Search Results for keywords:"correction"

Found 39 results
Skip to main content

Search Results: keywords:"correction"

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:86 FR 7653
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    The U.S. Copyright Office, part of the Library of Congress, has issued a correction to a final rule published on January 11, 2021. The rule pertains to the responsibilities of digital music providers in transferring and reporting royalties for unmatched musical works to a mechanical licensing collective. This action is related to the Music Modernization Act, which aims to address unlicensed use of musical works. The correction involves specific amendments to section 210.10 of the associated regulation.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. Copyright Office made a small fix to some rules about how online music companies pay and report money for music they use but don't own, to make sure everything is clear and works right. This is part of a bigger plan to help musicians get paid fairly for their work.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 10813
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    The U.S. Department of Commerce issued a correction to a notice published on February 10, 2025, concerning countervailing duties on corrosion-resistant steel from Canada. The error involved the incorrect naming of a mandatory respondent in the original notice. The company name was mistakenly listed as ArcelorMittal Dofasco Inc., but it should have been ArcelorMittal Dofasco G.P. This correction has been officially documented to ensure accurate information in the public record.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. Department of Commerce needed to fix a mistake in a document about special taxes on certain steel from Canada. They got the name of a company wrong and corrected it to make sure everyone has the right information.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 8120
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    The U.S. Department of Commerce released a correction to a previous notice about the results of a 2022 review related to countervailing duties on wooden cabinets from China. The original notice, published on November 12, 2024, did not list the companies associated with The Ancientree Cabinet Co., Ltd. The correction clarifies that Jiangsu Hongjia Wood Co., Ltd., its Shanghai Branch, and Jiangsu Yunru Technology Industry Co., Ltd. are cross-owned with Ancientree. This update ensures accurate representation of the involved parties in the trade compliance document.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. Department of Commerce made a correction to a previous announcement about special taxes on wooden cabinets from China. They added names of some companies linked to Ancientree Cabinet Co., Ltd. to make sure everything is clear and correct.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:86 FR 3991
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    The Rural Business-Cooperative Service of the USDA released a correction to a previous notice about the Rural Energy for America Program. The original notice contained mistakes regarding the points given for the size of the funding request and for applicants who hadn’t received grants or loan commitments in the past two years. The corrections specify that applicants who haven’t recently received funding can earn 5 extra points. Additionally, smaller grant requests can qualify for 10 extra points, with a total maximum score possible of 100 points for those applications.

    Simple Explanation

    The Rural Business-Cooperative Service made some changes to the rules for a program that helps people in the countryside get energy grants or loans. They fixed a mistake to let people earn more points if they ask for a smaller grant or haven't gotten money in the last two years, and now they can get up to 100 points.

  • Type:Proposed Rule
    Citation:86 FR 2615
    Reading Time:less than a minute

    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) made a correction to a proposed rule document related to emissions from solvent cleanup operations in Missouri. In the original document, which appeared on December 21, 2020, there was a date error. The DATES section on page 82995 incorrectly stated "January 20, 2021," which has been corrected to "January 21, 2021." This correction ensures that the intended timeline is accurately reflected.

    Simple Explanation

    The EPA noticed a tiny mistake in their paperwork about cleaning up certain air pollutants in Missouri, and they fixed it by changing a date from January 20 to January 21. This correction helps everyone know exactly when things are supposed to happen.

  • Type:Proposed Rule
    Citation:86 FR 10227
    Reading Time:about 6 minutes

    In this proposed rule, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) aims to correct a past error regarding emission limits related to regional haze in the United States Virgin Islands. Originally published in 2012, the rule did not include certain required limits in the Code of Federal Regulations. This update will incorporate those limits without changing any previous decisions or reopening past determinations. The EPA is inviting public comments on this correction for transparency, focusing solely on confirming the specific limits intended to have been included.

    Simple Explanation

    The EPA made a goof in a past rule about air pollution in the Virgin Islands by leaving out some important pollution limits they meant to include. Now, they're fixing the mistake and telling people exactly what limits should have been in there from the start.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:89 FR 101880
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) issued a correction to a final rule titled "Adoption of 2020 Core Based Statistical Area Standards," originally published in the Federal Register on December 6, 2024. The correction addresses errors in the numbering of paragraphs in the rule, specifically in Section 5.3001, where two instances of paragraph (e) and paragraph (f) were mistakenly numbered. The document redesignates these duplicate paragraphs to ensure the rule's accuracy and clarity. The correction takes effect on January 6, 2025.

    Simple Explanation

    The Department of Housing and Urban Development needed to fix a mistake in their rules for organizing cities, where some numbers got mixed up. They corrected it so everything is in the right order now, and this fix will start working next year.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 5606
    Reading Time:about 2 minutes

    This document is a correction to a final regulation initially published in the Federal Register on December 11, 2024, under Treasury Decision 10016. These regulations pertain to how taxable income or loss and foreign currency gain or loss are determined for a qualified business unit. The document corrects specific portions of the published regulation and makes amendments to parts of the tax code under sections 861, 985 through 989, and 1502. These corrections are effective starting January 17, 2025.

    Simple Explanation

    Imagine you have a special kind of piggy bank where you put money in different types of coins from all over the world. Sometimes the rules about how to count how much money is inside change a little bit. This document is about fixing a few mistakes in those rules so everything is clear and fair for counting those coins.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:86 FR 4967
    Reading Time:less than a minute

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has issued a correction to a previous notice about travel restrictions between the United States and Canada that was published on December 22, 2020, in the Federal Register. The correction involves changing the incorrect date "January 21, 2020," to the correct date "January 21, 2021." This change ensures the accuracy of the document regarding the continuation of temporary travel restrictions due to the ongoing coronavirus situation. If you need more details, you can contact Stephanie Watson at U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    Simple Explanation

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) made a small mistake in a note about limits on travel between the U.S. and Canada. They wrote the wrong year for when the rules continued and have fixed it to say "January 21, 2021," instead of "January 21, 2020."

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 7657
    Reading Time:about 4 minutes

    The U.S. Department of Commerce issued a correction to a previous notice regarding the less-than-fair-value investigation on ceramic abrasive grains from China. The error was a typographical mistake in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) subheadings related to the investigation's scope. The corrected HTSUS subheadings are listed, and the notice emphasizes that the written description of the merchandise is crucial. The investigation focuses on ceramic abrasive grains that include specific compounds and are classified under particular HTSUS subheadings.

    Simple Explanation

    The U.S. Department of Commerce noticed a small mistake in a list of special codes they use to classify items coming from China and fixed it, so everything is correct now for their review of ceramic sandpaper grains.

123 Next