80_FR_11040 80 FR 11001 - State Safety Oversight

80 FR 11001 - State Safety Oversight

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 39 (February 27, 2015)

Page Range11001-11030
FR Document2015-03841

This notice seeks public comment on proposed rules that would transform and strengthen State Safety Oversight (SSO) of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems. FTA will issue a final rule and response to comments following the close of the comment period. Once FTA issues a final rule, the agency will rescind its current regulations.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 39 (Friday, February 27, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 39 (Friday, February 27, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 11001-11030]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-03841]



[[Page 11001]]

Vol. 80

Friday,

No. 39

February 27, 2015

Part V





Department of Transportation





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





Federal Transit Administration





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





49 CFR Part 674





State Safety Oversight; Proposed Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 11002]]


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

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Transit Administration

49 CFR Part 674

[Docket No. FTA-2015-0003]
RIN 2132-AB19


State Safety Oversight

AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration (FTA), DOT.

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.

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

SUMMARY: This notice seeks public comment on proposed rules that would 
transform and strengthen State Safety Oversight (SSO) of rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems. FTA will issue a final rule and 
response to comments following the close of the comment period. Once 
FTA issues a final rule, the agency will rescind its current 
regulations.

DATES: Comments must be received by April 28, 2015.

ADDRESSES: Please submit your comments by only one of the following 
methods:
     Online: Use the Federal eRulemaking portal at http://www.regulations.gov and follow the instructions for submitting 
comments.
     U.S. Mail: Send your comments to the Docket Management 
Facility, U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue 
SE., W12-140, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
     Hand Delivery or Courier: Go to Room W12-140 on the ground 
floor of the West Building, U.S. Department of Transportation 
headquarters, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. 
Eastern time, Monday through Friday except Federal holidays.
     Telefax: Send your comments to 202-493-2251.
    Instructions: All comments must include the docket number for this 
rulemaking: FTA-2015-0003. Submit two copies of your comments if you 
submit them by mail. For confirmation that FTA received your comments, 
include a self-addressed, stamped postcard. All comments received will 
be posted without change to www.regulations.gov, including any personal 
information provided. Please see the Privacy Act heading under 
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below, for Privacy Act information pertinent 
to any submitted comments or materials, and you may review DOT's 
complete Privacy Act Statement published in the Federal Register on 
April 11, 2000, at 65 FR 19477.
    Docket Access: For access to background documents and comments 
received in the rulemaking docket, go to www.regulations.gov or to the 
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room 
W12-140, Washington, DC 20590 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday 
through Friday except Federal holidays.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For program matters, Lynn Spencer, 
Director, FTA Office of System Safety, telephone 202-366-5112 or 
[email protected]; For legal matters, Richard Wong, FTA Office of 
Chief Counsel, telephone 202-366-0675 or [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Executive Summary

    This rulemaking would replace the regulations for State Safety 
Oversight (SSO) of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems in 
place for the past twenty years, and significantly strengthen the 
program to prevent and mitigate accidents and incidents on those 
systems. In the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-
21; Pub. L. 112-141, July 6, 2012), Congress directed FTA to establish 
a comprehensive Public Transportation Safety Program (codified at 49 
U.S.C. 5329), one element of which is the State Safety Oversight 
program. The purpose of today's NPRM is to carry out the several 
explicit statutory mandates to strengthen the States' oversight of the 
safety of their rail transit systems, and ensure that the States' 
regulatory agencies have the necessary enforcement authority and 
financial and human resources for that purpose.
    In the legislative history of MAP-21, Congress took note of several 
critical weaknesses in the State Safety Oversight program, including:
     Lack of adequate and consistent safety practices across 
rail transit systems
     Lack of regulatory, oversight, and enforcement authority
     Limited SSO program funding, staff, training, and other 
resources
     Lack of SSO financial and legal independence from the rail 
transit agencies they oversee.
    See generally, Sen. Rpt. 111-232 (July 26, 2010).
    Today's NPRM is the critical first step in meeting the MAP-21 
requirements for State Safety Oversight of rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems now set forth at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). Once FTA 
issues a final rule for State Safety Oversight, to be codified at 49 
CFR part 674, the agency will rescind the current regulations at 49 CFR 
part 659.

Legal Authority

    Section 20021 of MAP-21 amended 49 U.S.C. 5329 by adding several 
new provisions that required FTA to establish a comprehensive public 
transportation safety program, the elements of which include a National 
Public Transportation Safety Plan; a training and certification program 
for Federal, state, and local transportation agency employees with 
safety responsibilities; public transportation agency safety plans; and 
a strengthened State Safety Oversight Program, consisting of elements 
at both the state and rail transit agency level.

Summary of Key Provisions

    The NPRM proposes to make the following changes to strengthen the 
existing SSO program:
     States would assume greater responsibility for overseeing 
the safety of their rail fixed guideway systems.
     FTA would review and approve each state's SSO program, 
including certifying whether states are meeting the statutory criteria 
and withholding funds from those states that do not.
     FTA would impose financial penalties on those states with 
non-existent or non-compliant safety oversight programs.

Costs and Benefits

    As discussed in greater detail below, FTA conducted a task-by-task 
analysis to assess recurring and non-recurring costs for the proposed 
regulations to SSOs and rail transit agencies against the recurring 
costs for the current SSO regulations. Compared to current spending 
levels of State Safety Oversight activities, the proposed rule would 
require an incremental $9.5 million per year on the part of SSOAs and 
$13.1 million for rail transit agencies, compared to current spending 
levels. FTA is providing approximately $22 million in grant funds each 
year to the States to off-set this NPRM's annual costs, meaning that 
this rulemaking is revenue neutral between the Federal government and 
the States. FTA also provides funding that rail transit agencies may 
use for these purposes, but is unable to provide an estimate of how 
much FTA funds will be used here. FTA conducted a breakeven analysis in 
order to determine what amount of the quantified benefits would need to 
accrue to outweigh the costs for this rulemaking and the Transit Agency 
Safety Plan by looking at, primarily, the safety events reported to FTA 
and, in a more conservative analysis, only the 5 NTSB-investigated 
accidents since 2004 that were related to inadequate safety oversight 
programs.

[[Page 11003]]

Background

    The Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (``MAP-21''; 
Pub. L. 112-141), authorizes a comprehensive Public Transportation 
Safety Program at 49 U.S.C. 5329. Four key components of the program 
are the National Public Transportation Safety Plan, authorized by 
Section 5329(b); the Public Transportation Safety Certification 
Training Program, authorized by Section 5329(c); the Public 
Transportation Agency Safety Plans, required by Section 5329(d); and 
the State Safety Oversight Program, authorized by Section 5329(e). FTA 
will issue rules to carry out all of these plans and programs under the 
rulemaking authority of 49 U.S.C. 5329(f)(7).
    On October 3, 2013, FTA issued an Advance Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking (ANPRM) for the National Public Transportation Safety Plan 
(``National Plan''), the Public Transportation Safety Certification 
Training Program (``Certification Training Program''), and the Public 
Transportation Agency Safety Plans (``Transit Agency Safety Plans''). 
78 FR 61251-73. On April 30, 2014, FTA proposed interim provisions for 
a Safety Certification Training Program, as authorized by 49 U.S.C. 
5329(c)(2). 79 FR 24363. In today's Federal Register, FTA is issuing 
final interim certification safety training program provisions. FTA is 
now reviewing the comments on the ANPRM for the National Plan, 
Certification Training Program, and Transit Agency Safety Plans. In the 
near future, FTA expects to issue an NPRM for the National Plan, 
Certification Training Program, and Transit Agency Safety Plans.
    Earlier, on May 13, 2013, the Federal Transit Administrator issued 
a Dear Colleague letter to the public transportation industry 
announcing the agency's intention to adopt the framework and principles 
of Safety Management Systems (SMS) as the basis for all rulemakings and 
other initiatives FTA will undertake to improve the safety of public 
transportation. Both the Dear Colleague letter and a set of frequently 
asked questions about SMS are available on FTA's Web site at http://www.fta.dot.gov/tso_15177.html.
    This NPRM pertains only to the State Safety Oversight (SSO) Program 
authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). The rulemaking for the SSO Program 
differs from the other rulemakings under the Public Transportation 
Safety Program in that it will replace a set of regulations that have 
been in place since 1995, codified at 49 CFR part 659. The SSO 
regulations pertain only to a limited portion of the public 
transportation industry--the recipients of Federal funds under 49 
U.S.C. Chapter 53 that operate rail fixed guideway transit systems not 
subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad Administration 
(FRA), the States in which those rail systems lie, and the State Safety 
Oversight Agencies (SSOAs) required to oversee the safety of those rail 
systems. Conversely, the rulemakings for the National Plan, the Transit 
Agency Safety Plans, and the Safety Certification Training Program all 
arise under the authority of MAP-21, which took effect on October 1, 
2012; these rulemakings will apply to all modes of public 
transportation, both rail and rubber tire; and they will apply to the 
manufacturers of public transportation vehicles, as well as the 
operators of public transportation.
    To provide some context for this NPRM, the following is a brief 
history of FTA's State Safety Oversight Program.

History of State Safety Oversight

    FTA's predecessor agency, the Urban Mass Transportation 
Administration (UMTA), originated under the Urban Mass Transportation 
Act (UMT Act) of 1964--a Great Society initiative under the Kennedy and 
Johnson Administrations, designed to assist state and local governments 
in financing urban mass transportation systems ``to be operated by 
public or private mass transportation companies as determined by local 
needs.'' (Pub. L. 88-365; quoting Section 2(b)(3) of the UMT Act, 49 
U.S.C. app. 1602(b)(3)). UMTA's mission, at that time, was strictly 
limited to providing Federal financial assistance to develop and 
maintain municipal transit systems. UMTA had no regulatory authority 
whatsoever over any of its grant recipients. Deliberately, the Congress 
chose not to give UMTA any ability to establish national standards for 
safety in urban mass transportation. See, e.g., Amalgamated Transit 
Union v. Skinner, 894 F.2d 1362, 1364 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
    Several years thereafter, following a series of troubling accidents 
in the rail transit industry, Congress recognized a need to provide 
UMTA with a limited authority to investigate accidents and hazardous 
conditions in urban mass transportation. Specifically, in Section 107 
of the National Mass Transportation Assistance Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-
503), Congress instructed the agency to ``investigate unsafe conditions 
in any facility, equipment, or manner of operation financed under this 
Act which the Secretary believes creates a serious hazard of death or 
injury.'' The statute further directed UMTA to determine the nature and 
extent of hazardous conditions on transit systems; determine the means 
that might best correct or eliminate those hazardous conditions; and 
compel a grant recipient to submit a plan for correcting or eliminating 
those hazardous conditions. Eight years later, however, in the Surface 
Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, the Congress weakened this 
investigatory authority by repealing Section 107 of the National Mass 
Transportation Assistance Act of 1974; moving the authority to Section 
22 of the UMT Act; and amending the statute to make the authority 
discretionary--not mandatory--striking the word ``shall'' and inserting 
the word ``may.''
    This very limited Federal authority for safety did not prove 
satisfactory, in the view of the National Transportation Safety Board 
(NTSB or ``Board''). In August 1991, after a number of accidents in the 
industry--including very serious accidents on rapid rail systems in 
Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York City--the Board published a study 
titled ``Oversight of Rail Rapid Transit Safety'' (NTSB/SS-91/02) in 
which it urged all States to develop or revise safety programs to 
ensure comprehensive and effective oversight over rapid rail systems in 
their jurisdictions. The NTSB suggested that States have primary 
authority for oversight of rail transit safety, but it urged UMTA to 
evaluate the effectiveness of States' oversight of rail transit, 
develop guidelines, and require States and transit operators to use 
their UMTA grant funds to improve the safety of rail transit systems. 
Also, the NTSB implored UMTA to withhold its Federal financial 
assistance as necessary pending corrective action by the States and 
transit operators.
    Very shortly thereafter, in response to the NTSB recommendations, 
the Congress created a State Safety Oversight program for rail fixed 
guideway transit safety in Section 3029 of the Intermodal Surface 
Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA), enacted in December 1991 (Pub. 
L. 102-240). Among the many fundamental changes ISTEA made to the 
Federal-aid programs for highways and public transportation, ISTEA 
renamed UMTA as the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), and directed 
FTA to compel States with rail transit systems within their borders not 
otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad 
Administration (FRA) (e.g., commuter rail systems, or light rail 
systems connecting to the ``general railroad system'' of the United 
States, as

[[Page 11004]]

described in 49 CFR part 209 Appendix A) to establish and carry out 
safety program plans for each of those rail transit systems. The 
statute directed that the safety program plans include, at minimum, 
core requirements for safety, lines of authority, levels of 
responsibility, and methods of documentation for those subjects. 
Further, Section 3029 of ISTEA vested FTA with explicit authority to 
withhold funding from any State that did not comply with the statutory 
mandates, and directed FTA to promulgate rules for that purpose. In 
enacting Section 3029, the Congress agreed with NTSB that the States, 
not FTA, should be the principal oversight authorities for rail transit 
within their jurisdictions, given that public transportation is an 
inherently local activity that, with few exceptions, did not cross 
state boundaries. Notably, this new authority for FTA, initially 
codified at Section 28 of the Federal Transit Act, later re-codified at 
49 U.S.C. 5330, made no provision for oversight of bus operations--
perhaps because the 1991 NTSB report had focused on rail transit.
    The First Rulemaking: To meet the ISTEA directives, FTA issued an 
Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for State Safety Oversight on 
June 25, 1992, at 57 FR 28572-5, followed by a Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking (NPRM) on December 9, 1993, at 58 FR 64856-69. On December 
27, 1995, FTA promulgated a final rule for State Safety Oversight at 60 
FR 67034-48. In short, the final rule obliged every State with a rail 
transit system not subject to the jurisdiction of FRA to establish an 
oversight agency, and obliged that oversight agency to develop a 
``system safety program standard'' that, at a minimum, adopted the 
uniform guidelines for rail transit systems set by the Manual for the 
Development of Rail System Safety Program Plans, published by the 
American Public Transit Association (APTA). These ``APTA Guidelines'' 
were incorporated by reference into the final rule. Also, the final 
rule obliged the State oversight agencies to review safety audit 
reports from the rail systems, conduct on-site safety reviews at least 
once every three years, investigate accidents and ``unacceptable 
hazardous conditions'' as reported by the rail transit systems, approve 
``corrective action plans'' submitted by the rail transit systems, make 
annual reports to FTA summarizing its oversight activities for the 
preceding twelve months, and make periodic reports to FTA summarizing 
accidents, hazardous conditions, and corrective action plans. The 
effective date of the final rule was deferred to January 1, 1997, to 
give States an opportunity to enact state statutes and regulations to 
carry out the ISTEA mandates.
    The FTA SSO rule and the APTA Guidelines were widely accepted as 
the baseline for State oversight of the safety of rail transit until 
the summer of 2001. In June and August of that year, there were two 
collisions of rapid rail trains on the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) 
system--both investigated by the NTSB--which called into question the 
effectiveness of the rule and the guidelines. In its Special 
Investigation Report issued in September 2002 (NTSB/SIR-02/01), the 
Board determined the probable cause of both accidents to have been the 
train operators' failure to comply with operating rules designed to 
prevent those types of collisions, and the failure of CTA management to 
exercise adequate oversight of the operational safety of its rapid rail 
system. Additionally, however, the Board identified several weaknesses 
in FTA's SSO program, and noted, specifically, that a previous audit of 
CTA by APTA had not identified any deficiencies in CTA's adherence to 
APTA's ``System Safety Checklist''--a procedure that used only record 
reviews and supplemental spot checks to gauge whether operating rules 
were being followed, and which provided little guidance on what rules a 
compliance program should entail or how those rules should be carried 
out. Thus, the NTSB concluded that the APTA Guidelines were not 
sufficiently specific for making assessments of the effectiveness of 
rail transit operators' safety programs, nor were the Guidelines an 
effective tool for State oversight of rail transit safety. The NTSB 
called on APTA to revise its manual to provide explicit guidance to the 
industry on auditing the effectiveness of rail transit safety 
compliance programs, and for FTA to amend its SSO regulations at 49 CFR 
part 659, accordingly.
    The Second Rulemaking: In response to the 2002 NTSB report on the 
CTA accidents, on March 9, 2004, FTA published an NPRM at 69 FR 11218-
32 intended to strengthen the SSO regulations. Specifically, FTA 
proposed to remove the incorporation by reference of the APTA 
Guidelines from 49 CFR part 659, and in lieu thereof, establish a set 
of enhanced, performance-based measures for the rail transit industry, 
including, notably, a rule making hazard identification and resolution 
a performance-based procedure, as opposed to the previous practice of 
allowing a rail transit operator or an SSOA to subjectively determine 
and address an ``unacceptable hazardous condition.'' FTA issued a final 
rule on April 29, 2005, at 70 FR 22562-83, which is the rule still in 
place today. In the final rule, FTA chose to include a good many of the 
APTA Guidelines as regulatory standards. Further, the final rule 
clarified the roles and responsibilities of States and their SSOAs; set 
a new definition of ``hazard,'' and requirements for hazard management 
plans; revised the requirements for SSOAs to conduct investigations; 
and fleshed out the minimum standards for system safety program plans, 
accident notification, and corrective action plans.
    Notwithstanding the amendments to the SSO regulations in the 2005 
rulemaking, the regulations were criticized for their lack of rigor, 
and the States' SSO programs were criticized for lack of authority, 
resources, and expertise. Most notably, in July 2006, the U.S. 
Government Accountability Office (GAO) criticized the regulations and 
identified some fundamental weaknesses in SSOAs in a report titled 
``Rail Transit: Additional Federal Leadership Would Enhance FTA's State 
Safety Oversight Program,'' http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-821. The 
GAO report found that the staffing levels and expertise varied greatly 
across the SSOAs, and that by their own admission, many of the SSOAs 
lacked enough qualified staff and adequate levels of training to meet 
their responsibilities--some of them employing as few as 0.1 or 0.2 
full-time equivalent positions for dedicated rail transit safety 
oversight--and for many of them, the lack of funding was a serious 
impediment. The GAO noted that the SSO regulations provided no 
enforcement power to the SSOAs, and very little enforcement power to 
FTA, with only the option of withholding up to five percent of a rail 
transit system's urbanized area formula funding if FTA were to find a 
State not in compliance with the SSO regulations. Additionally, the GAO 
report faulted FTA for having failed to set goals and performance 
measures for State Safety Oversight, and having failed to audit SSOAs 
as often as originally planned. GAO urged FTA to set both short- and 
long-term goals for State Safety Oversight, with measures of progress 
toward each of those goals. Further, the GAO recommended that FTA audit 
each of the SSOAs at least once every three years, and develop an 
appropriate training curriculum for SSOAs that would include courses on

[[Page 11005]]

how to conduct oversight of rail transit systems.
    Legislation Leading to Enactment of State Safety Oversight 
Authority in MAP-21: Not long after the GAO's criticisms, the rail 
transit industry suffered a string of fatal accidents and accidents 
with multiple personal injuries. On November 30, 2006, a Washington 
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) Blue Line train struck and 
killed two employees inspecting rapid rail track in Alexandria, 
Virginia. On January 7, 2007, a WMATA Green Line train derailed near 
the Mt. Vernon station in Washington, DC, injuring 23 people and 
causing $3.8 million in damage. On May 28, 2008, two Massachusetts Bay 
Transportation Authority (MBTA) light rail trains collided with one 
another on the Green Line in Newton, Massachusetts--a suburb of 
Boston--killing the driver of the second train, injuring eight people, 
and causing $8 million in damage. On May 8, 2009, the MBTA suffered 
another accident on its Green Line light rail system in which one train 
rear-ended another in the tunnel near the Government Center station in 
downtown Boston; 68 people were injured, with more than $9 million in 
damage. On June 22, 2009, two WMATA rapid rail trains collided with one 
another near the Fort Totten station on the Red Line, killing the 
driver of the second train and eight passengers, injuring another 52 
passengers, and causing $12 million in damage. On July 18, 2009, two 
Municipal Transportation Agency light rail trains collided with one 
another at the West Portal station in San Francisco, injuring the 
drivers of both trains and 46 people and causing $4.5 million in 
damage. And in August and September, 2009, two WMATA maintenance 
employees lost their lives while working on the rapid rail system; one 
was struck by a maintenance vehicle on the Orange Line, the other by a 
train on the Blue Line.
    In conducting its several investigations, the NTSB found a variety 
of probable causes for these accidents. Among them, equipment 
malfunctions; equipment in poor or marginal condition, including 
equipment that can pose particular risks to safety, such as signal 
systems; lack of vehicle crashworthiness; and employee error, such as 
inattentiveness, or failure to follow a rail transit system's operating 
procedure. In the instance of WMATA, the NTSB found the lack of a 
strong safety culture to be a contributing factor. Also, the NTSB found 
a lack of adequate oversight both by the rail transit systems' State 
Safety Oversight Agencies, and FTA.
    In July 2009--one month after the WMATA Red Line accident near the 
Fort Totten station--Senators and Representatives from the Maryland and 
Virginia delegations introduced the National Metro Safety Act in both 
houses of Congress (H.R. 3338, S 1506, 111th Cong. (2009)). The bills 
would have required FTA to establish national minimum safety standards 
for transit systems, including several particular standards recommended 
by the NTSB pertaining to event recorders, emergency access and egress, 
crashworthiness of vehicles, and employee hours of service. Neither 
bill was reported out of committee. In December 2009, on behalf of the 
President, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and Federal Transit 
Administrator Peter Rogoff formally submitted a legislative proposal to 
the Congress that contemplated a more comprehensive approach to safety 
in public transportation. In testimony before both the House Committee 
on Transportation and Infrastructure and the Senate Committee on 
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, the Secretary and the 
Administrator presented the details of this proposal, which, 
ultimately, were introduced in both houses in February 2010 as the 
Public Transportation Safety Program Act of 2010 (H.R. 4643, S 3105, 
111th Cong. (2010)). Citing the warning signs of increasing collisions, 
derailments, and casualties, the Secretary and the Administrator 
emphasized that rail transit always carries the potential for 
catastrophic accident and damage--notwithstanding its record of being a 
very safe means of travel--and that the State Safety Oversight program, 
as it currently exists, suffered from a number of fundamental 
weaknesses:
     Under the existing SSO framework, each rail transit system 
was free to determine its own safety practices. An SSOA would simply 
review those practices and report the progress of any corrective 
actions.
     Each SSOA had only so much regulatory, oversight, and 
enforcement authority as had been given by the State government. In 
many instances, the SSOA lacked authority to enforce any standards or 
compel compliance by the rail transit systems it oversaw.
     Many States viewed the SSO program as an unfunded mandate. 
Thus, many States devoted insufficient resources to the program, which 
compromised the abilities of SSOAs to recruit staff, provide adequate 
training to their staff, and develop their own expertise.
     In many instances, an SSOA was dependent upon financial 
resources from the same entities it was obliged to oversee--the rail 
transit systems--thus creating a conflict of interest.
    In pertinent part, the Administration's bill would have required 
FTA to develop uniform, national standards for rail transit safety; 
given FTA authority to inspect rail transit systems for compliance with 
those standards; established a certification program for State Safety 
Oversight; authorized grants of 100 percent Federal funding for SSO 
programs, once certified; and required the SSO programs to be 
financially independent from the rail transit systems. Further, the 
Administration's bill would have given States the option to decline 
participation in the SSO program, without penalty, in which instance, 
FTA would have been required to perform the oversight function. Also, 
the Administration's bill would have given FTA authority to issue civil 
or criminal penalties for noncompliance. See generally, Examining the 
Federal Role in Overseeing the Safety of Public Transportation Systems: 
Hearing Before the Subcomm. On Hous., Transp. & Cmty. Dev. of the S. 
Comm. On Banking, Hous. & Urban Affairs, 111th Cong. 89-97 (2009).
    Both the House and Senate versions of the Administration's bill 
were referred to committees. In July 2010, the Senate committee on 
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs reported a bill sponsored by the 
chairman of the committee, Senator Dodd, titled the Public 
Transportation Safety Act of 2010 (S 3638, 111th Cong. (2010)), which 
laid the foundation for the State Safety Oversight provisions 
eventually enacted under MAP-21. The Senate Banking bill embraced most 
of the fundamental precepts of the Administration's legislative 
proposal, but it differed from the Administration's bill in that it did 
not allow a State to decline participation in the SSO program; the 
grants of Federal funds for an SSO program would require a 20 percent 
match; and States could be allowed as much as three years, after the 
effective date of a final rule, to develop an SSO program adequate for 
certification--after which, in the event of an inadequate SSO program, 
FTA would be authorized to withhold all Federal grant funds from all 
public transportation operators in that State, not just the rail 
transit systems. See generally, the Senate Banking committee report 
accompanying the Senate bill (S. Rept. 111-232; (2010)). The 111th 
Congress adjourned before the Senate could act on the Senate Banking 
bill, and the House did not consider any similar bill.

[[Page 11006]]

    In the 112th Congress, the Senate Banking committee re-introduced 
its Public Transportation Safety Act of 2010, which became Section 
20021 of the larger bill for reauthorization of surface 
transportation--the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act 
(S 1813, 112th Cong. (2012), ``MAP-21''), shepherded by the Senate 
Committee on Environment and Public Works--that passed the Senate on 
March 14, 2012. The House bill for reauthorization of surface 
transportation--the American Energy and Infrastructure Jobs Act of 2012 
(H.R. 7, 112th Cong. (2012))--had nothing comparable to the Senate bill 
insofar as State Safety Oversight of rail transit systems. Ultimately, 
the conferees from the House and Senate chose to adopt Section 20021 of 
the Senate bill, with some amendments, and the title of the Senate 
bill, ``MAP-21,'' as the title of the legislation that the president 
signed on July 6, 2012 (Pub. L. 112-141).

The New Statute and Today's Proposed Rulemaking

    As noted, MAP-21 authorizes a comprehensive Public Transportation 
Safety Program, now codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329. As part of this 
comprehensive program, new Section 5329(e) significantly revises the 
existing SSO program, creating a program that is more demanding of the 
States and their SSO programs, and FTA, as well, in several ways. 
First, with respect to the States, the statute requires them to submit 
their SSO programs to FTA for its approval. In order to gain this 
approval, the States must assume responsibility for overseeing the 
safety of their rail fixed guideway public transportation systems, 
adopt and enforce Federal and relevant State safety laws, determine 
appropriate staffing levels for their SSOAs, and ensure proper training 
and certification of their safety oversight personnel. The organization 
designated as an SSOA must be financially and legally independent of 
the rail transit systems they oversee, i.e., an SSOA cannot be 
reimbursed for its expenses by the rail transit agencies they oversee, 
nor can the SSOA be the same agency that operates a rail transit 
agency. An SSOA may not employ any individual who is also responsible 
for the administration of rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems that are subject to the State's oversight. An SSOA must have 
investigative and enforcement authority under State law, must audit at 
least triennially the compliance of the rail transit systems under its 
oversight, and provide at least annually a status report to FTA, the 
Governor of the State, and the board of directors of the rail transit 
system. FTA is then obliged to submit an annual evaluation of the State 
Safety Oversight programs to the Congress.
    MAP-21 also made considerable changes regarding FTA's role in the 
SSO program. As mentioned previously, FTA must now approve each State's 
SSO program. In addition, FTA must establish a grant program to help 
the States develop and carry out their SSO functions, and to obtain the 
necessary training and certification for their SSOA staff. FTA must 
certify whether the States are meeting the statutory requirements, deny 
certification to those that are not, and FTA can withhold Federal funds 
until an SSO program can be certified. Congress provided FTA with 
additional authority to conduct inspections, investigations, audits, 
and examinations; test the equipment, facilities, rolling stock, and 
operations of rail transit systems; make reports and issue directives 
with respect to safety; issue subpoenas and take depositions from any 
employee of a rail transit system who is responsible for safety; 
require production of documents; and issue regulations for State Safety 
Oversight through public notice and comment.
    On February 6, 2013, the Federal Transit Administrator issued a 
Dear Colleague letter to the States and the public transportation 
industry, outlining the steps that each State must take to develop an 
SSO program and establish an SSOA in compliance with Section 5329. This 
letter is available on FTA's Web site at http://www.fta.dot.gov/tso.html On May 13, 2013, FTA published for public comment an 
illustrative apportionment of the SSO grant funds available to eligible 
States in Federal Fiscal Year 2013, at 78 FR 28014-8. On or before 
October 1, 2013, the Administrator notified each State, individually, 
of his decision whether to issue a certification for that State's SSO 
program, in accordance with the statutory deadline set by 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(7). On March 10, 2014, FTA announced the final apportionment of 
FY 2013 and FY 2014 grant funds for SSO programs, at 79 FR 13380. On 
February, 9, 2015, FTA published the apportionment for FY 2015 grant 
funds for SSO programs, at 80 FR 7254.
    Today's NPRM is a critical step in transforming and strengthening 
the regulatory framework for State Safety Oversight of rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems. Once FTA issues a final rule 
for State Safety Oversight, the agency will rescind the current 
regulations at 49 CFR part 659. The following is a section-by-section 
analysis of the proposed rule in today's rulemaking:

Section-by-Section Analysis

Section 674.1 Purpose

    This section explains that the purpose of these regulations is to 
carry out the mandate of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) for States to perform 
oversight of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems within 
their jurisdictions. This section differs only slightly in wording from 
the current rule at 49 CFR 659.1.

Section 674.3 Applicability

    This section explains that these regulations apply to States with 
rail fixed guideway public transportation systems, the SSOAs that 
oversee the safety of those systems, and entities that own or operate 
rail fixed guideway public transportation systems with Federal 
financial assistance from FTA. The first two sentences of this section 
are similar in wording to the current rule at 49 CFR 659.3, titled 
``Scope.''

Section 674.5 Policy

    This section identifies three separate, explicit policies that 
underlie these regulations: First, FTA is using the principles and 
methods of Safety Management Systems (SMS) as the basis for these 
regulations and all other regulations and policies FTA will issue under 
the authority of 49 U.S.C. 5329. Second, the primary responsibility for 
overseeing the safety of rail transit systems lies with the States--and 
a State's SSOA must have sufficient authority and resources to oversee 
the number, size, and complexity of rail transit systems that operate 
within that State. Third, FTA is obliged to make Federal funds 
available to eligible States to help them develop and carry out their 
SSO programs--and certify whether those SSO programs are adequate to 
promote the purposes of the public transportation safety programs under 
49 U.S.C. 5329. The current rule at 49 CFR part 659 does not include a 
statement of policy.

Section 674.7 Definitions

    This section sets forth a number of definitions for terms used 
repeatedly throughout the State Safety Oversight program and the other 
safety programs authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329. Some of these defined 
terms are the same as set forth in the current regulations at 49 CFR 
part 659, but the wording of the definitions has been changed, in 
today's proposed rulemaking, for sake of clarity; readers should refer, 
specifically, to the definitions of ``contractor,'' ``corrective action 
plan,'' ``hazard,'' ``individual,'' ``investigation,'' ``passenger,'' 
``rail fixed

[[Page 11007]]

guideway public transportation system'' and ``rail transit agency.'' A 
few of the definitions remain the same as stated in the current 
regulations, or as stated in other FTA regulations; we refer, 
specifically, to the definitions of ``Administrator,'' ``FRA,'' 
``FTA,'' and ``State.''
    There are new definitions, however, for the terms ``National Public 
Transportation Safety Plan,'' ``Public Transportation Safety 
Certification Training Program,'' ``Public Transportation Agency Safety 
Plan,'' ``State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA)'', and ``State Safety 
Oversight Program (SSOP),'' all of which are strictly consistent with 
the use of those terms in the statutes. And there are new, common-sense 
definitions for the terms ``Transit Agency Safety Plan,'' and 
``vehicle.'' ``Transit Agency Safety Plan'' is a shorthand reference to 
the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan; and ``vehicle'' means any 
rolling stock used on a rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system, including but not limited to passenger and maintenance 
vehicles.
    We have also included definitions for the terms ``accident,'' 
``event,'' ``incident,'' and ``occurrence.'' We propose amending the 
definition for ``accident'' as it relates to injuries. In 49 CFR 
659.33, the definition includes, ``injuries requiring immediate medical 
attention away from the scene for two or more individuals.'' We propose 
changing that to ``one or more persons suffers a serious injury,'' and 
we propose adding the NTSB definition of ``serious injury'' found in 49 
CFR 830.2: ``any injury which: (1) Requires hospitalization for more 
than 48 hours, commencing within 7 days from the date of the injury was 
received; (2) results in a fracture of any bone (except simple 
fractures of fingers, toes, or nose); (3) causes severe hemorrhages, 
nerve, muscle, or tendon damage; (4) involves any internal organ; or 
(5) involves second- or third-degree burns, or any burns affecting more 
than 5 percent of the body surface.'' FTA seeks comment on this change. 
The term ``event'' is defined as any accident, incident, or occurrence. 
As stated in our January 28, 2015, Federal Register notice on updates 
to the National Transit Database (NTD) safety information collection, 
we added the term ``event'' in order to cover all planned and unplanned 
events that are required to be reported to the NTD. The purpose of the 
change is to provide better alignment with nomenclature used in other 
transportation modes, and to provide clarity during data analysis 
conducted to identify safety trends. An ``incident'' is an event that 
exceeds the definition of ``occurrence,'' but does not meet the 
definition of ``accident.'' Examples include but are not limited to 
near misses, close calls, railyard derailments, non-serious injuries, 
and violations of safety standards. An occurrence is an event with no 
injuries, or where damage occurs to property or equipment but does not 
affect transit operations. FTA seeks comment on these definitions. In 
particular, FTA seeks comment on whether we should include definitions 
for ``close call'' and ``near miss'' in the final rule.
    Additionally, there are a number of new definitions in today's 
proposed rulemaking that are based on the principles and methods of 
Safety Management Systems (SMS). Readers should refer, specifically, to 
the terms ``accountable executive,'' ``risk,'' ``risk control,'' 
``safety assurance,'' ``Safety Management System,'' ``safety policy,'' 
``safety promotion,'' and ``safety risk management.'' In the years 
since the rules at 49 CFR part 659 were first issued in 1995, SMS has 
emerged as the best practice for enhancing safety in all modes of 
transportation, and the Secretary of Transportation instructed each of 
the Department's operating administrations to develop rules, plans, and 
programs to apply SMS to their grant recipients and regulated 
communities. See, http://www.fedeval.net/docs/2012Coplen_1.pdf. In 
brief, SMS is a formal, top-down, organization-wide approach to 
managing risks and assuring the effectiveness of risk controls. An SMS 
establishes lines of safety accountability throughout an organization, 
starting at the executive management level, and provides a structure to 
support a sound safety culture. SMS is not a one-size-fits-all 
approach, however. SMS is flexible, and can be scaled to the mode, 
size, and complexity of any transit operator, in any environment--
urban, suburban, or rural. As mentioned, both the Administrator's May 
13, 2013, Dear Colleague letter and a set of frequently asked questions 
about SMS are available on FTA's Web site at http://www.fta.dot.gov/tso_15177.html. Also, as explained below, the Appendix to these 
proposed rules, titled ``Safety Management Systems Framework,'' will 
give the reader a basic understanding of SMS.
    Many of the definitions for applying the principles and methods of 
SMS in proposed section 674.7 are very similar to those set forth in a 
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and a Final Rule on SMS by FTA's sister 
agency, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The NPRM, issued on 
October 7, 2010, at 75 FR 62008, titled ``Safety Management Systems for 
Certified Airports,'' proposes to apply the principles and methods of 
SMS to airports that hold certificates in accordance with 14 CFR part 
139. A Final Rule, issued on January 8, 2015, at 80 FR 1308, titled 
``Safety Management Systems for Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental 
Operations Certificate Holders,'' applies the principles and methods of 
SMS to domestic, international flag, and supplemental operations air 
carriers that hold certificates in accordance with 14 CFR part 121. FTA 
also anticipates that it will be incorporating many if not all of these 
same definitions for applying SMS to public transportation in its 
future rulemakings for the National Public Transportation Safety Plan, 
the Public Transportation Safety Certification Training Program, and 
the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans.

Section 674.9 Transition From Previous Requirements for State Safety 
Oversight

    In framing the provisions of MAP-21 for a much stronger State 
Safety Oversight program--and much higher expectations of the States 
and their SSOAs--the Congress recognized that the States and the rail 
transit systems they oversee would need a period of transition. Also, 
the Congress recognized that FTA would need time to conduct rulemakings 
through public notice and comment. Thus, MAP-21 Section 20030(e) 
provides that the previous authorization statute for State Safety 
Oversight, 49 U.S.C. 5330, will remain in effect for three years after 
FTA promulgates a final rule under the authority of the new 
authorization statute for State Safety Oversight, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). 
Although nothing in this rulemaking precludes a State from immediately 
establishing an oversight agency that fully complies with MAP-21's 
requirements, Congress recognized that many States would need time to 
enact enabling legislation during the transition from the current 
program to a MAP-21 compliant program, particularly in States where the 
legislature meets only part-time or biennially. This section in today's 
proposed rulemaking recognizes that transition. (See, specifically, 
proposed 49 CFR 674.9(a) in today's NPRM.) Also, this section states 
that the current SSO regulations at 49 CFR part 659 will be rescinded 
upon the effective date of a final rule under the new authorization 
statute, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e).

[[Page 11008]]

Section 674.11 State Safety Oversight Program

    Readers should please be mindful of the differences between a State 
Safety Oversight Program (SSOP) and the State Safety Oversight Agency 
(SSOA) that carries out an SSOP. In essence, an SSOA is a State agency 
that is obliged to interpret, administer, and enforce the State 
statutes enacted by a State legislature and the State regulations and 
program standards developed by a Governor and his or her designees in 
the executive branch of State government. An SSOP is the collection of 
law, rules, and administrative standards that define the minimum 
requirements for safety of rail public transportation in the State; the 
financial, physical, and human resources necessary to establish and 
maintain the SSOA; and the system of checks and balances, within State 
government, that holds an SSOA accountable for its actions.
    In enacting MAP-21, the Congress very carefully spelled out the 
different missions and functions of an SSOP and an SSOA. The missions 
and functions of an SSOP are specified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3). The 
missions and functions of an SSOA are specified at 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(4). In today's rulemaking, proposed section 674.11 states the 
missions and functions of an SSOP, and proposed section 674.13 states 
the missions and functions of an SSOA, as directed by the statutes. 
Most importantly, in an SSOP, a State must do the following: A State 
must explicitly assume responsibility for overseeing the safety of rail 
transit systems within its borders. A State must adopt and enforce 
Federal and relevant State law for that purpose. Not only must a State 
establish an SSOA, but it must ensure that the SSOA has a staffing 
level adequate to oversee the number, size, and complexity of the rail 
transit systems within the State, and that the staff of the SSOA are 
trained and qualified to perform their jobs. Further, a State must 
ensure that an SSOA does not receive any financial support from the 
rail transit systems the SSOA is obliged to oversee.
    In summary, an SSOP is the means by which a State ensures that an 
SSOA is sufficiently empowered by law, and supported with the resources 
necessary to do its job, without bias toward any rail transit system 
within the SSOA's oversight. Through the requirements for an SSOP, the 
Congress is calling on the Governors of all States with rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems to create SSOAs that are agile, 
competent watchdogs for the safety of those rail transit systems. 
Moreover, MAP-21 rectifies the previous, untenable practice in which a 
number of SSOAs had to rely upon subsidization from one or more of the 
rail transit systems they were obliged to oversee; through the SSOP, a 
State must now ensure that those previous conflicts of interest no 
longer exist.

Section 674.13 Designation of Oversight Agency

    In MAP-21, the Congress established a set of requirements for 
designation of a State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) that are more 
prescriptive than those of SAFETEA-LU and the previous authorization 
statutes, including, notably, the requirements for financial and legal 
independence, audit, investigation and enforcement authority, and other 
safeguards against conflicts of interest between an SSOA and the rail 
fixed guideway public transportation systems the SSOA will oversee. 
This section of the NPRM simply reiterates the statutory requirements 
for designation and establishment of an SSOA now codified at 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(4)(A). Also, this section of the NPRM notes the Administrator's 
authority to waive the requirements for financial and legal 
independence and the prohibitions on employee conflict of interest in 
the instance of a State in which the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems have fewer than one million revenue miles per 
year combined, or provide fewer than ten million unlinked passenger 
trips per year, combined. The statutory authority for a waiver is 
codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(B).
    Additionally, this section reiterates the reporting requirements 
for an SSOA now codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4), including, notably, 
the requirements that an SSOA make annual reports on the status of the 
safety of the rail fixed guideway public transportation systems it 
oversees to both the Governor and the boards of directors of the rail 
transit systems.

Section 674.15 Designation of Oversight Agency for Multi-State System

    In a few instances across the United States, there are rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems that operate in more than one 
State. This section of the NPRM identifies the same option for State 
Safety Oversight of such a multi-state system as now provided by 49 
U.S.C. 5329(e)(5): The States may choose either to apply uniform safety 
standards and procedures to the rail transit system through a State 
Safety Oversight Program compliant with 49 U.S.C. 5329 and approved by 
the Administrator, or to designate a single entity that meets the 
requirements for an SSOA to serve as the SSOA for that rail transit 
system, through a program approved by the Administrator.

Section 674.17 Use of Federal Financial Assistance

    This section explains that Federal financial assistance is now 
available to States to develop and carry out State Safety Oversight 
Programs (SSOPs), and may be used, specifically, for both the 
operational and administrative expenses of SSOPs and SSOAs and the 
expenses of employee training. Also, this section notes that the 
Federal financial assistance to a State will be allocated in accordance 
with a formula applicable to all eligible States; a grant of Federal 
funds will be subject to terms and conditions as the Administrator 
deems appropriate; the Federal share of eligible expenses under a grant 
will be eighty percent; and the non-Federal share of the expenses under 
a grant cannot be comprised of Federal funds, funds received from a 
public transportation agency, or any revenues earned by a public 
transportation agency.

Section 674.19 Certification of a State Safety Oversight Program

    One of the most important provisions of the MAP-21 framework for 
safety is the new mandate for an FTA certification of a State Safety 
Oversight Program (SSOP); specifically, the mandate that the 
Administrator make a determination not only whether an SSOP meets the 
technical requirements of the statute, but whether that same SSOP ``is 
adequate to promote the purposes'' of the National Public 
Transportation Safety Plan and the other goals and objectives of 49 
U.S.C. 5329(e)(7)(A) (emphasis added). The Congress recognizes that the 
weaknesses of the State Safety Oversight Agencies (SSOAs) cannot be 
addressed by the SSOAs, themselves. Consequently, Congress is obliging 
the States to either provide the current SSOAs with stronger authority 
and more resources to conduct the necessary oversight of rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems, or to establish and nurture new 
organizations for that purpose. Further, Congress is obliging the FTA 
Administrator to determine whether each and every State has an adequate 
program through the mechanism of issuing or denying the issuance of a 
certification that the program is adequate to meet both the letter and 
the purposes of the law.
    This section of the NPRM fleshes out the requirements and the 
process for certification of a State's SSOP. Specifically, proposed 
section 674.17(a)

[[Page 11009]]

states that the Administrator must determine whether an SSOP meets the 
requirements of the statute and is adequate to promote the purposes of 
49 U.S.C. 5329, including, but not limited to, the National Public 
Transportation Safety Plan, the Public Transportation Safety 
Certification Training Program, and the Public Transportation Agency 
Safety Plans (referenced as the ``Transit Agency Safety Plans'' in this 
rulemaking). Proposed section 674.17(b) recites the statutory mandate 
that the Administrator must issue either a certification or a denial of 
certification for each State's SSOP. Proposed section 674.17(c) states 
that in the event the Administrator issues a denial of a certification, 
he or she must provide the State a written explanation and an 
opportunity to modify its SSOP to merit the issuance of certification, 
and ask the Governor to take all possible steps to correct the 
deficiencies that are precluding the issuance of a certification.
    Proposed section 674.17(c) states that in his or her discretion, 
the Administrator may impose financial penalties as authorized by 
Congress at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(7)(D). In brief, the statute provides the 
Administrator three options in imposing a financial penalty: (1) The 
Administrator can withhold SSO grant funds from the State; (2) The 
Administrator can withhold not more than five percent of the 49 U.S.C. 
5307 Urbanized Area formula funds appropriated for use in the State or 
urbanized area in the State, until such time as the SSOP can be 
certified; or (3) The Administrator can require all of the rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems governed by the SSOP to spend up 
to 100 percent of their Federal funding under 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53 for 
``safety-related improvements'' on their systems, only, until such time 
as the SSOP can be certified. See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(7)(D)(ii)(I)-
(III).
    Additionally, proposed section 674.17(d) states that in deciding 
whether to issue a certification for a State's SSOP, the Administrator 
will evaluate whether the SSOA has sufficient authority, resources, and 
expertise to oversee the number, size, and complexity of the rail 
transit systems that operate within the State, or will attain the 
necessary authority, resources, and expertise in accordance with a 
developmental plan and schedule set forth in a sufficient level of 
detail in the State's SSOP.

Section 674.21 Withholding of Federal Financial Assistance for 
Noncompliance

    Proposed section 674.21(a) explains that in those instances in 
which the Administrator has discretion to impose financial penalties 
for noncompliance with the SSO requirements, in making a decision 
whether to do so, and determining the nature and amount of a financial 
penalty, the Administrator must consider the extent and circumstances 
of the noncompliance, the operating budgets of both the SSOA and the 
rail transit systems that will be affected by the penalty, and such 
other matters as justice may require.
    There is one instance, however, in which the Administrator will be 
unable to exercise any discretion to mitigate a very harsh financial 
penalty for noncompliance with the SSO requirements. If a State fails 
to establish a State Safety Oversight Program approved by the 
Administrator within three years of the effective date of the final 
rule that will follow today's NPRM, FTA will be prohibited by law from 
obligating any Federal financial assistance to any entity in that State 
that is otherwise eligible to receive funding through any of the FTA 
programs authorized by 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53. See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3). 
In other words: If for whatever reason, a State is unable or unwilling 
to come into compliance with a final rule for State Safety Oversight 
within three years after that final rule takes effect, all FTA grant 
funds for all of the public transportation agencies, designated 
recipients, subrecipients, and Metropolitan Planning Organizations in 
that State will be cut off. The statute is designed to provide every 
incentive to a State to develop and carry out an SSO program compliant 
with the regulations. Proposed section 674.21(b) reflects the 
congressional mandate of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3).

Section 674.23 Confidentiality of Information

    When FTA first promulgated a rule for State Safety Oversight, the 
agency recognized that rail transit systems often face litigation 
arising from accidents, and that the release of accident investigation 
reports can compromise both the defense of litigation and the abilities 
of rail transit systems to obtain comprehensive, confidential analyses 
of accidents. See, the preamble to the 1995 rule at 60 FR 67034, 67042 
(Dec. 27, 1995). Thus, the current rule at 49 CFR 659.11 provides that 
a State ``may withhold an investigation report that may have been 
prepared or adopted by the oversight agency from being admitted as 
evidence or used in a civil action for damages. . . .'' Also, the 
current rule makes clear that the Federal regulations at 49 CFR part 
659 do not require a rail transit system to make a security plan 
available to the public, or any security procedures referenced in that 
plan. See, 49 CFR 659.11(b). Thus, as a practical matter, any questions 
whether to admit investigation reports into evidence for litigation are 
left to the courts to determine, in accordance with the relevant State 
law and the courts' rules of evidence.
    Today's proposed rulemaking would clarify, and slightly expand, the 
current rule, by specifying that a ``State, State Safety Oversight 
Agency, or a rail fixed guideway public transportation system may 
withhold an investigation report prepared or adopted in accordance with 
the Federal regulations for State Safety Oversight from being admitted 
as evidence or used in a civil action for damages resulting from a 
matter mentioned in the report.'' See, proposed section 674.21(a). 
Also, the proposed rule would clarify, and slightly expand, the current 
rule, by specifying that FTA's SSO regulations would ``not require 
public availability of any data, information, or procedures pertaining 
to the security of a rail fixed guideway public transportation system 
or its passenger operations.'' See, proposed section 674.21(b).

Section 674.25 Role of the State Safety Oversight Agency

    Ever since 1995, when FTA issued the current SSO regulations at 49 
CFR part 659, the SSOA has been required to set minimum standards for 
the safety of all rail fixed guideway public transportation agencies 
within their oversight. Today's proposed rulemaking would continue that 
requirement. See, proposed section 674.25(a). Under today's NPRM, 
however, those minimum standards must be consistent with the National 
Public Transportation Safety Plan (the ``National Plan''), the Public 
Transportation Safety Certification Training Program (the ``Safety 
Certification Training'' program), and the principles and methods of 
Safety Management Systems (SMS), all of which will be the subject of 
future rulemakings separate from today's NPRM. What this may mean, as a 
practical matter, is that any number of SSOAs may have to revise and 
reissue their minimum standards for safety of rail fixed guideway 
public transportation once FTA issues final rules for the National 
Plan, the Safety Certification program, and the Transit Agency Safety 
Plan, to ensure that their minimum standards are consistent with

[[Page 11010]]

FTA regulations. As noted above, FTA issued an ANPRM for the National 
Plan, the Transit Agency Safety Plans, and the Safety Certification 
Training program on October 3, 2013, at 78 FR 61251-73. Also, in 
today's Federal Register FTA is issuing final interim provisions for 
the Safety Certification Training program. FTA encourages all SSOAs and 
interested persons to participate in the rulemakings.
    Proposed section 674.25(b) notes that basic principles and methods 
of SMS are set forth in an Appendix to the rules, titled the ``Safety 
Management Systems (SMS) Framework.''
    Proposed section 674.25(c) would require an SSOA to review and 
approve the Transit Agency Safety Plan, oversee the execution of that 
plan, and enforce the execution of that plan through the order of a 
corrective action plan or any other means, as necessary or appropriate. 
Proposed sections 674.25(d) and 674.25(e) recognize that an SSOA has 
primary responsibility for investigating the hazards, risks, and 
accidents on a rail transit system, and any alleged noncompliance with 
a Transit Agency Safety Plan, but these responsibilities do not 
preclude the Federal Transit Administrator from exercising his or her 
independent authority to investigate hazards, risks, or accidents.
    Proposed section 674.25(f) would allow an SSOA to retain the 
services of a contractor for assistance in investigating accidents and 
incidents and for expertise the SSOA does not have within its own 
organization. Proposed section 674.25(g) makes clear that all personnel 
and contractors employed by an SSOA must comply with the requirements 
of the Safety Certification Training program--either the interim 
provisions for the program or the final rule, once the final rule is 
issued.

Section 674.27 State Safety Program Standards

    Under 49 CFR 659.15--the rule in place since 1995--the SSOAs have 
been required to develop a nine-part State safety program standard 
comprised of requirements for program management, standards 
development, oversight of the internal safety and security reviews by 
rail transit systems, the frequency of those reviews, accident 
notification requirements, investigation procedures, corrective 
actions, the 21-point ``system safety program plan'' for rail transit 
systems, and the ``system security plan'' for rail transit systems. The 
current rule sets a regimen that is reactive, highly prescriptive, and 
mechanistic; today's proposed rulemaking will be proactive, emphasizing 
the avoidance and mitigation of hazards and risks.
    Today's NPRM transforms the list-specific, mechanistic approach to 
State safety program standards into one based on the more flexible, 
effective principles and methods of SMS. The SMS approach to State 
safety program standards at proposed section 674.27 addresses many of 
the same elements as are called out in the current SSO rule; it does 
so, however, in ways that are more comprehensive for preventing 
accidents, afford more latitude to the SSOAs, and can be scaled to the 
number, size, and complexity of the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems within the oversight of an SSOA. First, proposed 
section 674.27(a) obliges an SSOA to adopt and distribute a program 
standard that is consistent with the National Safety Plan, SMS, and the 
relevant State Safety Oversight Program. Next, proposed section 
674.27(a) obliges an SSOA to identify the processes and procedures that 
will govern its own activities. Next, proposed section 674.27(a) 
obliges an SSOA to identify the processes and procedures a Rail Transit 
Agency must have in place to comply with the SSO's program standard. 
Finally, proposed section 674.27(a) sets explicit but minimum, flexible 
standards for program management, standards development, oversight of a 
Rail Transit Agency's internal safety reviews, triennial audits of 
Transit Agency Safety Plans, accident notification, investigations, and 
corrective actions.
    Readers should note in particular the proposed requirements for an 
explanation of an SSOA's authority; the steps an SSOA must take to 
ensure ``open, on-going communication'' with the rail transit systems 
within its oversight; the process whereby an SSOA will evaluate the 
material submitted under the signatures of a Rail Transit Agency's 
accountable executives; the procedures an SSOA and a Rail Transit 
Agency will follow to manage findings and recommendations arising from 
a triennial audit; the coordination of an SSOA investigation with a 
Rail Transit Agency's own internal investigation; the role of an SSOA 
in supporting any investigation or findings made by the NTSB; and the 
procedures and SSOA and a Rail Transit Agency will follow to manage any 
conflicts over the contents or execution of a corrective action plan. 
See, proposed subsections 674.27(a)(1)-(7).
    Also, readers should please note the new FTA responsibility for 
reviewing the effectiveness of State safety program standards. Under 
proposed section 674.27(b), FTA will evaluate an SSOA's program 
standard as part of its continuous evaluation of every State Safety 
Oversight Program (SSOP), and in preparing FTA's annual report to 
Congress on the certification status of every SSOP, both of which are 
required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(8). FTA will certify each compliant SSOA 
within the first three years following publication of the final rule, 
and will monitor compliance annually thereafter.

Section 674.29 Transit Agency Safety Plans: General Requirements

    One of the most significant changes in State Safety Oversight under 
today's proposed rulemaking is the transition from the simple review-
and-approval of the ``system safety program plan'' for a rail fixed 
guideway public transportation system, now codified at 49 CFR 659.17, 
to the more hands-on, proactive role for an SSOA in evaluating the 
effectiveness of a Transit Agency Safety Plan in proposed section 
674.29. To reiterate, ``Transit Agency Safety Plan'' is a shorthand 
reference to the new Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan now 
required of all operators of public transportation--not just rail 
transit systems--in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(d). Although this is 
the subject of a rulemaking separate from today's proposal, Section 
5329(d) sets forth seven explicit, minimum standards for a Transit 
Agency Safety Plan. (See, for example, the standards for identifying 
and evaluating safety risks, strategies to minimize exposure to 
hazards, performance targets, assignment of an ``adequately trained 
safety officer'' reporting directly to the chief executive, and the 
``comprehensive staff training program,'' codified at 49 U.S.C. 
5329(d)(1)). Today's proposed rulemaking makes the SSOA responsible for 
helping ensure that the Transit Agency Safety Plan for a rail transit 
system--the most complex type of public transportation system--is 
sufficient to protect both the public and the Rail Transit Agency's 
employees.
    Specifically, under proposed section 674.29(a), an SSOA must 
evaluate whether a Transit Agency Safety Plan is based on an adequate 
Safety Management System (SMS), is consistent with the National Safety 
Plan, and is in compliance with the seven minimum standards set by the 
statute. Under proposed section 674.29(b), an SSOA must make a number 
of judgments in determining whether the Transit Agency Safety Plan is 
based on an adequate SMS: Most notably, the judgments whether a Transit 
Agency Safety Plan sets forth a sufficiently explicit safety policy for 
the rail transit system, and whether the plan

[[Page 11011]]

identifies adequate means for risk control, safety assurance, and 
promotion of safety to support the execution of the Transit Agency 
Safety Plan throughout the rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system--by all employees and agents of the system, and its contractors. 
Under proposed section 674.29(c), in any instance in which an SSOA does 
not approve a Transit Agency Safety Plan, the SSOA must provide the 
Rail Transit Agency a written explanation, and the Rail Transit Agency 
an opportunity to modify and resubmit its plan for the SSOA's approval.
    In short, under proposed section 674.29, the SSOA becomes a 
vigorous, diligent, ``institutional check'' on whether a Transit Agency 
Safety Plan for a rail transit system is adequate to avoid or mitigate 
hazards and risks to everyone who uses, manages, or maintains that 
system. This is a much more assertive role for an SSOA than has been 
the case under the regulations in place since 1995.

Section 674.31 Triennial Audits: General Requirements

    Under the current regulations, an SSOA conducts an ``on-site 
review'' of the ``system safety program plan'' for a rail fixed 
guideway public transportation system at least once every three years. 
See, 49 CFR 659.29. As a practical matter, this sort of review has 
amounted to little more than a checklist procedure, and the 
superficiality of the on-site review was a specific point of criticism 
by the National Transportation Safety Board following the rapid and 
light rail accidents in 2009, referenced above.
    Under today's NPRM, the three-year on-site review would be 
transformed into a more searching analysis of the safety of a rail 
transit system. Specifically, under proposed section 674.31, an SSOA 
will conduct a complete audit of a Rail Transit Agency's compliance 
with its Transit Agency Safety Plan at least once every three years, or 
on an on-going basis over a three-year timeframe, if the Rail Transit 
Agency concurs. At the conclusion of the three-year audit cycle an SSOA 
will issue a report with findings and recommendations that include, at 
minimum, an analysis of the effectiveness of the Transit Agency Safety 
Plan, recommendations for improvements, and a corrective action plan, 
if necessary or appropriate. The Rail Transit Agency must be given an 
opportunity to comment on the findings and recommendations arising from 
the audit. Optimally, an SSOA audit, per se, will be a more 
independent, effective means of testing the value of a Transit Agency 
Safety Plan and the steps a Rail Transit Agency has taken to carry out 
that plan over a three-year cycle.

Section 674.33 Accident and Incident Notification

    Proposed section 674.33 differs very little from the two-hour 
notification requirement for certain types of accidents in the current 
rule at 49 CFR 659.33, with two exceptions. The first exception is the 
addition of the term ``Incident.'' The second exception is the 
additional requirement that FTA be notified of an Accident or Incident 
together with the SSOA.
    FTA is proposing to require two-hour notification for either an 
``Accident'' or ``Incident.'' In proposed section 674.7, ``Incident'' 
is characterized as a near miss, close call, a violation of a safety 
standard that poses a hazard to a rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system, or equipment or property damage in an amount 
less than $25,000 that effects transit operations. Experience teaches 
that a near miss or close call may be as much or more important for 
detecting hazards and mitigating risk as an accident that results in 
personal injury or property damage. And logically, a violation of a 
safety standard calls for notification, regardless whether the 
violation led to personal injury or property damage.
    To enhance FTA's own situational awareness, a Rail Transit Agency 
must notify FTA of any accident or incident at the same time a Rail 
Transit Agency notifies the SSOA. In recent years FTA has benefitted 
from the electronic notification process a number of rail transit 
systems are using to inform multiple parties of accidents, similar to 
the telephonic notifications that railroads subject to 49 CFR part 225 
provide to the Federal Railroad Administration via the National 
Response Center. Insofar as the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems already use an electronic notification system, 
FTA asks that it be added to their automated lists of addressees, which 
would require minimal effort.

Section 674.35 Investigations

    In the deliberations leading to the enactment of MAP-21, the 
congressional authorization committees took a fresh look at whether 
investigation and enforcement authority for safety in rail fixed 
guideway public transportation should be vested in FTA or retained by 
the States. Ultimately, the Congress decided that FTA and the States, 
through their SSOAs, will have concurrent authority to investigate any 
incident involving the safety of a rail transit vehicle or taking place 
on the property of a rail transit system, while the SSOAs retain the 
role of primary oversight for the safety of rail fixed guideway public 
transportation. See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(A)(v), 5329(f)(1). 
Consequently, under today's proposed rulemaking, FTA will continue to 
defer to the SSOAs to conduct initial inspections and investigations. 
Should an SSOA request FTA's assistance, however, or should the 
Administrator determine that an SSOA lacks the ability to conduct an 
investigation as necessary or appropriate, FTA may initiate an 
investigation.
    Under the current regulations, an SSOA may request a rail transit 
system to conduct an investigation on behalf of the SSOA. See, 49 CFR 
659.35(a), (c). In some instances, it may benefit a rail transit system 
to investigate an accident occurring on its property, but in FTA's 
view, that practice can trigger a conflict of interest, particularly 
where a rail transit system has an ability to influence an 
apportionment of fault and liability. Given that 49 U.S.C. 5329 now 
provides SSOAs with resources to conduct their own investigations, and 
requires professional training and certification of their employees to 
investigate accidents, proposed section 674.35(a) would require an SSOA 
to conduct an ``independent investigation'' of any accident or incident 
that a Rail Transit Agency reports to the SSOA in compliance with 
proposed section 674.33(a). Further, proposed section 674.35(c) would 
require all personnel and contractors conducting investigations for an 
SSOA to be trained to conduct investigations in accordance with the 
Safety Certification Training program. Obviously, a Rail Transit Agency 
would not be prohibited from conducting its own internal investigation 
of an accident. Rather, proposed section 674.35(a) states that in any 
instance in which both an SSOA and a Rail Transit Agency are conducting 
an investigation, they must coordinate their investigations with one 
another in accordance with the State safety oversight program standard 
required by proposed section 674.27.
    Under proposed section 674.35(b), an SSOA must issue a written 
report on an investigation that identifies the factors that caused or 
contributed to the accident or incident, describes the SSOA's 
investigation activities, and sets forth a corrective action plan, as 
necessary or appropriate. The SSOA must formally adopt an investigation 
report and transmit that report to the Rail Transit Agency for review 
and concurrence. If a Rail Transit Agency

[[Page 11012]]

does not concur in an SSOA's investigation report, the SSOA may allow 
the Rail Transit Agency to submit a written dissent from the report, 
and the SSOA may include the Rail Transit Agency's dissent in the 
report, if the SSOA so chooses.
    Also, readers should note that MAP-21 has vested the Federal 
Transit Administrator with broad authority to conduct investigations of 
public transportation systems--whether to ensure the continuing safety 
of a system, or in response to an accident or incident. See, 49 U.S.C. 
5329(f)(1) (as the Secretary's designee, the Administrator ``may . . . 
conduct inspections, investigations, audits, examinations, and testing 
of the equipment, facilities, rolling stock, and operations of [a] 
public transportation system . . .''). To facilitate the 
Administrator's authority to conduct investigations, he or she may make 
reports and issue directives, issue subpoenas, take depositions, 
require production of documents by either a public transportation 
system or an SSOA, and provide guidance to public transportation 
systems ``regarding prevention of accidents and incidents.'' See, 49 
U.S.C. 5329(f)(2)-(6). The FTA Office of Safety and Oversight will 
carry out the Administrator's authority to conduct investigations, with 
assistance from staff of the ten FTA Regional Offices.

Section 674.37 Corrective Action Plans

    It is most likely an SSOA will order a Rail Transit Agency to 
prepare and carry out a corrective action plan as the result of an 
investigation of an accident or hazard, an internal safety audit, or an 
SSOA's triennial audit of a Transit Agency Safety Plan. Although it is 
not possible to know what potential corrective action plans may call 
for, under proposed section 674.37(a), in any instance in which a Rail 
Transit Agency is ordered to develop and carry out a corrective action 
plan, the SSOA must review and approve that plan before the Rail 
Transit Agency carries out the plan. A corrective action plan must 
specify the actions a Rail Transit Agency will take to avoid or 
mitigate the risks and hazards that led to the plan, the schedule for 
taking the corrective actions, and the persons who will take the 
corrective actions. The Rail Transit Agency will periodically report 
its progress in carrying out the corrective action plan, and the SSOA 
may monitor the Rail Transit Agency's progress through unannounced, on-
site inspections, or any other means the SSOA deems necessary or 
appropriate. Also, in any instance in which the National Transportation 
Safety Board (NTSB) has conducted an investigation, an SSOA must 
evaluate whether the NTSB's findings and recommendations call for a 
corrective action plan by the Rail Transit Agency, and if so, the SSOA 
must order the Rail Transit Agency to develop and carry out a 
corrective action plan.

Section 674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency Annual Reporting to FTA

    It is not FTA's objective to increase the reporting burdens on 
States, their SSOAs, or rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems any more than absolutely necessary. Moreover, the current SSOA 
reporting requirements at 49 CFR 659.39 have worked well for the 
limited authority and responsibilities given to the SSOAs under the 
State Safety Oversight program in place for the past twenty years. As 
further described in the Paperwork Reduction Act section of this 
notice, below, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) extended the 
approval for FTA to collect information from SSOAs as required by 49 
U.S.C. 5330 and the rules at 49 CFR part 659.
    Today's rulemaking proposes to keep the basic structure of the 
current 49 CFR 659.39 insofar as the data and information SSOAs must 
report to FTA on an annual basis, with a few additions and revisions, 
as follows. First, under proposed subsection 674.39(a)(2), an SSOA 
would be obliged to submit evidence once a year that each of its 
employees and contractors are in compliance with the applicable Safety 
Training Certification requirements. Second, under proposed subsection 
674.39(a)(4), an SSOA would be obliged to submit a summary of the 
triennial audits completed during the preceding year, and the Rail 
Transit Agencies' progress in carrying out any corrective action plans 
arising from those audits. Third, under proposed subsection 
674.39(a)(5), an SSOA would be obliged to submit evidence of its review 
and approval of any changes to Transit Agency Safety Plans during the 
preceding year.

Section 674.41 Conflicts of Interest

    Proposed section 674.41(a) incorporates a fundamental change 
enacted by MAP-21: An SSOA must now be both financially and legally 
independent from any rail fixed guideway public transportation system 
under the oversight of the SSOA. See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(A)(i). The 
only exception to this requirement would be an instance in which the 
Administrator has issued a waiver based on the relatively small annual 
fixed guideway revenue mileage in a State (less than one million actual 
and projected revenue miles, in total), or the relatively small number 
of unlinked passenger trips carried by all the rail transit systems in 
a State, on an annual basis (fewer than ten million actual and 
projected unlinked passenger trips, in total). See, 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(4)(B).
    Proposed section 674.41(b) would change the current rule, 49 CFR 
659.41, to make it clear that an SSOA may not employ any individual who 
provides services to a rail fixed guideway public transportation system 
under the oversight of the SSOA. Also, the proposed rule would delete 
the reference in the current rule to state law determinations of 
conflict of interest. Again, however, the Administrator could issue a 
waiver from this requirement on the basis of the relatively small 
annual fixed guideway revenue mileage (less than one million miles) in 
a State or the relatively small number of unlinked passenger trips per 
year (less than 10 million unlinked trips) in a State, using the same 
thresholds as specified in proposed section 674.41(a).
    Finally, proposed section 674.41(c) would make it clear that a 
contractor may not provide its services to both an SSOA and a rail 
transit system under the oversight of that SSOA. There is no waiver 
available with respect to this particular requirement.

Appendix: Safety Management Systems (SMS) Framework

    For a basic understanding of SMS, readers should please consult the 
Appendix that immediately follows the text of the proposed rules: The 
document titled ``Safety Management Systems (SMS) Framework.'' This 
document describes at some length each of the four key components of a 
viable SMS for any transportation provider: (1) The Safety Management 
Policy for an organization, (2) an organization's Risk Management 
practices, (3) the means for Safety Assurance throughout an 
organization, and (4) the practices for Safety Promotion within an 
organization, through training, education, and communication. This 
document explains that SMS is both flexible and scalable to the size of 
an organization and its operating environment. This document addresses 
the role of the Accountable Executive--the leader at the top of an 
organization who is ultimately responsible for safety--and the roles of 
a chief safety officer, an executive leadership team, employees who 
specialize in operations, maintenance, and asset management, employees 
with front-line

[[Page 11013]]

responsibilities for safety, and an organization's board of directors. 
Also, this document speaks to discrete activities such as hazard 
identification and analysis, risk assessment and mitigation, change 
management, continuous improvement, and the integration of an 
organization's SMS with its public safety and emergency preparedness.
    This Appendix is a guidance document. Unlike the final rules that 
will follow the public notice and comment on the proposed rules in this 
NPRM, this Appendix will not have the force of law. FTA is publishing 
the Safety Management Systems (SMS) Framework in this Appendix to 
provide practical advice both to the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems that will develop and integrate SMS into their 
operations and managerial structures, and the States and SSOAs that 
will oversee the rail transit systems' practice of SMS. FTA does not 
intend to set substantive standards for SMS through today's proposed 
rulemaking for State Safety Oversight. Rather, FTA intends to propose 
substantive standards for SMS in the upcoming Notices of Proposed 
Rulemaking for the National Public Transportation Safety Plan and the 
Transit Agency Safety Plans. Nonetheless, FTA invites readers to 
comment on the material set forth in this Appendix, together with your 
comments on the rules proposed in this NPRM. Indeed, FTA expects to 
revise this Appendix from time to time, in the years ahead, as the 
practice of SMS matures throughout the transit industry.

Additional Matters of Interest in the Proposed Rules

    Security. Persons versed in the current State Safety Oversight 
program will notice that today's proposed rulemaking omits any mention 
of system security plans and internal security reviews for rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems. In short, the 49 CFR part 659 
regulations, issued in 1995, preceded the terrorist attacks of 
September 11, 2001, and the creation of the Transportation Security 
Administration (TSA), an agency of the United States Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS), which now has lead responsibility for the 
Federal Government's activities in the area of security in public 
transportation. This lead responsibility for TSA is set forth in the 
Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) between DHS and DOT executed in September 
2004 and the Annex to that MOA executed by TSA and FTA in September 
2005. Further, under Sections 1405 and 1512 of the Implementing 
Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of 2007 (Pub. L. 110-53; 
Aug. 3, 2007) (``9/11 Commission Act''), TSA is given the authority to 
issue regulations that will require public transportation agencies to 
develop and carry out security plans. Under Section 1404 of the 9/11 
Commission Act, DHS is carrying out a national strategy for public 
transportation security with guidelines that minimize security threats 
and maximize the ability of public transportation agencies to mitigate 
damage from terrorist attack and other major incidents. Also, TSA has 
issued rules that apply to rail transit systems insofar as TSA 
inspection authority, appointment of rail security coordinators, and 
reporting significant concerns to TSA. See, 49 CFR 1508.5, 1508.201, 
and 1508.203.
    In omitting any mention of rail transit system security plans and 
reviews, the rules FTA is proposing for State Safety Oversight in this 
NPRM would not prohibit rail transit systems from continuing to improve 
their practices to prevent and mitigate the threats to the security of 
their systems. To the contrary, rail transit systems are encouraged to 
do so--and strictly in accordance with the rules and guidelines TSA has 
issued and will issue in the future. Both FTA and TSA recognize, 
moreover, that some of the steps a public transportation agency takes 
to protect public and employee safety are often one and the same as 
those it takes to protect its transit system from a terrorist attack; 
for example, the steps an agency takes as part of a threat and 
vulnerability assessment. FTA and TSA work to ensure that the transit 
industry is not confronted with inconsistent government-issued security 
requirements or guidance.
    Plain English. For purposes of plain English, and compliance with 
the Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-274; Oct. 13, 2010), FTA has 
made every effort to keep the text of the rules in this NPRM short, 
simple, and clear. Admittedly, the current regulation at 49 CFR part 
659 is lengthy, and less than a model of clarity, thus, FTA seeks to 
move in the opposite direction. A certain level of detail may be 
sacrificed in this rulemaking, but FTA would prefer to put a rule in 
place that is easier to understand and to work with.
    Annual Certifications of Compliance. Readers should please note 
that the requirement that an SSOA annually submit a certification of 
its compliance with the rules, codified at 49 CFR 659.43, is being 
moved to proposed subsection 674.39(a)(6) with the other requirements 
for annual reporting.

Estimated Costs and Benefits

Existing 49 CFR Part 659 Program Requirements and Activities

    As stated in the Background section above, this NPRM replaces a set 
of regulations that have been in place since December 27, 1995, 
codified at 49 CFR part 659. As such, this NPRM applies to a discrete 
subsection of the public transportation industry--the recipients of 
Federal funds under 49 U.S.C. chapter 53 that operate rail fixed 
guideway transit systems not subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal 
Railroad Administration; the States in which those rail systems lie; 
and the SSOAs required to oversee the safety of those rail systems.
    Through the implementation of 49 CFR part 659, the States, SSOAs 
and rail transit agencies affected by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) already engage 
in core activities that address many of this NPRM's proposed 
requirements. In practical terms, many of the changes required in this 
NPRM serve to increase the frequency and/or comprehensiveness of 
activities that are already performed, such as reviews, inspections, 
field observations, investigations, safety studies, data analysis 
activities, and hazard management.

Costs to States of Implementing 49 CFR Part 659, CY 2011-2013

    Pursuant to 49 CFR part 659, FTA collects annual information from 
the SSOAs regarding the hours they expend to implement SSO requirements 
for the rail transit agencies in their jurisdictions. Based on this 
information, when totals are averaged for the last three reporting 
years (CY 2011-CY 2013), FTA has determined that the 28 covered SSOAs 
expend approximately 115,396 total hours per year implementing part 659 
requirements. While these hours average out to roughly 4,120 per State 
per year, there is wide variation across the States in terms of the 
total level of effort devoted to compliance with part 659. Some States, 
such as California, oversee multiple rail transit systems with two or 
more full-time equivalents (FTEs) devoted to each system. Most States 
covered by part 659, however, have one (1) rail fixed guideway system 
and devote between .5 and 1 FTEs per year to implementing 49 CFR part 
659 requirements for that system, supplemented by contractor resources 
for major activities, such as the Three-Year Review and accident 
investigation.
    The table below illustrates the break-down of activities and labor 
hours currently expended to implement 49 CFR part 659 by the States and 
SSOAs.

[[Page 11014]]

Using the 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) average wage rate of 
$42.70 per hour for State and local government operations managers, 
this level of effort equates to an annual cost of approximately $5 
million for States and SSOAs to implement 49 CFR part 659 requirements 
nationwide.
    The table also identifies one-time, non-recurring activities with 
an asterisk (*). These activities, such as establishing standards and 
procedures, are performed initially to establish the SSO program 
standard for a State new to implementing part 659. By including these 
non-recurring costs, FTA's table reflects the reality that new States 
and rail transit agencies are joining the SSO program each year. In 
fact, since January 1, 1997, when the December 27, 1995 rule 
implementing 49 CFR part 659 went into effect, the SSO program has 
grown by 40 percent, increasing from 19 SSOAs and 32 rail transit 
agencies to 28 SSOAs and 48 rail transit agencies.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Annual state activity to implement 49     Total labor     Total labor
       CFR part 659 requirements              hours           costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop and adopt program standard *...           1,400       $59,780.00
Develop and adopt program procedures *.           1,400        59,780.00
Review and update program standard and            2,912       124,342.40
 procedures............................
Review and approve rail transit agency            3,840       163,968.00
 SSPP..................................
Review and approve rail transit agency            3,840       163,968.00
 system security plan..................
Travel.................................           5,376       229,555.20
Review and approve rail transit agency            3,072       131,174.40
 procedures............................
Review and approve SSPP modifications             3,072       131,174.40
 and updates...........................
Review and approve system security plan           3,072       131,174.40
 modifications and updates.............
Perform three-year review of rail                 9,216       393,523.20
 transit agency........................
Training...............................           3,840       163,968.00
Review and approve internal safety                4,224       180,364.80
 review report.........................
Review and approve internal security              4,224       180,364.80
 review report.........................
Prepare three-year safety and security           13,440       573,888.00
 review report.........................
Prepare accident investigation report..           5,376       229,555.20
Review and approve rail transit agency            6,144       262,348.80
 accident investigation reports........
Review, approve and track corrective             15,360       655,872.00
 action plans..........................
Monitor rail transit agency adherence            19,200       819,840.00
 to hazard management process..........
Designation Submission *...............              30         1,281.00
Initial Submission *...................           2,270        96,929.00
Annual Submission......................           3,528       150,645.60
Periodic Submission....................             560        23,912.00
                                        --------------------------------
    Total including non-recurring costs         115,396     4,927,409.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Non-recurring cost.

Costs to Rail Transit Agencies of Implementing 49 CFR Part 659, CY 
2011-2013

    Based on information collected from the SSO agencies in annual 
reports and previous assessments conducted by the Government 
Accountability Office and the National Transportation Safety Board, FTA 
has also established the level of effort required to implement 49 CFR 
part 659 requirements for the 48 rail transit agencies covered by the 
regulation. Based on this data, FTA has determined that each year, rail 
transit agencies expend approximately 237,000 hours implementing 49 CFR 
part 659 requirements.
    While these hours average out to approximately 5,000 per rail 
transit agency per year, there is variation in the rail transit 
industry based on the size of rail fixed guideway systems. The nation's 
five (5) largest rail transit agencies each employ between 6 and 15 
full-time equivalents who work exclusively on 49 CFR part 659 
activities. Most of the remaining rail transit agencies devote between 
.5 and 2 FTEs to implement 49 CFR part 659 activities. Major activities 
performed by the rail transit agencies to implement 49 CFR part 659 
include developing safety and security plans and procedures; conducting 
internal reviews and audits to assess the implementation of safety and 
security plans; conducting accident and incident investigations; 
identifying, assessing and resolving hazards and their consequences; 
managing safety data acquisition and analysis; coordinating with 
emergency response planning; and communicating with/responding to the 
SSO agency through reports, meetings, teleconferences, emails, 
training, submittals and support for field observations and reviews.
    Also using the 2013 Bureau of Labor Statistics average wage rate of 
$42.70 per hour for State and local government operations managers, FTA 
has determined that the rail transit industry spends about $10 million 
per year to implement the 49 CFR part 659 requirements nationwide. 
FTA's table below reflects non-recurring costs required for new rail 
transit agencies covered by part 659, and for existing rail transit 
agencies to address new extensions and capital projects, once they 
become operational, as averaged over the last three years.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Annual rail transit agency activity to    Total labor     Total labor
 implement 49 CFR part 659 requirements       hours           costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop system safety program plan *...           6,272      $267,814.40
Review and update system safety program           7,550       322,385.00
 plan..................................
Develop system security plan *.........           4,036       172,337.20
Review and update system security plan.           6,208       265,081.60
Develop program procedures *...........           5,946       253,894.20
Review and update program procedures...           4,142       176,863.40
Travel.................................           4,146       177,034.20

[[Page 11015]]

 
Conduct internal safety and security             15,230       650,321.00
 reviews...............................
Prepare internal safety and security              8,160       348,432.00
 review reports........................
Prepare annual internal safety and               10,708       457,231.60
 security review report for state
 oversight.............................
Conduct accident investigations........          30,000     1,281,000.00
Prepare accident investigation reports.          19,168       818,473.60
Investigate unacceptable hazardous               14,030       599,081.00
 conditions............................
Prepare unacceptable hazardous                   12,032       513,766.40
 condition reports.....................
Implement hazard management process....          32,312     1,379,722.40
Prepare and submit corrective action             19,090       815,143.00
 plans.................................
Coordinate hazard management program             23,848     1,018,309.60
 activities with state oversight.......
Maintain safety data...................           3,570       152,439.00
Plan and conduct annual emergency                 3,382       144,411.40
 preparedness drill....................
Prepare and submit after-action report            1,090        46,543.00
 for annual emergency drill............
Maintain security data.................           3,570       152,439.00
Make submissions to state oversight               2,618       111,788.60
 agency................................
                                        --------------------------------
    Total including non-recurring costs         236,996    10,119,729.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Non-recurring cost.

Limitations of the Resources Expended by States and Rail Transit 
Agencies

    Based on the assessment provided in the two tables above, 
collectively the States, the SSOAs and the rail transit agencies expend 
approximately 352,000 labor hours or $15 million to implement 49 CFR 
part 659 requirements each year. While this level of effort helps make 
the transit industry among the safest modes of surface transportation, 
it has not been sufficient to prevent major accidents with multiple 
fatalities from occurring. As discussed in the preamble to this NPRM, 
over the last decade, the rail transit industry remains vulnerable to 
catastrophic occurrences.
    Since 2004, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has 
investigated (or preliminarily investigated) 19 major rail transit 
accidents, and has issued 25 safety recommendations to FTA, including 
six (6) Urgent Recommendations. In conducting these investigations, the 
NTSB found a variety of probable causes for these accidents. Among 
them, equipment malfunctions; equipment in poor or marginal condition, 
including equipment that can pose particular risks to safety, such as 
signal systems; lack of vehicle crashworthiness; employee fatigue and 
fitness for duty issues; and employee error, such as inattentiveness or 
failure to follow a rail transit system's operating procedure. The NTSB 
also identified the lack of a strong safety culture and a lack of 
adequate oversight both by the rail transit systems' State Safety 
Oversight Agencies and FTA. Deficiencies in oversight--of the kind 
being addressed by this rulemaking--were specifically identified as a 
contributing factor for five of the 19 major accidents. As a result, 
the NTSB has made improving the operational safety of the rail transit 
industry one of its Top Ten Most Wanted Items in 2014.
    FTA has also observed that while other modes of surface 
transportation, such as highway and commercial motor carrier, freight 
railroad and commercial trucking have achieved significant improvements 
in safety performance over the last decade, the public transportation 
industry's safety performance has not improved. Over the last decade, 
the rail transit industry actually has experienced increases in several 
key categories, including the number and severity of collisions, the 
number of worker fatalities and injuries, and the number and severity 
of passenger injuries. In this respect, the public transportation 
industry, and the nation's rail transit agencies in particular, are 
outliers to the overall U.S. DOT modal safety experience.
    Perhaps coincidentally, FTA also notes that the current level of 
expenditure by the States and rail transit agencies on safety oversight 
activities falls considerably below one (1) percent of the roughly $4 
billion that FTA awards to rail transit agencies each year. A review of 
safety programs administered by other modal administrations, such as 
the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), the Federal Highway 
Administration (FHWA), the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration 
(FMCSA), and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), demonstrates 
that at least one (1) percent of the Federal investment is typically 
devoted to safety oversight activities and programs in most other 
related modes of transportation. Other modes have determined that this 
level of investment in safety returns positive dividends in safety 
performance while also addressing tight budget margins in the 
transportation industry.
    Combined with a lack of resources devoted to safety oversight, FTA 
has observed that the operating, maintenance and service environments 
of the nation's rail transit agencies continue to change. Rail transit 
ridership is at an all-time high, while rail transit equipment and 
infrastructure is in a deteriorated condition. The heavier service 
cycles required to meet rising demand in some of the nation's largest 
urbanized areas create challenges for aging infrastructure with 
potential safety implications. FTA's Transit Asset Management (TAM) 
NPRM, authorized at 49 U.S.C. 5326, will attempt to address some of 
these challenges through the institution of formal asset management 
programs.
    In addition, this NPRM also implements an earlier decision made by 
the Federal Transit Administrator to adopt the framework and principles 
of Safety Management Systems (SMS). This decision was communicated in a 
May 13, 2013 Dear Colleague letter to the public transportation 
industry. FTA's adoption of SMS better positions the SSOAs and rail 
transit agencies to address the nexus between safety and state of good 
repair more effectively.

MAP-21 Requirements To Address Known Gaps in Oversight

    MAP-21 creates a new regulatory role for FTA and the States that 
responds to known gaps in oversight and safety performance. For 
example, to address noted FTA and NTSB concerns regarding conflicts of 
interest and the ability of SSO agencies to act independently in the 
interest of public safety, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(i) specifies that each 
SSO agency must have financial and legal independence from each of the 
rail fixed guideway public

[[Page 11016]]

transportation systems in its jurisdiction.
    To address the need for an enhanced safety regulatory program, 49 
U.S.C. 5329(e)(2)(A-B) directs States to assume oversight 
responsibility for rail transit agencies in engineering and 
construction, as well as in revenue service. This requirement increases 
the number of States subject to the State Safety Oversight regulations 
from 28 to 30, and increases the number of rail transit agencies from 
48 to 60 nationwide.

MAP-21 SSO Grant Program--Costs to States

    The statutory changes to State Safety Oversight include a new grant 
program to assist with the costs of compliance. Federal financial 
assistance is now available to States to help them develop and carry 
out their State Safety Oversight Programs (SSOPs), and may be used, 
specifically, for up to eighty percent of both the operational and 
administrative expenses of SSOAs, including the expenses of employee 
training.
    On March 10, 2014, FTA announced its apportionment of $21,945,771 
in funding to eligible States for their SSOPs and SSOAs for Federal 
Fiscal Year 2013, and $22,293,250 for Federal Fiscal Year 2014. 46 FR 
13380. In addition, on February, 9, 2015, FTA announced the 
apportionment of $14,841,808 in funding to eligible States for SSOPs 
and SSOAs for Federal Fiscal Year 2015 through May 31, 2015. 80 FR 
7254. Thus, for purposes of cost-benefit analysis, this rulemaking is 
revenue neutral between the Federal government and the States, and this 
has been factored into the analysis.
    Specifically, in determining the additional costs that would be 
imposed through this rulemaking, we have factored the net transfer from 
FTA to the States and their SSOAs. The table below compares and 
contrasts the specific activities performed, the labor hours and the 
total costs expended under the existing 49 CFR part 659 requirements 
(as discussed above) with FTA's proposal for the MAP-21 program 
authorized at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and described in this NPRM. Readers 
should note that the 49 CFR part 659 labor hours and costs reflect 28 
SSOAs and 48 rail transit agencies, while the 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) labor 
hours and costs reflect 30 SSOAs and 60 rail transit agencies. As 
discussed above, new definitions in 49 U.S.C. 5329 expand State Safety 
Oversight requirements to include rail transit agencies in construction 
and engineering phases of development.
    Labor estimates for the activities in this NPRM were derived based 
on the hours required to complete them as reported by States already 
implementing the specific activities; the estimates and general 
discussion provided in the Senate report to the Public Transportation 
Safety Act of 2010 (S. 3638, 111th Congress); and the experience of 
FTA's legal, policy, grant making and safety team.
    This table shows a minimum four-fold increase in the level of 
oversight activity performed to implement the NPRM. In particular, as 
part of proposed section 674.27, SSOAs would be required to establish a 
new set of activities unique to the oversight of SMS in the rail 
transit industry. The 30 SSOAs would be required to identify their 
``accountable executive'' for the implementation of the SSO program, 
and determine their procedures and process for overseeing the effective 
functioning of each rail transit agency's SMS, including overseeing 
elements such as organizational accountability, safety climate and 
culture, committee structures, safety performance monitoring, safety 
audits and reviews, safety risk management, and, perhaps most 
importantly, the implementation and monitoring of safety risk 
mitigations. Through the MAP-21 SSO grant program, this additional 
oversight activity will be funded at no additional cost to the States. 
FTA welcomes comments and observations regarding the hours reported for 
the part 659 requirements and the estimates presented for the proposed 
activities in this NPRM.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   49 CFR part
    State oversight agency activity in NPRM         659 labor      49 CFR part    Section 5329     Section 5329
                                                      hours      659 total cost    labor hours      total cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec.   674.11 Develop State Safety Oversight
 Program:
     Explicit Acknowledgement of State                0           $0.00           1,200       $51,240.00
     Responsibility to Oversee Safety of Rail
     Transit Agencies in Engineering,
     Construction and Operations *.............
     Demonstrate Authority to Adopt and               0            0.00           1,200        51,240.00
     Enforce State and Federal Regulations *...
     Demonstrate Adequate/Appropriate                 0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
     Staffing Level *..........................
     Demonstrate Qualification and                    0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
     Certification of Staff *..................
     Demonstrate by Law Prohibition                   0            0.00             600        25,620.00
     against Receiving Funding from Rail
     Transit Agency *..........................
Sec.   674.13 Designation of oversight agency:
     Legal and Financial Independence                 0            0.00           2,400       102,480.00
     Procedures and Disclosures *..............
     Annual Updates and Legal and                     0            0.00             600        25,620.00
     Financial Independence Disclosures........
     Documentation of No Provision of                 0            0.00              60         2,562.00
     Transit Service...........................
     Documentation of No Employment for               0            0.00              60         2,562.00
     Personnel Administering Rail Transit
     Programs..................................
     Establish and Document Authority                 0            0.00          30,000     1,281,000.00
     to Review, Approve, Oversee, and Enforce
     Agency Safety Plan *......................
     Establish and Document                           0            0.00          30,000     1,281,000.00
     Investigative and Enforcement Authority *.
Sec.   674.15 Designation of oversight agency                 0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
 for multi-state system........................
Sec.   674.17 Use of Federal financial
 assistance
     Identifying and Providing                        0            0.00           6,000       256,200.00
     Appropriate Match for Grant Program *.....
     SSO Grant Management and Reporting               0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
     Activities................................
Sec.   674.19 Certification of a State Safety
 Oversight Program:
     Certification Pre-Submittal                      0            0.00           2,400       102,480.00
     Documentation to FTA......................
     Work Plan and Quarterly Updates to               0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
     FTA.......................................
     Initial Certification                        2,860      122,122.00             300        12,810.00
     Documentation.............................
     Final Certification Documentation.               0            0.00             600        25,620.00
     Maintenance of Annual                            0            0.00             600        25,620.00
     Certification.............................
Sec.   674.21 Withholding of Federal financial                0            0.00               0             0.00
 assistance for noncompliance..................

[[Page 11017]]

 
Sec.   674.23 Confidentiality of information:
     Develop and adopt procedures/                    0            0.00           3,000       128,100.00
     regulation to withhold an investigation
     report from being admitted as evidence or
     used in a civil action *..................
Sec.   674.25 Role of the State safety
 oversight agency
     Establish minimum standards for                  0            0.00          30,000     1,281,000.00
     the safety of rail transit agencies *.....
     Update minimum standards as needed               0            0.00           6,000       256,200.00
     or required...............................
     Review and approve Agency Safety             3,840      163,968.00           9,600       409,920.00
     Plan (Sec.   674.29 Transit Agency Safety
     Plans: general requirements)..............
     Review and Approve Supporting and            3,072      131,174.40           9,600       409,920.00
     Referenced Procedures.....................
     Review and Approve Annual Updates            3,072      131,174.40           4,800       204,960.00
     to Agency Safety Plan and Supporting and/
     or Referenced Procedures..................
     Oversee the Rail Transit Agency's            8,448      360,729.60          60,000     2,562,000.00
     execution of its Transit Agency Safety
     Plan......................................
     Enforce the execution of a Transit               0            0.00           1,200        51,240.00
     Agency Safety Plan, through an order of a
     corrective action plan or any other means,
     as necessary or appropriate...............
     Ensure that a Transit Agency                     0            0.00           1,200        51,240.00
     Safety Plan meets the requirements for
     Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans
     at 49 U.S.C. 5329(d) and the regulations
     that are or may be codified at 49 CFR Part
     673.......................................
     Investigate any hazard or risk              19,200      819,840.00          60,000     2,562,000.00
     that threatens the safety of a Rail
     Transit Agency............................
     Investigate any allegation of                    0            0.00               0             0.00
     noncompliance with a Transit Agency Safety
     Plan......................................
     Exert primary responsibility to                  0            0.00               0             0.00
     investigate each Rail Transit Agency
     accident..................................
     Enter into agreements with                       0            0.00           6,000       256,200.00
     contractors...............................
     Comply with the requirements of              3,840      163,968.00          24,000     1,024,800.00
     the Public Transportation Agency Safety
     Certification Training Program............
Sec.   674.27 State safety program standards:
     Develop and adopt program standard           1,400       59,780.00           6,000       256,200.00
     *.........................................
     Develop and adopt program                    1,400       59,780.00           6,000       256,200.00
     procedures *..............................
     Develop and adopt Safety                         0            0.00           6,000       256,200.00
     Management Systems oversight principles
     and oversight methods *...................
     Review and update program standard           2,912      124,342.40             600        25,620.00
     and procedures............................
Sec.   674.31 Triennial audits: general
 requirements:
     Conduct Three Year Audit..........           9,216      393,523.20          36,000     1,537,200.00
     Document Results and Findings.....          13,440      573,888.00          12,000       512,400.00
Sec.   674.33 Notifications: Accidents and
 other incidents
     Receive and track notification of                0            0.00           1,000        42,700.00
     accidents.................................
     Report to FTA.....................               0            0.00           1,000        42,700.00
Sec.   674.35 Investigations
     Prepare Accident Investigation               5,376      229,555.20          60,000     2,562,000.00
     Report....................................
     Review, Approve and/or Adopt                 6,144      262,348.80           6,000       256,200.00
     Accident Investigation Reports............
Sec.   674.37 Corrective action plans..........          15,360      655,872.00          18,000       768,600.00
Sec.   674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency               3,528      150,645.60           2,400       102,480.00
 annual reporting to FTA.......................
Sec.   674.41 Conflicts of interest............               0            0.00             600        25,620.00
Travel.........................................           5,376      229,555.20           1,200        51,240.00
Security.......................................           6,912      295,142.40               0             0.00
                                                ----------------------------------------------------------------
    Total State Oversight Agencies, including           115,396    4,927,409.20         463,220    19,779,494.00
     non-recurring costs (Year 1)..............
                                                ----------------------------------------------------------------
    Total State Oversight Agencies, including           112,596    4,807,849.20         366,020    14,348,054.00
     only recurring costs (Future Years).......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Non-recurring cost.

MAP-21 SSO Grant Program--Costs to Rail Transit Agencies

    As discussed above, this NPRM implements the framework and 
principles of Safety Management Systems. The costs included in the 
table below reflect FTA's estimation regarding the likely requirements 
of SMS adoption by the rail transit agencies in critical areas overseen 
by the SSO program, such as investigations, inspections, and reviews; 
safety data acquisition and analysis; and safety performance 
monitoring. Notably, we have not included the costs to develop and 
update safety plans and procedures under today's NPRM. These costs will 
be included in the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan rulemaking. 
Therefore, while there are non-recurring costs under part 659, there 
are no non-recurring costs attributable to this NPRM.
    This table depicts general increases on the order of 10 to 20 
percent for the labor hours in most major activities currently 
performed to implement 49 CFR part 659, indicating enhanced activity in 
the specific area based on the more rigorous MAP-21 SSO program, as 
well as the requirements of additional collaboration and coordination 
with a significantly expanded SSO function in the State. Additional 
labor is provided to augment internal safety audit programs, manage 
corrective action plans, and implement hazard management programs. 
Activities

[[Page 11018]]

related to the review and approval of security plans have been removed 
for the MAP-21 program.
    The most significant changes come in the ``accident/incident 
investigation'' and ``maintain safety data'' categories. With the 
enhanced role of the SSO agencies in accident and incident 
investigation, FTA proposes that the amount of time required for rail 
transit agencies to develop reports and document results will decrease. 
Through FTA's adoption of SMS principles, FTA and the SSO agencies 
ultimately will be working to ensure that operations and maintenance 
data and information can be reviewed and assessed in as close to real-
time as possible to identify and address potential safety issues and 
concerns before they result in accidents. Safety performance monitoring 
will become a critical component of the SSO program.
    FTA appreciates that the majority of this activity may be currently 
managed by other departments and personnel outside of the rail transit 
agency's safety department. For example, management information systems 
have already been adopted by rail transit agencies to support vehicle 
and infrastructure maintenance, control center operations, and 
construction management. However, the data collected and maintained in 
these systems may not be routinely assessed for safety issues, 
concerns, hazards or potential impacts. FTA's new MAP-21 program 
addresses NTSB and GAO recommendations that each rail transit agency 
evaluate this data from a safety perspective in as close to real-time 
as possible. Thus, the agency may be overstating the costs to rail 
transit agencies here, but does believe that, even for those rail 
transit agencies that already collect and maintain much of this data, 
there may be some additional costs associated with assessing this data 
for safety purposes in real-time.
    It should be noted that for the MAP-21 columns, this table includes 
60 rail transit agencies, as opposed to the 48 rail transit agencies 
covered by the 49 CFR part 659 requirements. Even if no other changes 
were addressed, increasing the number of covered rail transit agencies 
by 25 percent would raise the total cost of the SSO program 
considerably.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   49 CFR part
          Rail transit agency activity              659 labor      49 CFR part    MAP-21 labor     MAP-21 total
                                                      hours      659 total cost       hours            cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Develop system safety program plan *...........           6,272     $267,814.40            ** 0             ** 0
Review and update system safety program plan...           7,550      322,385.00            ** 0             ** 0
Develop system security plan *.................           4,036      172,337.20               0             0.00
Review and update system security plan.........           6,208      265,081.60               0             0.00
Develop program procedures *...................           5,946      253,894.20            ** 0             ** 0
Review and update program procedures...........           4,142      176,863.40            ** 0             ** 0
Travel.........................................           4,146      177,034.20           4,800       204,960.00
Conduct internal safety and security reviews...          15,230      650,321.00          30,000     1,281,000.00
Prepare internal safety and security review               8,160      348,432.00          14,400       614,880.00
 reports.......................................
Prepare annual internal safety and security              10,708      457,231.60          21,000       896,700.00
 review report for state oversight.............
Conduct accident investigations................          30,000    1,281,000.00          24,000     1,024,800.00
Prepare accident investigation reports.........          19,168      818,473.60           3,000       128,100.00
Investigate unacceptable hazardous conditions..          14,030      599,081.00          60,000     2,562,000.00
Prepare unacceptable hazardous condition                 12,032      513,766.40               0             0.00
 reports.......................................
Implement hazard management process............          32,312    1,379,722.40          60,000     2,562,000.00
Prepare and submit corrective action plans.....          19,090      815,143.00          24,000     1,024,800.00
Coordinate hazard management program activities          23,848    1,018,309.60          30,000     1,281,000.00
 with state oversight..........................
Maintain safety data...........................           3,570      152,439.00         240,000    10,248,000.00
Plan and conduct annual emergency preparedness            3,382      144,411.40           4,800       204,960.00
 drill.........................................
Prepare and submit after-action report for                1,090       46,543.00           1,200        51,240.00
 annual emergency drill........................
Maintain security data.........................           3,570      152,439.00               0             0.00
Make submissions to state oversight agency.....           2,618      111,788.60           9,600       409,920.00
                                                ----------------------------------------------------------------
    Total including non-recurring costs (Year           237,108   10,124,511.60         526,800    22,494,360.00
     1)........................................
                                                ----------------------------------------------------------------
    Total including recurring costs only                220,854    9,430,465.80         526,800    22,494,360.00
     (Future Years)............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Non-recurring cost.
** FTA will include these costs in the upcoming Transit Agency Safety Plan rulemaking.

Total Estimated Impact of NPRM

    Based on the tables provided above, FTA estimates that minimum 
implementation of this NPRM will require a total of approximately $20 
million for the 30 States to implement, and a total of roughly $22 
million for the 60 rail transit agencies to implement.
    Compared to current spending levels of State Safety Oversight 
activities, the proposed rule would require an incremental $9.5 million 
per year on the part of SSOAs and $13.1 million for rail transit 
agencies, compared to current spending levels. This represents a 
combined increase of roughly $23 million per year over current levels.
    In terms of the actual costs to the States, FTA is providing 
approximately $22 million in grant funds each year to the States to 
off-set this NPRM's annual costs. This funding is treated as a transfer 
for the purposes of benefit-cost analysis. In addition, since the 
States already expend approximately $5 million to implement 49 CFR part 
659 requirements, this existing expenditure will more than cover the 20 
percent local match required in FTA's grant program. FTA therefore 
finds that that the States will bear no new net costs as a result of 
this NPRM. With regard to costs to the rail transit agencies, FTA 
currently provides funding that rail transit agencies may use for these 
purposes, but, since there is no safety-focused grant program similar 
to that for SSOs and each rail transit agency receives and uses its 
formula funds differently, we are unable to provide an estimate of how 
much FTA funds will be used here. We request comment on this point and 
also will revisit in the Transit Agency Safety Plan NPRM.

[[Page 11019]]

    FTA believes that a significant portion of the incremental expenses 
may comprise activities that are already performed--and management 
information systems that are already maintained--by rail transit 
departments other than the safety department, such as operations, 
maintenance and performance monitoring. For instance, FTA reviews at 
rail transit agencies and SSO audits confirm that all rail transit 
agencies use and maintain formal systems to track rules checks 
performed on operators; inspections and preventative/corrective 
maintenance activities for vehicles and infrastructure; reports 
regarding the occurrence and cause of events resulting in service 
delays lasting longer than a prescribed period of minutes; and unusual 
occurrences reported during revenue service. Therefore, the cost 
estimate calculated above may overstate the true incremental costs of 
the changes to the SSO program, but is used here to be conservative. 
FTA requests comment on this point.
    Doing more to analyze and assess this information from a safety 
perspective is at the core of SMS, and FTA anticipates that this level 
of active review of operations and maintenance data will ultimately 
result in cost savings for many rail transit agencies, as has been the 
case in the aviation and trucking industries. See, e.g., Federal 
Aviation Administration, Final Regulatory Evaluation: Safety Management 
System for Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental Operations, Docket No. FAA-
2009-0671. Initially, however, FTA anticipates that the rail transit 
agencies will be required to spend an additional $13.1 million per year 
to implement this NPRM, which equates to approximately $228,000 per 
rail transit agency. Larger rail transit agencies will be required to 
assume a larger portion of these costs, while smaller rail transit 
agencies likely will spend considerably less.
    As the 60 rail transit agencies affected by the NPRM gain greater 
experience with proactive safety data analysis focused on safety 
problem identification and the development of mitigation strategies, as 
well as enhanced verification techniques to assess the effectiveness of 
the implementation of these strategies, FTA expects that, as in other 
transportation industries, the rail transit agencies will begin 
receiving greater efficiencies on their return in this investment, not 
just related to safety. However, based on the newness of SMS 
implementation in the rail transit industry and SSO program, FTA does 
not propose including these kinds of operational gains as part of the 
benefits from this NPRM. FTA also has not yet had the opportunity to 
conduct SMS pilots in the rail transit industry which will provide even 
greater clarification regarding the full impacts on both the rail 
transit agencies and SSO program, although the agency is planning on 
conducting pilots to assist the industry with implementing SMS.
    The safety benefits of the proposed changes are difficult to 
estimate quantitatively because they involve numerous small but 
important changes to State and agency safety practices, and because the 
overall rate of serious injuries on rail transit systems is already 
quite low. These changes to the SSO regulations address longstanding 
deficiencies in the current SSO structure and improve the ability of 
SSOAs to carry out their mission of improving safety on rail fixed 
guideway transit systems. In addition, NTSB has advocated for many of 
these changes based on their investigation of rail transit accidents, 
their analysis of the current SSO structure, and their expertise in 
ensuring safe operation across all modes of transportation. FTA 
likewise believes that the revised SSO structure and associated 
activities will enhance the safety of rail fixed guideway transit 
systems, increasing accountability and decreasing transit-related 
incidents, injuries, and fatalities.
    That said, although this rule would not on its own implement SMS, 
it does create the organizational structure needed for SMS to be 
successful. Thus, FTA has considered how other transportation modes 
that are in the process of implementing SMS or similar systematic 
approaches to safety have estimated the benefits of their programs in 
reducing incidents and adverse outcomes. For example, although no two 
programs are identical, the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) in 
its NPRM implementing its System Safety Program (SSP) (77 FR 55372, 
Sept. 7, 2012) provided anecdotal evidence that the program could lead 
to meaningful reductions in serious crashes. Similarly, in its final 
rule implementing SMS for air carriers, the Federal Aviation 
Administration estimated that its SMS program could yield a 20% 
reduction in crashes. 80 FR 1308, Jan. 8, 2015. Enhancements brought 
about by SMS also have supported transportation and oversight agencies 
in mitigating the impacts of those events that do occur.
    FTA has, therefore, considered what percentage of potential safety 
benefits this rule would need to achieve in order to ``break even'' 
with the costs (including both the transfer of funds from FTA and the 
costs to the SSOs and rail transit agencies themselves) based on two 
different estimates of the potential benefit pool. FTA notes that this 
analysis is not intended to be the full analysis of the potential 
benefits of SMS for transit safety, which will be conducted in our 
subsequent safety rulemakings; rather, it is intended to provide some 
quantified estimate of the potential benefits of the changes to the SSO 
program proposed in this rule. Further, we note that this analysis may 
understate the potential benefits because we did not have information 
on some non-injury related costs associated with many incidents, 
particularly regarding property damage and travel delays. Also, as 
mentioned above, we did not include an estimate of FTA funds provided 
to transit agencies for these activities because, unlike with SSO 
funding, we did not have sufficient certainty on this funding level.
    First, over the last six years, as reported by the SSO agencies in 
their annual reports to FTA, the rail transit industry has averaged 
approximately 975 safety events meeting 49 CFR part 659 accident 
reporting thresholds per year (i.e. what must be reported). In an 
average year, these events result in 135 fatalities (of which 
approximately 85 per year involve suicides and trespassers) and 645 
injuries requiring hospitalization away from the scene. Using 
Departmental guidance regarding the valuation of fatalities and 
injuries,\1\ these incidents have an economic value of $1.865 billion 
per year. Rail transit incidents also entail costs related to vehicle 
and infrastructure damage, delays and disruptions to commuters, and 
emergency response costs. For example, the May 2008 collision between 
two light-rail vehicles in Newton, Massachusetts, caused $8.6 million 
in property damage and caused significant service delays during the 
evening rush hour. These additional incident costs could not be 
comprehensively quantified due to data limitations, and FTA requests 
comment on additional data that may assist it in quantifying this 
aspect of the analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Rogoff, Peter and Thomson, Kathryn, ``Guidance on Treatment 
of the Economic Value of a Statistical Life (VSL) in U.S. Department 
of Transportation Analyses.'' June 13, 2014. The fatality number is 
$9.2 million. Hospitalized injuries are assumed to be equivalent to 
a ``serious'' injury on the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS-3); this 
value is 10.5% of the VSL, or $966,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As an illustrative calculation, based on the above analysis, in 
order for the benefits of this rule to break even with the costs to 
both SSOs and rail transit agencies, this rule would only need to 
prevent 1.21% of these accidents per year, which does not include 
potentially significant unquantified costs related to property damage 
and disruption. FTA

[[Page 11020]]

believes that this level of accident reduction will likely be 
attainable based on the NPRM's proposed enhancements to the SSO program 
and the associated improvements in rail transit agency safety practices 
that lend themselves to greater awareness of risks and hazards. This 
figure also does not account for the $22 million FTA provided the SSOs 
or the FTA formula funds provided to the rail transit agencies. If only 
the SSO funds were taken into account, this rule would only need to 
prevent 0.007 of these accidents per year in order to break even with 
the increased costs directly born by the rail transit agencies. A lower 
break even number would exist if FTA were able to provide an estimate 
of the FTA funding used by the rail transit agencies for these 
activities.
    Second, as an alternative, we performed a more narrow analysis of 
the potential safety benefits of the proposed regulation by reviewing 
the rail transit incidents specifically identified by the NTSB as 
related to inadequate safety oversight programs. Of the 19 major rail 
transit accidents the NTSB has investigated (or preliminarily 
investigated) since 2004, five had probable causes that included 
inadequate safety oversight on the part of the rail transit agency or 
FTA. These incidents and the corresponding damages and costs are 
detailed below.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                          Moderate         Severe       Cost of property
               Date                               Agency                 Fatalities    Minor injuries     injuries        injuries           damage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2/3/2004..........................  Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)..               0              42               0               0            $62,000
7/11/2006.........................  Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)..               0             125              21               6          1,004,900
6/22/2009.........................  Washington Metropolitan Area                    9              38              12               2         12,000,000
                                     Transit Authority (WMATA).
1/26/2010.........................  Washington Metropolitan Area                    2               0               0               0                  0
                                     Transit Authority (WMATA).
7/20/2010.........................  Miami-Dade Transit (MDT).........               0              16               0               0            406,691
                                                                      ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.........................  .................................              11             221              33               8       13.5 million
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Again using Departmental guidance regarding the valuation of 
fatalities and injuries,\2\ FTA used a value of $9.2 million per 
fatality. NTSB's qualitative injury levels were converted to the 
Abbreviated Injury Scale and monetized as follows: Minor is assumed to 
be AIS-1 ($27,000), Moderate is assumed to be AIS-2 ($432,000), and 
Severe is (conservatively) assumed to be AIS-3 ($955,000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As such, the total quantifiable cost for the five incidents is 
approximately $142.6 million (fatalities: $101.2 million, minor 
injuries: $6.0 million, moderate injuries $14.3 million, severe 
injuries: $7.6 million, property damage: $13.5 million) or 
approximately $14.3 million per year over a ten year period. The 
average cost per incident was $28.5 million, plus unquantified losses 
from travel delays and emergency response. The most costly incident, 
the 2009 WMATA crash, had total costs of over $100 million, including 
$91 million in monetized injuries and $12 million in property damage. 
While improved safety oversight cannot necessarily prevent all rail 
transit accidents, preventing even a single incident on the scale of 
the 2009 WMATA crash would yield societal benefits that exceed the 
incremental costs of compliance across multiple years of 
implementation, especially when considering FTA's funding of this 
program. Benefits would also accrue from the prevention of multiple, 
less severe incidents, including those where only property damage or 
travel delays occur. The agency requests comment and information on any 
other accidents that have been identified as being related to 
inadequate safety oversight programs.
    In conducting a break even analysis, as in the above analysis, when 
considering the incremental costs to SSOs for this rule and rail 
transit agencies, this rule would need to prevent 1.6 of the types of 
accidents significant enough to be investigated by NTSB and identified 
as being caused by inadequate safety oversight per year in order to 
break even. Similarly, when FTA funding of the SSOs (but not the rail 
transit agencies) is taken into account, this rule would need to 
prevent 0.91 of these incidents in order to break even. However, we 
believe that including all of the costs to the rail transit agencies 
may overstate the costs in this illustrative analysis and is therefore 
a very conservative analysis. We request comment on this point.

Rulemaking Analyses and Notices

    All comments received on or before the close of business on the 
comment closing date indicated above will be considered and will be 
available for examination in the docket at the above address. Comments 
received after the closing date will be filed in the docket and will be 
considered to the extent practicable. A final rule may be published at 
any time after close of the comment period.

Executive Orders 13563 and 12866; U.S. DOT Regulatory Policies and 
Procedures

    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct Federal agencies to assess 
all costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits--including potential economic, environmental, public 
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity. Also, 
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both 
costs and benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting 
flexibility. FTA is also required under 49 U.S.C. 5329(h) to ``take 
into consideration the costs and benefits of each action the Secretary 
proposes to take under'' section 5329.
    FTA has determined this rulemaking is a nonsignificant regulatory 
action within the meaning of Executive Order 12866 and is 
nonsignificant within the meaning of the U.S. Department of 
Transportation's regulatory policies and procedures. FTA has determined 
that this rulemaking is not economically significant. The proposals set 
forth in this NPRM will not result in an effect on the economy of $100 
million or more. The proposals set forth in the NPRM will not adversely 
affect the economy, interfere with actions taken or planned by other 
agencies, or generally alter the budgetary impact of any entitlements, 
grants, user fees, or loan programs.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    In compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354; 
5 U.S.C. 601-612), FTA has evaluated the likely effects of the 
proposals set forth in this NPRM on small entities, and has determined 
that they will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities. The recipients of the State Safety

[[Page 11021]]

Oversight funds are eligible States, and the entities that will carry 
out the oversight of rail fixed guideway public transportation--the 
SSOAs--are State agencies. For this reason, FTA certifies that this 
action will not have a significant economic effect on a substantial 
number of small entities.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    This proposed rulemaking would not impose unfunded mandates as 
defined by the Unfunded Mandates Reform act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4; 109 
Stat. 48). The Federal share for the grants made under 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(6) is eighty percent. This proposed rule will not result in the 
expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, 
or by the private sector, of $143.1 million or more in any one year (2 
U.S.C. 1532).

Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)

    This proposed rulemaking has been analyzed in accordance with the 
principles and criteria established by Executive Order 13132 (Aug. 4, 
1999), and FTA has determined that the proposed action would not have 
sufficient Federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a 
Federalism assessment. FTA has also determined that this proposed 
action would not preempt any State law or State regulation or affect 
the States' abilities to discharge traditional State governmental 
functions. Moreover, consistent with Executive Order 13132, FTA has 
examined the direct compliance costs of the NPRM on State and local 
governments and determined that the collection and analysis of the data 
is eligible for Federal funding as part of the State Safety Oversight 
program costs.

Executive Order 12372 (Intergovernmental Review)

    The regulations effectuating Executive Order 12372 regarding 
intergovernmental consultation on Federal programs and activities apply 
to this proposed rulemaking.

Paperwork Reduction Act

    In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
3501 et seq.; ``PRA'') and the OMB regulation at 5 CFR 1320.8(d), FTA 
is seeking approval from OMB for the Information Collection Request 
abstracted below. FTA acknowledges that this NPRM entails collection of 
information to facilitate State Safety Oversight of rail fixed guideway 
public transportation systems, including, specifically, annual status 
reporting on the safety of rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems, triennial auditing of rail transit systems' compliance with 
their public transportation agency safety plans, requests for FTA 
certification of State Safety Oversight programs, and completion of 
public transportation safety certification training programs--all of 
which are mandated by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). Therefore, FTA is seeking 
comment whether the information collected will have practical utility; 
whether its estimation of the burden of the proposed information 
collection is accurate; whether the burden can be minimized through the 
use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
technology; and for ways in which the quality, utility, and clarity of 
the information can be enhanced.
    Readers should note that the information collection will be 
specific to each State and its State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA), to 
facilitate and record the SSOA's exercise of its oversight 
responsibilities. The paperwork burden for each State and its SSOA will 
be proportionate to the number of rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems within that State, the type of mode of those 
systems (e.g., rapid rail, light rail, or streetcar), and the size and 
complexity of those rail transit systems. Moreover, the labor-burden of 
the reporting requirements such as annual reporting and triennial 
auditing are largely borne by the SSOA staff that will be financed, in 
the main, by the Federal financial assistance under 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e)(6).
    Also, readers should note that FTA already collects information 
from States and SSOAs in accordance with the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 
5330 and the regulations at 49 CFR part 659. Please see FTA's currently 
approved collection, 2132-0558, available at http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain, which describes the SSOAs' development of program 
standards and their review and approval of System Safety Program Plans 
and System Security Plans for rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems; the triennial, on-site reviews that SSOAs conduct of rail 
transit systems; and various other reporting, such as SSOAs' review and 
approval of accident reports and corrective action plans, and submittal 
of annual reports of safety and security oversight activities and 
certifications of compliance with Section 5330. Most if not all of the 
information collection from States and SSOAs under 49 U.S.C. 5330 and 
49 CFR part 659 will carry over into the new State Safety Oversight 
program codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329 and the specific requirements 
proposed in today's rulemaking.
    Heretofore, there has been no Federal financial assistance 
available to States and their SSOAs to defray the costs of information 
collection under 49 U.S.C. 5330 and the longstanding regulations at 49 
CFR part 659. The costs of information collection associated with 
today's NPRM would be eligible for reimbursement under the SSO grants 
authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6).
    Type of Collection: Rail Fixed Guideway Systems; State Safety 
Oversight.
    Type of Review: OMB Clearance. Updated information collection 
request.
    Summary of the Collection: The information collection includes 
annual status reporting on the safety of rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems, triennial auditing of rail transit systems' 
compliance with their public transportation agency safety plans, 
requests for FTA certification of State Safety Oversight programs, and 
completion of public transportation safety certification training 
programs.
    Need for and Expected Use of the Information to be Collected: 
Collection of information for this program is necessary to ensure that 
state oversight agencies can perform their designated safety functions. 
Without comprehensive safety information from rail transit agencies, 
State safety oversight agencies would be unable to monitor safety as 
directed by 49 U.S.C. 5326, and without the State safety oversight 
reporting requirements, FTA would be unable to determine each State's 
compliance with 49 U.S.C. 5326(e).
    Respondents: Currently there are 30 States with 60 rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems. Twenty-eight of these States 
have already established a State Safety Oversight program and an SSOA; 
two more have indicated their intention to do so in the near future. 
The PRA estimate is based on a total of 30 States deploying SSOAs and 
seeking Federal financial assistance under 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6), per 
year.
    Frequency: Information will be collected at least once per year.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 230,130, estimated as follows: 
Annually, each SSOA would devote approximately 3,962 hours to 
information collection activities for each of the rail transit systems 
in the State's jurisdiction. Combined, the SSOAs would devote 
approximately 118,860 hours on those information collection activities 
that year. The local governments affected by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and 
today's proposed rulemaking, including the 60 rail fixed

[[Page 11022]]

guideway public transportation systems, would spend an estimated annual 
total of 111,300 hours on information collection activities, or 
approximately 1,855 hours each. Also, the States and SSOAs would spend 
approximately 50 hours each in the preparation of applications for 
Federal financial assistance for their SSO programs, for a combined 
estimate of 1,500 hours per year. FTA will post the supporting 
documentation for this collection in the docket for this NPRM.

National Environmental Policy Act

    The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et 
seq.) requires Federal agencies to analyze the potential environmental 
effects of their proposed actions in the form of a categorical 
exclusion, environmental assessment, or environmental impact statement. 
This proposed rulemaking is categorically excluded under FTA's 
environmental impact procedure at 23 CFR 771.117(c)(20), pertaining to 
planning and administrative activities that do not involve or lead 
directly to construction, such as the promulgation of rules, 
regulations, and directives. FTA has determined that no unusual 
circumstances exist in this instance, and that a categorical exclusion 
is appropriate for this rulemaking.

Executive Order 12630 (Taking of Private Property)

    This rulemaking will not affect a taking of private property or 
otherwise have taking implications under Executive Order 12630 (March 
15, 1998), Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally 
Protected Property Rights.

Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice 
in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations)

    Executive Order 12898 (Feb. 8, 1994) directs every Federal agency 
to make environmental justice part of its mission by identifying and 
addressing the effects of all programs, policies, and activities on 
minority populations and low-income populations. The USDOT 
environmental justice initiatives accomplish this goal by involving the 
potentially affected public in developing transportation projects that 
fit harmoniously within their communities without compromising safety 
or mobility. Additionally, FTA has issued a program circular addressing 
environmental justice in public transportation, C 4703.1, Environmental 
Justice Policy Guidance for Federal Transit Administration Recipients. 
This circular provides a framework for FTA grantees as they integrate 
principles of environmental justice into their transit decision-making 
processes. The Circular includes recommendations for State Departments 
of Transportation, Metropolitan Planning Organizations, and public 
transportation systems on (1) How to fully engage environmental justice 
populations in the transportation decision-making process; (2) How to 
determine whether environmental justice populations would be subjected 
to disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental 
effects of a public transportation project, policy, or activity; and 
(3) How to avoid, minimize, or mitigate these effects.

Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)

    This action meets the applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 (Feb. 5, 1996), Civil Justice Reform, 
to minimize litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.

Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children)

    FTA has analyzed this proposed rulemaking under Executive Order 
13045 (April 21, 1997), Protection of Children from Environmental 
Health Risks and Safety Risks. FTA certifies that this proposed rule 
will not cause an environmental risk to health or safety that may 
disproportionately affect children.

Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)

    FTA has analyzed this proposed rulemaking under Executive Order 
13175 (Nov. 6, 2000) and finds that the action will not have 
substantial direct effects on one or more Indian tribes; will not 
impose substantial direct compliance costs on Indian tribal 
governments; will not preempt tribal laws; and will not impose any new 
consultation requirements on Indian tribal governments. Therefore, a 
tribal summary impact statement is not required.

Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects)

    FTA has analyzed this proposed rulemaking under Executive Order 
13211, Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy 
Supply, Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). FTA has determined that 
this action is not a significant energy action under the Executive 
Order, given that the action is not likely to have a significant 
adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy. 
Therefore, a Statement of Energy Effects is not requirement.

Privacy Act

    In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments from the 
public to better inform its rulemaking process. DOT posts these 
comments, without edit, including any personal information the 
commenter provides, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system 
of records notice (DOT/ALL-14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at 
www.dot.gov/privacy.

Statutory/Legal Authority for This Rulemaking

    This rulemaking is issued under the authority of section 20021(a) 
of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), 
which requires the Secretary of Transportation to prescribe regulations 
for State Safety Oversight of rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems. The authority is codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(9)(C). Also, 
the Secretary is authorized to issue regulations to carry out the 
general provisions of the Public Transportation Safety Program pursuant 
to 49 U.S.C. 5329(f)(7).

Regulation Identification Number

    A Regulation Identification Number (RIN) is assigned to each 
regulatory action listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulations. 
The Regulatory Information Service Center publishes the Unified Agenda 
in April and October of each year. The RIN set forth in the heading of 
this document can be used to cross-reference this action with the 
Unified Agenda.

List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 674

    Grant Programs--Transportation, Mass Transportation, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements, Safety.

    Issued in Washington, DC under the authority delegated at 49 CFR 
1.91.
Therese McMillan,
Acting Administrator.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, and under the authority 
of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), 5329(f), and the delegations of authority at 49 
CFR 1.91, FTA hereby amends Chapter VI of Title 49, Code of Federal 
Regulations, by adding Part 674, as set forth below:

Title 49--Transportation

PART 674--STATE SAFETY OVERSIGHT

Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
674.1 Purpose.
674.3 Applicability.
674.5 Policy.
674.7 Definitions.

[[Page 11023]]

674.9 Transition from previous requirements for State safety 
oversight.
Subpart B--Role of the State
674.11 State Safety Oversight Program.
674.13 Designation of oversight agency.
674.15 Designation of oversight agency for multi-state system.
674.17 Use of Federal financial assistance.
674.19 Certification of a State Safety Oversight Program.
674.21 Withholding of Federal financial assistance for 
noncompliance.
674.23 Confidentiality of information.
Subpart C--State Safety Oversight Agencies
674.25 Role of the State Safety Oversight Agency.
674.27 State safety program standards.
674.29 Transit Agency Safety Plans: general requirements.
674.31 Triennial audits: general requirements.
674.33 Notifications: Accidents and incidents.
674.35 Investigations.
674.37 Corrective action plans.
674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency annual reporting to FTA.
674.41 Conflicts of interest.
Appendix A to Part 674--Safety Management Systems Framework

Subpart A--General Provisions


Sec.  674.1  Purpose.

    This part carries out the mandate of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) for State 
safety oversight of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems.


Sec.  674.3  Applicability.

    This part applies to States with rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems; State safety oversight agencies that oversee 
the safety of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems; and 
entities that own or operate rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems with Federal financial assistance authorized under 49 U.S.C. 
Chapter 53.


Sec.  674.5  Policy.

    (a) The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) has adopted the 
principles and methods of Safety Management Systems (SMS) as the basis 
for enhancing the safety of public transportation in the United States. 
All rules, regulations, policies, guidance, best practices, and 
technical assistance administered under the authority of 49 U.S.C. 5329 
will follow the principles and methods of SMS.
    (b) In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), a State that has a rail 
fixed guideway public transportation system has primary responsibility 
for overseeing the safety of that rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system. A State safety oversight agency must have 
sufficient authority, resources, and qualified personnel to oversee the 
number, size, and complexity of rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems that operate within a State.
    (c) FTA will make Federal financial assistance available to help an 
eligible State develop or carry out its State safety oversight program. 
Also, FTA will certify whether a State safety oversight program meets 
the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and is adequate to promote the 
purposes of the public transportation safety programs codified at 49 
U.S.C. 5329.


Sec.  674.7  Definitions.

    As used in this part:
    Accident means an Event that involves any of the following: A 
fatality; one or more persons suffers a serious injury; property or 
equipment damage equal to or greater than $25,000; a mainline 
derailment, occurring at any location; an evacuation of equipment or a 
station to prevent injury or loss of life.
    Accountable Executive means a single, identifiable person who has 
ultimate responsibility for carrying out the Safety Management System 
of a public transportation agency; responsibility for carrying out the 
agency's Transit Asset Management Plan; and control or direction over 
the human and capital resources needed to develop and maintain both the 
agency's Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan, in accordance with 
49 U.S.C. 5329(d), and the agency's Transit Asset Management Plan in 
accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5326.
    Administrator means the Federal Transit Administrator or the 
Administrator's designee.
    Contractor means an entity that performs tasks on behalf of FTA, a 
State Safety Oversight Agency, or a Rail Transit Agency, through 
contract or other agreement.
    Corrective action plan means a plan developed by a Rail Transit 
Agency that describes the actions the Rail Transit Agency will take to 
minimize, control, correct, or eliminate risks and hazards, and the 
schedule for taking those actions. Either a State Safety Oversight 
Agency or FTA may require a Rail Transit Agency to develop and carry 
out a corrective action plan.
    FRA means the Federal Railroad Administration, an agency within the 
United States Department of Transportation.
    FTA means the Federal Transit Administration, an agency within the 
United States Department of Transportation.
    Event means any Accident, Incident or Occurrence.
    Hazard means any real or potential condition that can cause injury, 
illness, or death; damage to or loss of the facilities, equipment, or 
property of a rail fixed guideway public transportation system; or 
damage to the environment.
    Incident means an Event that exceeds the definition of an 
Occurrence, but does not meet the requirements of an Accident. Examples 
include, but are not limited to: A near miss or close call, a railyard 
derailment, non-serious injuries, a violation of a safety standard, or 
equipment or property damage less than $25,000 that affects transit 
operations.
    Individual means a passenger, employee, contractor, pedestrian, 
trespasser, or any person on the property of a rail fixed guideway 
public transportation system.
    Investigation means the process of determining the causal and 
contributing factors of an accident, incident, or hazard, for the 
purpose of preventing recurrence and mitigating risk.
    National Public Transportation Safety Plan means the plan to 
improve the safety of all public transportation systems that receive 
Federal financial assistance under 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53; authorized by 
49 U.S.C. 5329(b).
    Occurrence means an Event with no injuries, where damage occurs to 
property or equipment but does not affect transit operations.
    Passenger means a person who is on board, boarding, or alighting 
from a vehicle on a rail fixed guideway public transportation system 
for the purpose of travel.
    Public Transportation Safety Certification Training Program means 
either the certification training program for Federal and State 
employees, or other designated personnel, who conduct safety audits and 
examinations of public transportation systems, and employees of public 
transportation agencies directly responsible for safety oversight, 
established through interim provisions in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 
5329(c)(2), or the program authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(c)(1).
    Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan means the comprehensive 
agency safety plan for a transit agency, including a Rail Transit 
Agency, that is required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d); based on a Safety 
Management System. For convenience, a Public Transportation Agency 
Safety Plan is referred to as a ``Transit Agency Safety Plan'' 
throughout these regulations for State Safety Oversight.
    Rail fixed guideway public transportation system means any fixed 
guideway system that uses rail, is

[[Page 11024]]

operated for public transportation, is within the jurisdiction of a 
State, and is not subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad 
Administration, or any such system in engineering or construction. Rail 
fixed guideway public transportation systems include but are not 
limited to rapid rail, heavy rail, light rail, monorail, trolley, 
inclined plane, funicular, and automated guideway.
    Rail Transit Agency means any entity that provides services on a 
rail fixed guideway public transportation system.
    Risk means the composite of predicted severity and likelihood of 
the potential effect of a hazard.
    Risk control means a method or methods to eliminate or reduce the 
effects of hazards.
    Safety assurance means processes within a Rail Transit Agency's 
Safety Management System that function to ensure the performance and 
effectiveness of safety risk controls, and to ensure that the Rail 
Transit Agency meets or exceeds its safety objectives through the 
collection, analysis, and assessment of information.
    Safety Management System (SMS) means the formal, top-down, 
organization-wide approach to managing safety risk and assuring the 
effectiveness of a Rail Transit Agency's safety risk controls. SMS 
includes systematic procedures, practices, and policies for managing 
risks and hazards.
    Safety policy means a Rail Transit Agency's documented commitment 
to safety, which defines the Rail Transit Agency's safety objectives 
and the accountabilities and responsibilities of its employees in 
regard to safety.
    Safety promotion means a combination of training and communication 
of safety information to support SMS as applied to the Rail Transit 
Agency's rail fixed guideway public transportation system.
    Safety risk management means a process within a Rail Transit 
Agency's SMS that describes the Rail Transit Agency's practice of SMS, 
and its means for identifying hazards and analyzing, assessing, and 
controlling risk.
    Serious injury means any injury which:
    (1) Requires hospitalization for more than 48 hours, commencing 
within 7 days from the date of the injury was received;
    (2) results in a fracture of any bone (except simple fractures of 
fingers, toes, or nose);
    (3) causes severe hemorrhages, nerve, muscle, or tendon damage;
    (4) involves any internal organ; or
    (5) involves second- or third-degree burns, or any burns affecting 
more than 5 percent of the body surface.
    State means a State of the United States, the District of Columbia, 
Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and 
the Virgin Islands.
    State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) means an agency established by 
a State that meets the requirements and performs the functions 
specified by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and the regulations set forth in this 
part.
    Transit Agency Safety Plan means the comprehensive agency safety 
plan for a transit agency, including a Rail Transit Agency, that is 
required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d); based on a Safety Management System. See 
also, Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan.
    Vehicle means any rolling stock used on a rail fixed guideway 
public transportation system, including but not limited to passenger 
and maintenance vehicles.


Sec.  674.9  Transition from previous requirements for State safety 
oversight.

    (a) Pursuant to section 20030(e) of the Moving Ahead for Progress 
in the 21st Century Act (Pub. L. 112-141; July 6, 2012) (``MAP-21''), 
the statute now codified at 49 U.S.C. 5330, titled ``State safety 
oversight,'' will be repealed three years after the effective date of 
the regulations set forth in this part.
    (b) Upon the effective date of the regulations set forth in this 
part, the regulations now codified at part 659 of this chapter will be 
rescinded.

Subpart B--Role of the State


Sec.  674.11  State Safety Oversight Program.

    Within three years of the effective date of this part, every State 
that has a rail fixed guideway public transportation system must have a 
State Safety Oversight Program (SSOP) that has been approved by the 
Administrator. FTA will audit each State's compliance at least 
triennially, consistent with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(9). At minimum, an SSOP 
must:
    (a) Explicitly acknowledge the State's responsibility for 
overseeing the safety of the rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems within the State;
    (b) Demonstrate the State's ability to adopt and enforce Federal 
and relevant State law for safety in rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems;
    (c) Establish a State safety oversight agency, by State law, in 
accordance with the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and this part;
    (d) Demonstrate that the State has determined an appropriate 
staffing level for the State safety oversight agency commensurate with 
the number, size, and complexity of the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems in the State, and that the State has consulted 
with the Administrator for that purpose;
    (e) Demonstrate that the employees and other personnel of the State 
safety oversight agency who are responsible for the oversight of rail 
fixed guideway public transportation systems are qualified to perform 
their functions, based on appropriate training, including the 
successful completion of the Public Transportation Safety Certification 
Training Program; and
    (f) Demonstrate that by law, the State prohibits any public 
transportation agency in the State from providing funds to the State 
safety oversight agency.


Sec.  674.13  Designation of oversight agency.

    (a) Every State that must establish a State Safety Oversight 
Program in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) must also establish a 
State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) for the purpose of overseeing the 
safety of rail fixed guideway public transportation systems within that 
State. Further, the State must ensure that:
    (1) The SSOA is financially and legally independent from any public 
transportation agency the SSOA is obliged to oversee;
    (2) The SSOA does not directly provide public transportation 
services in an area with a rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system the SSOA is obliged to oversee;
    (3) The SSOA does not employ any individual who is also responsible 
for administering a rail fixed guideway public transportation system 
the SSOA is obliged to oversee;
    (4) The SSOA has authority to review, approve, oversee, and enforce 
the public transportation agency safety plan for a rail fixed guideway 
public transportation system required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d);
    (5) The SSOA has investigative and enforcement authority with 
respect to the safety of all rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems within the State;
    (6) At least once every three years, the SSOA audits every rail 
fixed guideway public transportation system's compliance with the 
public transportation agency safety plan required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d); 
and
    (7) At least once a year, the SSOA reports the status of the safety 
of each rail fixed guideway public transportation system to the 
Governor, the FTA, and the board of directors, or

[[Page 11025]]

equivalent entity, of the rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system.
    (b) At the request of the Governor of a State, the Administrator 
may waive the requirements for financial and legal independence and the 
prohibitions on employee conflict of interest under paragraphs (a)(1) 
and (a)(3) of this section, if the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems in design, construction, or revenue operations 
in the State have fewer than one million combined actual and projected 
rail fixed guideway revenue miles per year or provide fewer than ten 
million combined actual and projected unlinked passenger trips per 
year. However:
    (1) If a State shares jurisdiction over one or more rail fixed 
guideway public transportation systems with another State, and has one 
or more rail fixed guideway public transportation systems that are not 
shared with another State, the revenue miles and unlinked passenger 
trips of the rail fixed guideway public transportation system under 
shared jurisdiction will not be counted in the Administrator's decision 
whether to issue a waiver.
    (2) The Administrator will rescind a waiver issued under this 
subsection if the number of revenue miles per year or unlinked 
passenger trips per year increases beyond the thresholds specified in 
this subsection.


Sec.  674.15  Designation of oversight agency for multi-state system.

    In an instance of a rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system that operates in more than one State, all States in which that 
rail fixed guideway public transportation system operates must either:
    (a) Ensure that uniform safety standards and procedures in 
compliance with 49 U.S.C. 5329 are applied to that rail fixed guideway 
public transportation system, through a State safety oversight program 
that has been approved by the Administrator; or
    (b) Designate a single entity that meets the requirements for an 
SSOA to serve as the SSOA for that rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system, through a State safety oversight program that 
has been approved by the Administrator.


Sec.  674.17  Use of Federal financial assistance.

    (a) In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6), FTA will make grants 
of Federal financial assistance to eligible States to help the States 
develop and carry out their State Safety Oversight Programs. This 
Federal financial assistance may be used for reimbursement of both the 
operational and administrative expenses of State Safety Oversight 
Programs, consistent with the uniform administrative requirements for 
grants to States under 2 CFR parts 200 and 1201. The expenses eligible 
for reimbursement include, specifically, the expense of employee 
training and the expense of establishing and maintaining a State Safety 
Oversight Agency in compliance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4).
    (b) The apportionments of available Federal financial assistance to 
eligible States will be made in accordance with a formula, established 
by the Administrator, following opportunity for public notice and 
comment. The formula will take into account fixed guideway vehicle 
revenue miles, fixed guideway route miles, and fixed guideway vehicle 
passenger miles attributable to all rail fixed guideway systems within 
each eligible State not subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal 
Railroad Administration.
    (c) The grants of Federal financial assistance for State safety 
oversight shall be subject to terms and conditions as the Administrator 
deems appropriate.
    (d) The Federal share of the expenses eligible for reimbursement 
under a grant for State safety oversight activities shall be eighty 
percent of the reasonable costs incurred under that grant.
    (e) The non-Federal share of the expenses eligible for 
reimbursement under a grant for State safety oversight activities may 
not be comprised of Federal funds, any funds received from a public 
transportation agency, or any revenues earned by a public 
transportation agency.


Sec.  674.19  Certification of a State Safety Oversight Program.

    (a) The Administrator must determine whether a State Safety 
Oversight Program meets the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). Also, 
the Administrator must determine whether a State Safety Oversight 
Program is adequate to promote the purposes of 49 U.S.C. 5329, 
including, but not limited to, the National Public Transportation 
Safety Plan, the Public Transportation Safety Certification Training 
Program, and the Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans (``Transit 
Agency Safety Plans'').
    (b) The Administrator must issue a certification to a State whose 
State Safety Oversight Program meets the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 
5329(e). The Administrator must issue a denial of certification to a 
State whose State Safety Oversight Program does not meet the 
requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e).
    (c) In an instance in which the Administrator issues a denial of 
certification to a State whose State Safety Oversight Program does not 
meet the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), the Administrator must 
provide a written explanation, and allow the State an opportunity to 
modify and resubmit its State Safety Oversight Program for the 
Administrator's approval. In the event the State is unable to modify 
its State Safety Oversight Program to merit the Administrator's 
issuance of a certification, the Administrator must notify the Governor 
of that fact, and must ask the Governor to take all possible actions to 
correct the deficiencies that are precluding the issuance of a 
certification for the State Safety Oversight Program. In his or her 
discretion, the Administrator may also impose financial penalties as 
authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), which may include:
    (1) Withholding SSO grant funds from the State;
    (2) Withholding up to five percent of the 49 U.S.C. 5307 Urbanized 
Area formula funds appropriated for use in the State or urbanized area 
in the State, until such time as the SSOP can be certified; or
    (3) Requiring all of the rail fixed guideway public transportation 
systems governed by the SSOP to spend up to 100 percent of their 
Federal funding under 49 U.S.C. chapter 53 for ``safety-related 
improvements'' on their systems, only, until such time as the SSOP can 
be certified.).
    (d) In making a determination whether to issue a certification or a 
denial of certification for a State Safety Oversight Program, the 
Administrator must evaluate whether the cognizant State Safety 
Oversight Agency has sufficient authority, resources, and expertise to 
oversee the number, size, and complexity of the rail fixed guideway 
public transportation systems that operate within the State, or will 
attain the necessary authority, resources, and expertise in accordance 
with a developmental plan and schedule set forth to a sufficient level 
of detail in the State Safety Oversight Program.


Sec.  674.21  Withholding of Federal financial assistance for 
noncompliance.

    (a) In making a decision to impose financial penalties as 
authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), and determining the nature and amount 
of the financial penalties, the Administrator shall consider the extent 
and circumstances of the noncompliance; the operating budgets of the 
State Safety Oversight Agency and the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems that will be affected by the financial 
penalties; and such other matters as justice may require.

[[Page 11026]]

    (b) If a State fails to establish a State Safety Oversight Program 
that has been approved by the Administrator within three years of the 
effective date of this part, FTA will be prohibited from obligating 
Federal financial assistance apportioned under 49 U.S.C. 5338 to any 
entity in the State otherwise eligible to receive that Federal 
financial assistance, in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3).


Sec.  674.23  Confidentiality of information.

    (a) A State, a State Safety Oversight Agency, or a Rail Transit 
Agency may withhold an investigation report prepared or adopted in 
accordance with these regulations from being admitted as evidence or 
used in a civil action for damages resulting from a matter mentioned in 
the report.
    (b) This part does not require public availability of any data, 
information, or procedures pertaining to the security of a rail fixed 
guideway public transportation system or its passenger operations.

Subpart C--State Safety Oversight Agencies


Sec.  674.25  Role of the State safety oversight agency.

    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must establish minimum 
standards for the safety of all rail fixed guideway public 
transportation systems within its oversight. These minimum standards 
must be consistent with the National Public Transportation Safety Plan, 
the Public Transportation Safety Certification Training Program, the 
principles and methods of Safety Management Systems, and all applicable 
Federal and State law.
    (b) Basic principles and methods of Safety Management Systems are 
set forth in an Appendix to this part, the ``Safety Management Systems 
(SMS) Framework.''
    (c) An SSOA must review and approve the Transit Agency Safety Plan 
for every rail fixed guideway public transportation system within its 
oversight. An SSOA must oversee a Rail Transit Agency's execution of 
its Transit Agency Safety Plan. An SSOA must enforce the execution of a 
Transit Agency Safety Plan, through an order of a corrective action 
plan or any other means, as necessary or appropriate. An SSOA must 
ensure that a Transit Agency Safety Plan meets the requirements for 
Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans at 49 U.S.C. 5329(d).
    (d) An SSOA has primary responsibility for the investigation of any 
hazard or risk that threatens the safety of a rail fixed guideway 
public transportation system within its oversight. An SSOA has primary 
responsibility for the investigation of any allegation of noncompliance 
with a Transit Agency Safety Plan. These responsibilities do not 
preclude the Administrator from exercising his or her authority under 
49 U.S.C. 5329(f) or 49 U.S.C. 5330.
    (e) An SSOA has primary responsibility for the investigation of an 
accident on a rail fixed guideway public transportation system. This 
responsibility does not preclude the Administrator from exercising his 
or her authority under 49 U.S.C. 5329(f) or 49 U.S.C. 5330.
    (f) An SSOA may enter into an agreement with a contractor for 
assistance in investigating accidents and incidents and for expertise 
the SSOA does not have within its own organization.
    (g) All personnel and contractors employed by an SSOA must comply 
with the requirements of the Public Transportation Safety Certification 
Training Program.


Sec.  674.27  State safety program standards.

    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must adopt and 
distribute a written State safety oversight program standard, 
consistent with the State Safety Oversight Program, the National Public 
Transportation Safety Plan, and the principles and methods of Safety 
Management Systems. This program standard must identify the processes 
and procedures that govern the activities of the SSOA. Also, this 
program standard must identify the processes and procedures a Rail 
Transit Agency must have in place to comply with the program standard. 
At minimum, this program standard must meet the following requirements:
    (1) Program management. The program standard must explain the 
authority of the SSOA to oversee the safety of rail fixed guideway 
public transportation systems; the policies that govern the activities 
of the SSOA; the reporting requirements that govern both the SSOA and 
the rail fixed guideway public transportation systems; and the steps 
the SSOA will take to ensure open, on-going communication between the 
SSOA and every rail fixed guideway public transportation system within 
its oversight.
    (2) Program standard development. The program standard must explain 
the SSOA's process for developing, reviewing, adopting, and revising 
its minimum standards for safety, and distributing those standards to 
the rail fixed guideway public transportation systems.
    (3) Safety Management Systems. The program standard must explain 
how the SSOA will apply the principles and methods of Safety Management 
Systems (SMS) in conducting oversight of Transit Agencies within its 
jurisdiction. The program standard must identify the SSOA official who 
serves as the functional equivalent of an accountable executive in a 
Rail Transit Agency, and all other officials in positions of executive 
leadership in the State or SSOA responsible for carrying out the State 
Safety Oversight Program. The program standard must set an explicit 
policy and objectives for safety in rail fixed guideway public 
transportation throughout the State. The program standard must explain 
the role of the SSOA in overseeing a Rail Transit Agency's practice of 
risk management, safety assurance, and safety promotion, throughout the 
Rail Transit Agency's organization. Basic principles and methods of SMS 
are set forth in an Appendix to this part, the ``System Management 
Systems (SMS) Framework.''
    (4) Oversight of Rail Transit Agency Safety Plans and Transit 
Agencies' internal safety reviews. The program standard must explain 
the role of the SSOA in overseeing a Rail Transit Agency's execution of 
its Transit Agency Safety Plan and any related safety reviews of the 
Rail Transit Agency's rail fixed guideway public transportation system. 
The program standard must describe the process whereby the SSOA will 
receive and evaluate all material submitted under the signature of a 
Rail Transit Agency's accountable executive. Also, the program standard 
must establish a procedure whereby a Rail Transit Agency will notify 
the SSOA before the Rail Transit Agency conducts an internal review of 
any aspect of the safety of its rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system.
    (5) Triennial SSOA audits of Rail Transit Agency Safety Plans. The 
program standard must explain the process the SSOA will follow and the 
criteria the SSOA will apply in conducting a complete audit of the Rail 
Transit Agency's compliance with its Transit Agency Safety Plan at 
least once every three years, in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(d) and 
49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(iv). Alternatively, the SSOA and Rail Transit 
Agency may agree that the SSOA will conduct its audit on an on-going 
basis over the three-year timeframe. The program standard must 
establish a procedure the SSOA and a Rail Transit Agency will follow to

[[Page 11027]]

manage findings and recommendations arising from the triennial audit.
    (6) Accident and incident notification. The program standard must 
establish requirements for a Rail Transit Agency to notify the SSOA of 
accidents and incidents on the Rail Transit Agency's rail fixed 
guideway public transportation system. These requirements must address, 
specifically, the time limits for notification, methods of 
notification, and the nature of the information the Rail Transit Agency 
must submit to the SSOA.
    (7) Investigations. The program standard must identify thresholds 
for incidents and accidents that require a Rail Transit Agency to 
conduct an investigation. Also, the program standard must address how 
the SSOA will coordinate its investigation with a Rail Transit Agency's 
own internal investigation; the role of the SSOA in supporting any 
investigation conducted or findings and recommendations made by the 
National Transportation Safety Board; and procedures for protecting the 
confidentiality of the investigation reports.
    (8) Corrective actions. The program standard must explain the 
process and criteria by which the SSOA may order a Rail Transit Agency 
to develop and carry out a corrective action plan, and a procedure for 
the SSOA to review and approve a corrective action plan. Also, the 
program standard must explain the SSOA's policy and practice for 
tracking and verifying a Rail Transit Agency's compliance with a 
corrective action plan, and managing any conflicts between the SSOA and 
a Rail Transit Agency relating either to the development or execution 
of a corrective action plan or the findings of an investigation.
    (b) At least once a year an SSOA must submit its program standard 
and any referenced program procedures to FTA, with an indication of any 
revisions made to the program standard since the last annual submittal. 
FTA will evaluate the SSOA's program standard as part of its continuous 
evaluation of the State Safety Oversight Program, and in preparing 
FTA's report to Congress on the certification status of that State 
Safety Oversight Program, in accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(8).


Sec.  674.29  Transit Agency Safety Plans: General requirements.

    (a) In determining whether to approve a Transit Agency Safety Plan 
for a rail fixed guideway public transportation system, a State Safety 
Oversight Agency (SSOA) must evaluate whether the Transit Agency Safety 
Plan is based on an adequate Safety Management System; is consistent 
with the National Public Transportation Safety Plan; is in compliance 
with the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(d), and the program standard 
set by the SSOA.
    (b) In determining whether a Transit Agency Safety Plan is based on 
an adequate Safety Management System, an SSOA must determine, 
specifically, whether the Transit Agency Safety Plan sets forth a 
sufficiently explicit safety policy for the rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system; a sufficiently explicit process for safety risk 
management, with adequate means of risk control for the rail fixed 
guideway public transportation system; adequate means of safety 
assurance for the rail fixed guideway public transportation system; and 
adequate means of safety promotion to support the execution of the 
Transit Agency Safety Plan by all employees, agents, and contractors 
for the rail fixed guideway public transportation system.
    (c) In an instance in which an SSOA does not approve a Transit 
Agency Safety Plan, the SSOA must provide a written explanation, and 
allow the Rail Transit Agency an opportunity to modify and resubmit its 
Transit Agency Safety Plan for the SSOA's approval.


Sec.  674.31  Triennial audits: General requirements.

    At least once every three years, a State Safety Oversight Agency 
(SSOA) must conduct a complete audit of a Rail Transit Agency's 
compliance with its Transit Agency Safety Plan. Alternatively, an SSOA 
and a Rail Transit Agency may agree that the SSOA will conduct the 
audit on an on-going basis over the three-year timeframe. At the 
conclusion of the three-year audit cycle, the SSOA shall issue a report 
with findings and recommendations arising from the audit, which must 
include, at minimum, an analysis of the effectiveness of the Transit 
Agency Safety Plan, recommendations for improvements, and a corrective 
action plan, if necessary or appropriate. The Rail Transit Agency must 
be given an opportunity to comment on the findings and recommendations.


Sec.  674.33  Notifications: Accidents and Incidents.

    (a) Two-hour notification. In addition to the requirements for 
accident notification set forth in a State Safety Oversight Program 
standard, a Rail Transit Agency must notify both the State Safety 
Oversight Agency (SSOA) and the Administrator within two hours of any 
Accident or Incident occurring on a rail fixed guideway public 
transportation system. The criteria and thresholds for Accident or 
Incident notification and reporting are defined in a reporting manual 
developed for the electronic reporting system specified by FTA as 
required in Sec.  674.39(b).
    (b) FRA notification. In any instance in which a Rail Transit 
Agency must notify the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) of an 
Accident or Incident as defined by 49 CFR 225.5 (i.e., shared use of 
the general railroad system trackage or corridors), the Rail Transit 
Agency must also notify the SSOA and the Administrator of the Accident 
or Incident within the same time frame as required by the FRA.


Sec.  674.35  Investigations.

    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must conduct an 
independent investigation of any Accident or Incident that is reported 
to the SSOA and the Administrator in accordance with Sec.  674.33(a). 
In any instance in which a Rail Transit Agency is conducting its own 
internal investigation of the Accident or Incident, the SSOA and the 
Rail Transit Agency must coordinate their investigations in accordance 
with the State safety oversight program standard and any agreements in 
effect.
    (b) Within a reasonable time, an SSOA must issue a written report 
on its investigation of an Accident or Incident in accordance with 
established reporting requirements. The report must describe the 
investigation activities; identify the factors that caused or 
contributed to the Accident or Incident; and set forth a corrective 
action plan, as necessary or appropriate. The SSOA must formally adopt 
the report of an Accident or Incident and transmit that report to the 
Rail Transit Agency for review and concurrence. If a Rail Transit 
Agency does not concur with an SSOA's report, the SSOA may allow the 
Rail Transit Agency to submit a written dissent from the report, which 
may be included in the report, in the discretion of the SSOA.
    (c) All personnel and contractors that conduct investigations on 
behalf of an SSOA must be trained to conduct investigations in 
accordance with the Public Transportation Safety Certification Training 
Program.


Sec.  674.37  Corrective action plans.

    (a) In any instance in which a Rail Transit Agency must develop and 
carry out a corrective action plan, the State Safety Oversight Agency 
(SSOA) must review and approve the plan before the Rail Transit Agency 
carries out the plan. A corrective action plan must describe, 
specifically, the actions the Rail Transit

[[Page 11028]]

Agency will take to minimize, control, correct, or eliminate the risks 
and hazards identified by the plan, the schedule for taking those 
actions, and the individuals responsible for taking those actions. The 
Rail Transit Agency must periodically report to the SSOA the Rail 
Transit Agency's progress in carrying out the corrective action plan. 
The SSOA may monitor the Rail Transit Agency's progress in carrying out 
the corrective action plan through unannounced, on-site inspections, or 
any other means the SSOA deems necessary or appropriate.
    (b) In any instance in which a safety Event on the Rail Transit 
Agency's rail fixed guideway public transportation system is the 
subject of an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board 
(NTSB), the SSOA must evaluate whether the findings or recommendations 
by the NTSB require a corrective action plan by the Rail Transit 
Agency, and if so, the SSOA must order the Rail Transit Agency to 
develop and carry out a corrective action plan.


Sec.  674.39  State Safety Oversight Agency annual reporting to FTA.

    (a) On or before March 15 of each year, a State Safety Oversight 
Agency (SSOA) must submit the following material to FTA:
    (1) The State safety oversight program standard adopted in 
accordance with Sec.  674.27, with an indication of any changes to the 
program standard during the preceding twelve months;
    (2) Evidence that each of its employees and contractors is in 
compliance with the requirements of the Public Transportation Safety 
Certification Training Program;
    (3) A publicly available report that summarizes its oversight 
activities for the preceding twelve months, describes the causal 
factors of accidents or incidents identified through investigation, and 
identifies the status of corrective actions, changes to Transit Agency 
Safety Plans, and the level of effort by the SSOA in carrying out its 
oversight activities;
    (4) A summary of the triennial audits completed during the 
preceding twelve months, and the Transit Agencies' progress in carrying 
out corrective action plans arising from triennial audits conducted in 
accordance with Sec.  674.31;
    (5) Evidence that the SSOA has reviewed and approved any changes to 
the Transit Agency Safety Plans during the preceding twelve months; and
    (6) A certification that the SSOA is in compliance with the 
requirements of this part.
    (b) These materials must be submitted electronically through a 
reporting system specified by FTA.


Sec.  674.41  Conflicts of interest.

    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must be financially and 
legally independent from any rail fixed guideway public transportation 
system under the oversight of the SSOA, unless the Administrator has 
issued a waiver of this requirement in accordance with Sec.  674.13(b).
    (b) An SSOA may not employ any individual who provides services to 
a rail fixed guideway public transportation system under the oversight 
of the SSOA, unless the Administrator has issued a waiver of this 
requirement in accordance with Sec.  674.13(b).
    (c) A contractor may not provide services to both an SSOA and a 
rail fixed guideway public transportation system under the oversight of 
that SSOA.

Appendix A to Part 674 to Part 674--Safety Management Systems (SMS) 
Framework

I. Overview

    The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) is adopting the 
principles and methods of Safety Management Systems (SMS) as the 
basis for the National Public Transportation Safety Program. With a 
focus on organization-wide safety policy, proactive hazard 
management, strong safety communication between workers and 
management, targeted safety training, and clear accountabilities and 
responsibilities for critical safety activities, SMS provides an 
enhanced structure for addressing the safety provisions specified in 
the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21).
    SMS is a formal, top-down, organization-wide approach to 
managing safety risks and assuring the effectiveness of safety risk 
mitigations. The specific components and sub-components of FTA's SMS 
framework are discussed in Section V of this Appendix.

II. Background

    Building on the public transportation industry's four decades of 
experience with system safety, SMS supplements traditional 
engineering processes by integrating management systems and 
organizational culture into critical safety risk management and 
assurance functions. As a result, SMS ensures that each public 
transportation agency, no matter its size or service environment, 
has the necessary organizational structures, accountabilities, 
activities and tools in place to direct and control resources to 
optimally manage safety.
    Focusing on collaboration and information sharing, SMS helps 
management and labor work together to control risk better, detect 
and correct safety problems earlier, share and analyze safety data 
more effectively, and measure safety performance more clearly. The 
ultimate goal of SMS is to ensure that the public transportation 
agency has an inclusive and effective process to direct resources to 
optimally manage safety.
    SMS establishes lines of safety accountability throughout an 
organization, starting at the executive management level, and 
provides a structure to support a sound safety culture from the 
front-line to the boardroom. SMS enables agencies to address 
organizational deficiencies that may lead to safety issues or 
unidentified safety risks, identify system-wide trends in safety, 
and manage the potential consequences of hazards before they result 
in incidents or accidents.
    SMS is scalable to organizations of any size and flexible enough 
to be effective in all transit environments, from the largest urban 
operator to the smallest rural transit system provider. SMS also 
provides oversight agencies with new tools, approaches, and 
opportunities to align safety priorities and promote continuous 
improvement.
    In the public transportation safety provisions of the Moving 
Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), FTA, the States 
and the public transportation industry have been presented with a 
rare opportunity to implement a modern regulatory framework that 
will help a safe industry become even safer. Adopting SMS principles 
will further deepen the industry's commitment to the safety of its 
passengers, employees, equipment and facilities and will strengthen 
its core competencies in hazard identification, safety data 
acquisition and analysis, and internal auditing. Most significantly, 
SMS offers the promise of a stronger culture for employees and 
managers to work together to solve safety problems.

III. Scalability and Flexibility

    Service providers within the public transportation industry can 
vary greatly based on size, complexity and operating 
characteristics. Transit agency management needs processes, 
activities and tools that scale to size, complexity and uniqueness 
of the transit system. SMS provides such an approach. SMS is 
flexible, and can be scaled to the mode, size, and complexity of any 
transit operator, in any environment--urban, suburban, or rural. The 
extent to which the transit agency's SMS processes, activities and 
tools are used and documented will vary from agency to agency. For a 
small bus operation, that SMS is going to be simple and 
straightforward. For a larger transit agency with hundreds or 
thousands of employees and multiple modes, that system is going to 
be more complicated.
    SMS scales itself to reflect the size and complexity of the 
operation, but the fundamental accountability remains the same. 
FTA's SMS Framework establishes the accountabilities, processes and 
activities necessary to implement an effective SMS. However, the 
transit agency will determine the level of detail necessary to 
identify and evaluate their own unique safety risks and target their 
resources to manage those safety risks.

IV. Executive Management Commitment

    SMS establishes lines of safety accountability throughout an 
organization,

[[Page 11029]]

particularly at the senior management level, and provides a 
structure to support a sound safety culture. Because SMS is a 
management approach, safety accountability must reside at the 
highest levels of management within a transit agency. In FTA's SMS 
Framework, this would be the Accountable Executive. Typically, the 
Accountable Executive will be the head of a transit agency, its 
Chief Executive Officer, President, General Manager, or Executive 
Director. Whatever the person's job title, the Accountable Executive 
plays the central role in developing and carrying out an SMS. 
Without the Accountable Executive's active endorsement and 
acceptance of accountability for the safety performance of a public 
transportation agency, an SMS cannot be effective. The extent to 
which an Accountable Executive will be involved in day-to-day SMS 
activities will depend both on the individual executive and the size 
and complexity of the organization.
    SMS does not require an Accountable Executive to be an expert in 
safety. Rather, the Accountable Executive must understand how the 
SMS works in his or her organization; know the key personnel to call 
upon for evaluating safety information; and grasp the significant 
safety issues that face the organization. The Accountable Executive 
should use the reports and analysis performed as part of the SMS 
process to support the agency's decision-making. For an Accountable 
Executive, safety information, like financial, schedule and service 
information, is an integral part of how resources are allocated, 
budgets are set, and risks are managed.

V. Key Components and Functional Elements of a Safety Management System

    As depicted below, FTA's SMS Framework is comprised of four key 
components and eleven sub-components that work together to refine, 
reinforce, and sustain the implementation of an SMS throughout a 
transit agency:
    (1) Safety Management Policy,
    (2) Safety Risk Management,
    (3) Safety Assurance, and
    (4) Safety Promotion.
    The component Safety Management Policy provides for the 
foundations of a public transportation agency's system for the 
management of safety. This component encompasses the agency's 
commitment to achieve explicit safety objectives and safety 
performance targets, as well as the agency's compromise to provide 
the necessary organizational structures to accomplish them. Under 
this component, senior leadership and employee responsibilities for 
the management of safety throughout the agency are respectively and 
distinctly established. This component also commits senior 
leadership to actively engage in the oversight of the agency's 
safety performance, by requiring regular review of the safety 
management policy statement, budget, and program by a designated 
Accountable Executive.
    The sub-components of the Safety Management Policy component 
are:
    Safety management policy statement--Clearly, succinctly and 
unambiguously frames the fundamentals upon which the transit agency 
will build and operate its SMS, documents management's commitment to 
the SMS, and inserts the management of safety at the same level of 
the topmost business processes of the transit agency.
    Critical to the value of the safety management policy statement, 
and to the operation of the SMS overall, is the introduction of an 
unambiguous clause reflecting executive level support for an 
effective employee safety reporting program.
    The safety management policy statement also documents 
management's commitment to continuous safety improvement, as well as 
to the continuous improvement of the safety management system 
itself.
    The Accountable Executive signs the safety management policy 
statement, which is distributed, with visible support from executive 
management, throughout the transit agency.
    Safety accountabilities and responsibilities--An explicit 
definition of the lines of accountability and responsibility for the 
management of safety within the transit agency, as well as the 
authorities required to deliver accountabilities and discharge 
responsibilities.
    This sub-component provides for the identification of an 
Accountable Executive and the definition of the required 
accountabilities, responsibilities and authorities of the post 
holder. The Accountable Executive is ultimately accountable for the 
implementation and continuous operation of the transit agency's SMS, 
ensuring that the transit agency has allocated resources and 
implemented mechanisms for the efficient and effective management of 
safety through its SMS to an extent commensurate to its needs, 
possibilities and constraints.
    The sub-component also provides for the appointment of a subject 
matter expert for the implementation and day-to-day operation of the 
SMS, the lines of relationship of the post holder with the 
Accountable Executive and the transit agency's governance structure, 
and the appointment of the staff necessary to support the post 
holder in the day-to-day operation of the SMS.
    It lastly provides for the definition of accountabilities, 
responsibilities and authorities of executive and senior management 
regarding the effective and efficient operation of the SMS.
    While safety management accountabilities, responsibilities and 
their delegation, and authorities may vary from agency to agency, 
they must nevertheless be defined and implemented.
    Integration with public safety and emergency management--All 
transit agencies have some level of emergency plans, procedures and/
or protocols that direct both internal emergency response to transit 
related events, and external emergency response in coordination with 
Local Emergency Management for community-wide emergency activities. 
Integration of plans, procedures and protocols through specific SMS-
related activities provides a 360-degree vision of how the transit 
agency meets its overall safety emergency management 
responsibilities.
    SMS documentation and records--SMS activities must be formally 
documented and available for reference throughout the organization. 
Therefore, a formal system of records and documentation control is 
an important element within the operation of SMS.
    This sub-component provides for the requirements of the agency 
to document its overall approach to the management of system, the 
activities for SMS implementation and its subsequent day-to-day 
operation, and the activities or procedures for the management of 
new or revised safety requirements, regulatory or otherwise.
    While the extent and complexity of the SMS documentation will be 
commensurate to the agency's size and complexity, SMS documentation 
and records must be readily available to all those with 
accountabilities for SMS performance or responsibilities for SMS 
implementation and operation.
    The component Safety Risk Management provides for the activities 
and tools a transit agency needs in order to identify precursors of 
safety concerns that might present during service delivery as well 
as their supporting operations. This allows a transit agency to 
anticipate the potential negative consequences of safety concerns, 
by evaluating whether it has taken enough precautions to control the 
potential consequences of identified safety concerns.
    Safety risk management is an ongoing and never-ending process. 
Safety risk management involves activities that allow the 
identification of hazards associated with the operation and 
maintenance of a public transportation system. Once hazards are 
identified, the Safety Risk Management process provides for the 
analysis of the potential consequences of identified hazards, for 
the evaluation of the safety risk of the potential consequences, and 
lastly for the development and implementation safety risk 
mitigations to address the anticipated, potential consequences of 
hazards.
    The sub-components of Safety Risk Management component are:
    Hazard identification and analysis--Provides for the critical 
first two steps in the SRM process. Under SMS, these steps help a 
transit agency identify and address concerns before they escalate 
into incidents, and provide a foundation for the evaluation 
activities that come next. It is important that hazard 
identification and analyses are supported agency-wide. Safety 
concerns and issues are an inevitable part of transit operations. 
Only after hazards are identified, can they be analyzed. Therefore, 
an explicit hazard identification program is critical. In this 
respect, a transit agency's employees are an irreplaceable asset for 
hazard identification.
    Safety risk evaluation and mitigation--Safety risk evaluation 
provides for the evaluation of the magnitude of the potential 
consequence of identified hazards. The term safety risk refers to 
the likelihood that people could be harmed or equipment could be 
damaged by the potential consequences of a hazard. Therefore, safety 
risk is expressed and measured by the predicted probability and 
severity of the hazard's potential

[[Page 11030]]

consequences. Safety risk evaluation must include the evaluation of 
existing mitigations to help determine whether the potential 
consequences of the hazard must be further mitigated. Safety risk 
mitigation is an action or resource which, when applied to an 
evaluated safety risk, reduces the probability and/or severity of 
the potential consequence of a hazard. Safety risk mitigation 
enables a transit agency to actively ``manage'' safety risk in a 
manner that is aligned with its safety performance targets and 
consists of initial, ongoing and revised mitigations.
    The component Safety Assurance ensures that chosen mitigations 
are appropriate and effective in addressing the evaluated safety 
risks, and generates confidence that the SMS contributes to the 
agency meeting its safety objectives and safety performance targets. 
This is achieved through the collection, analysis, and assessment of 
safety data. Safety Assurance is performed through inspections, 
observations, and auditing activities to support safety oversight 
and performance monitoring. Safety Assurance also helps a transit 
agency evaluate whether or not an anticipated change may impact 
safety.
    The sub-components of the Safety Assurance component are:
    Safety performance monitoring and measurement--An ongoing 
activity that ensures senior management has the data and information 
it needs to measure whether safety risk mitigations and safety-
related activities are appropriate and effective. Safety performance 
monitoring does not as much involve monitoring individuals, but 
rather monitoring the safety performance of the organization itself.
    Management of change--SMS places emphasis on managing change. 
There is a very simple reason for this. Whenever change is 
introduced within a public transportation agency, there is the 
potential that the change may impact safety by impacting existing 
safety risk mitigations. Therefore, the safety assurance component 
of an effective SMS will evaluate the anticipated change and, if it 
might impact safety, ensure that it is further evaluated through the 
transit agency's safety risk management process.
    Continuous improvement--Ensures constant improvement in the 
functioning of the entire SMS and includes ongoing management 
support to continuously monitor SMS implementation. SMS evaluation 
is necessary to ensure that the SMS continues to meet its core 
safety objectives; transit agency safety performance is monitored 
against its safety performance targets, and identified weaknesses 
are immediately addressed.
    The component Safety Promotion requires a combination of 
training and communication of safety information to employees to 
heighten the efficiency and effectiveness of the transit agency's 
SMS. Safety promotion provides visibility and knowledge of executive 
management's commitment to safety performance and an effective SMS 
throughout the transit agency. It typically includes formal and 
informal platforms for the communication of safety management 
information throughout the organization, safety management training 
for employees, training on employee roles and responsibilities 
within the SMS, and training on the mechanism for employees to 
report safety concerns.
    Safety promotion is a critical component of an efficient and 
effective SMS, setting the tone for the transit agency's safety 
management activities and helping to build a positive safety 
culture.
    The two sub-components of the Safety Promotion component are:
    Safety communication--Critical to maintaining the two-way 
feedback loop between front-line employees and management and 
establishing a safety culture that promotes the effective reporting 
of safety concerns or issues. Effective safety communication and SMS 
education will ensure that personnel are aware of the SMS and their 
role within it. It also ensures that safety critical information is 
conveyed in a timely manner, and effectively explains why particular 
safety actions are taken and why safety procedures are introduced or 
changed.
    Competencies and training--Provides for the development, through 
training, of key safety management competencies essential for the 
effective implementation and operation of an SMS, including safety 
reporting competencies and safety data management competencies. Each 
competency should be primarily aimed at a specific employee level.
    At the front-line employee level, safety management training 
should provide for the development of safety reporting competencies, 
i.e. employees should receive formal training on the expected 
contents of employee safety reporting (what to report; what not to 
report) and the procedures established for reporting. At the subject 
matter expert level (key safety management staff), formal training 
should develop safety data management competencies, i.e. how to 
analyze safety data, how to extract information, and how to turn 
safety information into safety intelligence for senior management 
decision-making. This also includes formal training to develop 
safety data collection, storage and retrieval competencies.

[FR Doc. 2015-03841 Filed 2-26-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P



                                                                                                      Vol. 80                           Friday,
                                                                                                      No. 39                            February 27, 2015




                                                                                                      Part V


                                                                                                      Department of Transportation
                                                                                                      Federal Transit Administration
                                                                                                      49 CFR Part 674
                                                                                                      State Safety Oversight; Proposed Rule
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00001   Fmt 4717   Sfmt 4717   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11002                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION                            received in the rulemaking docket, go to              Legal Authority
                                                                                                         www.regulations.gov or to the U.S.                       Section 20021 of MAP–21 amended
                                                 Federal Transit Administration                          Department of Transportation, 1200                    49 U.S.C. 5329 by adding several new
                                                                                                         New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W12–                      provisions that required FTA to
                                                 49 CFR Part 674                                         140, Washington, DC 20590 between                     establish a comprehensive public
                                                 [Docket No. FTA–2015–0003]                              9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday                       transportation safety program, the
                                                                                                         through Friday except Federal holidays.               elements of which include a National
                                                 RIN 2132–AB19
                                                                                                         FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:   For                Public Transportation Safety Plan; a
                                                 State Safety Oversight                                  program matters, Lynn Spencer,                        training and certification program for
                                                                                                         Director, FTA Office of System Safety,                Federal, state, and local transportation
                                                 AGENCY:  Federal Transit Administration                 telephone 202–366–5112 or                             agency employees with safety
                                                 (FTA), DOT.                                             Lynn.Spencer@dot.gov; For legal                       responsibilities; public transportation
                                                 ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking;                  matters, Richard Wong, FTA Office of                  agency safety plans; and a strengthened
                                                 request for comments.                                   Chief Counsel, telephone 202–366–0675                 State Safety Oversight Program,
                                                                                                         or Richard.Wong@dot.gov.                              consisting of elements at both the state
                                                 SUMMARY:    This notice seeks public                                                                          and rail transit agency level.
                                                 comment on proposed rules that would                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                 transform and strengthen State Safety                                                                         Summary of Key Provisions
                                                                                                         Executive Summary
                                                 Oversight (SSO) of rail fixed guideway                                                                           The NPRM proposes to make the
                                                 public transportation systems. FTA will                    This rulemaking would replace the                  following changes to strengthen the
                                                 issue a final rule and response to                      regulations for State Safety Oversight                existing SSO program:
                                                 comments following the close of the                     (SSO) of rail fixed guideway public                      • States would assume greater
                                                 comment period. Once FTA issues a                       transportation systems in place for the               responsibility for overseeing the safety
                                                 final rule, the agency will rescind its                 past twenty years, and significantly                  of their rail fixed guideway systems.
                                                 current regulations.                                    strengthen the program to prevent and                    • FTA would review and approve
                                                 DATES: Comments must be received by                     mitigate accidents and incidents on                   each state’s SSO program, including
                                                 April 28, 2015.                                         those systems. In the Moving Ahead for                certifying whether states are meeting the
                                                 ADDRESSES: Please submit your                           Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–                statutory criteria and withholding funds
                                                 comments by only one of the following                   21; Pub. L. 112–141, July 6, 2012),                   from those states that do not.
                                                 methods:                                                Congress directed FTA to establish a                     • FTA would impose financial
                                                    • Online: Use the Federal                            comprehensive Public Transportation                   penalties on those states with non-
                                                 eRulemaking portal at http://                           Safety Program (codified at 49 U.S.C.                 existent or non-compliant safety
                                                 www.regulations.gov and follow the                      5329), one element of which is the State              oversight programs.
                                                 instructions for submitting comments.                   Safety Oversight program. The purpose                 Costs and Benefits
                                                    • U.S. Mail: Send your comments to                   of today’s NPRM is to carry out the
                                                 the Docket Management Facility, U.S.                    several explicit statutory mandates to                   As discussed in greater detail below,
                                                 Department of Transportation, 1200                                                                            FTA conducted a task-by-task analysis
                                                                                                         strengthen the States’ oversight of the
                                                 New Jersey Avenue SE., W12–140,                                                                               to assess recurring and non-recurring
                                                                                                         safety of their rail transit systems, and
                                                 Washington, DC 20590–0001.                                                                                    costs for the proposed regulations to
                                                                                                         ensure that the States’ regulatory
                                                    • Hand Delivery or Courier: Go to                    agencies have the necessary
                                                                                                                                                               SSOs and rail transit agencies against
                                                 Room W12–140 on the ground floor of                                                                           the recurring costs for the current SSO
                                                                                                         enforcement authority and financial and
                                                 the West Building, U.S. Department of                                                                         regulations. Compared to current
                                                                                                         human resources for that purpose.
                                                 Transportation headquarters, 1200 New                                                                         spending levels of State Safety
                                                                                                            In the legislative history of MAP–21,              Oversight activities, the proposed rule
                                                 Jersey Avenue SE., between 9 a.m. and
                                                                                                         Congress took note of several critical                would require an incremental $9.5
                                                 5 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through
                                                                                                         weaknesses in the State Safety Oversight              million per year on the part of SSOAs
                                                 Friday except Federal holidays.
                                                    • Telefax: Send your comments to                     program, including:                                   and $13.1 million for rail transit
                                                 202–493–2251.                                              • Lack of adequate and consistent                  agencies, compared to current spending
                                                    Instructions: All comments must                      safety practices across rail transit                  levels. FTA is providing approximately
                                                 include the docket number for this                      systems                                               $22 million in grant funds each year to
                                                 rulemaking: FTA–2015–0003. Submit                          • Lack of regulatory, oversight, and               the States to off-set this NPRM’s annual
                                                 two copies of your comments if you                      enforcement authority                                 costs, meaning that this rulemaking is
                                                 submit them by mail. For confirmation                      • Limited SSO program funding, staff,              revenue neutral between the Federal
                                                 that FTA received your comments,                        training, and other resources                         government and the States. FTA also
                                                 include a self-addressed, stamped                                                                             provides funding that rail transit
                                                                                                            • Lack of SSO financial and legal                  agencies may use for these purposes, but
                                                 postcard. All comments received will be
                                                                                                         independence from the rail transit                    is unable to provide an estimate of how
                                                 posted without change to
                                                                                                         agencies they oversee.                                much FTA funds will be used here. FTA
                                                 www.regulations.gov, including any
                                                 personal information provided. Please                      See generally, Sen. Rpt. 111–232 (July             conducted a breakeven analysis in order
                                                 see the Privacy Act heading under                       26, 2010).                                            to determine what amount of the
                                                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below, for                       Today’s NPRM is the critical first step            quantified benefits would need to
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 Privacy Act information pertinent to any                in meeting the MAP–21 requirements                    accrue to outweigh the costs for this
                                                 submitted comments or materials, and                    for State Safety Oversight of rail fixed              rulemaking and the Transit Agency
                                                 you may review DOT’s complete                           guideway public transportation systems                Safety Plan by looking at, primarily, the
                                                 Privacy Act Statement published in the                  now set forth at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). Once              safety events reported to FTA and, in a
                                                 Federal Register on April 11, 2000, at                  FTA issues a final rule for State Safety              more conservative analysis, only the 5
                                                 65 FR 19477.                                            Oversight, to be codified at 49 CFR part              NTSB-investigated accidents since 2004
                                                    Docket Access: For access to                         674, the agency will rescind the current              that were related to inadequate safety
                                                 background documents and comments                       regulations at 49 CFR part 659.                       oversight programs.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         11003

                                                 Background                                              portion of the public transportation                  statute further directed UMTA to
                                                    The Moving Ahead for Progress in the                 industry—the recipients of Federal                    determine the nature and extent of
                                                 21st Century Act (‘‘MAP–21’’; Pub. L.                   funds under 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53 that                 hazardous conditions on transit
                                                 112–141), authorizes a comprehensive                    operate rail fixed guideway transit                   systems; determine the means that
                                                 Public Transportation Safety Program at                 systems not subject to the jurisdiction of            might best correct or eliminate those
                                                 49 U.S.C. 5329. Four key components of                  the Federal Railroad Administration                   hazardous conditions; and compel a
                                                 the program are the National Public                     (FRA), the States in which those rail                 grant recipient to submit a plan for
                                                 Transportation Safety Plan, authorized                  systems lie, and the State Safety                     correcting or eliminating those
                                                 by Section 5329(b); the Public                          Oversight Agencies (SSOAs) required to                hazardous conditions. Eight years later,
                                                 Transportation Safety Certification                     oversee the safety of those rail systems.             however, in the Surface Transportation
                                                                                                         Conversely, the rulemakings for the                   Assistance Act of 1982, the Congress
                                                 Training Program, authorized by Section
                                                                                                         National Plan, the Transit Agency Safety              weakened this investigatory authority
                                                 5329(c); the Public Transportation
                                                                                                         Plans, and the Safety Certification                   by repealing Section 107 of the National
                                                 Agency Safety Plans, required by
                                                                                                         Training Program all arise under the                  Mass Transportation Assistance Act of
                                                 Section 5329(d); and the State Safety
                                                                                                         authority of MAP–21, which took effect                1974; moving the authority to Section
                                                 Oversight Program, authorized by
                                                                                                         on October 1, 2012; these rulemakings                 22 of the UMT Act; and amending the
                                                 Section 5329(e). FTA will issue rules to
                                                                                                         will apply to all modes of public                     statute to make the authority
                                                 carry out all of these plans and
                                                                                                         transportation, both rail and rubber tire;            discretionary—not mandatory—striking
                                                 programs under the rulemaking
                                                                                                         and they will apply to the                            the word ‘‘shall’’ and inserting the word
                                                 authority of 49 U.S.C. 5329(f)(7).
                                                                                                         manufacturers of public transportation                ‘‘may.’’
                                                    On October 3, 2013, FTA issued an                                                                             This very limited Federal authority
                                                                                                         vehicles, as well as the operators of
                                                 Advance Notice of Proposed                                                                                    for safety did not prove satisfactory, in
                                                                                                         public transportation.
                                                 Rulemaking (ANPRM) for the National                        To provide some context for this                   the view of the National Transportation
                                                 Public Transportation Safety Plan                       NPRM, the following is a brief history                Safety Board (NTSB or ‘‘Board’’). In
                                                 (‘‘National Plan’’), the Public                         of FTA’s State Safety Oversight                       August 1991, after a number of
                                                 Transportation Safety Certification                     Program.                                              accidents in the industry—including
                                                 Training Program (‘‘Certification                                                                             very serious accidents on rapid rail
                                                 Training Program’’), and the Public                     History of State Safety Oversight
                                                                                                                                                               systems in Philadelphia, Chicago, and
                                                 Transportation Agency Safety Plans                         FTA’s predecessor agency, the Urban                New York City—the Board published a
                                                 (‘‘Transit Agency Safety Plans’’). 78 FR                Mass Transportation Administration                    study titled ‘‘Oversight of Rail Rapid
                                                 61251–73. On April 30, 2014, FTA                        (UMTA), originated under the Urban                    Transit Safety’’ (NTSB/SS–91/02) in
                                                 proposed interim provisions for a Safety                Mass Transportation Act (UMT Act) of                  which it urged all States to develop or
                                                 Certification Training Program, as                      1964—a Great Society initiative under                 revise safety programs to ensure
                                                 authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(c)(2). 79                  the Kennedy and Johnson                               comprehensive and effective oversight
                                                 FR 24363. In today’s Federal Register,                  Administrations, designed to assist state             over rapid rail systems in their
                                                 FTA is issuing final interim certification              and local governments in financing                    jurisdictions. The NTSB suggested that
                                                 safety training program provisions. FTA                 urban mass transportation systems ‘‘to                States have primary authority for
                                                 is now reviewing the comments on the                    be operated by public or private mass                 oversight of rail transit safety, but it
                                                 ANPRM for the National Plan,                            transportation companies as determined                urged UMTA to evaluate the
                                                 Certification Training Program, and                     by local needs.’’ (Pub. L. 88–365;                    effectiveness of States’ oversight of rail
                                                 Transit Agency Safety Plans. In the near                quoting Section 2(b)(3) of the UMT Act,               transit, develop guidelines, and require
                                                 future, FTA expects to issue an NPRM                    49 U.S.C. app. 1602(b)(3)). UMTA’s                    States and transit operators to use their
                                                 for the National Plan, Certification                    mission, at that time, was strictly                   UMTA grant funds to improve the safety
                                                 Training Program, and Transit Agency                    limited to providing Federal financial                of rail transit systems. Also, the NTSB
                                                 Safety Plans.                                           assistance to develop and maintain                    implored UMTA to withhold its Federal
                                                    Earlier, on May 13, 2013, the Federal                municipal transit systems. UMTA had                   financial assistance as necessary
                                                 Transit Administrator issued a Dear                     no regulatory authority whatsoever over               pending corrective action by the States
                                                 Colleague letter to the public                          any of its grant recipients. Deliberately,            and transit operators.
                                                 transportation industry announcing the                  the Congress chose not to give UMTA                      Very shortly thereafter, in response to
                                                 agency’s intention to adopt the                         any ability to establish national                     the NTSB recommendations, the
                                                 framework and principles of Safety                      standards for safety in urban mass                    Congress created a State Safety
                                                 Management Systems (SMS) as the basis                   transportation. See, e.g., Amalgamated                Oversight program for rail fixed
                                                 for all rulemakings and other initiatives               Transit Union v. Skinner, 894 F.2d                    guideway transit safety in Section 3029
                                                 FTA will undertake to improve the                       1362, 1364 (D.C. Cir. 1990).                          of the Intermodal Surface
                                                 safety of public transportation. Both the                  Several years thereafter, following a              Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA),
                                                 Dear Colleague letter and a set of                      series of troubling accidents in the rail             enacted in December 1991 (Pub. L. 102–
                                                 frequently asked questions about SMS                    transit industry, Congress recognized a               240). Among the many fundamental
                                                 are available on FTA’s Web site at                      need to provide UMTA with a limited                   changes ISTEA made to the Federal-aid
                                                 http://www.fta.dot.gov/tso_15177.html.                  authority to investigate accidents and                programs for highways and public
                                                    This NPRM pertains only to the State                 hazardous conditions in urban mass                    transportation, ISTEA renamed UMTA
                                                 Safety Oversight (SSO) Program                          transportation. Specifically, in Section              as the Federal Transit Administration
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). The                    107 of the National Mass Transportation               (FTA), and directed FTA to compel
                                                 rulemaking for the SSO Program differs                  Assistance Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93–503),              States with rail transit systems within
                                                 from the other rulemakings under the                    Congress instructed the agency to                     their borders not otherwise subject to
                                                 Public Transportation Safety Program in                 ‘‘investigate unsafe conditions in any                the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad
                                                 that it will replace a set of regulations               facility, equipment, or manner of                     Administration (FRA) (e.g., commuter
                                                 that have been in place since 1995,                     operation financed under this Act                     rail systems, or light rail systems
                                                 codified at 49 CFR part 659. The SSO                    which the Secretary believes creates a                connecting to the ‘‘general railroad
                                                 regulations pertain only to a limited                   serious hazard of death or injury.’’ The              system’’ of the United States, as


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00003   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11004                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 described in 49 CFR part 209 Appendix                   action plans. The effective date of the               practice of allowing a rail transit
                                                 A) to establish and carry out safety                    final rule was deferred to January 1,                 operator or an SSOA to subjectively
                                                 program plans for each of those rail                    1997, to give States an opportunity to                determine and address an
                                                 transit systems. The statute directed that              enact state statutes and regulations to               ‘‘unacceptable hazardous condition.’’
                                                 the safety program plans include, at                    carry out the ISTEA mandates.                         FTA issued a final rule on April 29,
                                                 minimum, core requirements for safety,                     The FTA SSO rule and the APTA                      2005, at 70 FR 22562–83, which is the
                                                 lines of authority, levels of                           Guidelines were widely accepted as the                rule still in place today. In the final rule,
                                                 responsibility, and methods of                          baseline for State oversight of the safety            FTA chose to include a good many of
                                                 documentation for those subjects.                       of rail transit until the summer of 2001.             the APTA Guidelines as regulatory
                                                 Further, Section 3029 of ISTEA vested                   In June and August of that year, there                standards. Further, the final rule
                                                 FTA with explicit authority to withhold                 were two collisions of rapid rail trains              clarified the roles and responsibilities of
                                                 funding from any State that did not                     on the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA)                States and their SSOAs; set a new
                                                 comply with the statutory mandates,                     system—both investigated by the                       definition of ‘‘hazard,’’ and
                                                 and directed FTA to promulgate rules                    NTSB—which called into question the
                                                                                                                                                               requirements for hazard management
                                                 for that purpose. In enacting Section                   effectiveness of the rule and the
                                                                                                                                                               plans; revised the requirements for
                                                 3029, the Congress agreed with NTSB                     guidelines. In its Special Investigation
                                                                                                                                                               SSOAs to conduct investigations; and
                                                 that the States, not FTA, should be the                 Report issued in September 2002
                                                                                                         (NTSB/SIR–02/01), the Board                           fleshed out the minimum standards for
                                                 principal oversight authorities for rail                                                                      system safety program plans, accident
                                                 transit within their jurisdictions, given               determined the probable cause of both
                                                                                                         accidents to have been the train                      notification, and corrective action plans.
                                                 that public transportation is an
                                                 inherently local activity that, with few                operators’ failure to comply with                        Notwithstanding the amendments to
                                                 exceptions, did not cross state                         operating rules designed to prevent                   the SSO regulations in the 2005
                                                 boundaries. Notably, this new authority                 those types of collisions, and the failure            rulemaking, the regulations were
                                                 for FTA, initially codified at Section 28               of CTA management to exercise                         criticized for their lack of rigor, and the
                                                 of the Federal Transit Act, later re-                   adequate oversight of the operational                 States’ SSO programs were criticized for
                                                 codified at 49 U.S.C. 5330, made no                     safety of its rapid rail system.                      lack of authority, resources, and
                                                 provision for oversight of bus                          Additionally, however, the Board                      expertise. Most notably, in July 2006,
                                                 operations—perhaps because the 1991                     identified several weaknesses in FTA’s                the U.S. Government Accountability
                                                 NTSB report had focused on rail transit.                SSO program, and noted, specifically,                 Office (GAO) criticized the regulations
                                                                                                         that a previous audit of CTA by APTA                  and identified some fundamental
                                                    The First Rulemaking: To meet the                    had not identified any deficiencies in
                                                 ISTEA directives, FTA issued an                                                                               weaknesses in SSOAs in a report titled
                                                                                                         CTA’s adherence to APTA’s ‘‘System                    ‘‘Rail Transit: Additional Federal
                                                 Advance Notice of Proposed                              Safety Checklist’’—a procedure that
                                                 Rulemaking for State Safety Oversight                                                                         Leadership Would Enhance FTA’s State
                                                                                                         used only record reviews and                          Safety Oversight Program,’’ http://
                                                 on June 25, 1992, at 57 FR 28572–5,                     supplemental spot checks to gauge
                                                 followed by a Notice of Proposed                                                                              www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-821.
                                                                                                         whether operating rules were being                    The GAO report found that the staffing
                                                 Rulemaking (NPRM) on December 9,                        followed, and which provided little
                                                 1993, at 58 FR 64856–69. On December                                                                          levels and expertise varied greatly
                                                                                                         guidance on what rules a compliance                   across the SSOAs, and that by their own
                                                 27, 1995, FTA promulgated a final rule                  program should entail or how those
                                                 for State Safety Oversight at 60 FR                                                                           admission, many of the SSOAs lacked
                                                                                                         rules should be carried out. Thus, the                enough qualified staff and adequate
                                                 67034–48. In short, the final rule                      NTSB concluded that the APTA
                                                 obliged every State with a rail transit                                                                       levels of training to meet their
                                                                                                         Guidelines were not sufficiently specific             responsibilities—some of them
                                                 system not subject to the jurisdiction of               for making assessments of the
                                                 FRA to establish an oversight agency,                                                                         employing as few as 0.1 or 0.2 full-time
                                                                                                         effectiveness of rail transit operators’              equivalent positions for dedicated rail
                                                 and obliged that oversight agency to                    safety programs, nor were the
                                                 develop a ‘‘system safety program                                                                             transit safety oversight—and for many of
                                                                                                         Guidelines an effective tool for State
                                                 standard’’ that, at a minimum, adopted                                                                        them, the lack of funding was a serious
                                                                                                         oversight of rail transit safety. The
                                                 the uniform guidelines for rail transit                                                                       impediment. The GAO noted that the
                                                                                                         NTSB called on APTA to revise its
                                                 systems set by the Manual for the                                                                             SSO regulations provided no
                                                                                                         manual to provide explicit guidance to
                                                 Development of Rail System Safety                       the industry on auditing the                          enforcement power to the SSOAs, and
                                                 Program Plans, published by the                         effectiveness of rail transit safety                  very little enforcement power to FTA,
                                                 American Public Transit Association                     compliance programs, and for FTA to                   with only the option of withholding up
                                                 (APTA). These ‘‘APTA Guidelines’’                       amend its SSO regulations at 49 CFR                   to five percent of a rail transit system’s
                                                 were incorporated by reference into the                 part 659, accordingly.                                urbanized area formula funding if FTA
                                                 final rule. Also, the final rule obliged                   The Second Rulemaking: In response                 were to find a State not in compliance
                                                 the State oversight agencies to review                  to the 2002 NTSB report on the CTA                    with the SSO regulations. Additionally,
                                                 safety audit reports from the rail                      accidents, on March 9, 2004, FTA                      the GAO report faulted FTA for having
                                                 systems, conduct on-site safety reviews                 published an NPRM at 69 FR 11218–32                   failed to set goals and performance
                                                 at least once every three years,                        intended to strengthen the SSO                        measures for State Safety Oversight, and
                                                 investigate accidents and ‘‘unacceptable                regulations. Specifically, FTA proposed               having failed to audit SSOAs as often as
                                                 hazardous conditions’’ as reported by                   to remove the incorporation by                        originally planned. GAO urged FTA to
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 the rail transit systems, approve                       reference of the APTA Guidelines from                 set both short- and long-term goals for
                                                 ‘‘corrective action plans’’ submitted by                49 CFR part 659, and in lieu thereof,                 State Safety Oversight, with measures of
                                                 the rail transit systems, make annual                   establish a set of enhanced,                          progress toward each of those goals.
                                                 reports to FTA summarizing its                          performance-based measures for the rail               Further, the GAO recommended that
                                                 oversight activities for the preceding                  transit industry, including, notably, a               FTA audit each of the SSOAs at least
                                                 twelve months, and make periodic                        rule making hazard identification and                 once every three years, and develop an
                                                 reports to FTA summarizing accidents,                   resolution a performance-based                        appropriate training curriculum for
                                                 hazardous conditions, and corrective                    procedure, as opposed to the previous                 SSOAs that would include courses on


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00004   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         11005

                                                 how to conduct oversight of rail transit                   In July 2009—one month after the                   from the same entities it was obliged to
                                                 systems.                                                WMATA Red Line accident near the                      oversee—the rail transit systems—thus
                                                    Legislation Leading to Enactment of                  Fort Totten station—Senators and                      creating a conflict of interest.
                                                 State Safety Oversight Authority in                     Representatives from the Maryland and                    In pertinent part, the Administration’s
                                                 MAP–21: Not long after the GAO’s                        Virginia delegations introduced the                   bill would have required FTA to
                                                 criticisms, the rail transit industry                   National Metro Safety Act in both                     develop uniform, national standards for
                                                 suffered a string of fatal accidents and                houses of Congress (H.R. 3338, S 1506,                rail transit safety; given FTA authority
                                                 accidents with multiple personal                        111th Cong. (2009)). The bills would                  to inspect rail transit systems for
                                                 injuries. On November 30, 2006, a                       have required FTA to establish national               compliance with those standards;
                                                 Washington Metropolitan Area Transit                    minimum safety standards for transit                  established a certification program for
                                                 Authority (WMATA) Blue Line train                       systems, including several particular                 State Safety Oversight; authorized grants
                                                 struck and killed two employees                         standards recommended by the NTSB                     of 100 percent Federal funding for SSO
                                                 inspecting rapid rail track in                          pertaining to event recorders,                        programs, once certified; and required
                                                 Alexandria, Virginia. On January 7,                     emergency access and egress,                          the SSO programs to be financially
                                                 2007, a WMATA Green Line train                          crashworthiness of vehicles, and                      independent from the rail transit
                                                 derailed near the Mt. Vernon station in                 employee hours of service. Neither bill               systems. Further, the Administration’s
                                                 Washington, DC, injuring 23 people and                  was reported out of committee. In                     bill would have given States the option
                                                 causing $3.8 million in damage. On May                  December 2009, on behalf of the                       to decline participation in the SSO
                                                 28, 2008, two Massachusetts Bay                         President, Secretary of Transportation                program, without penalty, in which
                                                 Transportation Authority (MBTA) light                   Ray LaHood and Federal Transit                        instance, FTA would have been
                                                 rail trains collided with one another on                Administrator Peter Rogoff formally                   required to perform the oversight
                                                 the Green Line in Newton,                               submitted a legislative proposal to the               function. Also, the Administration’s bill
                                                 Massachusetts—a suburb of Boston—                       Congress that contemplated a more                     would have given FTA authority to
                                                 killing the driver of the second train,                 comprehensive approach to safety in                   issue civil or criminal penalties for
                                                 injuring eight people, and causing $8                   public transportation. In testimony                   noncompliance. See generally,
                                                 million in damage. On May 8, 2009, the                  before both the House Committee on                    Examining the Federal Role in
                                                 MBTA suffered another accident on its                   Transportation and Infrastructure and                 Overseeing the Safety of Public
                                                 Green Line light rail system in which                   the Senate Committee on Banking,                      Transportation Systems: Hearing Before
                                                 one train rear-ended another in the                     Housing, and Urban Affairs, the                       the Subcomm. On Hous., Transp. &
                                                 tunnel near the Government Center                       Secretary and the Administrator                       Cmty. Dev. of the S. Comm. On Banking,
                                                 station in downtown Boston; 68 people                   presented the details of this proposal,               Hous. & Urban Affairs, 111th Cong. 89–
                                                 were injured, with more than $9 million                 which, ultimately, were introduced in                 97 (2009).
                                                 in damage. On June 22, 2009, two                        both houses in February 2010 as the
                                                 WMATA rapid rail trains collided with                                                                            Both the House and Senate versions of
                                                                                                         Public Transportation Safety Program
                                                 one another near the Fort Totten station                                                                      the Administration’s bill were referred
                                                                                                         Act of 2010 (H.R. 4643, S 3105, 111th
                                                 on the Red Line, killing the driver of the                                                                    to committees. In July 2010, the Senate
                                                                                                         Cong. (2010)). Citing the warning signs
                                                 second train and eight passengers,                      of increasing collisions, derailments,                committee on Banking, Housing, and
                                                 injuring another 52 passengers, and                     and casualties, the Secretary and the                 Urban Affairs reported a bill sponsored
                                                 causing $12 million in damage. On July                  Administrator emphasized that rail                    by the chairman of the committee,
                                                 18, 2009, two Municipal Transportation                  transit always carries the potential for              Senator Dodd, titled the Public
                                                 Agency light rail trains collided with                  catastrophic accident and damage—                     Transportation Safety Act of 2010 (S
                                                 one another at the West Portal station in               notwithstanding its record of being a                 3638, 111th Cong. (2010)), which laid
                                                 San Francisco, injuring the drivers of                  very safe means of travel—and that the                the foundation for the State Safety
                                                 both trains and 46 people and causing                   State Safety Oversight program, as it                 Oversight provisions eventually enacted
                                                 $4.5 million in damage. And in August                   currently exists, suffered from a number              under MAP–21. The Senate Banking bill
                                                 and September, 2009, two WMATA                          of fundamental weaknesses:                            embraced most of the fundamental
                                                 maintenance employees lost their lives                     • Under the existing SSO framework,                precepts of the Administration’s
                                                 while working on the rapid rail system;                 each rail transit system was free to                  legislative proposal, but it differed from
                                                 one was struck by a maintenance                         determine its own safety practices. An                the Administration’s bill in that it did
                                                 vehicle on the Orange Line, the other by                SSOA would simply review those                        not allow a State to decline
                                                 a train on the Blue Line.                               practices and report the progress of any              participation in the SSO program; the
                                                    In conducting its several                            corrective actions.                                   grants of Federal funds for an SSO
                                                 investigations, the NTSB found a variety                   • Each SSOA had only so much                       program would require a 20 percent
                                                 of probable causes for these accidents.                 regulatory, oversight, and enforcement                match; and States could be allowed as
                                                 Among them, equipment malfunctions;                     authority as had been given by the State              much as three years, after the effective
                                                 equipment in poor or marginal                           government. In many instances, the                    date of a final rule, to develop an SSO
                                                 condition, including equipment that can                 SSOA lacked authority to enforce any                  program adequate for certification—after
                                                 pose particular risks to safety, such as                standards or compel compliance by the                 which, in the event of an inadequate
                                                 signal systems; lack of vehicle                         rail transit systems it oversaw.                      SSO program, FTA would be authorized
                                                 crashworthiness; and employee error,                       • Many States viewed the SSO                       to withhold all Federal grant funds from
                                                 such as inattentiveness, or failure to                  program as an unfunded mandate. Thus,                 all public transportation operators in
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 follow a rail transit system’s operating                many States devoted insufficient                      that State, not just the rail transit
                                                 procedure. In the instance of WMATA,                    resources to the program, which                       systems. See generally, the Senate
                                                 the NTSB found the lack of a strong                     compromised the abilities of SSOAs to                 Banking committee report
                                                 safety culture to be a contributing factor.             recruit staff, provide adequate training              accompanying the Senate bill (S. Rept.
                                                 Also, the NTSB found a lack of adequate                 to their staff, and develop their own                 111–232; (2010)). The 111th Congress
                                                 oversight both by the rail transit                      expertise.                                            adjourned before the Senate could act
                                                 systems’ State Safety Oversight                            • In many instances, an SSOA was                   on the Senate Banking bill, and the
                                                 Agencies, and FTA.                                      dependent upon financial resources                    House did not consider any similar bill.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00005   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11006                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    In the 112th Congress, the Senate                    and the board of directors of the rail                analysis of the proposed rule in today’s
                                                 Banking committee re-introduced its                     transit system. FTA is then obliged to                rulemaking:
                                                 Public Transportation Safety Act of                     submit an annual evaluation of the State
                                                                                                                                                               Section-by-Section Analysis
                                                 2010, which became Section 20021 of                     Safety Oversight programs to the
                                                 the larger bill for reauthorization of                  Congress.                                             Section 674.1 Purpose
                                                 surface transportation—the Moving                          MAP–21 also made considerable                        This section explains that the purpose
                                                 Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century                  changes regarding FTA’s role in the SSO               of these regulations is to carry out the
                                                 Act (S 1813, 112th Cong. (2012), ‘‘MAP–                 program. As mentioned previously, FTA                 mandate of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) for States
                                                 21’’), shepherded by the Senate                         must now approve each State’s SSO                     to perform oversight of rail fixed
                                                 Committee on Environment and Public                     program. In addition, FTA must                        guideway public transportation systems
                                                 Works—that passed the Senate on                         establish a grant program to help the                 within their jurisdictions. This section
                                                 March 14, 2012. The House bill for                      States develop and carry out their SSO                differs only slightly in wording from the
                                                 reauthorization of surface                              functions, and to obtain the necessary                current rule at 49 CFR 659.1.
                                                 transportation—the American Energy                      training and certification for their SSOA
                                                 and Infrastructure Jobs Act of 2012 (H.R.               staff. FTA must certify whether the                   Section 674.3 Applicability
                                                 7, 112th Cong. (2012))—had nothing                      States are meeting the statutory                         This section explains that these
                                                 comparable to the Senate bill insofar as                requirements, deny certification to those             regulations apply to States with rail
                                                 State Safety Oversight of rail transit                  that are not, and FTA can withhold                    fixed guideway public transportation
                                                 systems. Ultimately, the conferees from                 Federal funds until an SSO program can                systems, the SSOAs that oversee the
                                                 the House and Senate chose to adopt                     be certified. Congress provided FTA                   safety of those systems, and entities that
                                                 Section 20021 of the Senate bill, with                  with additional authority to conduct                  own or operate rail fixed guideway
                                                 some amendments, and the title of the                   inspections, investigations, audits, and              public transportation systems with
                                                 Senate bill, ‘‘MAP–21,’’ as the title of                examinations; test the equipment,                     Federal financial assistance from FTA.
                                                 the legislation that the president signed               facilities, rolling stock, and operations             The first two sentences of this section
                                                 on July 6, 2012 (Pub. L. 112–141).                      of rail transit systems; make reports and             are similar in wording to the current
                                                                                                         issue directives with respect to safety;              rule at 49 CFR 659.3, titled ‘‘Scope.’’
                                                 The New Statute and Today’s Proposed                    issue subpoenas and take depositions
                                                 Rulemaking                                              from any employee of a rail transit                   Section 674.5 Policy
                                                    As noted, MAP–21 authorizes a                        system who is responsible for safety;                    This section identifies three separate,
                                                 comprehensive Public Transportation                     require production of documents; and                  explicit policies that underlie these
                                                 Safety Program, now codified at 49                      issue regulations for State Safety                    regulations: First, FTA is using the
                                                 U.S.C. 5329. As part of this                            Oversight through public notice and                   principles and methods of Safety
                                                 comprehensive program, new Section                      comment.                                              Management Systems (SMS) as the basis
                                                 5329(e) significantly revises the existing                 On February 6, 2013, the Federal                   for these regulations and all other
                                                 SSO program, creating a program that is                 Transit Administrator issued a Dear                   regulations and policies FTA will issue
                                                 more demanding of the States and their                  Colleague letter to the States and the                under the authority of 49 U.S.C. 5329.
                                                 SSO programs, and FTA, as well, in                      public transportation industry, outlining             Second, the primary responsibility for
                                                 several ways. First, with respect to the                the steps that each State must take to                overseeing the safety of rail transit
                                                 States, the statute requires them to                    develop an SSO program and establish                  systems lies with the States—and a
                                                 submit their SSO programs to FTA for                    an SSOA in compliance with Section                    State’s SSOA must have sufficient
                                                 its approval. In order to gain this                     5329. This letter is available on FTA’s               authority and resources to oversee the
                                                 approval, the States must assume                        Web site at http://www.fta.dot.gov/                   number, size, and complexity of rail
                                                 responsibility for overseeing the safety                tso.html On May 13, 2013, FTA                         transit systems that operate within that
                                                 of their rail fixed guideway public                     published for public comment an                       State. Third, FTA is obliged to make
                                                 transportation systems, adopt and                       illustrative apportionment of the SSO                 Federal funds available to eligible States
                                                 enforce Federal and relevant State safety               grant funds available to eligible States in           to help them develop and carry out their
                                                 laws, determine appropriate staffing                    Federal Fiscal Year 2013, at 78 FR                    SSO programs—and certify whether
                                                 levels for their SSOAs, and ensure                      28014–8. On or before October 1, 2013,                those SSO programs are adequate to
                                                 proper training and certification of their              the Administrator notified each State,                promote the purposes of the public
                                                 safety oversight personnel. The                         individually, of his decision whether to              transportation safety programs under 49
                                                 organization designated as an SSOA                      issue a certification for that State’s SSO            U.S.C. 5329. The current rule at 49 CFR
                                                 must be financially and legally                         program, in accordance with the                       part 659 does not include a statement of
                                                 independent of the rail transit systems                 statutory deadline set by 49 U.S.C.                   policy.
                                                 they oversee, i.e., an SSOA cannot be                   5329(e)(7). On March 10, 2014, FTA
                                                 reimbursed for its expenses by the rail                 announced the final apportionment of                  Section 674.7 Definitions
                                                 transit agencies they oversee, nor can                  FY 2013 and FY 2014 grant funds for                      This section sets forth a number of
                                                 the SSOA be the same agency that                        SSO programs, at 79 FR 13380. On                      definitions for terms used repeatedly
                                                 operates a rail transit agency. An SSOA                 February, 9, 2015, FTA published the                  throughout the State Safety Oversight
                                                 may not employ any individual who is                    apportionment for FY 2015 grant funds                 program and the other safety programs
                                                 also responsible for the administration                 for SSO programs, at 80 FR 7254.                      authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329. Some of
                                                 of rail fixed guideway public                              Today’s NPRM is a critical step in                 these defined terms are the same as set
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 transportation systems that are subject                 transforming and strengthening the                    forth in the current regulations at 49
                                                 to the State’s oversight. An SSOA must                  regulatory framework for State Safety                 CFR part 659, but the wording of the
                                                 have investigative and enforcement                      Oversight of rail fixed guideway public               definitions has been changed, in today’s
                                                 authority under State law, must audit at                transportation systems. Once FTA                      proposed rulemaking, for sake of clarity;
                                                 least triennially the compliance of the                 issues a final rule for State Safety                  readers should refer, specifically, to the
                                                 rail transit systems under its oversight,               Oversight, the agency will rescind the                definitions of ‘‘contractor,’’ ‘‘corrective
                                                 and provide at least annually a status                  current regulations at 49 CFR part 659.               action plan,’’ ‘‘hazard,’’ ‘‘individual,’’
                                                 report to FTA, the Governor of the State,               The following is a section-by-section                 ‘‘investigation,’’ ‘‘passenger,’’ ‘‘rail fixed


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00006   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                        11007

                                                 guideway public transportation system’’                 ‘‘incident’’ is an event that exceeds the             FR 62008, titled ‘‘Safety Management
                                                 and ‘‘rail transit agency.’’ A few of the               definition of ‘‘occurrence,’’ but does not            Systems for Certified Airports,’’
                                                 definitions remain the same as stated in                meet the definition of ‘‘accident.’’                  proposes to apply the principles and
                                                 the current regulations, or as stated in                Examples include but are not limited to               methods of SMS to airports that hold
                                                 other FTA regulations; we refer,                        near misses, close calls, railyard                    certificates in accordance with 14 CFR
                                                 specifically, to the definitions of                     derailments, non-serious injuries, and                part 139. A Final Rule, issued on
                                                 ‘‘Administrator,’’ ‘‘FRA,’’ ‘‘FTA,’’ and                violations of safety standards. An                    January 8, 2015, at 80 FR 1308, titled
                                                 ‘‘State.’’                                              occurrence is an event with no injuries,              ‘‘Safety Management Systems for
                                                    There are new definitions, however,                  or where damage occurs to property or                 Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental
                                                 for the terms ‘‘National Public                         equipment but does not affect transit                 Operations Certificate Holders,’’ applies
                                                 Transportation Safety Plan,’’ ‘‘Public                  operations. FTA seeks comment on                      the principles and methods of SMS to
                                                 Transportation Safety Certification                     these definitions. In particular, FTA
                                                 Training Program,’’ ‘‘Public                                                                                  domestic, international flag, and
                                                                                                         seeks comment on whether we should
                                                 Transportation Agency Safety Plan,’’                                                                          supplemental operations air carriers that
                                                                                                         include definitions for ‘‘close call’’ and
                                                 ‘‘State Safety Oversight Agency                         ‘‘near miss’’ in the final rule.                      hold certificates in accordance with 14
                                                 (SSOA)’’, and ‘‘State Safety Oversight                     Additionally, there are a number of                CFR part 121. FTA also anticipates that
                                                 Program (SSOP),’’ all of which are                      new definitions in today’s proposed                   it will be incorporating many if not all
                                                 strictly consistent with the use of those               rulemaking that are based on the                      of these same definitions for applying
                                                 terms in the statutes. And there are new,               principles and methods of Safety                      SMS to public transportation in its
                                                 common-sense definitions for the terms                  Management Systems (SMS). Readers                     future rulemakings for the National
                                                 ‘‘Transit Agency Safety Plan,’’ and                     should refer, specifically, to the terms              Public Transportation Safety Plan, the
                                                 ‘‘vehicle.’’ ‘‘Transit Agency Safety Plan’’             ‘‘accountable executive,’’ ‘‘risk,’’ ‘‘risk           Public Transportation Safety
                                                 is a shorthand reference to the Public                  control,’’ ‘‘safety assurance,’’ ‘‘Safety             Certification Training Program, and the
                                                 Transportation Agency Safety Plan; and                  Management System,’’ ‘‘safety policy,’’               Public Transportation Agency Safety
                                                 ‘‘vehicle’’ means any rolling stock used                ‘‘safety promotion,’’ and ‘‘safety risk               Plans.
                                                 on a rail fixed guideway public                         management.’’ In the years since the
                                                 transportation system, including but not                rules at 49 CFR part 659 were first                   Section 674.9 Transition From
                                                 limited to passenger and maintenance                    issued in 1995, SMS has emerged as the                Previous Requirements for State Safety
                                                 vehicles.                                               best practice for enhancing safety in all             Oversight
                                                    We have also included definitions for                modes of transportation, and the                         In framing the provisions of MAP–21
                                                 the terms ‘‘accident,’’ ‘‘event,’’                      Secretary of Transportation instructed
                                                 ‘‘incident,’’ and ‘‘occurrence.’’ We                                                                          for a much stronger State Safety
                                                                                                         each of the Department’s operating
                                                 propose amending the definition for                                                                           Oversight program—and much higher
                                                                                                         administrations to develop rules, plans,
                                                 ‘‘accident’’ as it relates to injuries. In 49           and programs to apply SMS to their                    expectations of the States and their
                                                 CFR 659.33, the definition includes,                    grant recipients and regulated                        SSOAs—the Congress recognized that
                                                 ‘‘injuries requiring immediate medical                  communities. See, http://                             the States and the rail transit systems
                                                 attention away from the scene for two or                www.fedeval.net/docs/2012Coplen_                      they oversee would need a period of
                                                 more individuals.’’ We propose                          1.pdf. In brief, SMS is a formal, top-                transition. Also, the Congress
                                                 changing that to ‘‘one or more persons                  down, organization-wide approach to                   recognized that FTA would need time to
                                                 suffers a serious injury,’’ and we                      managing risks and assuring the                       conduct rulemakings through public
                                                 propose adding the NTSB definition of                   effectiveness of risk controls. An SMS                notice and comment. Thus, MAP–21
                                                 ‘‘serious injury’’ found in 49 CFR 830.2:               establishes lines of safety accountability            Section 20030(e) provides that the
                                                 ‘‘any injury which: (1) Requires                        throughout an organization, starting at               previous authorization statute for State
                                                 hospitalization for more than 48 hours,                 the executive management level, and                   Safety Oversight, 49 U.S.C. 5330, will
                                                 commencing within 7 days from the                       provides a structure to support a sound               remain in effect for three years after
                                                 date of the injury was received; (2)                    safety culture. SMS is not a one-size-                FTA promulgates a final rule under the
                                                 results in a fracture of any bone (except               fits-all approach, however. SMS is                    authority of the new authorization
                                                 simple fractures of fingers, toes, or                   flexible, and can be scaled to the mode,              statute for State Safety Oversight, 49
                                                 nose); (3) causes severe hemorrhages,                   size, and complexity of any transit                   U.S.C. 5329(e). Although nothing in this
                                                 nerve, muscle, or tendon damage; (4)                    operator, in any environment—urban,                   rulemaking precludes a State from
                                                 involves any internal organ; or (5)                     suburban, or rural. As mentioned, both                immediately establishing an oversight
                                                 involves second- or third-degree burns,                 the Administrator’s May 13, 2013, Dear                agency that fully complies with MAP–
                                                 or any burns affecting more than 5                      Colleague letter and a set of frequently              21’s requirements, Congress recognized
                                                 percent of the body surface.’’ FTA seeks                asked questions about SMS are available               that many States would need time to
                                                 comment on this change. The term                        on FTA’s Web site at http://                          enact enabling legislation during the
                                                 ‘‘event’’ is defined as any accident,                   www.fta.dot.gov/tso_15177.html. Also,                 transition from the current program to a
                                                 incident, or occurrence. As stated in our               as explained below, the Appendix to
                                                 January 28, 2015, Federal Register                                                                            MAP–21 compliant program,
                                                                                                         these proposed rules, titled ‘‘Safety
                                                 notice on updates to the National                                                                             particularly in States where the
                                                                                                         Management Systems Framework,’’ will
                                                 Transit Database (NTD) safety                           give the reader a basic understanding of              legislature meets only part-time or
                                                 information collection, we added the                    SMS.                                                  biennially. This section in today’s
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 term ‘‘event’’ in order to cover all                       Many of the definitions for applying               proposed rulemaking recognizes that
                                                 planned and unplanned events that are                   the principles and methods of SMS in                  transition. (See, specifically, proposed
                                                 required to be reported to the NTD. The                 proposed section 674.7 are very similar               49 CFR 674.9(a) in today’s NPRM.) Also,
                                                 purpose of the change is to provide                     to those set forth in a Notice of Proposed            this section states that the current SSO
                                                 better alignment with nomenclature                      Rulemaking and a Final Rule on SMS by                 regulations at 49 CFR part 659 will be
                                                 used in other transportation modes, and                 FTA’s sister agency, the Federal                      rescinded upon the effective date of a
                                                 to provide clarity during data analysis                 Aviation Administration (FAA). The                    final rule under the new authorization
                                                 conducted to identify safety trends. An                 NPRM, issued on October 7, 2010, at 75                statute, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e).


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00007   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11008                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 Section 674.11 State Safety Oversight                   MAP–21 rectifies the previous,                        entity that meets the requirements for an
                                                 Program                                                 untenable practice in which a number of               SSOA to serve as the SSOA for that rail
                                                    Readers should please be mindful of                  SSOAs had to rely upon subsidization                  transit system, through a program
                                                 the differences between a State Safety                  from one or more of the rail transit                  approved by the Administrator.
                                                 Oversight Program (SSOP) and the State                  systems they were obliged to oversee;
                                                                                                                                                               Section 674.17 Use of Federal
                                                 Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) that                     through the SSOP, a State must now
                                                                                                                                                               Financial Assistance
                                                 carries out an SSOP. In essence, an                     ensure that those previous conflicts of
                                                                                                         interest no longer exist.                                This section explains that Federal
                                                 SSOA is a State agency that is obliged                                                                        financial assistance is now available to
                                                 to interpret, administer, and enforce the               Section 674.13 Designation of                         States to develop and carry out State
                                                 State statutes enacted by a State                       Oversight Agency                                      Safety Oversight Programs (SSOPs), and
                                                 legislature and the State regulations and                  In MAP–21, the Congress established                may be used, specifically, for both the
                                                 program standards developed by a                        a set of requirements for designation of              operational and administrative expenses
                                                 Governor and his or her designees in the                a State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA)                of SSOPs and SSOAs and the expenses
                                                 executive branch of State government.                   that are more prescriptive than those of              of employee training. Also, this section
                                                 An SSOP is the collection of law, rules,                SAFETEA–LU and the previous                           notes that the Federal financial
                                                 and administrative standards that define                authorization statutes, including,                    assistance to a State will be allocated in
                                                 the minimum requirements for safety of                  notably, the requirements for financial               accordance with a formula applicable to
                                                 rail public transportation in the State;                and legal independence, audit,                        all eligible States; a grant of Federal
                                                 the financial, physical, and human                      investigation and enforcement                         funds will be subject to terms and
                                                 resources necessary to establish and                    authority, and other safeguards against               conditions as the Administrator deems
                                                 maintain the SSOA; and the system of                    conflicts of interest between an SSOA                 appropriate; the Federal share of eligible
                                                 checks and balances, within State                       and the rail fixed guideway public                    expenses under a grant will be eighty
                                                 government, that holds an SSOA                          transportation systems the SSOA will                  percent; and the non-Federal share of
                                                 accountable for its actions.                            oversee. This section of the NPRM                     the expenses under a grant cannot be
                                                    In enacting MAP–21, the Congress                     simply reiterates the statutory                       comprised of Federal funds, funds
                                                 very carefully spelled out the different                requirements for designation and                      received from a public transportation
                                                 missions and functions of an SSOP and                   establishment of an SSOA now codified                 agency, or any revenues earned by a
                                                 an SSOA. The missions and functions of                  at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(A). Also, this                public transportation agency.
                                                 an SSOP are specified at 49 U.S.C.                      section of the NPRM notes the
                                                 5329(e)(3). The missions and functions                                                                        Section 674.19 Certification of a State
                                                                                                         Administrator’s authority to waive the
                                                 of an SSOA are specified at 49 U.S.C.                                                                         Safety Oversight Program
                                                                                                         requirements for financial and legal
                                                 5329(e)(4). In today’s rulemaking,                      independence and the prohibitions on                     One of the most important provisions
                                                 proposed section 674.11 states the                      employee conflict of interest in the                  of the MAP–21 framework for safety is
                                                 missions and functions of an SSOP, and                  instance of a State in which the rail                 the new mandate for an FTA
                                                 proposed section 674.13 states the                      fixed guideway public transportation                  certification of a State Safety Oversight
                                                 missions and functions of an SSOA, as                   systems have fewer than one million                   Program (SSOP); specifically, the
                                                 directed by the statutes. Most                          revenue miles per year combined, or                   mandate that the Administrator make a
                                                 importantly, in an SSOP, a State must                   provide fewer than ten million unlinked               determination not only whether an
                                                 do the following: A State must explicitly               passenger trips per year, combined. The               SSOP meets the technical requirements
                                                 assume responsibility for overseeing the                statutory authority for a waiver is                   of the statute, but whether that same
                                                 safety of rail transit systems within its               codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(B).                  SSOP ‘‘is adequate to promote the
                                                 borders. A State must adopt and enforce                    Additionally, this section reiterates              purposes’’ of the National Public
                                                 Federal and relevant State law for that                 the reporting requirements for an SSOA                Transportation Safety Plan and the other
                                                 purpose. Not only must a State establish                now codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4),                 goals and objectives of 49 U.S.C.
                                                 an SSOA, but it must ensure that the                    including, notably, the requirements                  5329(e)(7)(A) (emphasis added). The
                                                 SSOA has a staffing level adequate to                   that an SSOA make annual reports on                   Congress recognizes that the weaknesses
                                                 oversee the number, size, and                           the status of the safety of the rail fixed            of the State Safety Oversight Agencies
                                                 complexity of the rail transit systems                  guideway public transportation systems                (SSOAs) cannot be addressed by the
                                                 within the State, and that the staff of the             it oversees to both the Governor and the              SSOAs, themselves. Consequently,
                                                 SSOA are trained and qualified to                       boards of directors of the rail transit               Congress is obliging the States to either
                                                 perform their jobs. Further, a State must               systems.                                              provide the current SSOAs with
                                                 ensure that an SSOA does not receive                                                                          stronger authority and more resources to
                                                 any financial support from the rail                     Section 674.15 Designation of                         conduct the necessary oversight of rail
                                                 transit systems the SSOA is obliged to                  Oversight Agency for Multi-State System               fixed guideway public transportation
                                                 oversee.                                                   In a few instances across the United               systems, or to establish and nurture new
                                                    In summary, an SSOP is the means by                  States, there are rail fixed guideway                 organizations for that purpose. Further,
                                                 which a State ensures that an SSOA is                   public transportation systems that                    Congress is obliging the FTA
                                                 sufficiently empowered by law, and                      operate in more than one State. This                  Administrator to determine whether
                                                 supported with the resources necessary                  section of the NPRM identifies the same               each and every State has an adequate
                                                 to do its job, without bias toward any                  option for State Safety Oversight of such             program through the mechanism of
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 rail transit system within the SSOA’s                   a multi-state system as now provided by               issuing or denying the issuance of a
                                                 oversight. Through the requirements for                 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(5): The States may                  certification that the program is
                                                 an SSOP, the Congress is calling on the                 choose either to apply uniform safety                 adequate to meet both the letter and the
                                                 Governors of all States with rail fixed                 standards and procedures to the rail                  purposes of the law.
                                                 guideway public transportation systems                  transit system through a State Safety                    This section of the NPRM fleshes out
                                                 to create SSOAs that are agile,                         Oversight Program compliant with 49                   the requirements and the process for
                                                 competent watchdogs for the safety of                   U.S.C. 5329 and approved by the                       certification of a State’s SSOP.
                                                 those rail transit systems. Moreover,                   Administrator, or to designate a single               Specifically, proposed section 674.17(a)


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00008   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                           11009

                                                 states that the Administrator must                      Section 674.21 Withholding of Federal                 admitted as evidence or used in a civil
                                                 determine whether an SSOP meets the                     Financial Assistance for                              action for damages. . . .’’ Also, the
                                                 requirements of the statute and is                      Noncompliance                                         current rule makes clear that the Federal
                                                 adequate to promote the purposes of 49                     Proposed section 674.21(a) explains                regulations at 49 CFR part 659 do not
                                                 U.S.C. 5329, including, but not limited                 that in those instances in which the                  require a rail transit system to make a
                                                 to, the National Public Transportation                  Administrator has discretion to impose                security plan available to the public, or
                                                 Safety Plan, the Public Transportation                  financial penalties for noncompliance                 any security procedures referenced in
                                                 Safety Certification Training Program,                  with the SSO requirements, in making                  that plan. See, 49 CFR 659.11(b). Thus,
                                                 and the Public Transportation Agency                    a decision whether to do so, and                      as a practical matter, any questions
                                                 Safety Plans (referenced as the ‘‘Transit                                                                     whether to admit investigation reports
                                                                                                         determining the nature and amount of a
                                                                                                                                                               into evidence for litigation are left to the
                                                 Agency Safety Plans’’ in this                           financial penalty, the Administrator
                                                                                                                                                               courts to determine, in accordance with
                                                 rulemaking). Proposed section 674.17(b)                 must consider the extent and
                                                                                                                                                               the relevant State law and the courts’
                                                 recites the statutory mandate that the                  circumstances of the noncompliance,
                                                                                                                                                               rules of evidence.
                                                 Administrator must issue either a                       the operating budgets of both the SSOA                  Today’s proposed rulemaking would
                                                 certification or a denial of certification              and the rail transit systems that will be             clarify, and slightly expand, the current
                                                 for each State’s SSOP. Proposed section                 affected by the penalty, and such other               rule, by specifying that a ‘‘State, State
                                                 674.17(c) states that in the event the                  matters as justice may require.                       Safety Oversight Agency, or a rail fixed
                                                 Administrator issues a denial of a                         There is one instance, however, in                 guideway public transportation system
                                                 certification, he or she must provide the               which the Administrator will be unable                may withhold an investigation report
                                                 State a written explanation and an                      to exercise any discretion to mitigate a              prepared or adopted in accordance with
                                                                                                         very harsh financial penalty for                      the Federal regulations for State Safety
                                                 opportunity to modify its SSOP to merit
                                                                                                         noncompliance with the SSO                            Oversight from being admitted as
                                                 the issuance of certification, and ask the
                                                                                                         requirements. If a State fails to establish           evidence or used in a civil action for
                                                 Governor to take all possible steps to
                                                                                                         a State Safety Oversight Program                      damages resulting from a matter
                                                 correct the deficiencies that are                       approved by the Administrator within
                                                 precluding the issuance of a                                                                                  mentioned in the report.’’ See, proposed
                                                                                                         three years of the effective date of the              section 674.21(a). Also, the proposed
                                                 certification.                                          final rule that will follow today’s                   rule would clarify, and slightly expand,
                                                    Proposed section 674.17(c) states that               NPRM, FTA will be prohibited by law                   the current rule, by specifying that
                                                 in his or her discretion, the                           from obligating any Federal financial                 FTA’s SSO regulations would ‘‘not
                                                 Administrator may impose financial                      assistance to any entity in that State that           require public availability of any data,
                                                 penalties as authorized by Congress at                  is otherwise eligible to receive funding              information, or procedures pertaining to
                                                 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(7)(D). In brief, the                  through any of the FTA programs                       the security of a rail fixed guideway
                                                 statute provides the Administrator three                authorized by 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53. See,              public transportation system or its
                                                 options in imposing a financial penalty:                49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3). In other words: If              passenger operations.’’ See, proposed
                                                 (1) The Administrator can withhold                      for whatever reason, a State is unable or             section 674.21(b).
                                                 SSO grant funds from the State; (2) The                 unwilling to come into compliance with
                                                                                                         a final rule for State Safety Oversight               Section 674.25 Role of the State Safety
                                                 Administrator can withhold not more                                                                           Oversight Agency
                                                 than five percent of the 49 U.S.C. 5307                 within three years after that final rule
                                                 Urbanized Area formula funds                            takes effect, all FTA grant funds for all                Ever since 1995, when FTA issued the
                                                                                                         of the public transportation agencies,                current SSO regulations at 49 CFR part
                                                 appropriated for use in the State or
                                                                                                         designated recipients, subrecipients,                 659, the SSOA has been required to set
                                                 urbanized area in the State, until such
                                                                                                         and Metropolitan Planning                             minimum standards for the safety of all
                                                 time as the SSOP can be certified; or (3)
                                                                                                         Organizations in that State will be cut               rail fixed guideway public
                                                 The Administrator can require all of the                off. The statute is designed to provide               transportation agencies within their
                                                 rail fixed guideway public                              every incentive to a State to develop and             oversight. Today’s proposed rulemaking
                                                 transportation systems governed by the                  carry out an SSO program compliant                    would continue that requirement. See,
                                                 SSOP to spend up to 100 percent of                      with the regulations. Proposed section                proposed section 674.25(a). Under
                                                 their Federal funding under 49 U.S.C.                   674.21(b) reflects the congressional                  today’s NPRM, however, those
                                                 Chapter 53 for ‘‘safety-related                         mandate of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(3).                      minimum standards must be consistent
                                                 improvements’’ on their systems, only,                                                                        with the National Public Transportation
                                                 until such time as the SSOP can be                      Section 674.23        Confidentiality of              Safety Plan (the ‘‘National Plan’’), the
                                                 certified. See, 49 U.S.C.                               Information                                           Public Transportation Safety
                                                 5329(e)(7)(D)(ii)(I)–(III).                               When FTA first promulgated a rule                   Certification Training Program (the
                                                    Additionally, proposed section                       for State Safety Oversight, the agency                ‘‘Safety Certification Training’’
                                                 674.17(d) states that in deciding                       recognized that rail transit systems often            program), and the principles and
                                                                                                         face litigation arising from accidents,               methods of Safety Management Systems
                                                 whether to issue a certification for a
                                                                                                         and that the release of accident                      (SMS), all of which will be the subject
                                                 State’s SSOP, the Administrator will
                                                                                                         investigation reports can compromise                  of future rulemakings separate from
                                                 evaluate whether the SSOA has                           both the defense of litigation and the                today’s NPRM. What this may mean, as
                                                 sufficient authority, resources, and                    abilities of rail transit systems to obtain           a practical matter, is that any number of
                                                 expertise to oversee the number, size,
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                                                                         comprehensive, confidential analyses of               SSOAs may have to revise and reissue
                                                 and complexity of the rail transit                      accidents. See, the preamble to the 1995              their minimum standards for safety of
                                                 systems that operate within the State, or               rule at 60 FR 67034, 67042 (Dec. 27,                  rail fixed guideway public
                                                 will attain the necessary authority,                    1995). Thus, the current rule at 49 CFR               transportation once FTA issues final
                                                 resources, and expertise in accordance                  659.11 provides that a State ‘‘may                    rules for the National Plan, the Safety
                                                 with a developmental plan and                           withhold an investigation report that                 Certification program, and the Transit
                                                 schedule set forth in a sufficient level of             may have been prepared or adopted by                  Agency Safety Plan, to ensure that their
                                                 detail in the State’s SSOP.                             the oversight agency from being                       minimum standards are consistent with


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00009   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11010                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 FTA regulations. As noted above, FTA                    emphasizing the avoidance and                         program standard as part of its
                                                 issued an ANPRM for the National Plan,                  mitigation of hazards and risks.                      continuous evaluation of every State
                                                 the Transit Agency Safety Plans, and the                   Today’s NPRM transforms the list-                  Safety Oversight Program (SSOP), and
                                                 Safety Certification Training program on                specific, mechanistic approach to State               in preparing FTA’s annual report to
                                                 October 3, 2013, at 78 FR 61251–73.                     safety program standards into one based               Congress on the certification status of
                                                 Also, in today’s Federal Register FTA is                on the more flexible, effective principles            every SSOP, both of which are required
                                                 issuing final interim provisions for the                and methods of SMS. The SMS                           by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(8). FTA will certify
                                                 Safety Certification Training program.                  approach to State safety program                      each compliant SSOA within the first
                                                 FTA encourages all SSOAs and                            standards at proposed section 674.27                  three years following publication of the
                                                 interested persons to participate in the                addresses many of the same elements as                final rule, and will monitor compliance
                                                 rulemakings.                                            are called out in the current SSO rule;               annually thereafter.
                                                    Proposed section 674.25(b) notes that                it does so, however, in ways that are
                                                 basic principles and methods of SMS                     more comprehensive for preventing                     Section 674.29 Transit Agency Safety
                                                 are set forth in an Appendix to the rules,              accidents, afford more latitude to the                Plans: General Requirements
                                                 titled the ‘‘Safety Management Systems                  SSOAs, and can be scaled to the                          One of the most significant changes in
                                                 (SMS) Framework.’’                                      number, size, and complexity of the rail              State Safety Oversight under today’s
                                                    Proposed section 674.25(c) would                     fixed guideway public transportation                  proposed rulemaking is the transition
                                                 require an SSOA to review and approve                   systems within the oversight of an                    from the simple review-and-approval of
                                                 the Transit Agency Safety Plan, oversee                 SSOA. First, proposed section 674.27(a)               the ‘‘system safety program plan’’ for a
                                                 the execution of that plan, and enforce                 obliges an SSOA to adopt and distribute               rail fixed guideway public
                                                 the execution of that plan through the                  a program standard that is consistent                 transportation system, now codified at
                                                 order of a corrective action plan or any                with the National Safety Plan, SMS, and               49 CFR 659.17, to the more hands-on,
                                                 other means, as necessary or                            the relevant State Safety Oversight                   proactive role for an SSOA in evaluating
                                                 appropriate. Proposed sections                          Program. Next, proposed section                       the effectiveness of a Transit Agency
                                                 674.25(d) and 674.25(e) recognize that                  674.27(a) obliges an SSOA to identify                 Safety Plan in proposed section 674.29.
                                                 an SSOA has primary responsibility for                  the processes and procedures that will                To reiterate, ‘‘Transit Agency Safety
                                                 investigating the hazards, risks, and                   govern its own activities. Next,                      Plan’’ is a shorthand reference to the
                                                 accidents on a rail transit system, and                 proposed section 674.27(a) obliges an                 new Public Transportation Agency
                                                 any alleged noncompliance with a                        SSOA to identify the processes and                    Safety Plan now required of all
                                                 Transit Agency Safety Plan, but these                   procedures a Rail Transit Agency must                 operators of public transportation—not
                                                 responsibilities do not preclude the                    have in place to comply with the SSO’s                just rail transit systems—in accordance
                                                 Federal Transit Administrator from                      program standard. Finally, proposed                   with 49 U.S.C. 5329(d). Although this is
                                                 exercising his or her independent                       section 674.27(a) sets explicit but                   the subject of a rulemaking separate
                                                 authority to investigate hazards, risks, or             minimum, flexible standards for                       from today’s proposal, Section 5329(d)
                                                 accidents.                                              program management, standards                         sets forth seven explicit, minimum
                                                    Proposed section 674.25(f) would                     development, oversight of a Rail Transit              standards for a Transit Agency Safety
                                                 allow an SSOA to retain the services of                 Agency’s internal safety reviews,                     Plan. (See, for example, the standards
                                                 a contractor for assistance in                          triennial audits of Transit Agency Safety             for identifying and evaluating safety
                                                 investigating accidents and incidents                   Plans, accident notification,                         risks, strategies to minimize exposure to
                                                 and for expertise the SSOA does not                     investigations, and corrective actions.               hazards, performance targets,
                                                 have within its own organization.                          Readers should note in particular the              assignment of an ‘‘adequately trained
                                                 Proposed section 674.25(g) makes clear                  proposed requirements for an                          safety officer’’ reporting directly to the
                                                 that all personnel and contractors                      explanation of an SSOA’s authority; the               chief executive, and the
                                                 employed by an SSOA must comply                         steps an SSOA must take to ensure                     ‘‘comprehensive staff training program,’’
                                                 with the requirements of the Safety                     ‘‘open, on-going communication’’ with                 codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(d)(1)).
                                                 Certification Training program—either                   the rail transit systems within its                   Today’s proposed rulemaking makes the
                                                 the interim provisions for the program                  oversight; the process whereby an SSOA                SSOA responsible for helping ensure
                                                 or the final rule, once the final rule is               will evaluate the material submitted                  that the Transit Agency Safety Plan for
                                                 issued.                                                 under the signatures of a Rail Transit                a rail transit system—the most complex
                                                                                                         Agency’s accountable executives; the                  type of public transportation system—is
                                                 Section 674.27 State Safety Program                                                                           sufficient to protect both the public and
                                                                                                         procedures an SSOA and a Rail Transit
                                                 Standards                                                                                                     the Rail Transit Agency’s employees.
                                                                                                         Agency will follow to manage findings
                                                   Under 49 CFR 659.15—the rule in                       and recommendations arising from a                       Specifically, under proposed section
                                                 place since 1995—the SSOAs have been                    triennial audit; the coordination of an               674.29(a), an SSOA must evaluate
                                                 required to develop a nine-part State                   SSOA investigation with a Rail Transit                whether a Transit Agency Safety Plan is
                                                 safety program standard comprised of                    Agency’s own internal investigation; the              based on an adequate Safety
                                                 requirements for program management,                    role of an SSOA in supporting any                     Management System (SMS), is
                                                 standards development, oversight of the                 investigation or findings made by the                 consistent with the National Safety
                                                 internal safety and security reviews by                 NTSB; and the procedures and SSOA                     Plan, and is in compliance with the
                                                 rail transit systems, the frequency of                  and a Rail Transit Agency will follow to              seven minimum standards set by the
                                                 those reviews, accident notification                    manage any conflicts over the contents                statute. Under proposed section
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 requirements, investigation procedures,                 or execution of a corrective action plan.             674.29(b), an SSOA must make a
                                                 corrective actions, the 21-point ‘‘system               See, proposed subsections 674.27(a)(1)–               number of judgments in determining
                                                 safety program plan’’ for rail transit                  (7).                                                  whether the Transit Agency Safety Plan
                                                 systems, and the ‘‘system security plan’’                  Also, readers should please note the               is based on an adequate SMS: Most
                                                 for rail transit systems. The current rule              new FTA responsibility for reviewing                  notably, the judgments whether a
                                                 sets a regimen that is reactive, highly                 the effectiveness of State safety program             Transit Agency Safety Plan sets forth a
                                                 prescriptive, and mechanistic; today’s                  standards. Under proposed section                     sufficiently explicit safety policy for the
                                                 proposed rulemaking will be proactive,                  674.27(b), FTA will evaluate an SSOA’s                rail transit system, and whether the plan


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00010   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         11011

                                                 identifies adequate means for risk                      means of testing the value of a Transit               incident involving the safety of a rail
                                                 control, safety assurance, and promotion                Agency Safety Plan and the steps a Rail               transit vehicle or taking place on the
                                                 of safety to support the execution of the               Transit Agency has taken to carry out                 property of a rail transit system, while
                                                 Transit Agency Safety Plan throughout                   that plan over a three-year cycle.                    the SSOAs retain the role of primary
                                                 the rail fixed guideway public                                                                                oversight for the safety of rail fixed
                                                                                                         Section 674.33 Accident and Incident
                                                 transportation system—by all employees                                                                        guideway public transportation. See, 49
                                                                                                         Notification
                                                 and agents of the system, and its                                                                             U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(A)(v), 5329(f)(1).
                                                 contractors. Under proposed section                        Proposed section 674.33 differs very               Consequently, under today’s proposed
                                                 674.29(c), in any instance in which an                  little from the two-hour notification                 rulemaking, FTA will continue to defer
                                                 SSOA does not approve a Transit                         requirement for certain types of                      to the SSOAs to conduct initial
                                                 Agency Safety Plan, the SSOA must                       accidents in the current rule at 49 CFR               inspections and investigations. Should
                                                 provide the Rail Transit Agency a                       659.33, with two exceptions. The first                an SSOA request FTA’s assistance,
                                                 written explanation, and the Rail                       exception is the addition of the term                 however, or should the Administrator
                                                 Transit Agency an opportunity to                        ‘‘Incident.’’ The second exception is the             determine that an SSOA lacks the
                                                 modify and resubmit its plan for the                    additional requirement that FTA be                    ability to conduct an investigation as
                                                 SSOA’s approval.                                        notified of an Accident or Incident                   necessary or appropriate, FTA may
                                                    In short, under proposed section                     together with the SSOA.                               initiate an investigation.
                                                 674.29, the SSOA becomes a vigorous,                       FTA is proposing to require two-hour                  Under the current regulations, an
                                                 diligent, ‘‘institutional check’’ on                    notification for either an ‘‘Accident’’ or            SSOA may request a rail transit system
                                                 whether a Transit Agency Safety Plan                    ‘‘Incident.’’ In proposed section 674.7,              to conduct an investigation on behalf of
                                                 for a rail transit system is adequate to                ‘‘Incident’’ is characterized as a near               the SSOA. See, 49 CFR 659.35(a), (c). In
                                                 avoid or mitigate hazards and risks to                  miss, close call, a violation of a safety             some instances, it may benefit a rail
                                                 everyone who uses, manages, or                          standard that poses a hazard to a rail                transit system to investigate an accident
                                                 maintains that system. This is a much                   fixed guideway public transportation                  occurring on its property, but in FTA’s
                                                 more assertive role for an SSOA than                    system, or equipment or property                      view, that practice can trigger a conflict
                                                 has been the case under the regulations                 damage in an amount less than $25,000                 of interest, particularly where a rail
                                                 in place since 1995.                                    that effects transit operations.                      transit system has an ability to influence
                                                                                                         Experience teaches that a near miss or                an apportionment of fault and liability.
                                                 Section 674.31 Triennial Audits:                        close call may be as much or more                     Given that 49 U.S.C. 5329 now provides
                                                 General Requirements                                    important for detecting hazards and                   SSOAs with resources to conduct their
                                                    Under the current regulations, an                    mitigating risk as an accident that                   own investigations, and requires
                                                 SSOA conducts an ‘‘on-site review’’ of                  results in personal injury or property                professional training and certification of
                                                 the ‘‘system safety program plan’’ for a                damage. And logically, a violation of a               their employees to investigate accidents,
                                                 rail fixed guideway public                              safety standard calls for notification,               proposed section 674.35(a) would
                                                 transportation system at least once every               regardless whether the violation led to               require an SSOA to conduct an
                                                 three years. See, 49 CFR 659.29. As a                   personal injury or property damage.                   ‘‘independent investigation’’ of any
                                                 practical matter, this sort of review has                  To enhance FTA’s own situational                   accident or incident that a Rail Transit
                                                 amounted to little more than a checklist                awareness, a Rail Transit Agency must                 Agency reports to the SSOA in
                                                 procedure, and the superficiality of the                notify FTA of any accident or incident                compliance with proposed section
                                                 on-site review was a specific point of                  at the same time a Rail Transit Agency                674.33(a). Further, proposed section
                                                 criticism by the National Transportation                notifies the SSOA. In recent years FTA                674.35(c) would require all personnel
                                                 Safety Board following the rapid and                    has benefitted from the electronic                    and contractors conducting
                                                 light rail accidents in 2009, referenced                notification process a number of rail                 investigations for an SSOA to be trained
                                                 above.                                                  transit systems are using to inform                   to conduct investigations in accordance
                                                    Under today’s NPRM, the three-year                   multiple parties of accidents, similar to             with the Safety Certification Training
                                                 on-site review would be transformed                     the telephonic notifications that                     program. Obviously, a Rail Transit
                                                 into a more searching analysis of the                   railroads subject to 49 CFR part 225                  Agency would not be prohibited from
                                                 safety of a rail transit system.                        provide to the Federal Railroad                       conducting its own internal
                                                 Specifically, under proposed section                    Administration via the National                       investigation of an accident. Rather,
                                                 674.31, an SSOA will conduct a                          Response Center. Insofar as the rail                  proposed section 674.35(a) states that in
                                                 complete audit of a Rail Transit                        fixed guideway public transportation                  any instance in which both an SSOA
                                                 Agency’s compliance with its Transit                    systems already use an electronic                     and a Rail Transit Agency are
                                                 Agency Safety Plan at least once every                  notification system, FTA asks that it be              conducting an investigation, they must
                                                 three years, or on an on-going basis over               added to their automated lists of                     coordinate their investigations with one
                                                 a three-year timeframe, if the Rail                     addressees, which would require                       another in accordance with the State
                                                 Transit Agency concurs. At the                          minimal effort.                                       safety oversight program standard
                                                 conclusion of the three-year audit cycle                                                                      required by proposed section 674.27.
                                                 an SSOA will issue a report with                        Section 674.35 Investigations                            Under proposed section 674.35(b), an
                                                 findings and recommendations that                          In the deliberations leading to the                SSOA must issue a written report on an
                                                 include, at minimum, an analysis of the                 enactment of MAP–21, the                              investigation that identifies the factors
                                                 effectiveness of the Transit Agency                     congressional authorization committees                that caused or contributed to the
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 Safety Plan, recommendations for                        took a fresh look at whether                          accident or incident, describes the
                                                 improvements, and a corrective action                   investigation and enforcement authority               SSOA’s investigation activities, and sets
                                                 plan, if necessary or appropriate. The                  for safety in rail fixed guideway public              forth a corrective action plan, as
                                                 Rail Transit Agency must be given an                    transportation should be vested in FTA                necessary or appropriate. The SSOA
                                                 opportunity to comment on the findings                  or retained by the States. Ultimately, the            must formally adopt an investigation
                                                 and recommendations arising from the                    Congress decided that FTA and the                     report and transmit that report to the
                                                 audit. Optimally, an SSOA audit, per se,                States, through their SSOAs, will have                Rail Transit Agency for review and
                                                 will be a more independent, effective                   concurrent authority to investigate any               concurrence. If a Rail Transit Agency


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00011   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11012                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 does not concur in an SSOA’s                            National Transportation Safety Board                  revenue mileage in a State (less than one
                                                 investigation report, the SSOA may                      (NTSB) has conducted an investigation,                million actual and projected revenue
                                                 allow the Rail Transit Agency to submit                 an SSOA must evaluate whether the                     miles, in total), or the relatively small
                                                 a written dissent from the report, and                  NTSB’s findings and recommendations                   number of unlinked passenger trips
                                                 the SSOA may include the Rail Transit                   call for a corrective action plan by the              carried by all the rail transit systems in
                                                 Agency’s dissent in the report, if the                  Rail Transit Agency, and if so, the SSOA              a State, on an annual basis (fewer than
                                                 SSOA so chooses.                                        must order the Rail Transit Agency to                 ten million actual and projected
                                                    Also, readers should note that MAP–                  develop and carry out a corrective                    unlinked passenger trips, in total). See,
                                                 21 has vested the Federal Transit                       action plan.                                          49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(B).
                                                 Administrator with broad authority to                                                                            Proposed section 674.41(b) would
                                                 conduct investigations of public                        Section 674.39 State Safety Oversight                 change the current rule, 49 CFR 659.41,
                                                 transportation systems—whether to                       Agency Annual Reporting to FTA                        to make it clear that an SSOA may not
                                                 ensure the continuing safety of a system,                  It is not FTA’s objective to increase              employ any individual who provides
                                                 or in response to an accident or                        the reporting burdens on States, their                services to a rail fixed guideway public
                                                 incident. See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(f)(1) (as                 SSOAs, or rail fixed guideway public                  transportation system under the
                                                 the Secretary’s designee, the                           transportation systems any more than                  oversight of the SSOA. Also, the
                                                 Administrator ‘‘may . . . conduct                       absolutely necessary. Moreover, the                   proposed rule would delete the
                                                 inspections, investigations, audits,                    current SSOA reporting requirements at                reference in the current rule to state law
                                                 examinations, and testing of the                        49 CFR 659.39 have worked well for the                determinations of conflict of interest.
                                                 equipment, facilities, rolling stock, and               limited authority and responsibilities                Again, however, the Administrator
                                                 operations of [a] public transportation                 given to the SSOAs under the State                    could issue a waiver from this
                                                 system . . .’’). To facilitate the                      Safety Oversight program in place for                 requirement on the basis of the
                                                 Administrator’s authority to conduct                    the past twenty years. As further                     relatively small annual fixed guideway
                                                 investigations, he or she may make                      described in the Paperwork Reduction                  revenue mileage (less than one million
                                                 reports and issue directives, issue                     Act section of this notice, below, the                miles) in a State or the relatively small
                                                 subpoenas, take depositions, require                    Office of Management and Budget                       number of unlinked passenger trips per
                                                 production of documents by either a                     (OMB) extended the approval for FTA to                year (less than 10 million unlinked
                                                 public transportation system or an                      collect information from SSOAs as                     trips) in a State, using the same
                                                 SSOA, and provide guidance to public                    required by 49 U.S.C. 5330 and the rules              thresholds as specified in proposed
                                                 transportation systems ‘‘regarding                      at 49 CFR part 659.                                   section 674.41(a).
                                                 prevention of accidents and incidents.’’                   Today’s rulemaking proposes to keep                   Finally, proposed section 674.41(c)
                                                 See, 49 U.S.C. 5329(f)(2)–(6). The FTA                  the basic structure of the current 49 CFR             would make it clear that a contractor
                                                 Office of Safety and Oversight will carry               659.39 insofar as the data and                        may not provide its services to both an
                                                 out the Administrator’s authority to                    information SSOAs must report to FTA                  SSOA and a rail transit system under
                                                 conduct investigations, with assistance                 on an annual basis, with a few additions              the oversight of that SSOA. There is no
                                                 from staff of the ten FTA Regional                      and revisions, as follows. First, under               waiver available with respect to this
                                                 Offices.                                                proposed subsection 674.39(a)(2), an                  particular requirement.
                                                                                                         SSOA would be obliged to submit
                                                 Section 674.37 Corrective Action Plans                  evidence once a year that each of its                 Appendix: Safety Management Systems
                                                    It is most likely an SSOA will order                 employees and contractors are in                      (SMS) Framework
                                                 a Rail Transit Agency to prepare and                    compliance with the applicable Safety                    For a basic understanding of SMS,
                                                 carry out a corrective action plan as the               Training Certification requirements.                  readers should please consult the
                                                 result of an investigation of an accident               Second, under proposed subsection                     Appendix that immediately follows the
                                                 or hazard, an internal safety audit, or an              674.39(a)(4), an SSOA would be obliged                text of the proposed rules: The
                                                 SSOA’s triennial audit of a Transit                     to submit a summary of the triennial                  document titled ‘‘Safety Management
                                                 Agency Safety Plan. Although it is not                  audits completed during the preceding                 Systems (SMS) Framework.’’ This
                                                 possible to know what potential                         year, and the Rail Transit Agencies’                  document describes at some length each
                                                 corrective action plans may call for,                   progress in carrying out any corrective               of the four key components of a viable
                                                 under proposed section 674.37(a), in                    action plans arising from those audits.               SMS for any transportation provider: (1)
                                                 any instance in which a Rail Transit                    Third, under proposed subsection                      The Safety Management Policy for an
                                                 Agency is ordered to develop and carry                  674.39(a)(5), an SSOA would be obliged                organization, (2) an organization’s Risk
                                                 out a corrective action plan, the SSOA                  to submit evidence of its review and                  Management practices, (3) the means for
                                                 must review and approve that plan                       approval of any changes to Transit                    Safety Assurance throughout an
                                                 before the Rail Transit Agency carries                  Agency Safety Plans during the                        organization, and (4) the practices for
                                                 out the plan. A corrective action plan                  preceding year.                                       Safety Promotion within an
                                                 must specify the actions a Rail Transit                                                                       organization, through training,
                                                 Agency will take to avoid or mitigate the               Section 674.41 Conflicts of Interest                  education, and communication. This
                                                 risks and hazards that led to the plan,                   Proposed section 674.41(a)                          document explains that SMS is both
                                                 the schedule for taking the corrective                  incorporates a fundamental change                     flexible and scalable to the size of an
                                                 actions, and the persons who will take                  enacted by MAP–21: An SSOA must                       organization and its operating
                                                 the corrective actions. The Rail Transit                now be both financially and legally                   environment. This document addresses
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 Agency will periodically report its                     independent from any rail fixed                       the role of the Accountable Executive—
                                                 progress in carrying out the corrective                 guideway public transportation system                 the leader at the top of an organization
                                                 action plan, and the SSOA may monitor                   under the oversight of the SSOA. See,                 who is ultimately responsible for
                                                 the Rail Transit Agency’s progress                      49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(A)(i). The only                  safety—and the roles of a chief safety
                                                 through unannounced, on-site                            exception to this requirement would be                officer, an executive leadership team,
                                                 inspections, or any other means the                     an instance in which the Administrator                employees who specialize in operations,
                                                 SSOA deems necessary or appropriate.                    has issued a waiver based on the                      maintenance, and asset management,
                                                 Also, in any instance in which the                      relatively small annual fixed guideway                employees with front-line


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00012   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         11013

                                                 responsibilities for safety, and an                     9/11 Commission Act of 2007 (Pub. L.                  Estimated Costs and Benefits
                                                 organization’s board of directors. Also,                110–53; Aug. 3, 2007) (‘‘9/11
                                                                                                                                                               Existing 49 CFR Part 659 Program
                                                 this document speaks to discrete                        Commission Act’’), TSA is given the
                                                                                                                                                               Requirements and Activities
                                                 activities such as hazard identification                authority to issue regulations that will
                                                 and analysis, risk assessment and                       require public transportation agencies to                As stated in the Background section
                                                 mitigation, change management,                          develop and carry out security plans.                 above, this NPRM replaces a set of
                                                 continuous improvement, and the                         Under Section 1404 of the 9/11                        regulations that have been in place since
                                                 integration of an organization’s SMS                    Commission Act, DHS is carrying out a                 December 27, 1995, codified at 49 CFR
                                                 with its public safety and emergency                    national strategy for public                          part 659. As such, this NPRM applies to
                                                 preparedness.                                           transportation security with guidelines               a discrete subsection of the public
                                                    This Appendix is a guidance                          that minimize security threats and                    transportation industry—the recipients
                                                 document. Unlike the final rules that                   maximize the ability of public                        of Federal funds under 49 U.S.C.
                                                 will follow the public notice and                       transportation agencies to mitigate                   chapter 53 that operate rail fixed
                                                 comment on the proposed rules in this                   damage from terrorist attack and other                guideway transit systems not subject to
                                                 NPRM, this Appendix will not have the                   major incidents. Also, TSA has issued                 the jurisdiction of the Federal Railroad
                                                 force of law. FTA is publishing the                     rules that apply to rail transit systems              Administration; the States in which
                                                 Safety Management Systems (SMS)                         insofar as TSA inspection authority,                  those rail systems lie; and the SSOAs
                                                 Framework in this Appendix to provide                   appointment of rail security                          required to oversee the safety of those
                                                 practical advice both to the rail fixed                 coordinators, and reporting significant               rail systems.
                                                 guideway public transportation systems                  concerns to TSA. See, 49 CFR 1508.5,                     Through the implementation of 49
                                                 that will develop and integrate SMS into                1508.201, and 1508.203.                               CFR part 659, the States, SSOAs and rail
                                                 their operations and managerial                            In omitting any mention of rail transit            transit agencies affected by 49 U.S.C.
                                                 structures, and the States and SSOAs                    system security plans and reviews, the                5329(e) already engage in core activities
                                                 that will oversee the rail transit systems’             rules FTA is proposing for State Safety               that address many of this NPRM’s
                                                 practice of SMS. FTA does not intend to                 Oversight in this NPRM would not                      proposed requirements. In practical
                                                 set substantive standards for SMS                       prohibit rail transit systems from                    terms, many of the changes required in
                                                 through today’s proposed rulemaking                     continuing to improve their practices to              this NPRM serve to increase the
                                                 for State Safety Oversight. Rather, FTA                 prevent and mitigate the threats to the               frequency and/or comprehensiveness of
                                                 intends to propose substantive                          security of their systems. To the                     activities that are already performed,
                                                 standards for SMS in the upcoming                       contrary, rail transit systems are                    such as reviews, inspections, field
                                                 Notices of Proposed Rulemaking for the                  encouraged to do so—and strictly in                   observations, investigations, safety
                                                 National Public Transportation Safety                   accordance with the rules and                         studies, data analysis activities, and
                                                 Plan and the Transit Agency Safety                      guidelines TSA has issued and will                    hazard management.
                                                 Plans. Nonetheless, FTA invites readers                 issue in the future. Both FTA and TSA                 Costs to States of Implementing 49 CFR
                                                 to comment on the material set forth in                 recognize, moreover, that some of the                 Part 659, CY 2011–2013
                                                 this Appendix, together with your                       steps a public transportation agency
                                                 comments on the rules proposed in this                  takes to protect public and employee                     Pursuant to 49 CFR part 659, FTA
                                                 NPRM. Indeed, FTA expects to revise                     safety are often one and the same as                  collects annual information from the
                                                 this Appendix from time to time, in the                 those it takes to protect its transit                 SSOAs regarding the hours they expend
                                                 years ahead, as the practice of SMS                     system from a terrorist attack; for                   to implement SSO requirements for the
                                                 matures throughout the transit industry.                example, the steps an agency takes as                 rail transit agencies in their
                                                                                                         part of a threat and vulnerability                    jurisdictions. Based on this information,
                                                 Additional Matters of Interest in the                                                                         when totals are averaged for the last
                                                                                                         assessment. FTA and TSA work to
                                                 Proposed Rules                                                                                                three reporting years (CY 2011–CY
                                                                                                         ensure that the transit industry is not
                                                   Security. Persons versed in the                       confronted with inconsistent                          2013), FTA has determined that the 28
                                                 current State Safety Oversight program                  government-issued security                            covered SSOAs expend approximately
                                                 will notice that today’s proposed                       requirements or guidance.                             115,396 total hours per year
                                                 rulemaking omits any mention of                            Plain English. For purposes of plain               implementing part 659 requirements.
                                                 system security plans and internal                      English, and compliance with the Plain                While these hours average out to
                                                 security reviews for rail fixed guideway                Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–274;                 roughly 4,120 per State per year, there
                                                 public transportation systems. In short,                Oct. 13, 2010), FTA has made every                    is wide variation across the States in
                                                 the 49 CFR part 659 regulations, issued                 effort to keep the text of the rules in this          terms of the total level of effort devoted
                                                 in 1995, preceded the terrorist attacks of              NPRM short, simple, and clear.                        to compliance with part 659. Some
                                                 September 11, 2001, and the creation of                 Admittedly, the current regulation at 49              States, such as California, oversee
                                                 the Transportation Security                             CFR part 659 is lengthy, and less than                multiple rail transit systems with two or
                                                 Administration (TSA), an agency of the                  a model of clarity, thus, FTA seeks to                more full-time equivalents (FTEs)
                                                 United States Department of Homeland                    move in the opposite direction. A                     devoted to each system. Most States
                                                 Security (DHS), which now has lead                      certain level of detail may be sacrificed             covered by part 659, however, have one
                                                 responsibility for the Federal                          in this rulemaking, but FTA would                     (1) rail fixed guideway system and
                                                 Government’s activities in the area of                  prefer to put a rule in place that is easier          devote between .5 and 1 FTEs per year
                                                 security in public transportation. This                 to understand and to work with.                       to implementing 49 CFR part 659
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 lead responsibility for TSA is set forth                   Annual Certifications of Compliance.               requirements for that system,
                                                 in the Memorandum of Agreement                          Readers should please note that the                   supplemented by contractor resources
                                                 (MOA) between DHS and DOT executed                      requirement that an SSOA annually                     for major activities, such as the Three-
                                                 in September 2004 and the Annex to                      submit a certification of its compliance              Year Review and accident investigation.
                                                 that MOA executed by TSA and FTA in                     with the rules, codified at 49 CFR                       The table below illustrates the break-
                                                 September 2005. Further, under                          659.43, is being moved to proposed                    down of activities and labor hours
                                                 Sections 1405 and 1512 of the                           subsection 674.39(a)(6) with the other                currently expended to implement 49
                                                 Implementing Recommendations of the                     requirements for annual reporting.                    CFR part 659 by the States and SSOAs.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00013   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11014                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 Using the 2013 Bureau of Labor                                                 The table also identifies one-time,                                        rail transit agencies are joining the SSO
                                                 Statistics (BLS) average wage rate of                                        non-recurring activities with an asterisk                                    program each year. In fact, since January
                                                 $42.70 per hour for State and local                                          (*). These activities, such as establishing                                  1, 1997, when the December 27, 1995
                                                 government operations managers, this                                         standards and procedures, are                                                rule implementing 49 CFR part 659
                                                 level of effort equates to an annual cost                                    performed initially to establish the SSO                                     went into effect, the SSO program has
                                                 of approximately $5 million for States                                       program standard for a State new to                                          grown by 40 percent, increasing from 19
                                                 and SSOAs to implement 49 CFR part                                           implementing part 659. By including                                          SSOAs and 32 rail transit agencies to 28
                                                 659 requirements nationwide.                                                 these non-recurring costs, FTA’s table                                       SSOAs and 48 rail transit agencies.
                                                                                                                              reflects the reality that new States and

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Total labor    Total labor
                                                                                   Annual state activity to implement 49 CFR part 659 requirements                                                                                hours          costs

                                                 Develop and adopt program standard * .................................................................................................................                                1,400     $59,780.00
                                                 Develop and adopt program procedures * .............................................................................................................                                  1,400      59,780.00
                                                 Review and update program standard and procedures ........................................................................................                                            2,912     124,342.40
                                                 Review and approve rail transit agency SSPP .....................................................................................................                                     3,840     163,968.00
                                                 Review and approve rail transit agency system security plan ..............................................................................                                            3,840     163,968.00
                                                 Travel .....................................................................................................................................................................          5,376     229,555.20
                                                 Review and approve rail transit agency procedures .............................................................................................                                       3,072     131,174.40
                                                 Review and approve SSPP modifications and updates ........................................................................................                                            3,072     131,174.40
                                                 Review and approve system security plan modifications and updates ................................................................                                                    3,072     131,174.40
                                                 Perform three-year review of rail transit agency ...................................................................................................                                  9,216     393,523.20
                                                 Training ..................................................................................................................................................................           3,840     163,968.00
                                                 Review and approve internal safety review report ................................................................................................                                     4,224     180,364.80
                                                 Review and approve internal security review report .............................................................................................                                      4,224     180,364.80
                                                 Prepare three-year safety and security review report ...........................................................................................                                     13,440     573,888.00
                                                 Prepare accident investigation report ....................................................................................................................                            5,376     229,555.20
                                                 Review and approve rail transit agency accident investigation reports ................................................................                                                6,144     262,348.80
                                                 Review, approve and track corrective action plans ..............................................................................................                                     15,360     655,872.00
                                                 Monitor rail transit agency adherence to hazard management process ...............................................................                                                   19,200     819,840.00
                                                 Designation Submission * ......................................................................................................................................                          30       1,281.00
                                                 Initial Submission * .................................................................................................................................................                2,270      96,929.00
                                                 Annual Submission ................................................................................................................................................                    3,528     150,645.60
                                                 Periodic Submission ..............................................................................................................................................                      560      23,912.00

                                                        Total including non-recurring costs ................................................................................................................                        115,396    4,927,409.20
                                                    * Non-recurring cost.


                                                 Costs to Rail Transit Agencies of                                            rail transit industry based on the size of                                   planning; and communicating with/
                                                 Implementing 49 CFR Part 659, CY                                             rail fixed guideway systems. The                                             responding to the SSO agency through
                                                 2011–2013                                                                    nation’s five (5) largest rail transit                                       reports, meetings, teleconferences,
                                                                                                                              agencies each employ between 6 and 15                                        emails, training, submittals and support
                                                   Based on information collected from                                        full-time equivalents who work                                               for field observations and reviews.
                                                 the SSO agencies in annual reports and                                       exclusively on 49 CFR part 659
                                                 previous assessments conducted by the                                                                                                                        Also using the 2013 Bureau of Labor
                                                                                                                              activities. Most of the remaining rail
                                                 Government Accountability Office and                                                                                                                      Statistics average wage rate of $42.70
                                                                                                                              transit agencies devote between .5 and
                                                 the National Transportation Safety                                           2 FTEs to implement 49 CFR part 659                                          per hour for State and local government
                                                 Board, FTA has also established the                                          activities. Major activities performed by                                    operations managers, FTA has
                                                 level of effort required to implement 49                                     the rail transit agencies to implement 49                                    determined that the rail transit industry
                                                 CFR part 659 requirements for the 48                                         CFR part 659 include developing safety                                       spends about $10 million per year to
                                                 rail transit agencies covered by the                                         and security plans and procedures;                                           implement the 49 CFR part 659
                                                 regulation. Based on this data, FTA has                                      conducting internal reviews and audits                                       requirements nationwide. FTA’s table
                                                 determined that each year, rail transit                                      to assess the implementation of safety                                       below reflects non-recurring costs
                                                 agencies expend approximately 237,000                                        and security plans; conducting accident                                      required for new rail transit agencies
                                                 hours implementing 49 CFR part 659                                           and incident investigations; identifying,                                    covered by part 659, and for existing rail
                                                 requirements.                                                                assessing and resolving hazards and                                          transit agencies to address new
                                                   While these hours average out to                                           their consequences; managing safety                                          extensions and capital projects, once
                                                 approximately 5,000 per rail transit                                         data acquisition and analysis;                                               they become operational, as averaged
                                                 agency per year, there is variation in the                                   coordinating with emergency response                                         over the last three years.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Total labor    Total labor
                                                                         Annual rail transit agency activity to implement 49 CFR part 659 requirements                                                                            hours          costs
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 Develop system safety program plan * ..................................................................................................................                               6,272    $267,814.40
                                                 Review and update system safety program plan ..................................................................................................                                       7,550     322,385.00
                                                 Develop system security plan * ..............................................................................................................................                         4,036     172,337.20
                                                 Review and update system security plan ..............................................................................................................                                 6,208     265,081.60
                                                 Develop program procedures * ..............................................................................................................................                           5,946     253,894.20
                                                 Review and update program procedures ..............................................................................................................                                   4,142     176,863.40
                                                 Travel .....................................................................................................................................................................          4,146     177,034.20



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014          19:08 Feb 26, 2015         Jkt 235001       PO 00000        Frm 00014        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702       E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM               27FEP4


                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                                           11015

                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Total labor    Total labor
                                                                        Annual rail transit agency activity to implement 49 CFR part 659 requirements                                                                    hours          costs

                                                 Conduct internal safety and security reviews ........................................................................................................                       15,230      650,321.00
                                                 Prepare internal safety and security review reports ..............................................................................................                           8,160      348,432.00
                                                 Prepare annual internal safety and security review report for state oversight .....................................................                                         10,708      457,231.60
                                                 Conduct accident investigations ............................................................................................................................                30,000    1,281,000.00
                                                 Prepare accident investigation reports ..................................................................................................................                   19,168      818,473.60
                                                 Investigate unacceptable hazardous conditions ....................................................................................................                          14,030      599,081.00
                                                 Prepare unacceptable hazardous condition reports ..............................................................................................                             12,032      513,766.40
                                                 Implement hazard management process ..............................................................................................................                          32,312    1,379,722.40
                                                 Prepare and submit corrective action plans ..........................................................................................................                       19,090      815,143.00
                                                 Coordinate hazard management program activities with state oversight .............................................................                                          23,848    1,018,309.60
                                                 Maintain safety data ..............................................................................................................................................          3,570      152,439.00
                                                 Plan and conduct annual emergency preparedness drill ......................................................................................                                  3,382      144,411.40
                                                 Prepare and submit after-action report for annual emergency drill ......................................................................                                     1,090       46,543.00
                                                 Maintain security data ............................................................................................................................................          3,570      152,439.00
                                                 Make submissions to state oversight agency .......................................................................................................                           2,618      111,788.60

                                                       Total including non-recurring costs ................................................................................................................                236,996    10,119,729.20
                                                    * Non-recurring cost.


                                                 Limitations of the Resources Expended                                    safety of the rail transit industry one of                                  Combined with a lack of resources
                                                 by States and Rail Transit Agencies                                      its Top Ten Most Wanted Items in 2014.                                   devoted to safety oversight, FTA has
                                                                                                                             FTA has also observed that while                                      observed that the operating,
                                                    Based on the assessment provided in                                   other modes of surface transportation,                                   maintenance and service environments
                                                 the two tables above, collectively the                                   such as highway and commercial motor                                     of the nation’s rail transit agencies
                                                 States, the SSOAs and the rail transit                                   carrier, freight railroad and commercial                                 continue to change. Rail transit
                                                 agencies expend approximately 352,000                                    trucking have achieved significant                                       ridership is at an all-time high, while
                                                 labor hours or $15 million to implement                                  improvements in safety performance                                       rail transit equipment and infrastructure
                                                 49 CFR part 659 requirements each year.                                  over the last decade, the public                                         is in a deteriorated condition. The
                                                 While this level of effort helps make the                                transportation industry’s safety                                         heavier service cycles required to meet
                                                 transit industry among the safest modes                                  performance has not improved. Over the                                   rising demand in some of the nation’s
                                                 of surface transportation, it has not been                               last decade, the rail transit industry                                   largest urbanized areas create challenges
                                                 sufficient to prevent major accidents                                    actually has experienced increases in                                    for aging infrastructure with potential
                                                 with multiple fatalities from occurring.                                 several key categories, including the                                    safety implications. FTA’s Transit Asset
                                                 As discussed in the preamble to this                                     number and severity of collisions, the                                   Management (TAM) NPRM, authorized
                                                 NPRM, over the last decade, the rail                                     number of worker fatalities and injuries,                                at 49 U.S.C. 5326, will attempt to
                                                 transit industry remains vulnerable to                                   and the number and severity of                                           address some of these challenges
                                                 catastrophic occurrences.                                                passenger injuries. In this respect, the                                 through the institution of formal asset
                                                    Since 2004, the National                                              public transportation industry, and the                                  management programs.
                                                 Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has                                   nation’s rail transit agencies in
                                                 investigated (or preliminarily                                                                                                                       In addition, this NPRM also
                                                                                                                          particular, are outliers to the overall
                                                 investigated) 19 major rail transit                                                                                                               implements an earlier decision made by
                                                                                                                          U.S. DOT modal safety experience.
                                                 accidents, and has issued 25 safety                                         Perhaps coincidentally, FTA also                                      the Federal Transit Administrator to
                                                 recommendations to FTA, including six                                    notes that the current level of                                          adopt the framework and principles of
                                                 (6) Urgent Recommendations. In                                           expenditure by the States and rail                                       Safety Management Systems (SMS).
                                                 conducting these investigations, the                                     transit agencies on safety oversight                                     This decision was communicated in a
                                                 NTSB found a variety of probable causes                                  activities falls considerably below one                                  May 13, 2013 Dear Colleague letter to
                                                 for these accidents. Among them,                                         (1) percent of the roughly $4 billion that                               the public transportation industry.
                                                 equipment malfunctions; equipment in                                     FTA awards to rail transit agencies each                                 FTA’s adoption of SMS better positions
                                                 poor or marginal condition, including                                    year. A review of safety programs                                        the SSOAs and rail transit agencies to
                                                 equipment that can pose particular risks                                 administered by other modal                                              address the nexus between safety and
                                                 to safety, such as signal systems; lack of                               administrations, such as the Federal                                     state of good repair more effectively.
                                                 vehicle crashworthiness; employee                                        Railroad Administration (FRA), the                                       MAP–21 Requirements To Address
                                                 fatigue and fitness for duty issues; and                                 Federal Highway Administration                                           Known Gaps in Oversight
                                                 employee error, such as inattentiveness                                  (FHWA), the Federal Motor Carrier
                                                 or failure to follow a rail transit system’s                             Safety Administration (FMCSA), and                                          MAP–21 creates a new regulatory role
                                                 operating procedure. The NTSB also                                       the Federal Aviation Administration                                      for FTA and the States that responds to
                                                 identified the lack of a strong safety                                   (FAA), demonstrates that at least one (1)                                known gaps in oversight and safety
                                                 culture and a lack of adequate oversight                                 percent of the Federal investment is                                     performance. For example, to address
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 both by the rail transit systems’ State                                  typically devoted to safety oversight                                    noted FTA and NTSB concerns
                                                 Safety Oversight Agencies and FTA.                                       activities and programs in most other                                    regarding conflicts of interest and the
                                                 Deficiencies in oversight—of the kind                                    related modes of transportation. Other                                   ability of SSO agencies to act
                                                 being addressed by this rulemaking—                                      modes have determined that this level                                    independently in the interest of public
                                                 were specifically identified as a                                        of investment in safety returns positive                                 safety, 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4)(i) specifies
                                                 contributing factor for five of the 19                                   dividends in safety performance while                                    that each SSO agency must have
                                                 major accidents. As a result, the NTSB                                   also addressing tight budget margins in                                  financial and legal independence from
                                                 has made improving the operational                                       the transportation industry.                                             each of the rail fixed guideway public


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014        19:08 Feb 26, 2015         Jkt 235001      PO 00000       Frm 00015       Fmt 4701      Sfmt 4702      E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM             27FEP4


                                                 11016                           Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 transportation systems in its                                             $14,841,808 in funding to eligible States                      Senate report to the Public
                                                 jurisdiction.                                                             for SSOPs and SSOAs for Federal Fiscal                         Transportation Safety Act of 2010 (S.
                                                    To address the need for an enhanced                                    Year 2015 through May 31, 2015. 80 FR                          3638, 111th Congress); and the
                                                 safety regulatory program, 49 U.S.C.                                      7254. Thus, for purposes of cost-benefit                       experience of FTA’s legal, policy, grant
                                                 5329(e)(2)(A–B) directs States to assume                                  analysis, this rulemaking is revenue                           making and safety team.
                                                 oversight responsibility for rail transit                                 neutral between the Federal government                            This table shows a minimum four-fold
                                                 agencies in engineering and                                               and the States, and this has been                              increase in the level of oversight activity
                                                 construction, as well as in revenue                                       factored into the analysis.                                    performed to implement the NPRM. In
                                                 service. This requirement increases the                                      Specifically, in determining the
                                                                                                                                                                                          particular, as part of proposed section
                                                 number of States subject to the State                                     additional costs that would be imposed
                                                                                                                           through this rulemaking, we have                               674.27, SSOAs would be required to
                                                 Safety Oversight regulations from 28 to
                                                                                                                           factored the net transfer from FTA to the                      establish a new set of activities unique
                                                 30, and increases the number of rail
                                                                                                                           States and their SSOAs. The table below                        to the oversight of SMS in the rail
                                                 transit agencies from 48 to 60
                                                                                                                           compares and contrasts the specific                            transit industry. The 30 SSOAs would
                                                 nationwide.
                                                                                                                           activities performed, the labor hours                          be required to identify their
                                                 MAP–21 SSO Grant Program—Costs to                                         and the total costs expended under the                         ‘‘accountable executive’’ for the
                                                 States                                                                    existing 49 CFR part 659 requirements                          implementation of the SSO program,
                                                    The statutory changes to State Safety                                  (as discussed above) with FTA’s                                and determine their procedures and
                                                 Oversight include a new grant program                                     proposal for the MAP–21 program                                process for overseeing the effective
                                                 to assist with the costs of compliance.                                   authorized at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) and                            functioning of each rail transit agency’s
                                                 Federal financial assistance is now                                       described in this NPRM. Readers should                         SMS, including overseeing elements
                                                 available to States to help them develop                                  note that the 49 CFR part 659 labor                            such as organizational accountability,
                                                 and carry out their State Safety                                          hours and costs reflect 28 SSOAs and 48                        safety climate and culture, committee
                                                 Oversight Programs (SSOPs), and may                                       rail transit agencies, while the 49 U.S.C.                     structures, safety performance
                                                 be used, specifically, for up to eighty                                   5329(e) labor hours and costs reflect 30                       monitoring, safety audits and reviews,
                                                 percent of both the operational and                                       SSOAs and 60 rail transit agencies. As                         safety risk management, and, perhaps
                                                 administrative expenses of SSOAs,                                         discussed above, new definitions in 49                         most importantly, the implementation
                                                 including the expenses of employee                                        U.S.C. 5329 expand State Safety                                and monitoring of safety risk
                                                 training.                                                                 Oversight requirements to include rail                         mitigations. Through the MAP–21 SSO
                                                    On March 10, 2014, FTA announced                                       transit agencies in construction and                           grant program, this additional oversight
                                                 its apportionment of $21,945,771 in                                       engineering phases of development.                             activity will be funded at no additional
                                                 funding to eligible States for their                                         Labor estimates for the activities in                       cost to the States. FTA welcomes
                                                 SSOPs and SSOAs for Federal Fiscal                                        this NPRM were derived based on the                            comments and observations regarding
                                                 Year 2013, and $22,293,250 for Federal                                    hours required to complete them as                             the hours reported for the part 659
                                                 Fiscal Year 2014. 46 FR 13380. In                                         reported by States already implementing                        requirements and the estimates
                                                 addition, on February, 9, 2015, FTA                                       the specific activities; the estimates and                     presented for the proposed activities in
                                                 announced the apportionment of                                            general discussion provided in the                             this NPRM.

                                                                                                                                                                        49 CFR            49 CFR             Section 5329   Section 5329
                                                                           State oversight agency activity in NPRM                                                      part 659          part 659            labor hours    total cost
                                                                                                                                                                      labor hours        total cost

                                                 § 674.11 Develop State Safety Oversight Program:
                                                     • Explicit Acknowledgement of State Responsibility to Oversee Safety
                                                        of Rail Transit Agencies in Engineering, Construction and Oper-
                                                        ations * .................................................................................................                  0              $0.00            1,200      $51,240.00
                                                     • Demonstrate Authority to Adopt and Enforce State and Federal
                                                        Regulations * .......................................................................................                       0               0.00            1,200       51,240.00
                                                     • Demonstrate Adequate/Appropriate Staffing Level * ..........................                                                 0               0.00            3,000      128,100.00
                                                     • Demonstrate Qualification and Certification of Staff * ........................                                              0               0.00            3,000      128,100.00
                                                     • Demonstrate by Law Prohibition against Receiving Funding from
                                                        Rail Transit Agency * ...........................................................................                           0               0.00              600       25,620.00
                                                 § 674.13 Designation of oversight agency:
                                                     • Legal and Financial Independence Procedures and Disclosures * ....                                                           0               0.00            2,400      102,480.00
                                                     • Annual Updates and Legal and Financial Independence Disclosures                                                              0               0.00              600       25,620.00
                                                     • Documentation of No Provision of Transit Service ............................                                                0               0.00               60        2,562.00
                                                     • Documentation of No Employment for Personnel Administering Rail
                                                        Transit Programs ................................................................................                           0               0.00               60        2,562.00
                                                     • Establish and Document Authority to Review, Approve, Oversee,
                                                        and Enforce Agency Safety Plan * ......................................................                                     0               0.00           30,000    1,281,000.00
                                                     • Establish and Document Investigative and Enforcement Authority *                                                             0               0.00           30,000    1,281,000.00
                                                 § 674.15 Designation of oversight agency for multi-state system ..............                                                     0               0.00            3,000      128,100.00
                                                 § 674.17 Use of Federal financial assistance
                                                     • Identifying and Providing Appropriate Match for Grant Program * .....
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                                                                                                                                                    0               0.00            6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • SSO Grant Management and Reporting Activities .............................                                                  0               0.00            3,000      128,100.00
                                                 § 674.19 Certification of a State Safety Oversight Program:
                                                     • Certification Pre-Submittal Documentation to FTA .............................                                              0            0.00                2,400      102,480.00
                                                     • Work Plan and Quarterly Updates to FTA .........................................                                            0            0.00                3,000      128,100.00
                                                     • Initial Certification Documentation ......................................................                              2,860      122,122.00                  300       12,810.00
                                                     • Final Certification Documentation .......................................................                                   0            0.00                  600       25,620.00
                                                     • Maintenance of Annual Certification ...................................................                                     0            0.00                  600       25,620.00
                                                 § 674.21 Withholding of Federal financial assistance for noncompliance ..                                                         0            0.00                    0            0.00



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014         19:08 Feb 26, 2015        Jkt 235001       PO 00000       Frm 00016       Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM    27FEP4


                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                                  11017

                                                                                                                                                                           49 CFR            49 CFR            Section 5329   Section 5329
                                                                           State oversight agency activity in NPRM                                                         part 659          part 659           labor hours    total cost
                                                                                                                                                                         labor hours        total cost

                                                 § 674.23 Confidentiality of information:
                                                     • Develop and adopt procedures/regulation to withhold an investiga-
                                                        tion report from being admitted as evidence or used in a civil ac-
                                                        tion * ....................................................................................................                    0              0.00            3,000      128,100.00
                                                 § 674.25 Role of the State safety oversight agency
                                                     • Establish minimum standards for the safety of rail transit agencies *                                                           0              0.00           30,000    1,281,000.00
                                                     • Update minimum standards as needed or required ...........................                                                      0              0.00            6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • Review and approve Agency Safety Plan (§ 674.29 Transit Agency
                                                        Safety Plans: general requirements) ..................................................                                    3,840      163,968.00               9,600      409,920.00
                                                     • Review and Approve Supporting and Referenced Procedures .........                                                          3,072      131,174.40               9,600      409,920.00
                                                     • Review and Approve Annual Updates to Agency Safety Plan and
                                                        Supporting and/or Referenced Procedures ........................................                                          3,072      131,174.40               4,800      204,960.00
                                                     • Oversee the Rail Transit Agency’s execution of its Transit Agency
                                                        Safety Plan. .........................................................................................                    8,448      360,729.60              60,000    2,562,000.00
                                                     • Enforce the execution of a Transit Agency Safety Plan, through an
                                                        order of a corrective action plan or any other means, as necessary
                                                        or appropriate. .....................................................................................                          0              0.00            1,200       51,240.00
                                                     • Ensure that a Transit Agency Safety Plan meets the requirements
                                                        for Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans at 49 U.S.C. 5329(d)
                                                        and the regulations that are or may be codified at 49 CFR Part 673                                                             0              0.00            1,200       51,240.00
                                                     • Investigate any hazard or risk that threatens the safety of a Rail
                                                        Transit Agency ....................................................................................                      19,200      819,840.00              60,000    2,562,000.00
                                                     • Investigate any allegation of noncompliance with a Transit Agency
                                                        Safety Plan ..........................................................................................                         0              0.00                0            0.00
                                                     • Exert primary responsibility to investigate each Rail Transit Agency
                                                        accident ...............................................................................................                       0              0.00                0            0.00
                                                     • Enter into agreements with contractors ..............................................                                           0              0.00            6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • Comply with the requirements of the Public Transportation Agency
                                                        Safety Certification Training Program .................................................                                   3,840      163,968.00              24,000    1,024,800.00
                                                 § 674.27 State safety program standards:
                                                     • Develop and adopt program standard * ..............................................                                        1,400       59,780.00               6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • Develop and adopt program procedures * ..........................................                                          1,400       59,780.00               6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • Develop and adopt Safety Management Systems oversight prin-
                                                        ciples and oversight methods * ...........................................................                                    0            0.00               6,000      256,200.00
                                                     • Review and update program standard and procedures .....................                                                    2,912      124,342.40                 600       25,620.00
                                                 § 674.31 Triennial audits: general requirements:
                                                     • Conduct Three Year Audit ..................................................................                                9,216      393,523.20              36,000    1,537,200.00
                                                     • Document Results and Findings .........................................................                                   13,440      573,888.00              12,000      512,400.00
                                                 § 674.33 Notifications: Accidents and other incidents
                                                     • Receive and track notification of accidents ........................................                                            0              0.00            1,000       42,700.00
                                                     • Report to FTA .....................................................................................                             0              0.00            1,000       42,700.00
                                                 § 674.35 Investigations
                                                     • Prepare Accident Investigation Report ...............................................                                      5,376      229,555.20              60,000    2,562,000.00
                                                     • Review, Approve and/or Adopt Accident Investigation Reports .........                                                      6,144      262,348.80               6,000      256,200.00
                                                 § 674.37 Corrective action plans .................................................................                              15,360      655,872.00              18,000      768,600.00
                                                 § 674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency annual reporting to FTA .............                                                     3,528      150,645.60               2,400      102,480.00
                                                 § 674.41 Conflicts of interest .......................................................................                               0            0.00                 600       25,620.00
                                                 Travel .............................................................................................................             5,376      229,555.20               1,200       51,240.00
                                                 Security ..........................................................................................................              6,912      295,142.40                   0            0.00

                                                       Total State Oversight Agencies, including non-recurring costs (Year 1)                                                   115,396    4,927,409.20             463,220   19,779,494.00

                                                       Total State Oversight Agencies, including only recurring costs (Future
                                                         Years) ..................................................................................................              112,596    4,807,849.20             366,020   14,348,054.00
                                                    * Non-recurring cost.


                                                 MAP–21 SSO Grant Program—Costs to                                           acquisition and analysis; and safety                            labor hours in most major activities
                                                 Rail Transit Agencies                                                       performance monitoring. Notably, we                             currently performed to implement 49
                                                                                                                             have not included the costs to develop                          CFR part 659, indicating enhanced
                                                   As discussed above, this NPRM                                             and update safety plans and procedures                          activity in the specific area based on the
                                                 implements the framework and                                                under today’s NPRM. These costs will                            more rigorous MAP–21 SSO program, as
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 principles of Safety Management                                             be included in the Public                                       well as the requirements of additional
                                                 Systems. The costs included in the table                                    Transportation Agency Safety Plan                               collaboration and coordination with a
                                                 below reflect FTA’s estimation                                              rulemaking. Therefore, while there are                          significantly expanded SSO function in
                                                 regarding the likely requirements of                                        non-recurring costs under part 659,                             the State. Additional labor is provided
                                                 SMS adoption by the rail transit                                            there are no non-recurring costs                                to augment internal safety audit
                                                 agencies in critical areas overseen by the                                  attributable to this NPRM.                                      programs, manage corrective action
                                                 SSO program, such as investigations,                                           This table depicts general increases                         plans, and implement hazard
                                                 inspections, and reviews; safety data                                       on the order of 10 to 20 percent for the                        management programs. Activities


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014         19:08 Feb 26, 2015          Jkt 235001      PO 00000        Frm 00017        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11018                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 related to the review and approval of                                       before they result in accidents. Safety                         data from a safety perspective in as
                                                 security plans have been removed for                                        performance monitoring will become a                            close to real-time as possible. Thus, the
                                                 the MAP–21 program.                                                         critical component of the SSO program.                          agency may be overstating the costs to
                                                   The most significant changes come in                                        FTA appreciates that the majority of                          rail transit agencies here, but does
                                                 the ‘‘accident/incident investigation’’                                     this activity may be currently managed                          believe that, even for those rail transit
                                                 and ‘‘maintain safety data’’ categories.                                    by other departments and personnel                              agencies that already collect and
                                                 With the enhanced role of the SSO                                           outside of the rail transit agency’s safety                     maintain much of this data, there may
                                                 agencies in accident and incident                                           department. For example, management                             be some additional costs associated with
                                                 investigation, FTA proposes that the                                        information systems have already been                           assessing this data for safety purposes in
                                                 amount of time required for rail transit                                    adopted by rail transit agencies to                             real-time.
                                                 agencies to develop reports and                                             support vehicle and infrastructure                                 It should be noted that for the MAP–
                                                 document results will decrease.                                             maintenance, control center operations,                         21 columns, this table includes 60 rail
                                                 Through FTA’s adoption of SMS                                               and construction management.                                    transit agencies, as opposed to the 48
                                                 principles, FTA and the SSO agencies                                        However, the data collected and                                 rail transit agencies covered by the 49
                                                 ultimately will be working to ensure                                        maintained in these systems may not be                          CFR part 659 requirements. Even if no
                                                 that operations and maintenance data                                        routinely assessed for safety issues,                           other changes were addressed,
                                                 and information can be reviewed and                                         concerns, hazards or potential impacts.                         increasing the number of covered rail
                                                 assessed in as close to real-time as                                        FTA’s new MAP–21 program addresses                              transit agencies by 25 percent would
                                                 possible to identify and address                                            NTSB and GAO recommendations that                               raise the total cost of the SSO program
                                                 potential safety issues and concerns                                        each rail transit agency evaluate this                          considerably.

                                                                                                                                                                           49 CFR            49 CFR              MAP–21         MAP–21
                                                                                      Rail transit agency activity                                                         part 659          part 659          labor hours      total cost
                                                                                                                                                                         labor hours        total cost

                                                 Develop system safety program plan * ..........................................................                                  6,272     $267,814.40                 ** 0             ** 0
                                                 Review and update system safety program plan ..........................................                                          7,550      322,385.00                 ** 0             ** 0
                                                 Develop system security plan * ......................................................................                            4,036      172,337.20                    0            0.00
                                                 Review and update system security plan ......................................................                                    6,208      265,081.60                    0            0.00
                                                 Develop program procedures * ......................................................................                              5,946      253,894.20                 ** 0             ** 0
                                                 Review and update program procedures ......................................................                                      4,142      176,863.40                 ** 0             ** 0
                                                 Travel .............................................................................................................             4,146      177,034.20               4,800       204,960.00
                                                 Conduct internal safety and security reviews ................................................                                   15,230      650,321.00              30,000     1,281,000.00
                                                 Prepare internal safety and security review reports ......................................                                       8,160      348,432.00              14,400       614,880.00
                                                 Prepare annual internal safety and security review report for state over-
                                                   sight ............................................................................................................            10,708      457,231.60             21,000        896,700.00
                                                 Conduct accident investigations ....................................................................                            30,000    1,281,000.00             24,000      1,024,800.00
                                                 Prepare accident investigation reports ..........................................................                               19,168      818,473.60              3,000        128,100.00
                                                 Investigate unacceptable hazardous conditions ............................................                                      14,030      599,081.00             60,000      2,562,000.00
                                                 Prepare unacceptable hazardous condition reports ......................................                                         12,032      513,766.40                  0              0.00
                                                 Implement hazard management process ......................................................                                      32,312    1,379,722.40             60,000      2,562,000.00
                                                 Prepare and submit corrective action plans ..................................................                                   19,090      815,143.00             24,000      1,024,800.00
                                                 Coordinate hazard management program activities with state oversight .....                                                      23,848    1,018,309.60             30,000      1,281,000.00
                                                 Maintain safety data ......................................................................................                      3,570      152,439.00            240,000     10,248,000.00
                                                 Plan and conduct annual emergency preparedness drill ..............................                                              3,382      144,411.40              4,800        204,960.00
                                                 Prepare and submit after-action report for annual emergency drill ..............                                                 1,090       46,543.00              1,200         51,240.00
                                                 Maintain security data ....................................................................................                      3,570      152,439.00                  0              0.00
                                                 Make submissions to state oversight agency ................................................                                      2,618      111,788.60              9,600        409,920.00

                                                       Total including non-recurring costs (Year 1) ..........................................                                  237,108   10,124,511.60            526,800     22,494,360.00

                                                       Total including recurring costs only (Future Years) ...............................                                      220,854    9,430,465.80            526,800     22,494,360.00
                                                    * Non-recurring cost.
                                                    ** FTA will include these costs in the upcoming Transit Agency Safety Plan rulemaking.


                                                 Total Estimated Impact of NPRM                                              spending levels. This represents a                              program. FTA therefore finds that that
                                                                                                                             combined increase of roughly $23                                the States will bear no new net costs as
                                                    Based on the tables provided above,
                                                                                                                             million per year over current levels.                           a result of this NPRM. With regard to
                                                 FTA estimates that minimum
                                                 implementation of this NPRM will                                               In terms of the actual costs to the                          costs to the rail transit agencies, FTA
                                                 require a total of approximately $20                                        States, FTA is providing approximately                          currently provides funding that rail
                                                 million for the 30 States to implement,                                     $22 million in grant funds each year to                         transit agencies may use for these
                                                 and a total of roughly $22 million for                                      the States to off-set this NPRM’s annual                        purposes, but, since there is no safety-
                                                                                                                                                                                             focused grant program similar to that for
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 the 60 rail transit agencies to                                             costs. This funding is treated as a
                                                 implement.                                                                  transfer for the purposes of benefit-cost                       SSOs and each rail transit agency
                                                    Compared to current spending levels                                      analysis. In addition, since the States                         receives and uses its formula funds
                                                 of State Safety Oversight activities, the                                   already expend approximately $5                                 differently, we are unable to provide an
                                                 proposed rule would require an                                              million to implement 49 CFR part 659                            estimate of how much FTA funds will
                                                 incremental $9.5 million per year on the                                    requirements, this existing expenditure                         be used here. We request comment on
                                                 part of SSOAs and $13.1 million for rail                                    will more than cover the 20 percent                             this point and also will revisit in the
                                                 transit agencies, compared to current                                       local match required in FTA’s grant                             Transit Agency Safety Plan NPRM.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014         19:08 Feb 26, 2015          Jkt 235001      PO 00000        Frm 00018        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                 11019

                                                    FTA believes that a significant portion              not yet had the opportunity to conduct                potential benefit pool. FTA notes that
                                                 of the incremental expenses may                         SMS pilots in the rail transit industry               this analysis is not intended to be the
                                                 comprise activities that are already                    which will provide even greater                       full analysis of the potential benefits of
                                                 performed—and management                                clarification regarding the full impacts              SMS for transit safety, which will be
                                                 information systems that are already                    on both the rail transit agencies and                 conducted in our subsequent safety
                                                 maintained—by rail transit departments                  SSO program, although the agency is                   rulemakings; rather, it is intended to
                                                 other than the safety department, such                  planning on conducting pilots to assist               provide some quantified estimate of the
                                                 as operations, maintenance and                          the industry with implementing SMS.                   potential benefits of the changes to the
                                                 performance monitoring. For instance,                      The safety benefits of the proposed                SSO program proposed in this rule.
                                                 FTA reviews at rail transit agencies and                changes are difficult to estimate                     Further, we note that this analysis may
                                                 SSO audits confirm that all rail transit                quantitatively because they involve                   understate the potential benefits
                                                 agencies use and maintain formal                        numerous small but important changes                  because we did not have information on
                                                 systems to track rules checks performed                 to State and agency safety practices, and             some non-injury related costs associated
                                                 on operators; inspections and                           because the overall rate of serious                   with many incidents, particularly
                                                 preventative/corrective maintenance                     injuries on rail transit systems is already           regarding property damage and travel
                                                 activities for vehicles and infrastructure;             quite low. These changes to the SSO                   delays. Also, as mentioned above, we
                                                 reports regarding the occurrence and                    regulations address longstanding                      did not include an estimate of FTA
                                                 cause of events resulting in service                    deficiencies in the current SSO                       funds provided to transit agencies for
                                                 delays lasting longer than a prescribed                 structure and improve the ability of                  these activities because, unlike with
                                                 period of minutes; and unusual                          SSOAs to carry out their mission of                   SSO funding, we did not have sufficient
                                                 occurrences reported during revenue                     improving safety on rail fixed guideway               certainty on this funding level.
                                                 service. Therefore, the cost estimate                   transit systems. In addition, NTSB has                   First, over the last six years, as
                                                 calculated above may overstate the true                 advocated for many of these changes                   reported by the SSO agencies in their
                                                 incremental costs of the changes to the                 based on their investigation of rail                  annual reports to FTA, the rail transit
                                                 SSO program, but is used here to be                     transit accidents, their analysis of the              industry has averaged approximately
                                                 conservative. FTA requests comment on                   current SSO structure, and their                      975 safety events meeting 49 CFR part
                                                 this point.                                             expertise in ensuring safe operation                  659 accident reporting thresholds per
                                                    Doing more to analyze and assess this                across all modes of transportation. FTA               year (i.e. what must be reported). In an
                                                 information from a safety perspective is                likewise believes that the revised SSO                average year, these events result in 135
                                                 at the core of SMS, and FTA anticipates                 structure and associated activities will              fatalities (of which approximately 85
                                                 that this level of active review of                     enhance the safety of rail fixed                      per year involve suicides and
                                                 operations and maintenance data will                    guideway transit systems, increasing                  trespassers) and 645 injuries requiring
                                                 ultimately result in cost savings for                   accountability and decreasing transit-                hospitalization away from the scene.
                                                 many rail transit agencies, as has been                 related incidents, injuries, and fatalities.          Using Departmental guidance regarding
                                                 the case in the aviation and trucking                      That said, although this rule would                the valuation of fatalities and injuries,1
                                                 industries. See, e.g., Federal Aviation                 not on its own implement SMS, it does                 these incidents have an economic value
                                                 Administration, Final Regulatory                        create the organizational structure                   of $1.865 billion per year. Rail transit
                                                 Evaluation: Safety Management System                    needed for SMS to be successful. Thus,                incidents also entail costs related to
                                                 for Domestic, Flag, and Supplemental                    FTA has considered how other                          vehicle and infrastructure damage,
                                                 Operations, Docket No. FAA–2009–                        transportation modes that are in the                  delays and disruptions to commuters,
                                                 0671. Initially, however, FTA                           process of implementing SMS or similar                and emergency response costs. For
                                                 anticipates that the rail transit agencies              systematic approaches to safety have                  example, the May 2008 collision
                                                 will be required to spend an additional                 estimated the benefits of their programs              between two light-rail vehicles in
                                                 $13.1 million per year to implement this                in reducing incidents and adverse                     Newton, Massachusetts, caused $8.6
                                                 NPRM, which equates to approximately                    outcomes. For example, although no                    million in property damage and caused
                                                 $228,000 per rail transit agency. Larger                two programs are identical, the Federal               significant service delays during the
                                                 rail transit agencies will be required to               Railroad Administration (FRA) in its                  evening rush hour. These additional
                                                 assume a larger portion of these costs,                 NPRM implementing its System Safety                   incident costs could not be
                                                 while smaller rail transit agencies likely              Program (SSP) (77 FR 55372, Sept. 7,                  comprehensively quantified due to data
                                                 will spend considerably less.                           2012) provided anecdotal evidence that                limitations, and FTA requests comment
                                                    As the 60 rail transit agencies affected             the program could lead to meaningful                  on additional data that may assist it in
                                                 by the NPRM gain greater experience                     reductions in serious crashes. Similarly,             quantifying this aspect of the analysis.
                                                 with proactive safety data analysis                     in its final rule implementing SMS for                   As an illustrative calculation, based
                                                 focused on safety problem identification                air carriers, the Federal Aviation                    on the above analysis, in order for the
                                                 and the development of mitigation                       Administration estimated that its SMS                 benefits of this rule to break even with
                                                 strategies, as well as enhanced                         program could yield a 20% reduction in                the costs to both SSOs and rail transit
                                                 verification techniques to assess the                   crashes. 80 FR 1308, Jan. 8, 2015.                    agencies, this rule would only need to
                                                 effectiveness of the implementation of                  Enhancements brought about by SMS                     prevent 1.21% of these accidents per
                                                 these strategies, FTA expects that, as in               also have supported transportation and                year, which does not include potentially
                                                 other transportation industries, the rail               oversight agencies in mitigating the                  significant unquantified costs related to
                                                 transit agencies will begin receiving                   impacts of those events that do occur.                property damage and disruption. FTA
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 greater efficiencies on their return in                    FTA has, therefore, considered what
                                                 this investment, not just related to                    percentage of potential safety benefits                 1 Rogoff, Peter and Thomson, Kathryn, ‘‘Guidance
                                                 safety. However, based on the newness                   this rule would need to achieve in order              on Treatment of the Economic Value of a Statistical
                                                 of SMS implementation in the rail                       to ‘‘break even’’ with the costs                      Life (VSL) in U.S. Department of Transportation
                                                 transit industry and SSO program, FTA                   (including both the transfer of funds                 Analyses.’’ June 13, 2014. The fatality number is
                                                                                                                                                               $9.2 million. Hospitalized injuries are assumed to
                                                 does not propose including these kinds                  from FTA and the costs to the SSOs and                be equivalent to a ‘‘serious’’ injury on the
                                                 of operational gains as part of the                     rail transit agencies themselves) based               Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS–3); this value is
                                                 benefits from this NPRM. FTA also has                   on two different estimates of the                     10.5% of the VSL, or $966,000.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00019   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11020                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 believes that this level of accident                                     would only need to prevent 0.007 of                      incidents specifically identified by the
                                                 reduction will likely be attainable based                                these accidents per year in order to                     NTSB as related to inadequate safety
                                                 on the NPRM’s proposed enhancements                                      break even with the increased costs                      oversight programs. Of the 19 major rail
                                                 to the SSO program and the associated                                    directly born by the rail transit agencies.              transit accidents the NTSB has
                                                 improvements in rail transit agency                                      A lower break even number would exist                    investigated (or preliminarily
                                                 safety practices that lend themselves to                                 if FTA were able to provide an estimate                  investigated) since 2004, five had
                                                 greater awareness of risks and hazards.                                  of the FTA funding used by the rail                      probable causes that included
                                                 This figure also does not account for the                                transit agencies for these activities.                   inadequate safety oversight on the part
                                                 $22 million FTA provided the SSOs or                                        Second, as an alternative, we                         of the rail transit agency or FTA. These
                                                 the FTA formula funds provided to the                                    performed a more narrow analysis of the                  incidents and the corresponding
                                                 rail transit agencies. If only the SSO                                   potential safety benefits of the proposed
                                                                                                                                                                                   damages and costs are detailed below.
                                                 funds were taken into account, this rule                                 regulation by reviewing the rail transit

                                                                                                                                                                                Moderate                           Cost of property
                                                      Date                                    Agency                                    Fatalities         Minor injuries                        Severe injuries
                                                                                                                                                                                 injuries                             damage

                                                 2/3/2004 .......     Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) .........                                      0                  42                   0                0             $62,000
                                                 7/11/2006 .....      Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) .........                                      0                 125                  21                6           1,004,900
                                                 6/22/2009 .....      Washington Metropolitan Area Transit                                           9                  38                  12                2          12,000,000
                                                                        Authority (WMATA).
                                                 1/26/2010 .....      Washington Metropolitan Area Transit                                           2                   0                   0                0                       0
                                                                        Authority (WMATA).
                                                 7/20/2010 .....      Miami-Dade Transit (MDT) ..................                                     0                 16                   0                0             406,691

                                                      Total ......    ..............................................................                 11                221                  33                8         13.5 million



                                                    Again using Departmental guidance                                     information on any other accidents that                  alternatives and, if regulation is
                                                 regarding the valuation of fatalities and                                have been identified as being related to                 necessary, to select regulatory
                                                 injuries,2 FTA used a value of $9.2                                      inadequate safety oversight programs.                    approaches that maximize net benefits—
                                                 million per fatality. NTSB’s qualitative                                    In conducting a break even analysis,                  including potential economic,
                                                 injury levels were converted to the                                      as in the above analysis, when                           environmental, public health and safety
                                                 Abbreviated Injury Scale and monetized                                   considering the incremental costs to                     effects, distributive impacts, and equity.
                                                 as follows: Minor is assumed to be AIS–                                  SSOs for this rule and rail transit                      Also, Executive Order 13563
                                                 1 ($27,000), Moderate is assumed to be                                   agencies, this rule would need to                        emphasizes the importance of
                                                 AIS–2 ($432,000), and Severe is                                          prevent 1.6 of the types of accidents                    quantifying both costs and benefits,
                                                 (conservatively) assumed to be AIS–3                                     significant enough to be investigated by                 reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
                                                 ($955,000).                                                              NTSB and identified as being caused by                   promoting flexibility. FTA is also
                                                    As such, the total quantifiable cost for                              inadequate safety oversight per year in                  required under 49 U.S.C. 5329(h) to
                                                 the five incidents is approximately                                      order to break even. Similarly, when                     ‘‘take into consideration the costs and
                                                 $142.6 million (fatalities: $101.2                                       FTA funding of the SSOs (but not the                     benefits of each action the Secretary
                                                 million, minor injuries: $6.0 million,                                   rail transit agencies) is taken into                     proposes to take under’’ section 5329.
                                                 moderate injuries $14.3 million, severe                                  account, this rule would need to prevent                    FTA has determined this rulemaking
                                                 injuries: $7.6 million, property damage:                                 0.91 of these incidents in order to break                is a nonsignificant regulatory action
                                                 $13.5 million) or approximately $14.3                                    even. However, we believe that                           within the meaning of Executive Order
                                                 million per year over a ten year period.                                 including all of the costs to the rail                   12866 and is nonsignificant within the
                                                 The average cost per incident was $28.5                                  transit agencies may overstate the costs                 meaning of the U.S. Department of
                                                 million, plus unquantified losses from                                   in this illustrative analysis and is                     Transportation’s regulatory policies and
                                                 travel delays and emergency response.                                    therefore a very conservative analysis.                  procedures. FTA has determined that
                                                 The most costly incident, the 2009                                       We request comment on this point.                        this rulemaking is not economically
                                                 WMATA crash, had total costs of over                                                                                              significant. The proposals set forth in
                                                 $100 million, including $91 million in                                   Rulemaking Analyses and Notices                          this NPRM will not result in an effect on
                                                 monetized injuries and $12 million in                                      All comments received on or before                     the economy of $100 million or more.
                                                 property damage. While improved                                          the close of business on the comment                     The proposals set forth in the NPRM
                                                 safety oversight cannot necessarily                                      closing date indicated above will be                     will not adversely affect the economy,
                                                 prevent all rail transit accidents,                                      considered and will be available for                     interfere with actions taken or planned
                                                 preventing even a single incident on the                                 examination in the docket at the above                   by other agencies, or generally alter the
                                                 scale of the 2009 WMATA crash would                                      address. Comments received after the                     budgetary impact of any entitlements,
                                                 yield societal benefits that exceed the                                  closing date will be filed in the docket                 grants, user fees, or loan programs.
                                                 incremental costs of compliance across                                   and will be considered to the extent
                                                                                                                                                                                   Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                 multiple years of implementation,                                        practicable. A final rule may be
                                                 especially when considering FTA’s                                        published at any time after close of the                    In compliance with the Regulatory
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 funding of this program. Benefits would                                  comment period.                                          Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96–354; 5 U.S.C.
                                                 also accrue from the prevention of                                                                                                601–612), FTA has evaluated the likely
                                                                                                                          Executive Orders 13563 and 12866; U.S.                   effects of the proposals set forth in this
                                                 multiple, less severe incidents,
                                                                                                                          DOT Regulatory Policies and                              NPRM on small entities, and has
                                                 including those where only property
                                                                                                                          Procedures                                               determined that they will not have a
                                                 damage or travel delays occur. The
                                                 agency requests comment and                                                Executive Orders 12866 and 13563                       significant economic impact on a
                                                                                                                          direct Federal agencies to assess all                    substantial number of small entities.
                                                   2 Id.                                                                  costs and benefits of available regulatory               The recipients of the State Safety


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014      19:08 Feb 26, 2015         Jkt 235001       PO 00000         Frm 00020   Fmt 4701    Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM    27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                          11021

                                                 Oversight funds are eligible States, and                systems, triennial auditing of rail transit           specific requirements proposed in
                                                 the entities that will carry out the                    systems’ compliance with their public                 today’s rulemaking.
                                                 oversight of rail fixed guideway public                 transportation agency safety plans,                      Heretofore, there has been no Federal
                                                 transportation—the SSOAs—are State                      requests for FTA certification of State               financial assistance available to States
                                                 agencies. For this reason, FTA certifies                Safety Oversight programs, and                        and their SSOAs to defray the costs of
                                                 that this action will not have a                        completion of public transportation                   information collection under 49 U.S.C.
                                                 significant economic effect on a                        safety certification training programs—               5330 and the longstanding regulations at
                                                 substantial number of small entities.                   all of which are mandated by 49 U.S.C.                49 CFR part 659. The costs of
                                                                                                         5329(e). Therefore, FTA is seeking                    information collection associated with
                                                 Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                                                                                  today’s NPRM would be eligible for
                                                                                                         comment whether the information
                                                   This proposed rulemaking would not                    collected will have practical utility;                reimbursement under the SSO grants
                                                 impose unfunded mandates as defined                     whether its estimation of the burden of               authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6).
                                                 by the Unfunded Mandates Reform act                     the proposed information collection is                   Type of Collection: Rail Fixed
                                                 of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4; 109 Stat. 48).                  accurate; whether the burden can be                   Guideway Systems; State Safety
                                                 The Federal share for the grants made                   minimized through the use of                          Oversight.
                                                 under 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6) is eighty                    automated collection techniques or                       Type of Review: OMB Clearance.
                                                 percent. This proposed rule will not                    other forms of information technology;                Updated information collection request.
                                                 result in the expenditure by State, local,                                                                       Summary of the Collection: The
                                                                                                         and for ways in which the quality,
                                                 and tribal governments, in the aggregate,                                                                     information collection includes annual
                                                                                                         utility, and clarity of the information
                                                 or by the private sector, of $143.1                                                                           status reporting on the safety of rail
                                                                                                         can be enhanced.
                                                 million or more in any one year (2                                                                            fixed guideway public transportation
                                                                                                            Readers should note that the                       systems, triennial auditing of rail transit
                                                 U.S.C. 1532).                                           information collection will be specific               systems’ compliance with their public
                                                 Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)                      to each State and its State Safety                    transportation agency safety plans,
                                                                                                         Oversight Agency (SSOA), to facilitate                requests for FTA certification of State
                                                   This proposed rulemaking has been
                                                                                                         and record the SSOA’s exercise of its                 Safety Oversight programs, and
                                                 analyzed in accordance with the
                                                                                                         oversight responsibilities. The                       completion of public transportation
                                                 principles and criteria established by
                                                                                                         paperwork burden for each State and its               safety certification training programs.
                                                 Executive Order 13132 (Aug. 4, 1999),
                                                                                                         SSOA will be proportionate to the                        Need for and Expected Use of the
                                                 and FTA has determined that the
                                                                                                         number of rail fixed guideway public                  Information to be Collected: Collection
                                                 proposed action would not have
                                                                                                         transportation systems within that State,             of information for this program is
                                                 sufficient Federalism implications to
                                                                                                         the type of mode of those systems (e.g.,              necessary to ensure that state oversight
                                                 warrant the preparation of a Federalism
                                                                                                         rapid rail, light rail, or streetcar), and            agencies can perform their designated
                                                 assessment. FTA has also determined
                                                                                                         the size and complexity of those rail                 safety functions. Without
                                                 that this proposed action would not
                                                                                                         transit systems. Moreover, the labor-                 comprehensive safety information from
                                                 preempt any State law or State
                                                                                                         burden of the reporting requirements                  rail transit agencies, State safety
                                                 regulation or affect the States’ abilities
                                                                                                         such as annual reporting and triennial                oversight agencies would be unable to
                                                 to discharge traditional State
                                                                                                         auditing are largely borne by the SSOA                monitor safety as directed by 49 U.S.C.
                                                 governmental functions. Moreover,
                                                                                                         staff that will be financed, in the main,             5326, and without the State safety
                                                 consistent with Executive Order 13132,
                                                                                                         by the Federal financial assistance                   oversight reporting requirements, FTA
                                                 FTA has examined the direct
                                                                                                         under 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6).                           would be unable to determine each
                                                 compliance costs of the NPRM on State
                                                 and local governments and determined                       Also, readers should note that FTA                 State’s compliance with 49 U.S.C.
                                                 that the collection and analysis of the                 already collects information from States              5326(e).
                                                 data is eligible for Federal funding as                 and SSOAs in accordance with the                         Respondents: Currently there are 30
                                                 part of the State Safety Oversight                      requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5330 and the                States with 60 rail fixed guideway
                                                 program costs.                                          regulations at 49 CFR part 659. Please                public transportation systems. Twenty-
                                                                                                         see FTA’s currently approved                          eight of these States have already
                                                 Executive Order 12372                                   collection, 2132–0558, available at                   established a State Safety Oversight
                                                 (Intergovernmental Review)                              http://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/                     program and an SSOA; two more have
                                                   The regulations effectuating Executive                PRAMain, which describes the SSOAs’                   indicated their intention to do so in the
                                                 Order 12372 regarding                                   development of program standards and                  near future. The PRA estimate is based
                                                 intergovernmental consultation on                       their review and approval of System                   on a total of 30 States deploying SSOAs
                                                 Federal programs and activities apply to                Safety Program Plans and System                       and seeking Federal financial assistance
                                                 this proposed rulemaking.                               Security Plans for rail fixed guideway                under 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(6), per year.
                                                                                                         public transportation systems; the                       Frequency: Information will be
                                                 Paperwork Reduction Act                                 triennial, on-site reviews that SSOAs                 collected at least once per year.
                                                    In compliance with the Paperwork                     conduct of rail transit systems; and                     Estimated Total Annual Burden
                                                 Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501                   various other reporting, such as SSOAs’               Hours: 230,130, estimated as follows:
                                                 et seq.; ‘‘PRA’’) and the OMB regulation                review and approval of accident reports               Annually, each SSOA would devote
                                                 at 5 CFR 1320.8(d), FTA is seeking                      and corrective action plans, and                      approximately 3,962 hours to
                                                 approval from OMB for the Information                   submittal of annual reports of safety and             information collection activities for each
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 Collection Request abstracted below.                    security oversight activities and                     of the rail transit systems in the State’s
                                                 FTA acknowledges that this NPRM                         certifications of compliance with                     jurisdiction. Combined, the SSOAs
                                                 entails collection of information to                    Section 5330. Most if not all of the                  would devote approximately 118,860
                                                 facilitate State Safety Oversight of rail               information collection from States and                hours on those information collection
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    SSOAs under 49 U.S.C. 5330 and 49                     activities that year. The local
                                                 systems, including, specifically, annual                CFR part 659 will carry over into the                 governments affected by 49 U.S.C.
                                                 status reporting on the safety of rail                  new State Safety Oversight program                    5329(e) and today’s proposed
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329 and the                    rulemaking, including the 60 rail fixed


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00021   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11022                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 guideway public transportation systems,                 framework for FTA grantees as they                    Privacy Act
                                                 would spend an estimated annual total                   integrate principles of environmental
                                                                                                                                                                 In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),
                                                 of 111,300 hours on information                         justice into their transit decision-making
                                                                                                                                                               DOT solicits comments from the public
                                                 collection activities, or approximately                 processes. The Circular includes
                                                                                                                                                               to better inform its rulemaking process.
                                                 1,855 hours each. Also, the States and                  recommendations for State Departments
                                                                                                                                                               DOT posts these comments, without
                                                 SSOAs would spend approximately 50                      of Transportation, Metropolitan
                                                                                                                                                               edit, including any personal information
                                                 hours each in the preparation of                        Planning Organizations, and public
                                                 applications for Federal financial                                                                            the commenter provides, to
                                                                                                         transportation systems on (1) How to
                                                 assistance for their SSO programs, for a                                                                      www.regulations.gov, as described in
                                                                                                         fully engage environmental justice
                                                 combined estimate of 1,500 hours per                                                                          the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
                                                                                                         populations in the transportation
                                                 year. FTA will post the supporting                                                                            14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
                                                                                                         decision-making process; (2) How to
                                                 documentation for this collection in the                                                                      www.dot.gov/privacy.
                                                                                                         determine whether environmental
                                                 docket for this NPRM.                                   justice populations would be subjected                Statutory/Legal Authority for This
                                                 National Environmental Policy Act                       to disproportionately high and adverse                Rulemaking
                                                                                                         human health or environmental effects
                                                   The National Environmental Policy                                                                              This rulemaking is issued under the
                                                                                                         of a public transportation project,
                                                 Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.)                                                                          authority of section 20021(a) of the
                                                                                                         policy, or activity; and (3) How to avoid,
                                                 requires Federal agencies to analyze the                                                                      Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st
                                                                                                         minimize, or mitigate these effects.
                                                 potential environmental effects of their                                                                      Century Act (MAP–21), which requires
                                                 proposed actions in the form of a                       Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice                  the Secretary of Transportation to
                                                 categorical exclusion, environmental                    Reform)                                               prescribe regulations for State Safety
                                                 assessment, or environmental impact                        This action meets the applicable                   Oversight of rail fixed guideway public
                                                 statement. This proposed rulemaking is                  standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of             transportation systems. The authority is
                                                 categorically excluded under FTA’s                      Executive Order 12988 (Feb. 5, 1996),                 codified at 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(9)(C). Also,
                                                 environmental impact procedure at 23                    Civil Justice Reform, to minimize                     the Secretary is authorized to issue
                                                 CFR 771.117(c)(20), pertaining to                       litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and                  regulations to carry out the general
                                                 planning and administrative activities                  reduce burden.                                        provisions of the Public Transportation
                                                 that do not involve or lead directly to                                                                       Safety Program pursuant to 49 U.S.C.
                                                 construction, such as the promulgation                  Executive Order 13045 (Protection of                  5329(f)(7).
                                                 of rules, regulations, and directives.                  Children)
                                                                                                                                                               Regulation Identification Number
                                                 FTA has determined that no unusual                        FTA has analyzed this proposed
                                                 circumstances exist in this instance, and               rulemaking under Executive Order                        A Regulation Identification Number
                                                 that a categorical exclusion is                         13045 (April 21, 1997), Protection of                 (RIN) is assigned to each regulatory
                                                 appropriate for this rulemaking.                        Children from Environmental Health                    action listed in the Unified Agenda of
                                                                                                         Risks and Safety Risks. FTA certifies                 Federal Regulations. The Regulatory
                                                 Executive Order 12630 (Taking of                                                                              Information Service Center publishes
                                                                                                         that this proposed rule will not cause an
                                                 Private Property)                                                                                             the Unified Agenda in April and
                                                                                                         environmental risk to health or safety
                                                   This rulemaking will not affect a                     that may disproportionately affect                    October of each year. The RIN set forth
                                                 taking of private property or otherwise                 children.                                             in the heading of this document can be
                                                 have taking implications under                                                                                used to cross-reference this action with
                                                 Executive Order 12630 (March 15,                        Executive Order 13175 (Tribal                         the Unified Agenda.
                                                 1998), Governmental Actions and                         Consultation)
                                                 Interference with Constitutionally                         FTA has analyzed this proposed                     List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 674
                                                 Protected Property Rights.                              rulemaking under Executive Order                        Grant Programs—Transportation,
                                                                                                         13175 (Nov. 6, 2000) and finds that the               Mass Transportation, Reporting and
                                                 Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions
                                                                                                         action will not have substantial direct               recordkeeping requirements, Safety.
                                                 to Address Environmental Justice in
                                                                                                         effects on one or more Indian tribes; will              Issued in Washington, DC under the
                                                 Minority Populations and Low-Income
                                                                                                         not impose substantial direct                         authority delegated at 49 CFR 1.91.
                                                 Populations)
                                                                                                         compliance costs on Indian tribal                     Therese McMillan,
                                                    Executive Order 12898 (Feb. 8, 1994)                 governments; will not preempt tribal
                                                 directs every Federal agency to make                                                                          Acting Administrator.
                                                                                                         laws; and will not impose any new
                                                 environmental justice part of its mission               consultation requirements on Indian                     For the reasons set forth in the
                                                 by identifying and addressing the effects               tribal governments. Therefore, a tribal               preamble, and under the authority of 49
                                                 of all programs, policies, and activities               summary impact statement is not                       U.S.C. 5329(e), 5329(f), and the
                                                 on minority populations and low-                        required.                                             delegations of authority at 49 CFR 1.91,
                                                 income populations. The USDOT                                                                                 FTA hereby amends Chapter VI of Title
                                                 environmental justice initiatives                       Executive Order 13211 (Energy Effects)
                                                                                                                                                               49, Code of Federal Regulations, by
                                                 accomplish this goal by involving the                      FTA has analyzed this proposed                     adding Part 674, as set forth below:
                                                 potentially affected public in                          rulemaking under Executive Order
                                                 developing transportation projects that                 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations                 Title 49—Transportation
                                                 fit harmoniously within their                           That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                                                                                                                               PART 674—STATE SAFETY
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 communities without compromising                        Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001).
                                                 safety or mobility. Additionally, FTA                   FTA has determined that this action is                OVERSIGHT
                                                 has issued a program circular                           not a significant energy action under the             Subpart A—General Provisions
                                                 addressing environmental justice in                     Executive Order, given that the action is             Sec.
                                                 public transportation, C 4703.1,                        not likely to have a significant adverse              674.1 Purpose.
                                                 Environmental Justice Policy Guidance                   effect on the supply, distribution, or use            674.3 Applicability.
                                                 for Federal Transit Administration                      of energy. Therefore, a Statement of                  674.5 Policy.
                                                 Recipients. This circular provides a                    Energy Effects is not requirement.                    674.7 Definitions.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00022   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                          11023

                                                 674.9 Transition from previous                          have sufficient authority, resources, and                Hazard means any real or potential
                                                     requirements for State safety oversight.            qualified personnel to oversee the                    condition that can cause injury, illness,
                                                 Subpart B—Role of the State                             number, size, and complexity of rail                  or death; damage to or loss of the
                                                 674.11 State Safety Oversight Program.                  fixed guideway public transportation                  facilities, equipment, or property of a
                                                 674.13 Designation of oversight agency.                 systems that operate within a State.                  rail fixed guideway public
                                                 674.15 Designation of oversight agency for                 (c) FTA will make Federal financial                transportation system; or damage to the
                                                     multi-state system.                                 assistance available to help an eligible              environment.
                                                 674.17 Use of Federal financial assistance.             State develop or carry out its State                     Incident means an Event that exceeds
                                                 674.19 Certification of a State Safety                  safety oversight program. Also, FTA will              the definition of an Occurrence, but
                                                     Oversight Program.                                  certify whether a State safety oversight              does not meet the requirements of an
                                                 674.21 Withholding of Federal financial                 program meets the requirements of 49                  Accident. Examples include, but are not
                                                     assistance for noncompliance.                                                                             limited to: A near miss or close call, a
                                                 674.23 Confidentiality of information.
                                                                                                         U.S.C. 5329(e) and is adequate to
                                                                                                         promote the purposes of the public                    railyard derailment, non-serious
                                                 Subpart C—State Safety Oversight                        transportation safety programs codified               injuries, a violation of a safety standard,
                                                 Agencies                                                at 49 U.S.C. 5329.                                    or equipment or property damage less
                                                 674.25 Role of the State Safety Oversight                                                                     than $25,000 that affects transit
                                                     Agency.                                             § 674.7   Definitions.                                operations.
                                                 674.27 State safety program standards.                     As used in this part:                                 Individual means a passenger,
                                                 674.29 Transit Agency Safety Plans: general                Accident means an Event that                       employee, contractor, pedestrian,
                                                     requirements.                                       involves any of the following: A fatality;            trespasser, or any person on the
                                                 674.31 Triennial audits: general                        one or more persons suffers a serious                 property of a rail fixed guideway public
                                                     requirements.
                                                                                                         injury; property or equipment damage                  transportation system.
                                                 674.33 Notifications: Accidents and
                                                     incidents.                                          equal to or greater than $25,000; a                      Investigation means the process of
                                                 674.35 Investigations.                                  mainline derailment, occurring at any                 determining the causal and contributing
                                                 674.37 Corrective action plans.                         location; an evacuation of equipment or               factors of an accident, incident, or
                                                 674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency                    a station to prevent injury or loss of life.          hazard, for the purpose of preventing
                                                     annual reporting to FTA.                               Accountable Executive means a                      recurrence and mitigating risk.
                                                 674.41 Conflicts of interest.                           single, identifiable person who has                      National Public Transportation Safety
                                                 Appendix A to Part 674—Safety Management                ultimate responsibility for carrying out              Plan means the plan to improve the
                                                     Systems Framework                                   the Safety Management System of a                     safety of all public transportation
                                                                                                         public transportation agency;                         systems that receive Federal financial
                                                 Subpart A—General Provisions                            responsibility for carrying out the                   assistance under 49 U.S.C. Chapter 53;
                                                 § 674.1   Purpose.                                      agency’s Transit Asset Management                     authorized by 49 U.S.C. 5329(b).
                                                    This part carries out the mandate of                 Plan; and control or direction over the                  Occurrence means an Event with no
                                                 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) for State safety                      human and capital resources needed to                 injuries, where damage occurs to
                                                 oversight of rail fixed guideway public                 develop and maintain both the agency’s                property or equipment but does not
                                                 transportation systems.                                 Public Transportation Agency Safety                   affect transit operations.
                                                                                                         Plan, in accordance with 49 U.S.C.                       Passenger means a person who is on
                                                 § 674.3   Applicability.                                5329(d), and the agency’s Transit Asset               board, boarding, or alighting from a
                                                    This part applies to States with rail                Management Plan in accordance with 49                 vehicle on a rail fixed guideway public
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    U.S.C. 5326.                                          transportation system for the purpose of
                                                 systems; State safety oversight agencies                   Administrator means the Federal                    travel.
                                                 that oversee the safety of rail fixed                   Transit Administrator or the                             Public Transportation Safety
                                                 guideway public transportation systems;                 Administrator’s designee.                             Certification Training Program means
                                                 and entities that own or operate rail                      Contractor means an entity that                    either the certification training program
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    performs tasks on behalf of FTA, a State              for Federal and State employees, or
                                                 systems with Federal financial                          Safety Oversight Agency, or a Rail                    other designated personnel, who
                                                 assistance authorized under 49 U.S.C.                   Transit Agency, through contract or                   conduct safety audits and examinations
                                                 Chapter 53.                                             other agreement.                                      of public transportation systems, and
                                                                                                            Corrective action plan means a plan                employees of public transportation
                                                 § 674.5   Policy.                                       developed by a Rail Transit Agency that               agencies directly responsible for safety
                                                    (a) The Federal Transit                              describes the actions the Rail Transit                oversight, established through interim
                                                 Administration (FTA) has adopted the                    Agency will take to minimize, control,                provisions in accordance with 49 U.S.C.
                                                 principles and methods of Safety                        correct, or eliminate risks and hazards,              5329(c)(2), or the program authorized by
                                                 Management Systems (SMS) as the basis                   and the schedule for taking those                     49 U.S.C. 5329(c)(1).
                                                 for enhancing the safety of public                      actions. Either a State Safety Oversight                 Public Transportation Agency Safety
                                                 transportation in the United States. All                Agency or FTA may require a Rail                      Plan means the comprehensive agency
                                                 rules, regulations, policies, guidance,                 Transit Agency to develop and carry out               safety plan for a transit agency,
                                                 best practices, and technical assistance                a corrective action plan.                             including a Rail Transit Agency, that is
                                                 administered under the authority of 49                     FRA means the Federal Railroad                     required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d); based on
                                                 U.S.C. 5329 will follow the principles                  Administration, an agency within the                  a Safety Management System. For
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 and methods of SMS.                                     United States Department of                           convenience, a Public Transportation
                                                    (b) In accordance with 49 U.S.C.                     Transportation.                                       Agency Safety Plan is referred to as a
                                                 5329(e), a State that has a rail fixed                     FTA means the Federal Transit                      ‘‘Transit Agency Safety Plan’’
                                                 guideway public transportation system                   Administration, an agency within the                  throughout these regulations for State
                                                 has primary responsibility for                          United States Department of                           Safety Oversight.
                                                 overseeing the safety of that rail fixed                Transportation.                                          Rail fixed guideway public
                                                 guideway public transportation system.                     Event means any Accident, Incident                 transportation system means any fixed
                                                 A State safety oversight agency must                    or Occurrence.                                        guideway system that uses rail, is


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00023   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11024                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 operated for public transportation, is                     (5) involves second- or third-degree               for the State safety oversight agency
                                                 within the jurisdiction of a State, and is              burns, or any burns affecting more than               commensurate with the number, size,
                                                 not subject to the jurisdiction of the                  5 percent of the body surface.                        and complexity of the rail fixed
                                                 Federal Railroad Administration, or any                    State means a State of the United                  guideway public transportation systems
                                                 such system in engineering or                           States, the District of Columbia, Puerto              in the State, and that the State has
                                                 construction. Rail fixed guideway                       Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands,                   consulted with the Administrator for
                                                 public transportation systems include                   Guam, American Samoa, and the Virgin                  that purpose;
                                                 but are not limited to rapid rail, heavy                Islands.                                                (e) Demonstrate that the employees
                                                 rail, light rail, monorail, trolley,                       State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA)               and other personnel of the State safety
                                                 inclined plane, funicular, and                          means an agency established by a State                oversight agency who are responsible
                                                 automated guideway.                                     that meets the requirements and                       for the oversight of rail fixed guideway
                                                    Rail Transit Agency means any entity                 performs the functions specified by 49                public transportation systems are
                                                 that provides services on a rail fixed                  U.S.C. 5329(e) and the regulations set                qualified to perform their functions,
                                                 guideway public transportation system.                  forth in this part.                                   based on appropriate training, including
                                                    Risk means the composite of                             Transit Agency Safety Plan means the               the successful completion of the Public
                                                 predicted severity and likelihood of the                comprehensive agency safety plan for a                Transportation Safety Certification
                                                 potential effect of a hazard.                           transit agency, including a Rail Transit              Training Program; and
                                                    Risk control means a method or                       Agency, that is required by 49 U.S.C.                   (f) Demonstrate that by law, the State
                                                 methods to eliminate or reduce the                      5329(d); based on a Safety Management                 prohibits any public transportation
                                                 effects of hazards.                                     System. See also, Public Transportation               agency in the State from providing
                                                                                                         Agency Safety Plan.                                   funds to the State safety oversight
                                                    Safety assurance means processes
                                                                                                            Vehicle means any rolling stock used               agency.
                                                 within a Rail Transit Agency’s Safety
                                                 Management System that function to                      on a rail fixed guideway public
                                                                                                                                                               § 674.13    Designation of oversight agency.
                                                 ensure the performance and                              transportation system, including but not
                                                                                                         limited to passenger and maintenance                     (a) Every State that must establish a
                                                 effectiveness of safety risk controls, and                                                                    State Safety Oversight Program in
                                                 to ensure that the Rail Transit Agency                  vehicles.
                                                                                                                                                               accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e) must
                                                 meets or exceeds its safety objectives                  § 674.9 Transition from previous                      also establish a State Safety Oversight
                                                 through the collection, analysis, and                   requirements for State safety oversight.              Agency (SSOA) for the purpose of
                                                 assessment of information.                                (a) Pursuant to section 20030(e) of the             overseeing the safety of rail fixed
                                                    Safety Management System (SMS)                       Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st                 guideway public transportation systems
                                                 means the formal, top-down,                             Century Act (Pub. L. 112–141; July 6,                 within that State. Further, the State
                                                 organization-wide approach to                           2012) (‘‘MAP–21’’), the statute now                   must ensure that:
                                                 managing safety risk and assuring the                   codified at 49 U.S.C. 5330, titled ‘‘State               (1) The SSOA is financially and
                                                 effectiveness of a Rail Transit Agency’s                safety oversight,’’ will be repealed three            legally independent from any public
                                                 safety risk controls. SMS includes                      years after the effective date of the                 transportation agency the SSOA is
                                                 systematic procedures, practices, and                   regulations set forth in this part.                   obliged to oversee;
                                                 policies for managing risks and hazards.                  (b) Upon the effective date of the                     (2) The SSOA does not directly
                                                    Safety policy means a Rail Transit                   regulations set forth in this part, the               provide public transportation services
                                                 Agency’s documented commitment to                       regulations now codified at part 659 of               in an area with a rail fixed guideway
                                                 safety, which defines the Rail Transit                  this chapter will be rescinded.                       public transportation system the SSOA
                                                 Agency’s safety objectives and the                                                                            is obliged to oversee;
                                                 accountabilities and responsibilities of                Subpart B—Role of the State                              (3) The SSOA does not employ any
                                                 its employees in regard to safety.                                                                            individual who is also responsible for
                                                                                                         § 674.11    State Safety Oversight Program.           administering a rail fixed guideway
                                                    Safety promotion means a
                                                 combination of training and                                Within three years of the effective                public transportation system the SSOA
                                                 communication of safety information to                  date of this part, every State that has a             is obliged to oversee;
                                                 support SMS as applied to the Rail                      rail fixed guideway public                               (4) The SSOA has authority to review,
                                                 Transit Agency’s rail fixed guideway                    transportation system must have a State               approve, oversee, and enforce the public
                                                 public transportation system.                           Safety Oversight Program (SSOP) that                  transportation agency safety plan for a
                                                                                                         has been approved by the                              rail fixed guideway public
                                                    Safety risk management means a
                                                                                                         Administrator. FTA will audit each                    transportation system required by 49
                                                 process within a Rail Transit Agency’s
                                                                                                         State’s compliance at least triennially,              U.S.C. 5329(d);
                                                 SMS that describes the Rail Transit
                                                                                                         consistent with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(9). At                 (5) The SSOA has investigative and
                                                 Agency’s practice of SMS, and its means
                                                                                                         minimum, an SSOP must:                                enforcement authority with respect to
                                                 for identifying hazards and analyzing,
                                                                                                            (a) Explicitly acknowledge the State’s             the safety of all rail fixed guideway
                                                 assessing, and controlling risk.
                                                                                                         responsibility for overseeing the safety              public transportation systems within the
                                                    Serious injury means any injury                      of the rail fixed guideway public                     State;
                                                 which:                                                  transportation systems within the State;                 (6) At least once every three years, the
                                                    (1) Requires hospitalization for more                   (b) Demonstrate the State’s ability to             SSOA audits every rail fixed guideway
                                                 than 48 hours, commencing within 7                      adopt and enforce Federal and relevant                public transportation system’s
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 days from the date of the injury was                    State law for safety in rail fixed                    compliance with the public
                                                 received;                                               guideway public transportation systems;               transportation agency safety plan
                                                    (2) results in a fracture of any bone                   (c) Establish a State safety oversight             required by 49 U.S.C. 5329(d); and
                                                 (except simple fractures of fingers, toes,              agency, by State law, in accordance with                 (7) At least once a year, the SSOA
                                                 or nose);                                               the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)                 reports the status of the safety of each
                                                    (3) causes severe hemorrhages, nerve,                and this part;                                        rail fixed guideway public
                                                 muscle, or tendon damage;                                  (d) Demonstrate that the State has                 transportation system to the Governor,
                                                    (4) involves any internal organ; or                  determined an appropriate staffing level              the FTA, and the board of directors, or


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00024   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                          11025

                                                 equivalent entity, of the rail fixed                    Safety Oversight Programs, consistent                 the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e),
                                                 guideway public transportation system.                  with the uniform administrative                       the Administrator must provide a
                                                    (b) At the request of the Governor of                requirements for grants to States under               written explanation, and allow the State
                                                 a State, the Administrator may waive                    2 CFR parts 200 and 1201. The expenses                an opportunity to modify and resubmit
                                                 the requirements for financial and legal                eligible for reimbursement include,                   its State Safety Oversight Program for
                                                 independence and the prohibitions on                    specifically, the expense of employee                 the Administrator’s approval. In the
                                                 employee conflict of interest under                     training and the expense of establishing              event the State is unable to modify its
                                                 paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(3) of this                    and maintaining a State Safety                        State Safety Oversight Program to merit
                                                 section, if the rail fixed guideway public              Oversight Agency in compliance with                   the Administrator’s issuance of a
                                                 transportation systems in design,                       49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(4).                                 certification, the Administrator must
                                                 construction, or revenue operations in                     (b) The apportionments of available                notify the Governor of that fact, and
                                                 the State have fewer than one million                   Federal financial assistance to eligible              must ask the Governor to take all
                                                 combined actual and projected rail fixed                States will be made in accordance with                possible actions to correct the
                                                 guideway revenue miles per year or                      a formula, established by the                         deficiencies that are precluding the
                                                 provide fewer than ten million                          Administrator, following opportunity                  issuance of a certification for the State
                                                 combined actual and projected unlinked                  for public notice and comment. The                    Safety Oversight Program. In his or her
                                                 passenger trips per year. However:                      formula will take into account fixed                  discretion, the Administrator may also
                                                    (1) If a State shares jurisdiction over              guideway vehicle revenue miles, fixed                 impose financial penalties as authorized
                                                 one or more rail fixed guideway public                  guideway route miles, and fixed                       by 49 U.S.C. 5329(e), which may
                                                 transportation systems with another                     guideway vehicle passenger miles                      include:
                                                 State, and has one or more rail fixed                   attributable to all rail fixed guideway                  (1) Withholding SSO grant funds from
                                                 guideway public transportation systems                  systems within each eligible State not                the State;
                                                 that are not shared with another State,                 subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal               (2) Withholding up to five percent of
                                                 the revenue miles and unlinked                          Railroad Administration.                              the 49 U.S.C. 5307 Urbanized Area
                                                 passenger trips of the rail fixed                          (c) The grants of Federal financial                formula funds appropriated for use in
                                                 guideway public transportation system                   assistance for State safety oversight shall           the State or urbanized area in the State,
                                                 under shared jurisdiction will not be                   be subject to terms and conditions as the             until such time as the SSOP can be
                                                 counted in the Administrator’s decision                 Administrator deems appropriate.                      certified; or
                                                 whether to issue a waiver.                                 (d) The Federal share of the expenses                 (3) Requiring all of the rail fixed
                                                    (2) The Administrator will rescind a                 eligible for reimbursement under a grant              guideway public transportation systems
                                                 waiver issued under this subsection if                  for State safety oversight activities shall           governed by the SSOP to spend up to
                                                 the number of revenue miles per year or                 be eighty percent of the reasonable costs             100 percent of their Federal funding
                                                 unlinked passenger trips per year                       incurred under that grant.                            under 49 U.S.C. chapter 53 for ‘‘safety-
                                                 increases beyond the thresholds                            (e) The non-Federal share of the                   related improvements’’ on their systems,
                                                 specified in this subsection.                           expenses eligible for reimbursement                   only, until such time as the SSOP can
                                                                                                         under a grant for State safety oversight              be certified.).
                                                 § 674.15 Designation of oversight agency                activities may not be comprised of                       (d) In making a determination
                                                 for multi-state system.                                 Federal funds, any funds received from                whether to issue a certification or a
                                                    In an instance of a rail fixed guideway              a public transportation agency, or any                denial of certification for a State Safety
                                                 public transportation system that                       revenues earned by a public                           Oversight Program, the Administrator
                                                 operates in more than one State, all                    transportation agency.                                must evaluate whether the cognizant
                                                 States in which that rail fixed guideway                                                                      State Safety Oversight Agency has
                                                 public transportation system operates                   § 674.19 Certification of a State Safety              sufficient authority, resources, and
                                                 must either:                                            Oversight Program.                                    expertise to oversee the number, size,
                                                    (a) Ensure that uniform safety                         (a) The Administrator must determine                and complexity of the rail fixed
                                                 standards and procedures in compliance                  whether a State Safety Oversight                      guideway public transportation systems
                                                 with 49 U.S.C. 5329 are applied to that                 Program meets the requirements of 49                  that operate within the State, or will
                                                 rail fixed guideway public                              U.S.C. 5329(e). Also, the Administrator               attain the necessary authority,
                                                 transportation system, through a State                  must determine whether a State Safety                 resources, and expertise in accordance
                                                 safety oversight program that has been                  Oversight Program is adequate to                      with a developmental plan and
                                                 approved by the Administrator; or                       promote the purposes of 49 U.S.C. 5329,               schedule set forth to a sufficient level of
                                                    (b) Designate a single entity that meets             including, but not limited to, the                    detail in the State Safety Oversight
                                                 the requirements for an SSOA to serve                   National Public Transportation Safety                 Program.
                                                 as the SSOA for that rail fixed guideway                Plan, the Public Transportation Safety
                                                 public transportation system, through a                 Certification Training Program, and the               § 674.21 Withholding of Federal financial
                                                                                                         Public Transportation Agency Safety                   assistance for noncompliance.
                                                 State safety oversight program that has
                                                 been approved by the Administrator.                     Plans (‘‘Transit Agency Safety Plans’’).                 (a) In making a decision to impose
                                                                                                           (b) The Administrator must issue a                  financial penalties as authorized by 49
                                                 § 674.17 Use of Federal financial                       certification to a State whose State                  U.S.C. 5329(e), and determining the
                                                 assistance.                                             Safety Oversight Program meets the                    nature and amount of the financial
                                                   (a) In accordance with 49 U.S.C.                      requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e). The                penalties, the Administrator shall
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 5329(e)(6), FTA will make grants of                     Administrator must issue a denial of                  consider the extent and circumstances
                                                 Federal financial assistance to eligible                certification to a State whose State                  of the noncompliance; the operating
                                                 States to help the States develop and                   Safety Oversight Program does not meet                budgets of the State Safety Oversight
                                                 carry out their State Safety Oversight                  the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 5329(e).                Agency and the rail fixed guideway
                                                 Programs. This Federal financial                          (c) In an instance in which the                     public transportation systems that will
                                                 assistance may be used for                              Administrator issues a denial of                      be affected by the financial penalties;
                                                 reimbursement of both the operational                   certification to a State whose State                  and such other matters as justice may
                                                 and administrative expenses of State                    Safety Oversight Program does not meet                require.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00025   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11026                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                   (b) If a State fails to establish a State             safety of a rail fixed guideway public                fixed guideway public transportation
                                                 Safety Oversight Program that has been                  transportation system within its                      systems.
                                                 approved by the Administrator within                    oversight. An SSOA has primary                           (3) Safety Management Systems. The
                                                 three years of the effective date of this               responsibility for the investigation of               program standard must explain how the
                                                 part, FTA will be prohibited from                       any allegation of noncompliance with a                SSOA will apply the principles and
                                                 obligating Federal financial assistance                 Transit Agency Safety Plan. These                     methods of Safety Management Systems
                                                 apportioned under 49 U.S.C. 5338 to                     responsibilities do not preclude the                  (SMS) in conducting oversight of
                                                 any entity in the State otherwise eligible              Administrator from exercising his or her              Transit Agencies within its jurisdiction.
                                                 to receive that Federal financial                       authority under 49 U.S.C. 5329(f) or 49               The program standard must identify the
                                                 assistance, in accordance with 49 U.S.C.                U.S.C. 5330.                                          SSOA official who serves as the
                                                 5329(e)(3).                                                (e) An SSOA has primary                            functional equivalent of an accountable
                                                                                                         responsibility for the investigation of an            executive in a Rail Transit Agency, and
                                                 § 674.23   Confidentiality of information.                                                                    all other officials in positions of
                                                                                                         accident on a rail fixed guideway public
                                                    (a) A State, a State Safety Oversight                transportation system. This                           executive leadership in the State or
                                                 Agency, or a Rail Transit Agency may                    responsibility does not preclude the                  SSOA responsible for carrying out the
                                                 withhold an investigation report                        Administrator from exercising his or her              State Safety Oversight Program. The
                                                 prepared or adopted in accordance with                  authority under 49 U.S.C. 5329(f) or 49               program standard must set an explicit
                                                 these regulations from being admitted as                U.S.C. 5330.                                          policy and objectives for safety in rail
                                                 evidence or used in a civil action for                     (f) An SSOA may enter into an                      fixed guideway public transportation
                                                 damages resulting from a matter                         agreement with a contractor for                       throughout the State. The program
                                                 mentioned in the report.                                assistance in investigating accidents and             standard must explain the role of the
                                                    (b) This part does not require public                incidents and for expertise the SSOA                  SSOA in overseeing a Rail Transit
                                                 availability of any data, information, or               does not have within its own                          Agency’s practice of risk management,
                                                 procedures pertaining to the security of                organization.                                         safety assurance, and safety promotion,
                                                 a rail fixed guideway public                                                                                  throughout the Rail Transit Agency’s
                                                                                                            (g) All personnel and contractors
                                                 transportation system or its passenger                                                                        organization. Basic principles and
                                                                                                         employed by an SSOA must comply
                                                 operations.                                                                                                   methods of SMS are set forth in an
                                                                                                         with the requirements of the Public
                                                                                                                                                               Appendix to this part, the ‘‘System
                                                 Subpart C—State Safety Oversight                        Transportation Safety Certification                   Management Systems (SMS)
                                                 Agencies                                                Training Program.                                     Framework.’’
                                                                                                         § 674.27    State safety program standards.              (4) Oversight of Rail Transit Agency
                                                 § 674.25   Role of the State safety oversight                                                                 Safety Plans and Transit Agencies’
                                                 agency.                                                    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency
                                                                                                                                                               internal safety reviews. The program
                                                    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency                  (SSOA) must adopt and distribute a                    standard must explain the role of the
                                                 (SSOA) must establish minimum                           written State safety oversight program                SSOA in overseeing a Rail Transit
                                                 standards for the safety of all rail fixed              standard, consistent with the State                   Agency’s execution of its Transit
                                                 guideway public transportation systems                  Safety Oversight Program, the National                Agency Safety Plan and any related
                                                 within its oversight. These minimum                     Public Transportation Safety Plan, and                safety reviews of the Rail Transit
                                                 standards must be consistent with the                   the principles and methods of Safety                  Agency’s rail fixed guideway public
                                                 National Public Transportation Safety                   Management Systems. This program                      transportation system. The program
                                                 Plan, the Public Transportation Safety                  standard must identify the processes                  standard must describe the process
                                                 Certification Training Program, the                     and procedures that govern the                        whereby the SSOA will receive and
                                                 principles and methods of Safety                        activities of the SSOA. Also, this                    evaluate all material submitted under
                                                 Management Systems, and all                             program standard must identify the                    the signature of a Rail Transit Agency’s
                                                 applicable Federal and State law.                       processes and procedures a Rail Transit               accountable executive. Also, the
                                                    (b) Basic principles and methods of                  Agency must have in place to comply                   program standard must establish a
                                                 Safety Management Systems are set                       with the program standard. At                         procedure whereby a Rail Transit
                                                 forth in an Appendix to this part, the                  minimum, this program standard must                   Agency will notify the SSOA before the
                                                 ‘‘Safety Management Systems (SMS)                       meet the following requirements:                      Rail Transit Agency conducts an
                                                 Framework.’’                                               (1) Program management. The                        internal review of any aspect of the
                                                    (c) An SSOA must review and                          program standard must explain the                     safety of its rail fixed guideway public
                                                 approve the Transit Agency Safety Plan                  authority of the SSOA to oversee the                  transportation system.
                                                 for every rail fixed guideway public                    safety of rail fixed guideway public                     (5) Triennial SSOA audits of Rail
                                                 transportation system within its                        transportation systems; the policies that             Transit Agency Safety Plans. The
                                                 oversight. An SSOA must oversee a Rail                  govern the activities of the SSOA; the                program standard must explain the
                                                 Transit Agency’s execution of its Transit               reporting requirements that govern both               process the SSOA will follow and the
                                                 Agency Safety Plan. An SSOA must                        the SSOA and the rail fixed guideway                  criteria the SSOA will apply in
                                                 enforce the execution of a Transit                      public transportation systems; and the                conducting a complete audit of the Rail
                                                 Agency Safety Plan, through an order of                 steps the SSOA will take to ensure                    Transit Agency’s compliance with its
                                                 a corrective action plan or any other                   open, on-going communication between                  Transit Agency Safety Plan at least once
                                                 means, as necessary or appropriate. An                  the SSOA and every rail fixed guideway                every three years, in accordance with 49
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 SSOA must ensure that a Transit                         public transportation system within its               U.S.C. 5329(d) and 49 U.S.C.
                                                 Agency Safety Plan meets the                            oversight.                                            5329(e)(4)(iv). Alternatively, the SSOA
                                                 requirements for Public Transportation                     (2) Program standard development.                  and Rail Transit Agency may agree that
                                                 Agency Safety Plans at 49 U.S.C.                        The program standard must explain the                 the SSOA will conduct its audit on an
                                                 5329(d).                                                SSOA’s process for developing,                        on-going basis over the three-year
                                                    (d) An SSOA has primary                              reviewing, adopting, and revising its                 timeframe. The program standard must
                                                 responsibility for the investigation of                 minimum standards for safety, and                     establish a procedure the SSOA and a
                                                 any hazard or risk that threatens the                   distributing those standards to the rail              Rail Transit Agency will follow to


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00026   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                              11027

                                                 manage findings and recommendations                     is consistent with the National Public                transportation system. The criteria and
                                                 arising from the triennial audit.                       Transportation Safety Plan; is in                     thresholds for Accident or Incident
                                                    (6) Accident and incident notification.              compliance with the requirements of 49                notification and reporting are defined in
                                                 The program standard must establish                     U.S.C. 5329(d), and the program                       a reporting manual developed for the
                                                 requirements for a Rail Transit Agency                  standard set by the SSOA.                             electronic reporting system specified by
                                                 to notify the SSOA of accidents and                        (b) In determining whether a Transit               FTA as required in § 674.39(b).
                                                 incidents on the Rail Transit Agency’s                  Agency Safety Plan is based on an                        (b) FRA notification. In any instance
                                                 rail fixed guideway public                              adequate Safety Management System, an                 in which a Rail Transit Agency must
                                                 transportation system. These                            SSOA must determine, specifically,                    notify the Federal Railroad
                                                 requirements must address, specifically,                whether the Transit Agency Safety Plan                Administration (FRA) of an Accident or
                                                 the time limits for notification, methods               sets forth a sufficiently explicit safety             Incident as defined by 49 CFR 225.5
                                                 of notification, and the nature of the                  policy for the rail fixed guideway public             (i.e., shared use of the general railroad
                                                 information the Rail Transit Agency                     transportation system; a sufficiently                 system trackage or corridors), the Rail
                                                 must submit to the SSOA.                                explicit process for safety risk                      Transit Agency must also notify the
                                                    (7) Investigations. The program                      management, with adequate means of                    SSOA and the Administrator of the
                                                 standard must identify thresholds for                   risk control for the rail fixed guideway              Accident or Incident within the same
                                                 incidents and accidents that require a                  public transportation system; adequate                time frame as required by the FRA.
                                                 Rail Transit Agency to conduct an                       means of safety assurance for the rail
                                                 investigation. Also, the program                                                                              § 674.35    Investigations.
                                                                                                         fixed guideway public transportation
                                                 standard must address how the SSOA                      system; and adequate means of safety                    (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency
                                                 will coordinate its investigation with a                promotion to support the execution of                 (SSOA) must conduct an independent
                                                 Rail Transit Agency’s own internal                      the Transit Agency Safety Plan by all                 investigation of any Accident or
                                                 investigation; the role of the SSOA in                  employees, agents, and contractors for                Incident that is reported to the SSOA
                                                 supporting any investigation conducted                  the rail fixed guideway public                        and the Administrator in accordance
                                                 or findings and recommendations made                    transportation system.                                with § 674.33(a). In any instance in
                                                 by the National Transportation Safety                      (c) In an instance in which an SSOA                which a Rail Transit Agency is
                                                 Board; and procedures for protecting the                does not approve a Transit Agency                     conducting its own internal
                                                 confidentiality of the investigation                    Safety Plan, the SSOA must provide a                  investigation of the Accident or
                                                 reports.                                                written explanation, and allow the Rail               Incident, the SSOA and the Rail Transit
                                                    (8) Corrective actions. The program                  Transit Agency an opportunity to                      Agency must coordinate their
                                                 standard must explain the process and                   modify and resubmit its Transit Agency                investigations in accordance with the
                                                 criteria by which the SSOA may order                    Safety Plan for the SSOA’s approval.                  State safety oversight program standard
                                                 a Rail Transit Agency to develop and                                                                          and any agreements in effect.
                                                 carry out a corrective action plan, and                 § 674.31 Triennial audits: General                      (b) Within a reasonable time, an
                                                 a procedure for the SSOA to review and                  requirements.                                         SSOA must issue a written report on its
                                                 approve a corrective action plan. Also,                    At least once every three years, a State           investigation of an Accident or Incident
                                                 the program standard must explain the                   Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must                   in accordance with established
                                                 SSOA’s policy and practice for tracking                 conduct a complete audit of a Rail                    reporting requirements. The report must
                                                 and verifying a Rail Transit Agency’s                   Transit Agency’s compliance with its                  describe the investigation activities;
                                                 compliance with a corrective action                     Transit Agency Safety Plan.                           identify the factors that caused or
                                                 plan, and managing any conflicts                        Alternatively, an SSOA and a Rail                     contributed to the Accident or Incident;
                                                 between the SSOA and a Rail Transit                     Transit Agency may agree that the                     and set forth a corrective action plan, as
                                                 Agency relating either to the                           SSOA will conduct the audit on an on-                 necessary or appropriate. The SSOA
                                                 development or execution of a                           going basis over the three-year                       must formally adopt the report of an
                                                 corrective action plan or the findings of               timeframe. At the conclusion of the                   Accident or Incident and transmit that
                                                 an investigation.                                       three-year audit cycle, the SSOA shall                report to the Rail Transit Agency for
                                                    (b) At least once a year an SSOA must                issue a report with findings and                      review and concurrence. If a Rail
                                                 submit its program standard and any                     recommendations arising from the                      Transit Agency does not concur with an
                                                 referenced program procedures to FTA,                   audit, which must include, at minimum,                SSOA’s report, the SSOA may allow the
                                                 with an indication of any revisions                     an analysis of the effectiveness of the               Rail Transit Agency to submit a written
                                                 made to the program standard since the                  Transit Agency Safety Plan,                           dissent from the report, which may be
                                                 last annual submittal. FTA will evaluate                recommendations for improvements,                     included in the report, in the discretion
                                                 the SSOA’s program standard as part of                  and a corrective action plan, if                      of the SSOA.
                                                 its continuous evaluation of the State                  necessary or appropriate. The Rail                      (c) All personnel and contractors that
                                                 Safety Oversight Program, and in                        Transit Agency must be given an                       conduct investigations on behalf of an
                                                 preparing FTA’s report to Congress on                   opportunity to comment on the findings                SSOA must be trained to conduct
                                                 the certification status of that State                  and recommendations.                                  investigations in accordance with the
                                                 Safety Oversight Program, in accordance                                                                       Public Transportation Safety
                                                                                                         § 674.33 Notifications: Accidents and                 Certification Training Program.
                                                 with 49 U.S.C. 5329(e)(8).
                                                                                                         Incidents.
                                                 § 674.29 Transit Agency Safety Plans:                     (a) Two-hour notification. In addition              § 674.37    Corrective action plans.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 General requirements.                                   to the requirements for accident                        (a) In any instance in which a Rail
                                                    (a) In determining whether to approve                notification set forth in a State Safety              Transit Agency must develop and carry
                                                 a Transit Agency Safety Plan for a rail                 Oversight Program standard, a Rail                    out a corrective action plan, the State
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    Transit Agency must notify both the                   Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA) must
                                                 system, a State Safety Oversight Agency                 State Safety Oversight Agency (SSOA)                  review and approve the plan before the
                                                 (SSOA) must evaluate whether the                        and the Administrator within two hours                Rail Transit Agency carries out the plan.
                                                 Transit Agency Safety Plan is based on                  of any Accident or Incident occurring                 A corrective action plan must describe,
                                                 an adequate Safety Management System;                   on a rail fixed guideway public                       specifically, the actions the Rail Transit


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00027   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11028                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 Agency will take to minimize, control,                    (b) These materials must be submitted               the public transportation agency has an
                                                 correct, or eliminate the risks and                     electronically through a reporting                    inclusive and effective process to direct
                                                 hazards identified by the plan, the                     system specified by FTA.                              resources to optimally manage safety.
                                                                                                                                                                  SMS establishes lines of safety
                                                 schedule for taking those actions, and
                                                                                                         § 674.41    Conflicts of interest.                    accountability throughout an organization,
                                                 the individuals responsible for taking                                                                        starting at the executive management level,
                                                 those actions. The Rail Transit Agency                     (a) A State Safety Oversight Agency
                                                                                                                                                               and provides a structure to support a sound
                                                 must periodically report to the SSOA                    (SSOA) must be financially and legally
                                                                                                                                                               safety culture from the front-line to the
                                                 the Rail Transit Agency’s progress in                   independent from any rail fixed                       boardroom. SMS enables agencies to address
                                                 carrying out the corrective action plan.                guideway public transportation system                 organizational deficiencies that may lead to
                                                 The SSOA may monitor the Rail Transit                   under the oversight of the SSOA, unless               safety issues or unidentified safety risks,
                                                 Agency’s progress in carrying out the                   the Administrator has issued a waiver of              identify system-wide trends in safety, and
                                                 corrective action plan through                          this requirement in accordance with                   manage the potential consequences of
                                                                                                         § 674.13(b).                                          hazards before they result in incidents or
                                                 unannounced, on-site inspections, or
                                                                                                            (b) An SSOA may not employ any                     accidents.
                                                 any other means the SSOA deems                                                                                   SMS is scalable to organizations of any size
                                                 necessary or appropriate.                               individual who provides services to a
                                                                                                         rail fixed guideway public                            and flexible enough to be effective in all
                                                    (b) In any instance in which a safety                                                                      transit environments, from the largest urban
                                                 Event on the Rail Transit Agency’s rail                 transportation system under the
                                                                                                                                                               operator to the smallest rural transit system
                                                 fixed guideway public transportation                    oversight of the SSOA, unless the                     provider. SMS also provides oversight
                                                 system is the subject of an investigation               Administrator has issued a waiver of                  agencies with new tools, approaches, and
                                                 by the National Transportation Safety                   this requirement in accordance with                   opportunities to align safety priorities and
                                                 Board (NTSB), the SSOA must evaluate                    § 674.13(b).                                          promote continuous improvement.
                                                 whether the findings or                                    (c) A contractor may not provide                      In the public transportation safety
                                                 recommendations by the NTSB require                     services to both an SSOA and a rail                   provisions of the Moving Ahead for Progress
                                                                                                         fixed guideway public transportation                  in the 21st Century Act (MAP–21), FTA, the
                                                 a corrective action plan by the Rail                                                                          States and the public transportation industry
                                                 Transit Agency, and if so, the SSOA                     system under the oversight of that
                                                                                                         SSOA.                                                 have been presented with a rare opportunity
                                                 must order the Rail Transit Agency to                                                                         to implement a modern regulatory framework
                                                 develop and carry out a corrective                      Appendix A to Part 674 to Part 674—                   that will help a safe industry become even
                                                 action plan.                                            Safety Management Systems (SMS)                       safer. Adopting SMS principles will further
                                                                                                         Framework                                             deepen the industry’s commitment to the
                                                 § 674.39 State Safety Oversight Agency                                                                        safety of its passengers, employees,
                                                 annual reporting to FTA.                                I. Overview                                           equipment and facilities and will strengthen
                                                    (a) On or before March 15 of each                       The Federal Transit Administration (FTA)           its core competencies in hazard
                                                 year, a State Safety Oversight Agency                   is adopting the principles and methods of             identification, safety data acquisition and
                                                 (SSOA) must submit the following                        Safety Management Systems (SMS) as the                analysis, and internal auditing. Most
                                                 material to FTA:                                        basis for the National Public Transportation          significantly, SMS offers the promise of a
                                                                                                         Safety Program. With a focus on                       stronger culture for employees and managers
                                                    (1) The State safety oversight program
                                                                                                         organization-wide safety policy, proactive            to work together to solve safety problems.
                                                 standard adopted in accordance with
                                                                                                         hazard management, strong safety
                                                 § 674.27, with an indication of any                                                                           III. Scalability and Flexibility
                                                                                                         communication between workers and
                                                 changes to the program standard during                  management, targeted safety training, and                Service providers within the public
                                                 the preceding twelve months;                            clear accountabilities and responsibilities for       transportation industry can vary greatly
                                                    (2) Evidence that each of its                        critical safety activities, SMS provides an           based on size, complexity and operating
                                                 employees and contractors is in                         enhanced structure for addressing the safety          characteristics. Transit agency management
                                                 compliance with the requirements of the                 provisions specified in the Moving Ahead for          needs processes, activities and tools that
                                                 Public Transportation Safety                            Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–21).            scale to size, complexity and uniqueness of
                                                                                                            SMS is a formal, top-down, organization-           the transit system. SMS provides such an
                                                 Certification Training Program;
                                                                                                         wide approach to managing safety risks and            approach. SMS is flexible, and can be scaled
                                                    (3) A publicly available report that                                                                       to the mode, size, and complexity of any
                                                                                                         assuring the effectiveness of safety risk
                                                 summarizes its oversight activities for                 mitigations. The specific components and              transit operator, in any environment—urban,
                                                 the preceding twelve months, describes                  sub-components of FTA’s SMS framework                 suburban, or rural. The extent to which the
                                                 the causal factors of accidents or                      are discussed in Section V of this Appendix.          transit agency’s SMS processes, activities and
                                                 incidents identified through                                                                                  tools are used and documented will vary
                                                                                                         II. Background                                        from agency to agency. For a small bus
                                                 investigation, and identifies the status of
                                                 corrective actions, changes to Transit                     Building on the public transportation              operation, that SMS is going to be simple and
                                                 Agency Safety Plans, and the level of                   industry’s four decades of experience with            straightforward. For a larger transit agency
                                                                                                         system safety, SMS supplements traditional            with hundreds or thousands of employees
                                                 effort by the SSOA in carrying out its                  engineering processes by integrating                  and multiple modes, that system is going to
                                                 oversight activities;                                   management systems and organizational                 be more complicated.
                                                    (4) A summary of the triennial audits                culture into critical safety risk management             SMS scales itself to reflect the size and
                                                 completed during the preceding twelve                   and assurance functions. As a result, SMS             complexity of the operation, but the
                                                 months, and the Transit Agencies’                       ensures that each public transportation               fundamental accountability remains the
                                                 progress in carrying out corrective                     agency, no matter its size or service                 same. FTA’s SMS Framework establishes the
                                                 action plans arising from triennial                     environment, has the necessary                        accountabilities, processes and activities
                                                 audits conducted in accordance with                     organizational structures, accountabilities,          necessary to implement an effective SMS.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 § 674.31;                                               activities and tools in place to direct and           However, the transit agency will determine
                                                    (5) Evidence that the SSOA has                       control resources to optimally manage safety.         the level of detail necessary to identify and
                                                                                                            Focusing on collaboration and information          evaluate their own unique safety risks and
                                                 reviewed and approved any changes to                    sharing, SMS helps management and labor               target their resources to manage those safety
                                                 the Transit Agency Safety Plans during                  work together to control risk better, detect          risks.
                                                 the preceding twelve months; and                        and correct safety problems earlier, share and
                                                    (6) A certification that the SSOA is in              analyze safety data more effectively, and             IV. Executive Management Commitment
                                                 compliance with the requirements of                     measure safety performance more clearly.                SMS establishes lines of safety
                                                 this part.                                              The ultimate goal of SMS is to ensure that            accountability throughout an organization,



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00028   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                              11029

                                                 particularly at the senior management level,            frames the fundamentals upon which the                   SMS documentation and records—SMS
                                                 and provides a structure to support a sound             transit agency will build and operate its SMS,        activities must be formally documented and
                                                 safety culture. Because SMS is a management             documents management’s commitment to the              available for reference throughout the
                                                 approach, safety accountability must reside             SMS, and inserts the management of safety             organization. Therefore, a formal system of
                                                 at the highest levels of management within              at the same level of the topmost business             records and documentation control is an
                                                 a transit agency. In FTA’s SMS Framework,               processes of the transit agency.                      important element within the operation of
                                                 this would be the Accountable Executive.                   Critical to the value of the safety                SMS.
                                                 Typically, the Accountable Executive will be            management policy statement, and to the                  This sub-component provides for the
                                                 the head of a transit agency, its Chief                 operation of the SMS overall, is the                  requirements of the agency to document its
                                                 Executive Officer, President, General                   introduction of an unambiguous clause                 overall approach to the management of
                                                 Manager, or Executive Director. Whatever the            reflecting executive level support for an             system, the activities for SMS
                                                 person’s job title, the Accountable Executive           effective employee safety reporting program.          implementation and its subsequent day-to-
                                                 plays the central role in developing and                   The safety management policy statement             day operation, and the activities or
                                                 carrying out an SMS. Without the                        also documents management’s commitment                procedures for the management of new or
                                                 Accountable Executive’s active endorsement              to continuous safety improvement, as well as          revised safety requirements, regulatory or
                                                 and acceptance of accountability for the                to the continuous improvement of the safety           otherwise.
                                                 safety performance of a public transportation           management system itself.                                While the extent and complexity of the
                                                 agency, an SMS cannot be effective. The                    The Accountable Executive signs the safety         SMS documentation will be commensurate to
                                                 extent to which an Accountable Executive                management policy statement, which is                 the agency’s size and complexity, SMS
                                                 will be involved in day-to-day SMS activities           distributed, with visible support from                documentation and records must be readily
                                                 will depend both on the individual executive            executive management, throughout the                  available to all those with accountabilities for
                                                 and the size and complexity of the                      transit agency.                                       SMS performance or responsibilities for SMS
                                                 organization.                                              Safety accountabilities and                        implementation and operation.
                                                    SMS does not require an Accountable                  responsibilities—An explicit definition of the           The component Safety Risk Management
                                                 Executive to be an expert in safety. Rather,            lines of accountability and responsibility for        provides for the activities and tools a transit
                                                 the Accountable Executive must understand               the management of safety within the transit           agency needs in order to identify precursors
                                                 how the SMS works in his or her                         agency, as well as the authorities required to        of safety concerns that might present during
                                                 organization; know the key personnel to call            deliver accountabilities and discharge                service delivery as well as their supporting
                                                 upon for evaluating safety information; and             responsibilities.                                     operations. This allows a transit agency to
                                                 grasp the significant safety issues that face              This sub-component provides for the                anticipate the potential negative
                                                 the organization. The Accountable Executive             identification of an Accountable Executive            consequences of safety concerns, by
                                                 should use the reports and analysis                     and the definition of the required                    evaluating whether it has taken enough
                                                 performed as part of the SMS process to                 accountabilities, responsibilities and                precautions to control the potential
                                                 support the agency’s decision-making. For an            authorities of the post holder. The                   consequences of identified safety concerns.
                                                 Accountable Executive, safety information,              Accountable Executive is ultimately                      Safety risk management is an ongoing and
                                                 like financial, schedule and service                    accountable for the implementation and                never-ending process. Safety risk
                                                 information, is an integral part of how                 continuous operation of the transit agency’s          management involves activities that allow
                                                 resources are allocated, budgets are set, and           SMS, ensuring that the transit agency has             the identification of hazards associated with
                                                 risks are managed.                                      allocated resources and implemented                   the operation and maintenance of a public
                                                                                                         mechanisms for the efficient and effective            transportation system. Once hazards are
                                                 V. Key Components and Functional Elements               management of safety through its SMS to an            identified, the Safety Risk Management
                                                 of a Safety Management System                           extent commensurate to its needs,                     process provides for the analysis of the
                                                    As depicted below, FTA’s SMS Framework               possibilities and constraints.                        potential consequences of identified hazards,
                                                 is comprised of four key components and                    The sub-component also provides for the            for the evaluation of the safety risk of the
                                                 eleven sub-components that work together to             appointment of a subject matter expert for the        potential consequences, and lastly for the
                                                 refine, reinforce, and sustain the                      implementation and day-to-day operation of            development and implementation safety risk
                                                 implementation of an SMS throughout a                   the SMS, the lines of relationship of the post        mitigations to address the anticipated,
                                                 transit agency:                                         holder with the Accountable Executive and             potential consequences of hazards.
                                                    (1) Safety Management Policy,                        the transit agency’s governance structure, and           The sub-components of Safety Risk
                                                    (2) Safety Risk Management,                          the appointment of the staff necessary to             Management component are:
                                                    (3) Safety Assurance, and                            support the post holder in the day-to-day                Hazard identification and analysis—
                                                    (4) Safety Promotion.                                operation of the SMS.                                 Provides for the critical first two steps in the
                                                    The component Safety Management Policy                  It lastly provides for the definition of           SRM process. Under SMS, these steps help
                                                 provides for the foundations of a public                accountabilities, responsibilities and                a transit agency identify and address
                                                 transportation agency’s system for the                  authorities of executive and senior                   concerns before they escalate into incidents,
                                                 management of safety. This component                    management regarding the effective and                and provide a foundation for the evaluation
                                                 encompasses the agency’s commitment to                  efficient operation of the SMS.                       activities that come next. It is important that
                                                 achieve explicit safety objectives and safety              While safety management accountabilities,          hazard identification and analyses are
                                                 performance targets, as well as the agency’s            responsibilities and their delegation, and            supported agency-wide. Safety concerns and
                                                 compromise to provide the necessary                     authorities may vary from agency to agency,           issues are an inevitable part of transit
                                                 organizational structures to accomplish them.           they must nevertheless be defined and                 operations. Only after hazards are identified,
                                                 Under this component, senior leadership and             implemented.                                          can they be analyzed. Therefore, an explicit
                                                 employee responsibilities for the                          Integration with public safety and                 hazard identification program is critical. In
                                                 management of safety throughout the agency              emergency management—All transit agencies             this respect, a transit agency’s employees are
                                                 are respectively and distinctly established.            have some level of emergency plans,                   an irreplaceable asset for hazard
                                                 This component also commits senior                      procedures and/or protocols that direct both          identification.
                                                 leadership to actively engage in the oversight          internal emergency response to transit related           Safety risk evaluation and mitigation—
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                                 of the agency’s safety performance, by                  events, and external emergency response in            Safety risk evaluation provides for the
                                                 requiring regular review of the safety                  coordination with Local Emergency                     evaluation of the magnitude of the potential
                                                 management policy statement, budget, and                Management for community-wide emergency               consequence of identified hazards. The term
                                                 program by a designated Accountable                     activities. Integration of plans, procedures          safety risk refers to the likelihood that people
                                                 Executive.                                              and protocols through specific SMS-related            could be harmed or equipment could be
                                                    The sub-components of the Safety                     activities provides a 360-degree vision of            damaged by the potential consequences of a
                                                 Management Policy component are:                        how the transit agency meets its overall              hazard. Therefore, safety risk is expressed
                                                    Safety management policy statement—                  safety emergency management                           and measured by the predicted probability
                                                 Clearly, succinctly and unambiguously                   responsibilities.                                     and severity of the hazard’s potential



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4


                                                 11030                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 39 / Friday, February 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 consequences. Safety risk evaluation must               agency, there is the potential that the change          Safety communication—Critical to
                                                 include the evaluation of existing mitigations          may impact safety by impacting existing               maintaining the two-way feedback loop
                                                 to help determine whether the potential                 safety risk mitigations. Therefore, the safety        between front-line employees and
                                                 consequences of the hazard must be further              assurance component of an effective SMS               management and establishing a safety culture
                                                 mitigated. Safety risk mitigation is an action          will evaluate the anticipated change and, if          that promotes the effective reporting of safety
                                                 or resource which, when applied to an                   it might impact safety, ensure that it is             concerns or issues. Effective safety
                                                 evaluated safety risk, reduces the probability          further evaluated through the transit agency’s        communication and SMS education will
                                                 and/or severity of the potential consequence            safety risk management process.                       ensure that personnel are aware of the SMS
                                                 of a hazard. Safety risk mitigation enables a              Continuous improvement—Ensures                     and their role within it. It also ensures that
                                                 transit agency to actively ‘‘manage’’ safety            constant improvement in the functioning of            safety critical information is conveyed in a
                                                 risk in a manner that is aligned with its safety        the entire SMS and includes ongoing                   timely manner, and effectively explains why
                                                 performance targets and consists of initial,            management support to continuously                    particular safety actions are taken and why
                                                 ongoing and revised mitigations.                        monitor SMS implementation. SMS                       safety procedures are introduced or changed.
                                                    The component Safety Assurance ensures               evaluation is necessary to ensure that the
                                                 that chosen mitigations are appropriate and                                                                     Competencies and training—Provides for
                                                                                                         SMS continues to meet its core safety                 the development, through training, of key
                                                 effective in addressing the evaluated safety
                                                                                                         objectives; transit agency safety performance         safety management competencies essential
                                                 risks, and generates confidence that the SMS
                                                                                                         is monitored against its safety performance           for the effective implementation and
                                                 contributes to the agency meeting its safety
                                                 objectives and safety performance targets.              targets, and identified weaknesses are                operation of an SMS, including safety
                                                 This is achieved through the collection,                immediately addressed.                                reporting competencies and safety data
                                                 analysis, and assessment of safety data.                   The component Safety Promotion requires            management competencies. Each competency
                                                 Safety Assurance is performed through                   a combination of training and                         should be primarily aimed at a specific
                                                 inspections, observations, and auditing                 communication of safety information to                employee level.
                                                 activities to support safety oversight and              employees to heighten the efficiency and                At the front-line employee level, safety
                                                 performance monitoring. Safety Assurance                effectiveness of the transit agency’s SMS.            management training should provide for the
                                                 also helps a transit agency evaluate whether            Safety promotion provides visibility and              development of safety reporting
                                                 or not an anticipated change may impact                 knowledge of executive management’s                   competencies, i.e. employees should receive
                                                 safety.                                                 commitment to safety performance and an               formal training on the expected contents of
                                                    The sub-components of the Safety                     effective SMS throughout the transit agency.          employee safety reporting (what to report;
                                                 Assurance component are:                                It typically includes formal and informal             what not to report) and the procedures
                                                    Safety performance monitoring and                    platforms for the communication of safety             established for reporting. At the subject
                                                 measurement—An ongoing activity that                    management information throughout the                 matter expert level (key safety management
                                                 ensures senior management has the data and              organization, safety management training for          staff), formal training should develop safety
                                                 information it needs to measure whether                 employees, training on employee roles and             data management competencies, i.e. how to
                                                 safety risk mitigations and safety-related              responsibilities within the SMS, and training         analyze safety data, how to extract
                                                 activities are appropriate and effective. Safety        on the mechanism for employees to report              information, and how to turn safety
                                                 performance monitoring does not as much                 safety concerns.                                      information into safety intelligence for senior
                                                 involve monitoring individuals, but rather                 Safety promotion is a critical component of        management decision-making. This also
                                                 monitoring the safety performance of the                an efficient and effective SMS, setting the           includes formal training to develop safety
                                                 organization itself.                                    tone for the transit agency’s safety                  data collection, storage and retrieval
                                                    Management of change—SMS places                      management activities and helping to build            competencies.
                                                 emphasis on managing change. There is a                 a positive safety culture.
                                                 very simple reason for this. Whenever change               The two sub-components of the Safety               [FR Doc. 2015–03841 Filed 2–26–15; 8:45 am]
                                                 is introduced within a public transportation            Promotion component are:                              BILLING CODE P
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS4




                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   19:08 Feb 26, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\27FEP4.SGM   27FEP4



Document Created: 2015-12-18 13:14:37
Document Modified: 2015-12-18 13:14:37
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionNotice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.
DatesComments must be received by April 28, 2015.
ContactFor program matters, Lynn Spencer, Director, FTA Office of System Safety, telephone 202-366-5112 or [email protected]; For legal matters, Richard Wong, FTA Office of Chief Counsel, telephone 202-366-0675 or [email protected]
FR Citation80 FR 11001 
RIN Number2132-AB19
CFR AssociatedGrant Programs-Transportation; Mass Transportation; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Safety

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR