16 CFR Part 1110 - CERTIFICATES OF COMPLIANCE
- § 1110.1 — Purpose and scope.
- § 1110.3 — Definitions.
- § 1110.5 — Acceptable certificates.
- § 1110.7 — Who must certify and provide a certificate.
- § 1110.9 — Form of certificate.
- § 1110.11 — Content of certificate.
- § 1110.13 — Availability of electronic certificate.
- § 1110.15 — Legal responsibility for certificate information.
Title 16 published on 2013-01-01
no entries appear in the Federal Register after this date.
This is a list of United States Code sections, Statutes at Large, Public Laws, and Presidential Documents, which provide rulemaking authority for this CFR Part.
This list is taken from the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules provided by GPO [Government Printing Office].
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Title 16 published on 2013-01-01
The following are ALL rules, proposed rules, and notices (chronologically) published in the Federal Register relating to 16 CFR 1110 after this date.
GPO FDSys XML | Text type regulations.gov FR Doc. 2013-11164 RIN CPSC Docket No. CPSC-2013-0017 CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION, 16 CFR Part 1110 Notice of proposed rulemaking. Written comments must be received by July 29, 2013. The United States Consumer Product Safety Commission (Commission, CPSC, or we) is issuing a proposed rule that would amend the existing regulation on certificates of compliance. The proposed amendment is intended to update the rule to clarify requirements in light of new regulations on testing and labeling pertaining to product certification, and component part testing. The proposed amendment would, among other things, use newly defined terms such as “finished product certificate” and “component part certificate”; require that regulated finished products that are privately labeled be certified by the private labeler for products manufactured in the United States; clarify requirements for the form, content, and availability of certificates of compliance; and require that importers of regulated finished products manufactured outside of the United States file the required certificate electronically with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at the time of filing the CBP entry or at the time of filing the entry and entry summary, if both are filed together.