issued thereunder, are unique in 
that they are brought about through group action of essentially small 
entities acting on their own behalf. Thus, both statutes have small 
entity orientation and compatibility.
    Small agricultural producers are defined by the Small Business 
Administration (13 CFR 121.201) as those having annual receipts of less 
than $750,000, and small agricultural service firms are defined as 
those having annual receipts of less than $6,500,000. There are 
approximately 700 producers of hazelnuts in the production area and 
approximately 18 handlers subject to regulation under the order. Using 
statistics compiled by NASS, the average value of production received 
by producers in 2004 and 2005 was $57,912,000. Using those estimates, 
the average annual hazelnut revenue per producer would be approximately 
$82,700. The level of sales of other crops by hazelnut producers is not 
known. In addition, based on Board records, about 83 percent of the 
handlers ship under $6,500,000 worth of hazelnuts on an annual basis. 
In view of the foregoing, it can be concluded that the majority of 
hazelnut producers and handlers may be classified as small entities.
    Board meetings are widely publicized in advance of the meetings and 
are held in a location central to the production area. The meetings are 
open to all industry members and other interested persons who are 
encouraged to participate in the deliberations and voice their opinions 
on topics under discussion. Thus, Board recommendations can be 
considered to represent the interests of small business entities in the 
industry.
    Currently, U.S. hazelnut production is allocated among three main 
market

[[Page 23764]]

outlets: Domestic inshell, export inshell, and kernel markets. Handlers 
and growers receive the highest return for sales in the domestic 
inshell market. They receive less for product going to export inshell, 
and the least for kernels. Based on Board records of average shipments 
for 1996-2005, the percentage going to each of these markets was 10 
percent (domestic inshell), 51 percent (export inshell), and 37 percent 
(kernels). Other minor market outlets make up the remaining 2 percent.
    The inshell hazelnut market can be characterized as having limited 
and inelastic demand with a very short primary marketing period. On 
average, 79 percent of domestic inshell hazelnut shipments occur 
between October 1 and November 30, primarily to supply holiday nut 
demand. The inshell market is, therefore, prone to oversupply and 
correspondingly low grower prices in the absence of supply 
restrictions. This volume control regulation provides a method for the 
U.S. hazelnut industry to limit the supply of domestic inshell 
hazelnuts available for sale in the continental U.S. and thereby 
mitigate market oversupply conditions.
    Many years of marketing experience led to the development of the 
current volume control procedures. These procedures have helped the 
industry solve its marketing problems by keeping inshell supplies in 
balance with domestic needs. Volume controls ensure that the domestic 
inshell market is fully supplied while protecting the market from the 
negative effects of oversupply.
    Although the domestic inshell market is a relatively small portion 
of total hazelnut sales (averaging 10 percent of total shipments for 
1996-2005), it remains a profitable market segment. The volume control 
provisions of the marketing order are designed to avoid oversupplying 
this particular market segment, because that would likely lead to 
substantially lower grower prices. The other market segments, export 
inshell and kernels, are expected to continue to provide good outlets 
for U.S. hazelnut production into the future. Adverse climatic 
conditions that negatively impacted hazelnut production in the other 
hazelnut producing regions of the world in 2004 and 2005 have corrected 
and the total world supply in 2006-2007 is predicted to increase 
dramatically. Product prices in the world market have trended downward 
in the expectation of the greater supply. While the U.S. hazelnut 
industry continues to experience high demand for their large sized and 
high quality product, the prices that producers receive are tied to the 
global market. In light of the anticipated world oversupply situation, 
regulation of the domestic inshell market is important to the U.S. 
hazelnut industry to insulate that specialty market from the supply 
related challenges of the world hazelnut market.
    In Oregon and Washington, high hazelnut production years typically 
follow low production years (a historically consistent pattern). The 
2005 crop of 27,600 tons was 16 percent below the 32,685 ton average 
for the 1995-2004 period, while the preliminary NASS estimate for 2006 
is 25 percent higher. The lowest production (15,000 tons in 1998) and 
highest production (49,500 tons in 2001) were 47 and 151 percent, 
respectively, of the 10 year average.
    This cyclical trait also leads to an inversely corresponding 
cyclical price pattern for hazelnuts. Grower price, however, does not 
fluctuate to the extent of production. The lower level of variability 
of price versus the variability of production provides an illustration 
of the order's price-stabilizing impact. The coefficient of variation 
(a standard statistical measure of variability; ``CV'') for hazelnut 
production over the most recent 10-year period is 0.36. In contrast, 
the coefficient of variation for hazelnut grower prices over the same 
period is 0.19, about half of the CV for production. The lower level of 
variability of price versus the variability of production provides an 
illustration of the order's price-stabilizing impact.
    Comparing grower revenue to cost is useful in highlighting the 
impact on growers of recent product and price levels. A recent hazelnut 
production cost study from Oregon State University estimated cost-of-
production per acre to be approximately $1,340 for a typical 100-acre 
hazelnut enterprise. Average grower revenue per bearing acre (based on 
NASS acreage and value of production data) equaled or exceeded that 
typical cost level less than half the time from 1995 to 2004. Average 
grower revenue was below typical costs in the other years. While crop 
size has fluctuated, volume regulations contribute to orderly marketing 
and market stability by moderating the variation in returns for all 
producers and handlers, both large and small.
    While the level of benefits of this rulemaking is difficult to 
quantify, the stabilizing effects of volume regulation impact both 
small and large handlers positively by helping them maintain and expand 
markets even though hazelnut supplies fluctuate widely from season to 
season. This regulation provides equitable allotment of the most 
profitable market, the domestic inshell market. That market is 
available to all handlers, regardless of size.
    As an alternative to this regulation, the Board discussed not 
regulating the marketing of the 2006 hazelnut crop. However, without 
any regulation in effect, the Board believes that the industry would 
tend to oversupply the inshell domestic market. The 2006 hazelnut crop 
is larger than last year's crop and 22 percent above the ten-year 
average. The unregulated release of 38,688 tons on the domestic inshell 
market could easily oversupply the small, but lucrative domestic 
inshell market. The Board believes that any oversupply would completely 
disrupt the market, causing producer returns to decrease dramatically.
    Section 982.40 of the order establishes a procedure and 
computations for the Board to follow in recommending to USDA 
establishment of preliminary, interim final, and final percentages of 
hazelnuts to be released to the free and restricted markets each 
marketing year. The program results in a plentiful supply of hazelnuts 
for consumers and for market expansion while retaining the mechanism 
for dealing with oversupply situations.
    Hazelnuts produced under the order comprise virtually all of the 
hazelnuts produced in the U.S. This production represents, on average, 
less than 2 percent of total U.S. production of all tree nuts, and less 
than 7 percent of the world's hazelnut production.
    Last season, 85 percent of the domestically produced hazelnut 
kernels were marketed in the domestic market and 15 percent were 
exported. Domestically produced kernels generally command a higher 
price in the domestic market than imported kernels. The industry is 
continuing its efforts to develop and expand other markets with 
emphasis on the domestic kernel market. Small business entities, both 
producers and handlers, benefit from the expansion efforts resulting 
from this program.
    Inshell hazelnuts produced under the order compete well in export 
markets because of their high quality. Based on Board statistics, 
Europe has historically been the primary export market for U.S. 
produced inshell hazelnuts. Shipments have also been relatively 
consistent, not varying much from the 10 year average of 4,958 tons. 
Recent years, though, have seen a significant increase in export 
destinations. Last season, inshell shipments to Europe totaled 4,622 
tons, representing just 38 percent of exports, with the largest share 
going to Germany. Inshell shipments to Southwest Pacific countries, and 
Hong Kong in particular, have increased dramatically in the past

[[Page 23765]]

few years, rising to 50 percent of total exports of 12,042 tons for the 
2005-2006 marketing year. The industry continues to pursue export 
opportunities.
    There are some reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance 
requirements under the order. The reporting and recordkeeping burdens 
are necessary for compliance purposes and for developing statistical 
data for maintenance of the program. The information collection 
requirements are currently approved by the Office of Management and 
Budget under OMB No. 0581-0178, Vegetable and Specialty Crops. The 
forms require information which is readily available from handler 
records and which can be provided without data processing equipment or 
trained statistical staff. As with all Federal marketing order 
programs, reports and forms are periodically reviewed to reduce 
information requirements and duplication by industry and public sector 
agencies. This rule does not change those requirements.
    The AMS is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to 
promote the use of the Internet and other information technologies to 
provide increased opportunities for citizen access to Government 
information and services, and for other purposes.
    In addition, USDA has not identified any relevant Federal rules 
that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with this rule.
    Further, the Board's meetings were widely publicized throughout the 
hazelnut industry and all interested persons were invited to attend the 
meetings and participate in Board deliberations. Like all Board 
meetings, those held on August 24 and November 15, 2006, were public 
meetings and all entities, both large and small, were able to express 
their views on this issue.
    An interim final rule concerning this action was published in the 
Federal Register on January 22, 2007. Copies of this rule were mailed 
by the Board's staff to all Board members. In addition, the rule was 
made available through the Internet by the Office of the Federal 
Register. A 60-day comment period ending March 23, 2007, was provided 
to allow interested parties to respond to the rule. No comments were 
received.
    A small business guide on complying with fruit, vegetable, and 
specialty crop marketing agreements and orders may be viewed at: http://www.ams.usda.gov/fv/moab.html. Any questions about the compliance 
guide should be sent to Jay Guerber at the previously mentioned address 
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
    After consideration of all relevant material presented, including 
the information and recommendation submitted by the Board and other 
available information, it is hereby found that finalizing the interim 
final rule, without change, as published in the Federal Register (72 FR 
2599, January 22, 2007) will tend to effectuate the declared policy of 
the Act.

List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 982

    Filberts, Hazelnuts, Marketing agreements, Nuts, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements.

PART 982--HAZELNUTS GROWN IN OREGON AND WASHINGTON

0
Accordingly, the interim final rule amending 7 CFR part 982 which was 
published at 72 FR 2599 on January 22, 2007, is adopted as a final rule 
without change.

    Dated: April 25, 2007.
Lloyd C. Day,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. E7-8235 Filed 4-30-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-02-P